One day it looked destined to be the next West Wing. Next day it's Three's Company without the sophisticated humour.
ABC meets the comedy channel.
What else can you call it?
First there's Not too much to ask starring the former environment minister, backed by a guy who got his professional acting start in tourism commercials. Clyde Jackman keeps going after the federal government for not ponying up money for Cupids.
But, as it turns out, the executive director of the Cupers Cove Foundation packed it in last August after he was getting no where with either the feds and the province in the request for $12 million.
But that's not the funny bit.
Peter Mackenzie was really peeved when the provincial government told the foundation they needed to lower their expectations for provincial cash. Jackman's department tossed $2.0 million on the table against a $12 million "ask", to use the cabinet vernacular these days.
Then Jackman's department went to the feds demanding $7.0 million. Jackman points to Quebec City which got $110 million in federal funding.
But as regular readers already know, that province tossed in 50% of the cost. All Jackman and his predecessor, current intergovernmental affairs minister Tom Hedderson, would do was cough up $6 million over three years ($2.0 million per year, not in total) and the federal cash would have flowed like water.
Those zany ministers are at it again, folks. Every episode you can hear one or the other say: "is it too much to ask?" And from off camera comes the small voice: "Apparently, it was for you."
Then there's 5 Wing. It was supposed to be an action/adventure hour but turned into endless comedy.
Labrador Affairs minister John Hickey likes to issue news releases that lambaste the Harper Conservatives currently running the country for ignoring a base that is crucial for protecting Canada's northern sovereignty. Only last month he was claiming that the woods around Goose Bay were ideal training areas since they could simulate any terrain in the world. But of course both those releases were just a reaction to federal stories.
The comedy here, aside from the really obvious? Hickey campaigned to put Harper in office in the last federal by-election and the Labrador by-election.
In very short order, Danny Williams went from having a political impact to running a comedy/variety show.
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