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- The telling of an Inuit legend of an evil spirit causing strife in the community and one warrior's endurance and battle of its menace.
- An inspirational tale about the relationship between two Sioux brothers living on the Pine Ridge reservation.
- Renegadepress.com follows the story of best friends Jack Sinclair and Zoey Jones who are determined to expose what's really going on in the lives of today's youth by using their teen generated e-zine 'the renegade press.com' as their platform.
- J.J. Harper, a First Nations chief, is gunned down by police constable Robert Cross on his way home one snowy night in downtown Winnipeg.
- CAUTION: May Contain Nuts is a fast paced sketch comedy series with a unique brand of Canadian Aboriginal humour. These assorted Nuts are a veritable United Nations troupe of performers, and no topic is off limits to this over the edge team. From Native Culture and Canadian culture, to Pop Culture and Multi-Culture, the Nuts will tackle anything. Every episode is jam packed with a ton of fast and funny skits featuring well known characters from previous seasons as well as a host of new characters that are sure to become old favourites. Want an 80s hair band music video? How about a revision of history with Ghandi or Shakespeare? With zombies, mobsters, super heroes, villains, anarchists, and of course cowboys and Indians; the Nuts are guaranteed to have you busting a gut in the aisle in three seconds flat! The result - a side-splitting and highly entertaining comedy experience.
- Wacky humor, yoga, and recovery shake it up in a spirited new comedy about a washed up hockey player who inherits a Juice Bar on one condition-he has to get and stay sober.
- Life partners Delmer and Marta of First Nations descent have moved from the "Rez" - the Moon Moose First Nation - to the "big city" of Morningside. Unlike their plan which was for Delmer to get a job in the Alberta oil patch, Marta, sincere to a fault, has become the household breadwinner being the accidental lifestyle host of the local television morning news program, Good Morning Morningside, while Delmer supports her in any way he can, which generally means not very often in a practical way despite his good intentions. Their life in Morningside is an interesting one if only in dealing with their friends and colleagues: Tom Bobadell, their mechanic/cowboy neighbor, Delmer's new best friend and an emotional wreck of a man; Creston, the show's self-absorbed and control-freak of a producer; the show's news co-hosts, ultra-ambitious Lisa Irons and deer-in-the-headlights Chad Hunter; sarcastic and acerbic-tongued Lloyd, the show's floor manager; and the station's interns, Wesley, always searching for love despite his awkward ways, and impressionable Keltie, who is always aiming to please without always achieving the desired result.
- A young Inuk mother wants to build a fresh future, but in her small Arctic community where everyone knows each other's business, it won't be easy.
- An Algonquin teenager becomes the superhero Kagagi to stop the evil Windigo from destroying the world.
- The archaeological record of the First Peoples of North America is scattered, fragmented, and could be lost forever. Guided by Indigenous archaeologist, Dr. Rudy Reimer (Squamish), and two adventure loving co-hosts Jenifer Brousseau (Ojibway/French) and Jacob Pratt (Dakota/ Saulteaux), we are taken on a Vision Quest through the mountains, waterways, plains, and Arctic landscapes of Canada's ancient archaeological record to discover first-hand the untold story of the original peoples of North America. For the first time in archaeological history twelve thousand years of human inhabitation of this land is vividly brought to life through thirteen episodes of Wild Archaeology.
- Tiga the wolf pup, Gertie the Gopher and Gavin the Goose are stuffed toys who live with Jodie and Jason, their Dad and grandmother, Kokum. But when there are no adults around, the toys come to life.
- A documentary written from the Inuit perspective on the oddities of Qallunaat (the Inuit word for white people). A mix of satire, comedy and indigenous facts on everything from why white people are obsessed with owning things to their odd dating habits.
- Chaos & Courage is a half-hour documentary series showcasing the personal and professional lives of Canadian Aboriginal women working in first response roles, including police officers, paramedics, urban rescue workers, and firefighters.
- Live-action and animation combine to tell the Southern Tutchone story of how a First Nations family in the early 1800s survives when a volcanic eruption in Indonesia throws Canada's north into an extended winter.
- In the fight to protect mother earth, join host Simon Baker on a one of a kind, global road trip deep inside native communities passionately defending their way of life against overwhelming environmental threats. From New Zealand to Ecuador, Hawaii to Australia, Native Planet is a six part documentary series that transports you to the front lines of an aboriginal inspired fight to protect mother earth. Travel the globe with series host and acclaimed First Nations actor Simon Baker and go deep into fascinating native communities waging a David and Goliath fight for the environment, their rights and ultimately, their survival. Native Planet takes you behind the headlines as Simon gains intimate access to native leaders and organizations behind some of the most important environmental challenges on the planet today. Entertaining, informative, fast paced and inspirational, Native Planet is about the unique spiritual connection First Peoples have with mother earth and their passion to defend it. Each one hour episode shares a character driven story where internationally recognized native communities confront threats to the environmental, their territory, culture and identity. As we experience through season one of Native Planet, the loss of habitat, radical changes in weather patterns and the sudden disappearance of natural species are often most evident to native peoples, the true stewards of our planet. With the series delivering front row access to some of the most compelling environmental challenges in the world today, Native Planet is crafted to attract an international TV and Web audience concerned with global environmental issues, the sustainability of native peoples and the future of our planet. Throughout season one's six, one hour TV episodes environmental conflict and threats to native territory often involve the predatory practices of multinational corporations and the complicit involvement of local governments. While Native Planet reveals and raises the voices of unsung Aboriginal heroes, every effort is made to integrate the point of view of antagonistic forces threatening native communities, territory or the environment.
- The price of survival is war
- First Nations kick boxing champion Trevor "The Red Dragon" Queezenence has a problem. It's not his over-protective girlfriend, his zealous trainer or his diabetic condition - it's that he won't settle for second best. After losing a championship match to diabetic shock, Trevor vows to recover and reclaim his title. John (his trainer) shares this desire to regain glory and has spent long months helping Trevor to get back in the ring, much to the disapproval of Trevor's girlfriend Janet - a nurse who knows a thing or two about blood sugar levels, cardiac arrest and getting out while the getting's good. She also knows that Trevor is not going to listen. On the eve of his comeback bout, Trevor comes to accept the disease and it's limitations and realizes that although he can't ignore it, doesn't mean he has to give into it.
- Lost Bones details the life and death of Lakota leader Sitting Bull and the stories that surround his burial and final resting place. Some say he is still buried at an old US army fort in North Dakota, the site of his first official burial. Others are adamant his Earthly remains were moved by Ghouls to Mobridge, South Dakota in April of 1953... and now another theory has surfaced. Sitting Bull's body was spirited away - shortly after his death - and taken to the Turtle Mountains of Manitoba. Through interviews with Elders, Experts, Historians and dramatic reenactments Lost Bones attempts to solve the mystery of where Sitting Bulls bones lie today.
- Two interconnected journeys - one Inuit and a parallel non-native one. Both are in search of the elusive and mythical Nuliajuk, a female deity whose presence is seen in countless works of Inuit art.
- Sisters Dylan, Bowie and Hendrix Spence must move from rural Manitoba to Winnipeg's north end after the tragic death of their parents. There, the sisters explore the differences that drive us apart and the love that brings us back together.
- Who's cool now? The questionable prevalence of Indigenous values in Hollywood blockbusters is debated in this short. What does the influence of this trend have on Indigenous people themselves? You'll be amused to see.
- Hidden Plague examines the HIV epidemic among Aboriginal people in Western Canada.
- Story of Qalupalik, a part-human sea creature that lives deep in the Arctic Ocean.
- RepREZentin' in Fort Chip is a dramatic short examining date rape and alcohol abuse on an isolated reservation in northern Alberta.
- Join young Tlingit warrior Anash on his quest to re-unite all parts of the Sun-Rock in order to fulfill a prophecy to attain peace and protect a fragile land.
- Artie the ant and his friends set out on new adventures that will bring them tentacle to tentacle with other ant nations. With his happy go lucky personality and their passion for music and all their relations, it is no surprise that they find friends among the ants their elders would call their natural born foes. In fact, Artie and his friends meet new friends from other nations and they work together to create a place where all the nations can work together in peace and harmony.
- Activists file a human-rights complaint against the Canadian government's inadequate funding of services for Indigenous children claiming it's discriminatory.
- When asked about living in the natural world, many First Nations people reply, "It's in the blood." We selected six Aboriginal men and women from the city and had them spend six days out in the natural world, to relive history as their Grandfathers and Grandmothers experienced it. Just how much nature is really left in their blood?
- Aboriginal Canadian women with diverse approaches to the healing process confront the current health crisis plaguing Canada's First Nations communities. For each, life's calling has been a struggle. Braided together with music and personal healing stories, traditional healing and modern medicine join forces to collectively address the physical, mental and spiritual health of all Aboriginal Canadians.
- In the wake of another crime in a small reserve community a young man arrives bringing hope, inspiration and an important message.
- Takes us on a beautiful journey across North America from the Canadian Arctic to Hawaii. Each episode is a new journey as we discover an "off the beaten path" destination.
- Four fighters from two rival boxing clubs will train together, learn from each other, and then fight. Pushed to their physical and emotional limits, each boxer must dig deep inside themselves and find their inner warrior.
- Hilarity ensues when two wanna-be players in the Hollywood North film industry, one a starving no-budget filmmaker, the other a struggling actor, meet with executive producer Lorne Cardinal (who acted alongside Al Pacino in Christopher Nolan's film 'Insomnia' and plays a parody of himself) to pitch an idea for a new blockbuster movie.
- A boy seeks revenge on his cruel mother. Based on the epic Inuit legend "The Blind Boy and the Loon."
- To beat hockey hotshot Melanie, T-Bear must learn a new and difficult skill: teamwork.
- Tara works the case of a young woman whose cause of death defies logic - The autopsy reveals her heart has been shredded yet there's no visible trauma to her body. The case grows even more disturbing when Tara discovers photos that cast suspicion on her partner Bob. Forensics links the latest victim to the murder of Gabriel and Tara realizes she has an innocent man- Johnny Redden- locked up and a murderer running free. The case explodes in gunfire and tragedy.
- Old wounds are stirred when a missing American tourist washes up on the notorious Dog Island. His body is half eaten and the people of Rabbit Fall are convinced the Weetigo- a creature who takes over humans' souls and turns then into cannibals- is back. The discovery coincides with the return of John Spence, a child killer who cannibalized his victim in one of Rabbit Falls's most haunting crimes. Fear morphs into frenzy and a group of vigilantes sets out to destroy the alleged Weetigo before he strikes again. The case spirals out of control when Tara brings Spence into protective custody.
- Constable Tara Wheaton moves to the town of Rabbit Fall in the Canadian wilderness, where she's directly plunged into the case of a missing girl. Tara has no leads on the missing girl and a murder case seems to be going nowhere when the only witness is a little girl too afraid to speak. The investigation leads Tara into the forest where she makes a disturbing discovery-one that links both cases and ties Tara directly to them.