- Talking to Americans
"Talking To Americans" was a regular feature presented by
Rick Mercer on the Canadianpolitical satire show "This Hour Has 22 Minutes ". It was later spun off into a one-hour special that aired onApril 1 ,2001 on CBC Television.It consisted of interviewing Americans on the street and convincing them to agree with ridiculous statements, amongst others, about their northern neighbour. It uses clips from "22 Minutes" and exclusive clips for this special, which was shown to the studio audience of "22 Minutes".
Material posed
The intent was to satirize perceived American ignorance of Canada and the rest of the world. Examples included:
*asking Americans what they felt about the Russian invasion ofChechnya andSaskatchewan .
*persuading Americans that Canada is getting a five-dollar coin. It would have had a maple leaf on it and it would have been called the "woodie".
*getting several Americans to say thatEdmonton should be bombed.
*telling residents ofChicago that Canada was considering changing its name to Chicago, and asking them what they felt about that idea.
*asking if Americans should try to liberateNelson Mandela .
*persuading Americans to congratulate Canada on legalizingVCRs or adopting the twenty-four-hour day, (ex-Iowa governorTom Vilsack was fooled by this one).
*various political controversies involving one or more Canadianprovince s.
*congratulating the Canadian government on building a dome over its "nationaligloo " (apparently a downsized version of theUnited States Capitol made out ofice ) to protect it from global warming (one of the interview subjects so fooled wasArkansas governor Mike Huckabee ).
*agreeing that the U.S. should bombSaskatchewan or send ground troops intoGilles Duceppe .
*having Americans congratulate Canada on legalizinginsulin (although it was a Canadian who first discovered the substance).
*proposing the idea that a Canadian company actually had the mining rights toMount Rushmore due to theplutonium within (plutonium is also asynthetic element ).
*suggesting that when Canada would make a replica ofMount Rushmore , they might addWilliam Howard Taft ,Richard Nixon , andBrian Mulroney - at one point, a woman objected to Taft, saying that he did not best display American qualities, but she was fine with adding Brian Mulroney, former Prime Minister of Canada.
*congratulating Canada for getting its first university.
*congratulating Canada for getting a grade 9 and a volunteer fire station.
*changing the words in the Canadian Anthem and asking Americans to sing it.
*congratulating Canada for officially joiningNorth America .
*controversy around the reconstruction of the historic "Peter Mann's Bridge", named after "Prime Minister Peter Mann" (actually a pun on the name of Canadian journalistPeter Mansbridge ).
*asking ifJean Chrétien -Pinochet should be charged with crimes against humanity.
*asking students and professors atColumbia University to sign apetition asking Canadians to discontinue the practice of abandoning the elderly on ice floes.
*congratulating Prime MinisterTim Horton on getting aCanadian s _do. seal hunt and the Torontopolar bear hunt.
*asking Americans how manystates Canada has (Canada has provinces, not states).
*wishing Canadians a "HappyStockwell Day ".
*congratulating Canadians on classifyingLabrador Retriever s as elephants as to prevent them from being used for hard labour.
*congratulating the newly-elected prime minister of Chinese descent.
*tricking Americans into thinking that Canada did not have "high-tech" things such asairplanes , paved roads orFM radio .
*asking if Canada should replace its propeller planes with jet planes.
*saying that the country was allowing its Irish citizens to vote, stating that it was previously prevented by the French Canadian separatist movement.
*stating that in the last 30 years Canadians did not have any election recounts because Canadians usebirch branches orpine cone s as voting tokens.
*congratulating Canadians on offering bilingual tours ofJoe Clark 's Hole.
*asking if Canada should have anavy even though it is a land-locked country. (Canada is not in fact landlocked, having shores on the Atlantic, Pacific, andArctic Ocean s, and has a navy, theCanadian Forces Maritime Command or MARCOM)Some of the Americans interviewed seemed just to be playing along, although professors at Columbia, Harvard, and
Stanford University were consistently fooled by absurdities such as the "Saskatchewan seal hunt". The only Americans who were shown outsmarting Mercer were a university student who spent her time laughing at him (before finally answering), and a small child who pointed out to his mother, who was also tricked, that Canada had provinces, not states.George W. Bush
The most famous segment, aired in 2000, featured Mercer asking then-presidential candidate
George W. Bush – who had previously stated that "you can't stump me on world leaders" – for his reaction to an endorsement by Canadian Prime Minister "JeanPoutine ".Bush said he looked forward to working together with his future counterpart to the north, praising
free trade and Canada. That said, Bush never actually used the name of Poutine and only failed to correct Mercer on the name. A few years later, when Bush made his first official visit to Canada, he said during a speech, "There's a prominent citizen who endorsed me in the 2000 election, and I wanted a chance to finally thank him for that endorsement. I was hoping to meet Jean Poutine." [ [http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2004/12/20041201-4.html President Discusses Strong Relationship with Canada ] ]2001 special
The special was a co-production between
Island Edge andSalter Street Films .Although the show received
Gemini Award nominations,Rick Mercer thought it would be inappropriate to make fun of American-Canadian relations so close to the events ofSeptember 11, 2001 and requested that the Academy of Canadian Cinema and Television pull the nominations. Nonetheless, the CBC repeated the special on occasion well after those events."Talking to Americans" attracted 2.7 million Canadian viewers, making it the highest-rated comedy special in the history of CBC.
ee also
*
Jaywalking (The Tonight Show)
*CNNNN References
External links
* [http://www.cbc.ca/programguide/program/index.jsp?program=Talking+To+Americans CBC Television - "Talking To Americans"]
*imdb title|0282195
* [http://www.stephenville.org/americans/ Stephenville: Talking to Americans]
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