Wednesday, December 31, 2025
ADVT 
National

Televised Tragically Hip Show An 'Unprecedented Event:' CBC

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Aug, 2016 01:41 PM
    TORONTO — Few Canadian television events qualify as a momentous occasion for the nation, but Saturday's Tragically Hip concert promises to be special.
     
    It seems like much of the country will be tuned into CBC's live broadcast of "The Tragically Hip: A National Celebration" from Kingston, Ont., when factoring in home screenings and community viewing parties.
     
    Yet how many people will watch is anybody's guess at this point.
     
    "This is an unprecedented event for us," said Jennifer Dettman, CBC's executive director of unscripted content.
     
    The sentiment is true on many levels, she adds. 
     
    The last stop on the Hip's "Man Machine Poem" tour is widely expected to be their final performance, as lead singer Gord Downie is facing terminal brain cancer. After tickets to the tour sold out within minutes, fans launched a campaign urging the CBC to carry the band's Kingston show as a live TV event.
     
    Dettman wouldn't speak to the contract negotiations that led to the Hip agreeing to the broadcast.
     
     
    "CBC made both a competitive and financially responsible offer to acquire the broadcast rights, and we're thrilled to be able to offer this national celebration to as many Canadians as possible," she said.
     
    The concert won't just be on the main CBC network, it will also be broadcast through various other platforms such as CBC Radio One, the CBC website and its YouTube and Facebook channels.
     
    With so many viewing options, that will make it tough to capture how many eyes and ears are focused on the Hip this Saturday.
     
    That's where ratings agency Numeris comes in. The Toronto-based company tracks viewership figures by using meters and viewing diaries prepared by a panel of Canadians representative of the population.
     
    Their data shows that most huge audience draws are typically live programming, led by major sporting events.
     
    The Super Bowl is the biggest TV event nearly every year — drawing about six million to eight million viewers in recent years — while a handful of other annual celebrations like the Academy Awards, the Golden Globes and Grammys are perennial favourites too.
     
    The gold medal game of the men's hockey tournament at the 2010 Vancouver Winter Olympics is considered to be the most-watched broadcast ever in Canada. It drew 16.6 million viewers, according to data from Numeris, about double the number of people who tune into most Super Bowls.
     
    Those kinds of numbers will be hard to beat, even for a rock band with as much Canadian clout as the Hip.
     
    Numeris spokesman Tom Jenks wouldn't guess how many viewers will tune into the CBC broadcast, but acknowledges it'll probably be a pretty big number.
     
     
    The agency said it will be counting every public screening — from restaurants to movie theatres to community viewing parties — and each person streaming the concert on their phone. Viewers who playback the show on their DVRs within seven days will also be included in the final numbers.
     
    "Our system captures all viewing," Jenks said.
     
    Potentially driving those numbers higher is the decision make the Hip's concert a one-time broadcast, with no encore presentation and no availability on on-demand platforms.
     
    "Our goal was to bring the experience of this live concert to Canadians in that moment," Dettman said.
     
    "I'm sure the band will figure out what they will want to do with the concert afterwards."
     
    She said the goal is to give all Canadians the same "crescendo" feeling that will ripple through the arena in Kingston.
     
    "Our goal is to bring the experience ... to as many Canadians as we can," she said.
     
    "The idea that we're all together experiencing this moment at the same time is really special."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Teen Suspects Arrested In Assaults At Manitoba Addiction Treatment Centre

    Selkirk RCMP say a 16-year-old boy was taken into custody Monday evening and a 17-year-old boy was arrested early Tuesday morning.

    Teen Suspects Arrested In Assaults At Manitoba Addiction Treatment Centre

    B.C. Audit Says More Work Needed On Community Programs To Reduce Reoffending

    B.C. Audit Says More Work Needed On Community Programs To Reduce Reoffending
      Carol Bellringer looked at six of the eight recommendations and says B.C. Community Corrections has taken steps to implement only one of them.

    B.C. Audit Says More Work Needed On Community Programs To Reduce Reoffending

    Chamber Of Commerce AGM Backs Wineries, Eyes AirBnb, B.C. Real Estate

    Chamber Of Commerce AGM Backs Wineries, Eyes AirBnb, B.C. Real Estate
    British Columbia's business leaders have adopted a list of policies they want addressed by government including more equitable taxation for wineries and Airbnb-style rentals and protection for old-growth forests.

    Chamber Of Commerce AGM Backs Wineries, Eyes AirBnb, B.C. Real Estate

    Ontario Woman Wakes Up To Find Large Snake In Apartment: Police

    Ontario Woman Wakes Up To Find Large Snake In Apartment: Police
    Brockville police say that by the time officers arrived around 1 a.m. Monday, the snake had slithered into an air vent and disappeared.

    Ontario Woman Wakes Up To Find Large Snake In Apartment: Police

    Man's Sudden Death Prompts RCMP Search For Watercraft In Maple Ridge

      Police confirm they were called to the Haney Bypass, about 45 kilometres east of Vancouver, just after 3 a.m.

    Man's Sudden Death Prompts RCMP Search For Watercraft In Maple Ridge

    Early Estimates Disappointing For 2016 Fraser River Sockeye Returns

    Early Estimates Disappointing For 2016 Fraser River Sockeye Returns
    Fisheries and Oceans Lower Fraser area director Jennifer Nener says about 2.27-million sockeye are expected this year.

    Early Estimates Disappointing For 2016 Fraser River Sockeye Returns