CBC CONGRATULATES SCHITT’S CREEK ON HISTORIC GOLDEN GLOBE AWARD WINS FOR CANADA
Feb 28, 2021
78th Golden Globe Awards tonight, including
Best Musical or Comedy Series and
Best Television Actress, Musical or Comedy Series for Catherine O’Hara. With the beloved comedy receiving five nominations earlier this year following the show’s record Emmy sweep last fall,
SCHITT’S CREEK has made history yet again as the most-honoured original Canadian series ever at the Golden Globes. “Congratulations to Schitt’s Creek on their groundbreaking Golden Globe wins,” said Sally Catto, General Manager, Entertainment, Factual and Sports, CBC. “It is so wonderful to see this brilliant team honoured once more. We are proud to have commissioned this heartfelt, inclusive Canadian comedy that has brought so much joy to audiences, and are thrilled to celebrate with fans around the world as the show continues to make history.”
CBC names new scripted content team c21media.net - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from c21media.net Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
A FACEBOOK group set up during the first national lockdown has become a vital support network for flood victims across Warrington. The Good Guys Group has been instrumental in helping those in need, drawing on its experience working with the community during the past year. After launching in March, the group has been involved in all aspects of community support, including giving out free food parcels, picking up prescriptions, offering mental health and wellbeing support, organising birthday parties for struggling families, and turning houses into homes. Beth Trainer, founder, has paid thanks to every business, organisation and individual who has helped and allowed the group s work to continue.
Gone but never forgotten in a quilt
Ode to George Floyd, a quilt by Peggie Hartwell. Members of the national Women of Color Quilters Network draw on personal experiences of injustice, turning their needlework into symbols of liberation, resistance and empowerment. Peggie Hartwell via The New York Times.
by Patricia Leigh Brown
(NYT NEWS SERVICE)
.- Peggie Hartwell, a fourth-generation quilter from South Carolina, has found it hard to return to her needlework since she completed Ode to George Floyd, in which she renders Floyds face in subtle brown batiks, and an image of his mother barely visible behind a grove of trees. I had to talk to him, get to know him, the 81-year-old quilter said of the process. I pick up a piece of fabric and see his face.