Three years ago French services launched a program entitled Tout le monde en parlait. If everyone talked about an event at least 20 years ago, of course Radio-Canada would have been talking about it as well.
It's a wonderful idea to revisit an event. We add testimony from those who witnessed the event and who can talk about it with a certain distance. It adds up to an extraordinary series. In fact it is the program schools and universities request the most, so that their students can find out about recent history; it's really exceptional.
I'll give you an example. When it was confirmed that the Jets would be returning to Winnipeg, we prepared a program on the return of the Jets. The program was not focused so much on the return of the Jets as on everything the arrival of the Winnipeg Jets had caused in terms of changes in the hockey world.
You will recall the first million-dollar salary, that was given to Bobby Hull, and the arrival of players from Eastern Europe. These were events that changed the nature of professional hockey and they happened in Winnipeg, with the Jets. We heard from former players and the former owner. There were a whole series of elements that put that page in our history in perspective.
That is one example of what is happening currently at Radio-Canada.