This Is That
"Canada. North America's third-largest nation. Home of Toronto. Member of the Internet. Skies, and lakes, and skies. Let's peer into the heart of this great nation: Who it is, where it is and where it's going, and how it's getting there, and who's involved, and what's at stake. This. Is. That." —Opener for This Is That
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At first glance, This Is That seemed to be a basic CBC Radio news interview show; kind of interesting, but mostly inoffensive, maybe a little bland. Most listeners realized that it's really a comedy show that managed to pull off a perfect style parody, probably around the time they start talking about lowering the drinking age in Quebec to fourteen -- twelve if you're with an adult. Many don't. They called in to comment or complain, which the show used as part of the comedy.
Starting as a Summer Replacement Series in 2010 and getting a regular timeslot in 2011, the show ran until December 2018.
- Affectionate Parody: "We come from a place of being huge fans of the CBC."[1]
- Audience Participation
- Like the real news shows it's based on, invites listeners to call in and comment on the stories, but since the stories are fake, the comments are Played for Laughs.
- The show also asks podcast listeners to let the show know where they were when they listened to the show.
- Cloudcuckoolander: The recurring commentator, Sue.
- Catch Phrase:
- "Well, this has been This Is That for this week. Next week, this will be that..."
- "Sue calling!" and "I thought you'd have fun with that."
- News Parody: definitely the Faux News type
- Poe's Law
- One story satirized the rise of no-frills airlines by interviewing an airline representative about his airline's new standing-room only flight. Many people called in and thought it was a good idea.
- Another story involved Toronto starting a pay-per-use system for city parks, which got a number of angry calls. This might not seem like a Poe's Law example at first, unless you're familiar with Toronto Mayor Rob Ford's ultra-conservative style of governance.
- Punctuated! For! Emphasis!
- Seen at the end of the opening voice-over
- "This. Was. That." is used at the very end of the show.
- Serious Business
- The opening voice-over (as quoted above).
- One story was a breaking news report about the "situation at the airport". The reporter and host both sounded like they were talking about a serious incident, but they're really just talking about a normal day at any airport.
- "People are literally coming and going."
- Stealth Parody: The show sounds so much like a regular CBC Radio news interview show that many people are fooled into calling in to comment (often angrily) about the stories.
- The creators themselves said “We want to sort of camouflage ourselves to be as authentic as possible.”[2]
This. Was. That. |