Television_of_Quebec Television_of_Quebec

Television of Quebec - Definition and Overview

Related Words: Advice, Announcer, Authority, Automation, Avionics, Box, Channel, Electronics, Grapevine, Information

Quebec television is an important part of the culture of Quebec. The prime-time French-language téléromans (soap operas) constitute one of the core cultural elements of Quebec which is shared by nearly all the citizens of the province regardless of their social status or their education. The exception may be people who watch only foreign channels or do not even own a television, but even then they are surely aware of what is going on in the latest soaps because of the pervasive nature of televison, advertising and word of mouth. The soaps are all broadcast in evening prime-time hours, on the state-run French-language federal television network as well as on the private French-language networks such as Groupe TVA.

One of the many paradoxes of Quebec culture comes from the fact that the evening soap operas that did and still do so much to define it as a distinct francophone entity had their origins on the SRC, the Société Radio-Canada (CBC) TV network owned and operated by the federal government, which is in turn controlled by the English majority in the House of Commons. As a result, there are quite a few links to the media in Canada.

The existence of Quebec consumer culture and a consumer society distinct from other similar societies in North America and Europe is a corollary of this common core of TV watching. All of the prime-time soaps, including those run on the state network, are supported by massive advertising. Nearly all of this advertising is made in the province of Quebec or translated specifically for the francophone audience from "modular" commercials planned for translation. In the first decade of the introduction of TV, in the 1950s, many commercials were translated to French very simply, from the English commercials run on English-language networks in Canada and the United States.

In the 1960s a few major commercial advertisers noticed that they got much better results in Quebec if they made a translation of the idea behind their campaigns instead of just the text and used local Quebec personalities and actors instead of U.S. or English-Canadian individuals. Two decades later nearly all breakfast cereals, appliances and automobiles were being hawked on the French-language networks using Quebec French texts (usually written in Montreal) and local actors and personalities. Commercials made in France cannot be reused because, for the most part, they advertise goods and services which are not available in North America, and the cultural references of Paris and its "street language" or argot do not connect with the "street language" or joual of Montreal and its cultural reality of summer jazz festivals and extremely cold winter weather, to name but two differences.

See also

Example Usage of Television

erickomans: Just put in for a short film and a Television pilot. Not particularly optimistic about getting more screen time in the film, so, TO WORK!
EllenTailor: Headed to Take Five & Co. this morning to play Television co-host. Check it out at 9am on WZZM 13!
damianholmes: mario amstrong - internet easy to watch on Television on NPR this morning http://is.gd/57KEO h/t @chrisbrogan
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