The This Hour Has 22 Minutes reference article from the English Wikipedia on 24-Apr-2004
(provided by Fixed Reference: snapshots of Wikipedia from wikipedia.org)

This Hour Has 22 Minutes

Have you considered sponsoring a child
22 Minutes logo
This Hour Has 22 Minutes is a Canadian television comedy. Begun in 1993, the show focuses on Canadian politics, combining news parody, sketch comedy and satirical editorials. Originally featuring Cathy Jones, Rick Mercer, Greg Thomey and Mary Walsh, the series featured satirical sketches of the weekly news and Canadian political events. The show's format is a mock news program, intercut with comic sketches and humorous interviews of public figures.

The show will return for its twelfth season in October 2004. Salter Street Films produced the series until the 2003-2004 season. Alliance Atlantis will now produce it.

Recognized with 24 Gemini Awards, including 5 for its most recent season, 22 Minutes is broadcast on the CBC Television network. It is taped before a studio audience in Halifax, Nova Scotia.

Table of contents
1 Cast
2 Regular characters and segments
3 Other memorable segments
4 Famous stunts
5 Specials
6 Origin of Name
7 External links

Cast


Former members

(
View Photo)

Regular characters and segments

Other memorable segments

Comedian Rick Mercer and then-Prime Minister of Canada Jean Chretien at a Harvey's

Famous stunts

Poutine

1999-2000 - During the American election campaign of 2000, Rick Mercer approached Republican presidential candidate George W. Bush on a campaign stop in Michigan, asking for comment on the news that Bush had received the endorsement of Canadian prime minister "Jean Poutine". (The then-prime minister's name was Jean Chrétien, and he had certainly not endorsed Bush.)

Bush accepted the endorsement with a short and grateful speech to the 22 Minutes cameras, which aired as part of the show's regular Talking to Americans feature.

Stockwell/Doris petition

2000-01 - Often cited as the show's best joke. The sketch was aired during the federal election campaign in 2000, and consisted of a staged rant by Rick Mercer.

When former Canadian Alliance leader Stockwell Day ran for Prime Minister of Canada, he proposed a mechanism to call for a referendum. A petition on any particular subject which gathered at least 100,000 signatures of voting age citizens, would automatically trigger a national referendum.

Mercer's "rant" asked viewers to log on to the 22 Minutes website, and sign an online petition asking the party leader to change his name to Doris Day (after the singer/actress). Producers claim to have obtained in excess of 1,200,000 online votes. This was cheerfully admitted to be a stunt unhampered by the rigours of an Elections Canada-controlled petition. Although the skit had no effect on Alliance policy, it did obtain international publicity for the show and contributed to the general air of farce surrounding Day's election campaign. Day did, however, have a very appropriate response to the petition: "Que sera, sera." View Video Clip

Oilers vs Canadiens

Raj Binder at the old timers game
2003-04 - Shaun Majumder (as "Raj Binder," bottom left corner) was sent to report on the 2003 outdoors Edmonton Oilers and Montreal Canadiens old timers game, preceding the night's actual NHL regular season game. Raj actually sneaked into all the team photos, causing uproar from the event's unwitting organizers in the days after, when the photos were released to the press.

Specials

Mary Walsh, Greg Thomey, Cathy Jones & Rick Mercer dances at the end of This Hour Has 22 Minutes News Year '98 Special

Origin of Name

This Hour Has 22 Minutes takes its title from the controversial CBC newsmagazine
This Hour Has Seven Days, which ran from 1964 to 1966, and from the fact that a typical half-hour television program actually only lasts twenty-two minutes (the remaining eight minutes being, of course, commercials).

External links