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    Frankensteer/CBC documentary

    Did anyone catch this documentary last
    evening on CBC? It is to be aired again
    Monday October 31 at 10 p.m. ET.

    For the sake of our industry you can and
    should express your opinion to CBC at:
    http://www.cbc.ca/contact

    FRANKENSTEER
    Thursday October 27 at 9pm on CBC-TV
    repeating Monday October 31 at 10pm ET/
    PT on CBC Newsworld

    Frankensteer is a disturbing documentary
    that reveals how the ordinary cow has been
    turned into an antibiotic-dependent,
    hormone-laced potential carrier of toxic
    bacteria, all in the name of cheaper food.
    Frankensteer exposes the harsh and
    sometimes frightening realities of how our
    beef gets to our tables.

    According to this compelling documentary,
    the beef industry, supported by North
    American government agencies and
    pharmaceutical companies, has engaged in
    an on-going experiment to create the perfect
    food machine. Their goal is to increase the
    speed of production and reduce the cost of
    manufacture. But there is a price in
    producing a cheap industrial product. This
    benign, grazing herbivore has undergone a
    transformation in how it’s raised, fed and
    slaughtered. Consumers are unaware of the
    dangers lurking in their beloved steaks, ribs
    and, especially, hamburgers.

    According to Mike McBane of the Canadian
    Health Coalition, "When you bring a
    package of hamburger home from a
    supermarket, you have to treat it as toxic
    material…"

    Frankensteer reveals some startling facts.
    Every year, fifty per cent of the total tonnage
    of antibiotics used in Canada ends up in
    livestock. Cattle raised in massive feedlots
    are routinely dosed with antibiotics even if
    they are not sick for public health safety
    reasons. During the current BSE (Mad Cow)
    crisis, North American health officials
    labeled parts of the cow as bio-hazardous
    products and ordered that they be handled
    accordingly. Recent changes in inspection
    rules have shifted the responsibility for food
    safety from government inspectors to the
    people on the floor who do the slaughtering
    and packing.

    Frankensteer is written and narrated by Ted
    Remerowski and produced and directed by
    Marrin Canell and Ted Remerowski. It is a
    production of Paradigm Pictures.

    #2
    The CBC, on a national level, is irresponsible to say the least. The Passionate Eye (The Passionate Lie) which used to be hosted by our current G.G. brings us controversial "indie" documentaries all the time. It finds ways to spend film board money etc, to help keep our "Arts" alive. Always when watching CBC "investigative journalism" such as MarketPlace and The Fifth Estate (hosted by another G.G). Their job is get watchers, not provide an accurate "whole picture".

    Non-rural viewers, and some who stand to benefit, with lap this up. They love being told a good old "truth is stranger than fiction" yarn. Creating such entertainment involves many half-truths, omissions, and glorified rare exceptions.

    The urban population at large will view this little gem with great credibilty, they wanting to hear this "fact".

    Maybe we should increase their funding so they can hire some editorial staff? Naw strike, decrease it so they don't have resources to do "investigative", "hard hitting", "thought prvoking","journalism".

    Comment


      #3
      Kind of torn on this one guys. I agree that calling this thing Frankensteer and talking about toxic waste are pathetic attempts at attention. However from the 15 minutes I saw at the end of the show it seemed that they were portraying the farmer as the good guy and the packers as their usual greedy profit driven selves. Maybe ranchers need to see this thing to open their eyes up to where we have been led. Like I said, dramatising something for those who don't understand is horrible, getting the message to the ranchers may be important though.

      Comment


        #4
        A couple of comments :

        1. a very respected veterinarian advised me today that two of the vets interviewed for the article have no credibility with the veterinarians association.

        2. Dr Lorne Taylor, former Minister of the Environment was part of a panel discussion at yesterday's Environmental Farm Plan meeting in Red Deer. Dr. Taylor lambasted the confined feeding industry for polluting the creeks, he indicated that there should never be any more of them allowed in the County of Forty Mile and areas in south eastern AB.

        It will be interesting to see how the industry responds to both the Passionate Eye program and Dr. Taylor.

        Comment


          #5
          emrald1 wrote:
          >It will be interesting to see how the industry
          >responds to both the Passionate Eye program and
          >Dr. Taylor.

          The following was sent out by the CCA yesterday
          afternoon:

          In anticipation that we may get calls from producers
          asking us to do something about the CBC
          documentary "Frankensteer" airing tonight on the
          Passionate Eye program, please encourage callers
          to also express their opinion directly to CBC. It will
          have more of an impact for CBC to hear from a
          number of viewers than to receive an official letter
          from CCA.

          Comment


            #6
            I have been noticing this building trend for years. I just copied mine over to the CBC.

            Comment


              #7
              Here is what my final submission looked like to CBC:

              The CBC, on a national level, is irresponsible to say the least. The Passionate Eye (The Passionate Lie) which used to be hosted by our current G.G. brings us controversial "indie" documentaries all the time. It finds ways to spend film board money etc, to help keep our "Arts" alive. Always one should be thoughtful, and do their own checks, when digesting CBC "investigative journalism" such as MarketPlace and The Fifth Estate (hosted by another G.G). Their job is get viewers, not provide an accurate "whole picture".

              Non-rural viewers, and some who stand to benefit, with lap this up. They love being told a good old "truth is stranger than fiction" yarn. Creating such entertainment involves incorporationg many half-truths, omissions, and glorified exceptions. I won't even begin to reward the effort by pointing out errors or omissions, there are so many. But I will make one exception, in saying that the tiny hormone additives quantities that steers receive are tiny as compared to a bull, a steer which has not been castrated. Nobody would ever know that Europe, which has an outlawed hormone use, has a massive black market, unmanaged and unreported. North America has a safety system that exists nowhere else in the world.

              The urban population at large will view this little gem with great credibilty, they wanting to hear "facts".

              Maybe we should increase their funding so they can hire some editorial staff? Naw strike that, decrease it so they don't have resources to do "investigative", "hard hitting", "thought provoking", "journalism".

              Paul A. McKenna, Calgary

              Comment


                #8
                Well I never caught the show but I think they ran this one once before?
                Without a doubt the CBC has a tendency to stir things up and paint a picture however they like it!
                But consider some of their facts? Is it true that over half of the drugs in North America end up in livestock? If that is true does it cause you to be a bit uneasy or is that okay?
                Are hormones and all those anti-biotics necessary to raise livestock? What is the point of raising more food if we don't get paid for it?
                Where is the proof that there is a massive black market in hormones in Europe? Or is this just hearsay? I would think if there was an actual massive blackmarket then the authorities would know about it and put a stop to it?
                There are a lot of practices in livestock production that are hard to defend? Like feeding animals to animals? Or using steroids on cattle? Or pumping animals full of anti-biotics so they will gain well in a factory farm?
                Baby pigs and chickens are on anti-biotics just about from the day they are born. Is this a good thing? Is it necessary?

                Comment


                  #9
                  Dr.Taylor used the term 'factory farm' in his tirade. Interesting that he is a former minister in the government that has set benchmarks of millions more hogs produced in Alberta by 2010. Wonder what he said around the cabinet table when that goal was being discussed.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    I wonder why Taylor might have been upset? Was there any justification for his "tirade" or had he just been watching too much CBC?
                    I think you might find that the most vocal opponents to "factory farms" are not the acreage owner but the farming neighbors? Acreage owners are like gypsys...they come and go...but the farmers have to live with the ILO forever!
                    When a hog barn or big feedlot move in next door to you do you think you are not affected? There goes your property values and maybe your quality of life!
                    So somebody can make enough money to pay for overpriced land? Thankfully I live in an area where there are not going to be anymore of these factories!

                    Comment

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