
Ottawa, Sept 2025 - Some YMA Board members spent time with Senator Tony Ince and his team to put into context the decline of Canadian Children’s content was a privilege. Today’s Canadian kids deserve to grow up with their own stories too. For those of us who were raised on Mr. Dressup, Magic School Bus, Big Comfy Couch, Franklin, Babar, Degrassi, 6TEEN and dozens more, we need to continue to demand the same for our kids.
Ottawa, Sept 2025 - Some YMA Board members spent time with Senator Tony Ince and his team to put into context the decline of Canadian Children’s content was a privilege. Today’s Canadian kids deserve to grow up with their own stories too. For those of us who were raised on Mr. Dressup, Magic School Bus, Big Comfy Couch, Franklin, Babar, Degrassi, 6TEEN and dozens more, we need to continue to demand the same for our kids.
Thanks to the Canadian Media Producers Association (CMPA) and Kat Kelly Hayduk, for organizing it, and to Athena Georgaklis, Steve Couture and Ken Faier for working together to push this message up the hill…literally.
Together with Lisa Broadfoot from CMPA, we had an in-depth conversation about the decline in funding and production volume of Canadian children's programming, its implications for our national storytelling, and the need for a course correction to create the next Canadian classic, alongside Mr. Dressup, The Big Comfy Couch, or Paw Patrol.
Owning our stories and ensuring kids grow up watching content that reflects their communities is critical to defend our cultural sovereignty.
To be continued