Madam Fry made the point about the mandate being the same in French and English Canada, so really, what's the problem? I'm just going to say that I agree with you that the mandate should be there. I think it is there. Your question is really about the resources. How can we do all, be all? I'm not too sure. Will, I think, is more the issue.
To get a movie like Gladiator in prime time on the CBC on Saturday night and call that Movie Night in Canada costs a heck of a lot of money for the network. Their justification, of course, is ad revenue. To me, it's shameful. The mandate should prevent that kind of nonsense. What would be so terrible about having an Academy-Award-nominated film like Water play, shortly after its theatrical run, in prime time on the CBC for every Canadian to see? How many of you have seen that movie? Raise your hands. See? Come on, it's an Academy-Award-nominated Canadian film.
This is one of the problems we have. A culture is the thing we all share. What is that thing? How do you define it? It's really hard in Canada to define it. Quebec has it figured out, and their language helps a great deal. But I really think it's about will. It's about will and it's about perception.
To me, the fact that the CBC doesn't behave like a private broadcaster is excellent, is very good, because when you look at private broadcasters in Canada, they all have the same CRTC mandate. Go on prime time; look at CTV and Global in prime time in English Canada. What do you see? American shows. They use the CRTC mandate to create protectionism, which allows them to flow exclusively American products, and they pay a little lip service to the entertainment show or whatever they need to fulfil Canadian content. Meanwhile, CBC is hanging out there on a limb making great shows, like Intelligence, which go out in prime time.
I'd rather see the abolishment of Canadian content legislation for the crooks who work at Global and CTV and put all that money into making CBC genuinely representative of the Canadian interest. Because, excuse my language, they're screwing us anyway with the private broadcasters. If HBO or NBC or whomever could sell directly into Canada, and they didn't have to go through a Global or whatever, then what would Global and CTV play? What would they play? They wouldn't have any programming. They would have to buy like everyone else, and they would be sitting here saying, “Oh, we have to make programs. What are we going to make?” Meanwhile, the CBC is genuinely out there making programs.
There's no question that it's will. Sorry, my language is terrible.