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Caught is a Canadian crime drama television series written and produced by Allan Hawco that debuted on CBC Television on February 26, 2018. [1] Based on the 2014 novel by Lisa Moore, [2] Caught is about a drug dealer who, with the help of a corrupt cop, makes a daring jailbreak from a New Brunswick prison in 1978, and travels across the globe to hunt down his drug king-pin ex-partner.
Road Movies (1992-1993) Rock Wars (1985) Rocket Robin Hood (1966–1969) The Romeo Section (2015–2016) The Ron James Show (2009–2014) The Rovers Comedy House (1981) Rumours (2006–2007) Run the Burbs (January 2022– 2024) St. Lawrence North (1960) Saturday Date with Billy O'Connor (1958-9) Saturday Night Movies (1977) Saturday Night Wrestling
CBC News – news; CBC News Magazine – newsmagazine; CBC News: Morning – news; CBC News: Sunday – news; CBC News: Today – news; CBC Selects – anthology; Celebrity Cooks – lifestyle/cooking; CFL on CBC – sports; CFL on TSN – sports; Charlie Had One But He Didn't Like It, So He Gave It To Us – sketch comedy (1966)
Steve Armitage, former CBC-Sports reporter and play-by-play announcer; Peter Armstrong; former host of World Report on CBC Radio 1, foreign correspondent for CBC Television and CBC Newsworld; currently the economics reporter for CBC News; Adrienne Arsenault, Chief Correspondent for CBC News, co-host of The National; Marie-Louise Arsenault, arts ...
Goat (2016) – drama film telling the true story of a 19-year-old and his brother who pledge the same fraternity and experience hazing [70] Gold (2016) – crime drama film based on the true story of the 1993 Bre-X mining scandal, when a massive gold deposit was supposedly discovered in the jungles of Indonesia [71]
The Newsroom is a Canadian television comedy-drama series which ran on CBC Television in the 1996–97, 2003–04 and 2004–05 seasons. A two-hour television movie, Escape from the Newsroom, was broadcast in 2002.
In October 2022, Campbell was suspended from the CBC television series Coroner, after an incident where he referred to Black grip technician by the n-word on a different production. [7] The grip, Andre Mike, stated he was clearing stones for Campbell's path, he heard the actor say, "You winter niggers are used to this kind of weather."
At the time Intelligence was cancelled by CBC, there was a widespread belief that the theme of political corruption was what got the show killed. In those Harper-era days, the series was in dangerous territory for a beleaguered CBC. The fact that it was superb TV, widely praised, was less important than fear of government criticism.