Entertainment Archives - Broadcast Dialogue https://broadcastdialogue.com/tag/entertainment/ Broadcast industry trends Canada Tue, 26 Aug 2025 16:00:36 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.2 Just Come: A Reflection on 75 Years of WABE and the Future of Media & Entertainment Technology https://broadcastdialogue.com/just-come-a-reflection-on-75-years-of-wabe-and-the-future-of-media-entertainment-technology/ Tue, 26 Aug 2025 14:59:18 +0000 https://broadcastdialogue.com/?p=74383 By Tessa Potter President, Western Association of Broadcast Engineers WABE 2025: Calgary, Alberta | September 29–October 1 Learn more and register at wabe.ca “Just come” is quickly becoming one of […]

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Tessa Potter

By Tessa Potter

President, Western Association of Broadcast Engineers

WABE 2025: Calgary, Alberta | September 29–October 1

Learn more and register at wabe.ca

“Just come” is quickly becoming one of the mottos I use most often when talking about this year’s WABE Media & Entertainment Technology Conference. As we approach our 75th anniversary event in Calgary, Alberta, just under 35 days away, there’s a sense of momentum, reflection, and welcome in the air.

We’re ready to greet old friends and new at the Calgary TELUS Convention Centre this fall from September 29 to October 1. As I took my first real holiday in seven years, driving from Winnipeg to Thunder Bay, down to Duluth and back through International Falls, I found myself thinking about technology, the history of our industry, and where I sit in it. Where are my skills most useful? Where is all this going? And how did we get here?

On that long drive, you can still spot some of the old towers from the Trans Canada Microwave System, now reused for modern tech. It’s a striking visual of our history. On July 1, 1958, that network introduced the country to the possibility of live network television and direct long-distance phone services to Canadians coast to coast. With 139 towers spanning over 6,275 kms, it was the longest network in the world at the time. The impact on Canadian broadcasting was enormous. CBC, using this infrastructure, could now transmit television programming nationally. From my understanding, this was a defining moment when national broadcasting truly began to take hold in Canada.

Fast forward to today, me in the car, trying to read LinkedIn posts debating the relevance of FM radio, all while having no cell signal on the way to Thunder Bay and regretting not downloading more of my Tidal playlist. My husband and I couldn’t agree on a podcast, so we turned to local radio, got a sniff of something different on SiriusXM, or I read poetry aloud from a library book I brought along.

Yes, we streamed a movie in our Airbnb on a Roku TV. But I still wish I had brought a paper map. Google Maps doesn’t always work when your cell signal drops to SOS. It reminded me that 25% of Canadians still live in areas where constant 5G coverage isn’t available. And when Starlink went down recently, I remembered that even the “perfect” systems have limits. The promise of simple plug-and-play satellite internet is compelling, but no technology is without friction.

Even with my background, I can program video routers, newsroom systems, and navigate and learn new systems easily, but on my trip I couldn’t stop my phone’s microphone from cutting out our music every time I tried to search in Google while it was plugged in. It was one of many tech arguments on our trip. Eventually, we just went analogue, possibly because I’m getting old, but more likely because I didn’t want to be frustrated on holiday.

Travelling through small towns and finding hidden gems reminded me how this hand held cell phone can solve problems, create opportunities, and connect us, but it can also be a pain in the ass. More features don’t always mean less work. 

More than anything, it reminded me that people still need breaks. With all the downsizing, small teams, and single-person roles we see now, when someone goes on vacation, the whole project can pause for two weeks.I really appreciate that I work on teams even at WABE where someone can pickup the work and continue the forward motion while you take a break to sample life beyond work with people you love.

And just like that, September is coming. Everyone will come back. The emails will start. Projects need to be finished. New ones need to be started. Promises from spring come due. It’s full force, and it takes a strong team, skilled people, and determination for successful results.

Being a WABE friend, volunteer, or community member is all about this wider industry team. I’m reminded of this every time someone reaches out: “Do you know someone who can fill this job?” or “Do you have advice for a career move?” or “Can you introduce me to someone who can help?” So many of the technical wizards I’ve worked with over the years aren’t on LinkedIn. They don’t post often. They’re modest and busy and effective. But they’re looking, for the right fit, the right work, the right place to be valued.

At WABE, we’ve been working for years to expand beyond broadcast. Our mission has always been to connect the people who work with the tech that creates and distributes content. We know Canada is big and spread out, but the intersection of AV, film, live events, broadcast, and content delivery is where new ideas are born.

Our full program is now live at wabe.ca. You’ll find a little bit of everything: broadcast, audio, video, film tech, AV, and more. Our exhibit hall will feature sales professionals, manufacturers, tech experts, and innovators. It’s the largest gathering in Canada for this type of cross-sector exchange. And we’ve kept the cost low to attend:

  • Free to attend the Exhibit Hall
  • $175 for a full conference pass
  • $15 for our Media Mixer Reunion & 75th Birthday Party on Monday
  • Day passes are available for programming sessions

We are only able to do this because of the generous support of our sponsors—companies who understand our mission and have helped volunteers keep WABE going for 75 years.

We rely on vendor support, sponsorship, and exhibit booth bookings to help cover the cost of renting the venue and producing the event. We’ve always done our best to keep prices affordable. But if you or your company don’t have the bandwidth or budget to contribute financially, we still just want you to come. Meet the community & be a part of it.

If you’ve seen the photo of WABE’s founding members, you might not see yourself reflected in that group, and I get it. I don’t either. But when I look at it, I see people who did similar work. They were learners. They believed in the power of gathering and learning from each other to push an industry forward.

Sure, the Trans Canada Microwave System is gone. Maybe FM radio isn’t flashy to the kids. Maybe cinema cameras with reels or POTS telephone systems feel like relics. But this foundation built a Canadian identity and some really amazing technology right here at home. Today’s tech,5G, IP, software, streaming, immersive audio, hybrid workflows, it all stands on that past. And we need a new generation of leaders who understand how this fits together. This is why we picked our theme: Bridging the Past and Building the Future.

There’s no perfect system, only systems in development and aging ones still in use. That’s why gathering in Calgary this fall matters. We care about keeping this space and making room for a community in Canada for tech conversations across sectors.

So just come.

Come to connect. Come to learn. Come to share what you know.

👉 Explore the full conference program

👉 Register now

👉 Join our mailing list

👉 Follow us on LinkedIn

If you’re a friend of WABE, share our socials. Forward this article. Invite your coworkers. Help us spread the word.

This is the final year of my presidency—and what a way to go out. Our 75th is not just a milestone, it’s a launchpad. We’re looking for new volunteers who understand our vision and mission and want to carry it forward:

  • Help with the website
  • Connect with next year’s speakers
  • Plan the conference
  • Offer marketing expertise
  • Research new sectors and vendors
  • Support the next wave of WABE friends

This is what 75 years of building a media technology community in Canada looks like: people connecting with people about tech!

And the invitation still stands:

Just come.

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Jovanna Burke and Chelsea Hobbs launch Grand Boulevard Entertainment https://broadcastdialogue.com/jovanna-burke-and-chelsea-hobbs-launch-grand-boulevard-entertainment/ Mon, 16 Jun 2025 19:30:44 +0000 https://broadcastdialogue.com/?p=73568 Actors-turned-creators Jovanna Burke (Supernatural) and Chelsea Hobbs (Lords of Dogtown) have partnered to launch Grand Boulevard Entertainment, a Vancouver-based production company with a mission to amplify under-represented voices in film […]

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Actors-turned-creators Jovanna Burke (Supernatural) and Chelsea Hobbs (Lords of Dogtown) have partnered to launch Grand Boulevard Entertainment, a Vancouver-based production company with a mission to amplify under-represented voices in film and television.

Burke and Hobbs officially launched their new venture at the Banff World Media Festival, where the duo took projects in development and pre-production to the market, including Puck Bunnies, a mockumentary about hockey moms, and The Sandwich Generation, a comedy about parenting.

“As a woman of Hispanic descent and as a woman period, my personal experiences navigating an industry with limited roles for women like herself fuels our mission at Grand Boulevard to create authentic, diverse stories both in front of and behind the camera and make opportunities for other women creatives like ourselves,” said Burke, in a company announcement.

“This partnership marks an exciting new chapter for us, with this launch we are deepening our commitment to bold, inclusive storytelling through our work. The power of presence, authenticity, and building spaces—both literal and metaphorical—where all stories belong is key to our mission,” added Hobbs.

The first project under the partnership is the Creative Sisterhood Podcast, set to launch this summer, spotlighting female creatives forging their own paths in film and television. A yet-to-be announced series will also head to camera this summer, as well as a scripted comedy, procedural drama and a scripted series for teens in active development. Their short film Palindrome is currently on the festival circuit and screened at the Inside Out LGBTQ film festival in May.

In addition to her acting work on The Flash and Supernatural, Burke has been branching out as a producer over the past decade, including co-creating the Canadian Screen Award-nominated web series The True Heroines. Her short film JANE screened at more than 30 festivals worldwide and she has produced multiple feature films including Parallel, and A Brother’s Bond.

Hobbs started her acting career at the age of seven, including her breakout role in fantasy adventure film, Snow Queen, and as Emily Kmetko in ABC Family drama Make It or Break It. Based in Vancouver, she continues to act in Hallmark projects like the Martha’s Vineyard Mystery movie series, while also developing original TV projects.

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LISTEN: Randy Lennox on the launch of Departure Festival + Conference https://broadcastdialogue.com/listen-randy-lennox-on-the-launch-of-departure-festival-conference/ Wed, 30 Apr 2025 22:39:42 +0000 https://broadcastdialogue.com/?p=72796 Departure Festival + Conference gets set to launch its debut edition May 6 – 11, in Toronto, a “reimagined” Canadian Music Week at the intersection of music, comedy, arts and […]

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Departure Festival + Conference gets set to launch its debut edition May 6 – 11, in Toronto, a “reimagined” Canadian Music Week at the intersection of music, comedy, arts and tech.

Randy Lennox, the co-founder and CEO of Loft Entertainment, joins Broadcast Dialogue – The Podcast on the eve of the inaugural event to talk about their new venture with Oak View Group, and building on the CMW legacy, as Departure sets out to super-serve Canada’s creative community.

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