We have long talked about the importance of Canadian content and the importance of ensuring that we have the appropriate tenets in place in order to protect Canadian content. I'm very pleased that we got the Broadcasting Act revised—and thank you to the government and all those involved in ensuring that—and now we're going through the policy process of that. You will hear our voice again saying it's really important to make sure that we protect the Canadian content components of that, the tenets of that, so that we ensure we have a good economic driver here in Canada for our own work.
Eleanor talked about the fact that we have a lot of work that comes to Canada. We appreciate the work coming from streamers. We call it service work. However, it can't replace Canadian content. It cannot replace our own industry, with our own actors, directors, producers and writers. That is a system that allows actors—and I'll talk on behalf of actors—to actually sustain themselves in our country so that we can build our industry.
There's been a disruption in the industry. I'm not saying it's a bad disruption, but there's been a disruption in the industry. It used to be that cable was the way you watched Eleanor perform, or you went to the theatre. Now we have streamers coming in, tapping into our market and benefiting from tapping into our market. It is so important that we make sure that the same rules we've applied to bricks-and-mortar broadcasters are also applied to streamers. They are getting the benefit of coming into our market. We should have the benefit to our system of ensuring there's Canadian content that is protected.