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Happy Ho Ho to you and yours!

From all of us at anythingbut.com to you all of you, at thepeoplewhoreadthissiteeachday.com, have an awesome Christmas!
Ho Ho Ho!
Dan and Dave

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Guess what!

A Milestone Is Approaching!
Sometime over the next week we will be publishing our 5000th post here on anythingbut.com.
Woo hoo!
Thanks for getting us here.

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Maybe now MY songs will get played and MY scripts will be purchased! This might be good for us all!

Report recommends overhaul of CanCon rules
OTTAWA (CP) — Canadian content rules in film and television need a dramatic overhaul and should be centralized under one federal organization, says a report commissioned by the Heritage Department.
The convoluted points system to determine Canadian content has remained relatively unchanged for 30 years and is frequently working at cross-purposes, says the report by Francois Macerola.
“The federal government’s film and television policy infrastructure is fragmented and, as a result, it lacks coherence, synergy and transparency,” says the report released Tuesday.
Macerola recommends replacing the points system with one based more heavily upon creative expenditures, including weighted categories for money spent on authors, creative collaborators, performers and technicians.
Productions should be elegible for greater tax and direct government support as their Canadian content increases.
Canadian ownship rules should remain and new rules be enacted requiring that the top three creative positions of any production — writer, director and lead performer — be Canadian, subject to a series of options “providing the necessary flexibility for producers.”
Subject matter should be left solely to the creators of a production, Macerola recommends.
He also would like an exemption on the rule limiting TV advertising to 12 minutes per hour that would permit extra ads promoting Canadian feature films.
This is the fourth report released this year on the state of the Canadian television industry and even industry players appear swamped by the deluge.
Halifax-based producer Wayne Grigsby says he’s not sure how all the studies fit together, although clearly the common thread is that the current “chaotic” funding system needs to be fixed.
“Whether laying in another level of bureaucrats to make decisions is going to help, I don’t know,” he said from the set of his new series for W, A Guy and a Girl.
“Cleaner and simpler and more co-ordinated would be a definite blessing and make life easier for everyone involved. Surely to God we can find a simpler way to do this.”
That’s precisely the failure of the Macerola report, said Brian Topp, executive director of ACTRA Toronto Performers, the actors’ union.
Canadian content rules need to be simpler, tighter and clearer, he said.
“This report takes us in exactly the opposite direction. The proposed new rules are more complex, more permissive and would dilute, not strengthen, Canadian content.”
Topp contends that the Macerola proposal would allow productions with lead foreign actors, writers and directors to be defined as Cancon and suggests the report be shelved as a deserving addition to the government’s collection of unhelpful studies.
Three reports had previously been released this spring:
* In March, a coalition representing TV actors, directors, writers and technicians unions declared a state of crisis in prime time and urged the federal government, private broadcasters and regulators to do better.
The Coalition of Canadian Audio-visual Unions called for more spending on dramatic series and for a tightening of the rules that define drama content.
* Last month, broadcaster Trina McQueen submitted her long-awaited report to the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission, calling on Ottawa to invest more money in homegrown television to halt the erosion of English-language drama. She proposed the expenditure of $30 million annually over five years.
* Last week, a massive, 872-page report prepared by the Commons heritage committee under the chairmanship of Liberal MP Clifford Lincoln recommended increased funding — and parliamentary accountability — for the CBC, a hold on further foreign ownership in Canadian media and a moratorium on media convergence, all to improve Canadian broadcasting.
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Recommendations
OTTAWA (CP) — Recommendations from a report released Tuesday entitled Canadian Content in the 21st Century in Film and Television Productions: A Matter of Cultural Identity:
* Create a single arms-length organization called the Canadian Content Commission responsible for certifying Canadian content in television and film productions.
* Replace the current points system for determining Canadian content with a weighted system based on creative expenditures.
* Distribution of Canadian feature films should continue to be reserved for Canadian-owned and controlled companies.
* Provide government financial support to help Canadian distributors establish regional services.
* Allow broadcasters to promote Canadian feature films with ads that exceed the 12-minutes per hour advertising limit on TV.
* Continue to recognize co-productions with foreign producers as Canadian content, develop minimum requirements for such co-productions and seek preferential treatment deals with European Union partners.
* Help aboriginal producers in Canada find creative and financial partnerships with aboriginal producers abroad.

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Its a very, very slow news day so here is a great joke

Chicken Little
One day the first grade teacher was reading the story of Chicken Little to her class.
She came to the part of the story where Chicken Little tried to warn the farmer.
She read, “…. and so Chicken Little went up to the farmer and said, “The sky is falling, the sky is falling!”
The teacher paused then asked the class, “And what do you think that farmer said?”
One little boy raised his hand and said, “I think he said: ‘Holy Shit! A talking chicken!'”

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It’s the end of the year as we know it and I feel fine

Happy New Year And Thanks!
This has been a great year here at anythingbut.com and we have you to thank for that.
So please join us again in 2003!
Happy New Year to you, everyone you know, anyone you want to know, and those whom you are stalking.
All the best,
Dan and Dave

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Wooo hooo! This is the Two Thousandth (2000th) Entry! Wow! Cool! Party!

So Here It Is!
I was looking for something cool, something neat, something worldy to use as the 2000th post on this website.
Something family oriented, but dirty and smutty. Something that has relevance, but is actually about nothing.
And this is what I came up with.
Meaningfull? Yes! Irrelevant! Of course!
Here’s to post number 3000 and thanks for reading!

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Changing to serve you better

NOTICE ANYTHING DIFFERENT?!?
So here we stand, almost a year since the “official” launch of anythingbut.com, and it’s time for some changes!
And those changes are going to take a few days, but don’t miss out on each and every step of our new evolution.
CH- CH- CH- CHANGES! TURN AND FACE THE PAGE!
I’d tell you some of the changes that are coming, but I am finding out about many of them as I go along as well.
SO PLEASE BEAR WITH US
Once we have completed everything, we will have a new service where we can email you everytime the site is updated!
The future is upon us! Welcome to it and enjoy the ride!
Dan and Dave

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My Fault

Sorry for the technical hickup folks. The next couple of days will be a bit wierd (new server and backend), but hopefull by the end of it everyting will be even better than before. If your wondering where the past articles went, they will be reappearing over the next couple of days. More to come….