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TV_the_greatest_canadian_logo.jpg The Greatest Canadian logo Officially launched on April 5, 2004, The Greatest Canadian was a project by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, to find who is the greatest ever Canadian. The project was inspired by the BBC series 100 Greatest Britons. The "Greatest Canadian" was not decided by a simple popular poll, but was instead chosen through a two-step voting process. On October 17, 2004 the CBC aired the first part of the Greatest Canadian television series. In it, the bottom 40 of the top 50 "greatest" choices were revealed, in order of popularity, determined by polls conducted by email, website, telephone, and letter. To prevent bias during the second round of voting, the top ten nominees were presented alphabetically rather than by order of first round popularity. This second vote was accompanied by a series of documentaries, where 10 Canadian celebrities acting as advocates each presented their case for The Greatest Canadian. Voting concluded on Nov. 28 at midnight and the following evening, November 29, the winner was revealed to be Tommy Douglas.
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GCdouglas.jpg The Greatest Canadian On October 30, Tommy Douglas won the title as Greatest Canadian. He had been at first place for almost the entire contest. Douglas is famous as being the father of Medicare. Prior to his political career, he received his Arts degree at Brandon College, where he met his best friend Stanley Knowles as well as his wife. He became a Baptist minister in small prairie towns such as Carberry, Manitoba, before he became a minister in Weyburn, Saskatchewan. During his time as a minister in Weyburn, at the height of the Great Depression, local farmers would come to him for help since many of them were losing their farms to holding corporations as they were unable to pay their bills on time. Douglas helped start up the Cooperative Commonwealth Federation as a lobby group of farmers, and it became a political party. Soon, people of the working class wanted to be part of the group, although they traditionally never got along with fellow farmers. While Douglas was Premier of Saskatchewan, he was able to help farmers keep their property, introduced many social reforms including automobile insurance and Medicare, although it was not passed until only a few weeks after Douglas resigned as Premier of Saskatchewan. While leader of the federal NDP, with backing from the Tories, he was able to pressure the federal Liberals to introduce such policies as the Canada Health Act. Actor Kiefer Sutherland, star of such TV shows as 24, is Douglas' grandson, and a noted supporter of Medicare to this day. Top 10Missing image Terry_fox.jpg 2. Terry Fox On October 17, the top 10 were revealed in alphabetical order, and on November 29 the top 10 were announced in order of votes (with the pictures below following the same pattern):
AdvocatesIn broadcast order:
Top 5011. Louis Riel (politician, metis leader) 21. Unknown Soldier (soldiers) 29. Jim Carrey (film actor, comedian, writer, producer) 38. Mario Lemieux (professional ice hockey player) 49. William Lyon Mackenzie King (prime minister) Comments and CriticismsSome critics have said the format used to select the "top 10" was not completely honest since CBC knew the ranking order of the nominees as determined by popular vote, but did not reveal this information. This format is identical to that of the Greatest Britons series and was designed to encourage a more informed vote as the feature documentaries were run. At least three members of the top 50 got into the list by an active mass-voting campaign among that individual's loyal, well-organized followers. Kin founder Harold A. Rogers, DJ Hal Anderson, and Bahá'í activist Mary Maxwell all benefitted from an active grassroots campaign to get their names included in the list. CBC openly admitted this, and recognized that these three esoteric individuals are probably quite unknown to the general public. Others complained that all the top 10 were men and all but Suzuki are white. Some critics have complained that the large number of entertainers on the list, like Jim Carrey and Avril Lavigne, reflects Canadians confusing popularity with greatness. In particular, Don Cherry's inclusion in the top 10 upset many Canadians, especially considering it forced out figures they believe are more worthy like Louis Riel and Jean Vanier (Don Cherry supported Sir John A. Macdonald as the Greatest Canadian). A few members of the list were not "Canadians" in the sense we think of the term today, but rather figures who were associated with some period of early Canadian history, before Canada was a nation. These include the American Indian leader Tecumseh, who never resided in Canada, and Laura Secord and Sir Isaac Brock, who were both British figures associated with the 1812 War (before Canadian Confederation). Eight of the top 50 could be considered French Canadians, ignoring the percentage of Francophones included as the Unknown Soldier. Tecumseh, Suzuki, and Louis Riel were the only non-Caucasians on the list. Many of the top 50 Greatest Canadians' careers have actually been spent with the CBC. David Suzuki and Don Cherry are current on-air personalities, Rick Mercer currently hosts a comedy series, Ernie Coombs was Mr. Dressup for decades on the network, while comedians like John Candy (guest on King of Kensington, lead on Dr. Zonk and the Zunkins and a regular on SCTV) Michael J. Fox (guest on The Magic Lie, star of Leo and Me), and Mike Myers (guest on King of Kensington) all made their first credited TV appearances on the CBC. Alexander Graham Bell was also on the 100 Great Britons list and is the only nominee to appear on more than one Greatest shortlist. While the Unknown Soldier was also one of the top 100 Great Britons, this is technically not the same person in the two contests. The next 50CBC also published the next 50, although they did not appear on the show. 55. Glenn Gould (pianist) 67. Patrick Roy (ice hockey goaltender) 78. Robert Munsch (children?s author) 90. Bryan Adams (singer, songwriter) External links
Other Great People100 Greatest Britons, Unsere Besten, De Grootste Nederlander, Great South Africans, and Suuret Suomalaiset.
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