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Connecting the Publishing Pieces

March 24, 2018 by admin

Best-selling books. International distribution deals. Acclaim for design excellence. These are a few of the hallmarks of success for any publisher, and all of them can be listed among this year’s accomplishments of University of Regina Press.

From a quest to define Canadian cuisine in Speaking in Cod Tounges, to the efforts of a veteran Rwandan peacekeeper to confront and change Canada’s military mental health system in After the War, U of R Press titles appeared on best-seller lists throughout the past year. The publisher recently sold UK rights to Zed Books in London for the soon-to-be-released Psychedelic Revolutionaries, recounting the history of hallucinogenic drug research in Saskatchewan. And, Memoirs of a Muhindi, a first-person account of what happens when nations turn against entire religious and ethnic groups, was named one the Alcuin Society of Canada’s top three best designed Canadian books of 2017, and was chosen as a winning design by the U.S. based Association of University Presses.

“Commercial success in publishing requires excellence in many areas,” said Morgan Tunzelmann, sales and marketing manager for the U of R Press. “Creative Saskatchewan’s investments allow us to focus on three essential pieces of that puzzle including: semi-annual travel to major media markets like New York and Toronto, more prominent advertising across Canada and around the world, and extraordinary cover and jacket design that captures book buyers’ interest.”

In coming months, the U of R Press intends to explore digital collaborations to expand the reach and impact of its publications. “We’re working on a virtual reality project based on The Education of Augie Merasty, and the production of a documentary and original song recording based on Firewater, two of our best-selling books that reveal essential perspectives of the damage inflicted on Indigenous peoples by colonization,” said U of R Press director and publisher, Bruce Walsh. “Innovative digital storytelling gives us the opportunity to share stories with wider audiences which, in the end, is the most important goal of any publisher.”

Filed Under: Book Publishing

New TV Series “Building Bridges” Airs On City

February 21, 2018 by admin

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

February 21, 2018

On Mobile? Click here to view video.

Wavelength Entertainment, an award-winning international media company, is pleased to announce the broadcast of its new original series beginning Monday Feb 26 at 10pm CST on City.

BRIDGING BORDERS is an emotional, eye-opening and inspirational documentary series that goes beyond the international headlines to showcase the incredible stories of everyday Canadians who band together to sponsor refugee families from overseas, then help them adjust to a new life in Canada.

Each episode tells a unique heart-wrenching yet up-lifting story. For the Canadians wanting to make a difference, it’s an anxious journey of raising money, deciding to accept a family, renting and furnishing a new home for them, then anxiously awaiting complete strangers at the airport. For the arriving refugees, that airport is both the end of a difficult journey, but also the start of a new beginning filled with culture shock and anxiety, but also relief and the promise of a safe new life.

Canada remains the only country in the world that has a private refugee sponsorship program – one that many other countries are trying to emulate.

Episode 1 – No Longer Refugees: Monday Feb 26 at 10pm CST Moved by images of the refugee crisis overseas, a group of neighbourhood friends decide to sponsor a family of six refugees from Sudan, hoping they can bring them to safety in Canada and help them adjust to life in a strange new land.

Episode 2 – From Syria to Saskatoon: March 5 at 10pm CST After fleeing the war in Syria, a young refugee couple and their one-year old child get a chance to start a new life when a group of Canadians decides to sponsor them and bring them to safety.

Episode 3 – Where is my Family: March 12 at 10pm CST After fleeing war-torn Aleppo, a young Syrian woman enlists a sympathetic group of Canadians to see if they can help her bring the rest of her family, still stuck overseas in Lebanon, to safety.

Episode 4 – The Universal Language: March 19 at 10pm CST With the refugee crisis in the news, a well-known Canadian children’s choir decides to try and make a difference. Raising money with the help of song, they embark on an emotional journey, hoping to provide a safe new home in Canada to a young family who has fled Eritrea.

“Bridging Borders is an emotional series about people helping people / families helping families. It is truly inspiring to create a new project that has the potential to share these Canadian stories with viewers throughout the world and have a positive impact upon many lives. It would not be possible to tell these stories without the ongoing support/involvement from MCC Saskatchewan, Creative Saskatchewan’s Screen-Based Media Production Grant, Rogers Media Inc., Joanne McDonald and Will Dixon at City Saskatchewan, and other partners.” says Christopher Triffo (Producer/Showrunner).

CONTACT: JEFF STECYK PRINCIPAL / EXECUTIVE PRODUCER WAVELENGTH ENTERTAINMENT jeff@wavelength-entertainment.com

Filed Under: Film & TV

Spatial Audio Enhances the VR Experience

February 6, 2018 by admin

When you think of virtual reality, those big black goggles always spring to mind. They block out the real world, and visually immerse you in a digital world.

But what does that virtual world sound like?

With an investment from a Creative Saskatchewan Business Capacity Grant, a Regina company is working on “spatial audio” tech. It creates 3D audio to enhance the visual virtual experience.

Mike McNaughton of Twisted Pair Productions dropped by the Creative Saskatchewan office to offer staff a demo of his spatial audio project. Strapping on the goggles, we were treated to a band’s live performance. Each musician was located in a different part of the hall. As you looked around the room at each individual musician, the instrument they were playing became louder as the others faded into the background.

As a leader in virtual entertainment technology, Twisted Pair Productions is always looking for new tech, and new ways to enhance the 3D virtual experience. The spatial audio project is another step forward in making the virtual world more immersive, and more entertaining.

“When potential customers can touch and feel the project, it commands a great deal of credibility as its clear we have a functional product and we are capable of producing their next project,” McNaughton said. “The grant provided to us greatly assisted us to build our skills and capacity in Virtual Reality and 360° video production.”

Filed Under: Digital Game Development

Amy Nelson, Australia and the Stampede

July 11, 2017 by admin

Saskatchewan country music singer/songwriter Amy Nelson first took Australia by storm with the support of a Market Travel Grant from Creative Saskatchewan.

These days, Amy’s continuing to capitalize on the relationships she made down under!

Not only will Amy return to perform in Australia later this month, but right now, Australia’s Kix Country Radio Network has hired Amy to report on the Calgary Stampede for their listeners across the country. You can keep up to Amy’s adventures below!

Congratulations, Amy, on building your international reputation! We’re proud to support your pursuit of commercial success.

nhttps://youtu.be/V12so9zDnsc

Filed Under: Music

Music Video Scores 16 Million Views

July 10, 2017 by admin

https://youtu.be/B9FzVhw8_bY

With more than 16 million views on YouTube, it’s fair to suggest that The Dead South’s music video, In Hell I’ll be in Good Company, has now reached “certified viral” status.

The Dead South, based out of Regina, successfully applied for a Market and Export Development Grant from Creative Saskatchewan to help them make the video. The plan was to reach new fans, but the band didn’t expect to connect with tens of millions of them.

“Since the video took off, we’ve been getting e-mails from around the world,” says band front man, Nate Hilts. “People write to say they’re into the music and that they’re not alone – that we’ve got a whole fan base there – so we should book a show. We’re getting notes like that from across North America, from Europe, and even South America.”

Hilts is quick to point out that the concept for the video, which features the quartet performing the song in front of an ever-changing backdrop of real-life settings, came from producer and director Zach Wilson at Two Brothers Films.

“The original idea was to show how widespread the reach of this amazing band is, the variety of places they play, and how hard working The Dead South really is,” says Wilson. “We all have a close attachment to Regina and Saskatchewan, so you’ll notice the video begins at home, before taking us out on the road, then ends by returning to Saskatchewan.”

The concept required the band to play the song in several dozen real-life locations, more than 150 times. “To get the effect we wanted was a huge challenge. The camera movements had to be timed very precisely to particular beats of the song, and piecing it all together in the end required leaving hours and hours of footage on the cutting room floor, but we’re very happy with the result.”

Hilts is excited about the opportunities that can follow from the viral success of the video. “As a band we agreed that if we were going to do this, we we’re going to go all in,” Hilts explains. “We want to be successful, and that means that when Americans, or Europeans, or South Americans say they like what you’re doing, you’ve got to be willing to get up and go!

Filed Under: Music

Cameras Roll on SuperGrid

June 7, 2017 by admin

Creative Saskatchewan is pleased to announce its investment in the production of SuperGrid, a new feature film produced by Hugh Patterson.

Patterson successfully applied to Creative Saskatchewan’s Screen-Based Media Production Grant. Creative Saskatchewan’s investment means cameras are rolling in Saskatchewan right now. As SuperGrid films in Saskatchewan, it is expected to spend approximately one million dollars in Saskatchewan businesses and on salaries for Saskatchewan workers.

In addition to investing in production, Creative Saskatchewan also supported SuperGrid at its earliest stage by sponsoring a seat in the National Screen Institute’s Features-First Program, where Patterson developed the project.

SuperGrid tells the story of a young smuggler who is forced to make a run on the road that took the life of his younger sister.

Creative Saskatchewan is proud to support Saskatchewan filmmakers through all stages of feature filmmaking, from development through production to post-production and marketing.

Filed Under: Film & TV

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