The Greatest Canadian

The Greatest Canadian was a 2004 television series consisting of 13 episodes produced by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) to determine who is considered to be the greatest Canadian of all time, at least according to those who watched and participated in the program.[1]

The Greatest Canadian
The Greatest Canadian logo
GenreDocumentary
Developed byCanadian Broadcasting Corporation
Written byGary Pearson
Directed byGuy O'Sullivan
Country of originCanada
No. of episodes13
Release
Original release17 October 2004 (2004-10-17)

The series two hour debut on October 17, 2004 garnered more than one million viewers, with approximately 500,000 to 700,000 viewers per episode thereafter.[2] The initial nomination phase received more than 10,000 names submitted for consideration.[3] The second phase of the process concluded on November 28 at midnight and the following evening the winner from more than 1.2 million votes was revealed to be Tommy Douglas.[4][5]

The series was inspired by the BBC production the Great Britons and has a spiritual sequel, The Greatest Canadian Invention.

Selection process

The "Greatest Canadian" was chosen through a two-step voting process. The first phase beginning on April 5, 2004, involved the collection of data (nominees for consideration) through polls conducted by mail, phone and the internet.[5] Of these nominees the bottom 40 of 50 individuals, in order of popularity, were revealed during the first episode in October.

The criteria for eligible as outlined by the CBC was broad:[3]

Born in what is now Canada, or born elsewhere but lived here and made a significant contribution to this country - real (no fictional characters or animals) - an individual (no pairs, or groups).

To prevent bias during the second round of voting; the top ten nominees, also revealed during the first episode, were presented alphabetically rather than by order of first round popularity.[5] This phase was accompanied by a series of hour-long feature documentaries, where 10 Canadian celebrities acting as advocates each presented their case for The Greatest Canadian.[1] Viewers then submitted votes over the next six weeks supporting their favorite finalists.

Top 10

On October 17, 2004 the top 10 nominees were revealed at the end of the first episode in alphabetical order.[6] The winner and all finalists were announced by popularity on November 28 and 29 in a three hour two part series conclusion.[7][6]

Rank[8] Image Name Notability Birthplace Advocate[9] Aired[6]
10 Wayne Gretzky Hockey player, holder of numerous NHL records Brantford, Ontario Deborah Grey October 20
9 Alexander Graham Bell Scientist, inventor,
founder of the Bell Telephone Company
Edinburgh, Scotland Evan Solomon November 15
8 Sir John A. Macdonald First Prime Minister of Canada Glasgow, Scotland Charlotte Gray October 27
7 Don Cherry Hockey coach and commentator Kingston, Ontario Bret Hart October 25
6 Lester B. Pearson Fourteenth Prime Minister of Canada,
United Nations General Assembly President,
Nobel Peace Prize Laureate
Toronto, Ontario Paul Gross November 10
5 David Suzuki Environmentalist Vancouver, British Columbia Melissa Auf der Maur November 17
4 Sir Frederick Banting Medical scientist, co-discoverer of insulin,
winner of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
Alliston, Ontario Mary Walsh November 8
3 Pierre Trudeau Fifteenth Prime Minister of Canada Montreal, Quebec Rex Murphy November 22
2 Terry Fox Athlete, activist, humanitarian Winnipeg, Manitoba Sook-Yin Lee November 3
1 Tommy Douglas Father of Medicare, Premier of Saskatchewan Falkirk, Scotland George Stroumboulopoulos October 18

Top 50

More than 10,000 names were submitted for consideration with the top 100 individuals being revealed online accompanied with a short biography.[10] Of the 100 only the top 50 nominees were featured during the televised broadcast.[2]

At least three* members of the top 50 were nominees as the direct result of an active mass-mailing campaign among that individual's loyal and well-organized followers. Kin Canada founder Harold A. Rogers, DJ Hal Anderson, and Baha'i activist Mary Maxwell all benefitted from a grassroots campaign to get their names included in the nominees list.[11] CBC openly admitted this during the broadcast, recognizing that these three esoteric individuals are probably quite unknown to the general public.[2]

Critics have complained there were only four women and three nonwhites in the top 50, French Canadian participation was very low and that a large number of modern pop culture celebrities made the list like; Bret Hart, Mike Myers, John Candy, Jim Carrey and Avril Lavigne.[2] Contemporary icons chosen may be reflective of a youthful voting demographic, as the production was family oriented, or there was unwillingness or confusion distinguishing modern popularity with national historic significance among the participants of all ages.[2] In particular, Don Cherry's inclusion in the top 10 upset many Canadians, especially considering it forced out figures they believe more worthy like Louis Riel and Jean Vanier.[2]

Rank[10] Name Notability
11 Louis Riel politician, metis leader
12 Jean Vanier humanitarian, founder of L'Arche, author
13 Stompin' Tom Connors singer, songwriter
14 Neil Young singer, guitarist, organist
15 Peter Gzowski broadcaster, writer, reporter
16 Roméo Dallaire general, humanitarian, author
17 Stephen Lewis politician, broadcaster, diplomat
18 Shania Twain singer, songwriter
19 Bobby Orr ice hockey player
20 Mike Myers actor, comedian, writer, producer
21 Unknown Soldier soldiers
22 Harold A. Rogers * founder of Kin Canada
23 Maurice Richard ice hockey player
24 Sir Arthur Currie commander, general
25 Nellie McClung feminist, social activist
26 Dr. Norman Bethune physician, medical innovator, humanitarian
27 Céline Dion vocalist, entertainer
28 Sir Isaac Brock major-general
29 Jim Carrey film actor, comedian, writer, producer
30 Rick Hansen parapalegic athlete, humanitarian
31 Pierre Berton author, television personality
32 Michael J. Fox actor, activist
33 Gordon Lightfoot folk singer, composer, lyricist
34 Hal Anderson * broadcaster
35 Laura Secord national heroine
36 Ernie Coombs children's entertainer
37 Tecumseh indigenous leader
38 Mario Lemieux ice hockey player
39 Bret Hart professional wrestler
40 Avril Lavigne singer, songwriter
41 John Candy comedian, actor
42 Sir Sandford Fleming engineer, inventor
43 Sir Wilfrid Laurier prime minister
44 Mary Maxwell * Baha'i follower
45 Jean Chrétien prime minister
46 Leonard Cohen poet, novelist, folk singer, songwriter
47 John George Diefenbaker prime minister
48 Billy Bishop WW1 flying ace
49 William Lyon Mackenzie King prime minister
50 Rick Mercer comedian, broadcasting personality

Other editions

Other countries have produced similar shows based on the format originated by the BBC. The Tomb of the Unknown Soldier and Alexander Graham Bell were also featured on the 100 Greatest Britons list.[2] A two-hour spin-off series called The Greatest Canadian Invention aired in 2007 with Insulin as the winner.[12]

See also

 Canada portal

References

  1. "And the Greatest Canadian of all time is…". CBC Archives. 2005.
  2. "The Greatest Canadians of CBC".
  3. The Greatest Canadian criteria CBC 2010 (Archive webpage)
  4. Sheila A Sorrentino; Leighann Remmert, MS RN; Mary J Wilk (2016). Mosby's Canadian Textbook for the Support Worker - E-Book. Elsevier Health Sciences. p. 23. ISBN 978-1-77172-107-3.
  5. "Tommy Douglas crowned 'Greatest Canadian". CBC/Radio-Canada. 2004.
  6. The Greatest Canadian schedule CBC 2010 (Archive webpage)
  7. "Who is The Greatest Canadian? CBC viewers respond". The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. 2010. Retrieved 21 June 2010.
  8. The Greatest Canadian top 100 CBC 2010 (Archive webpage)
  9. The Greatest Canadian advocate CBC 2010 (Archive webpage)
  10. The Greatest Canadian top 100 CBC 2010 (Archive webpage) - PDF list
  11. "The greatest Canadian" via The Globe and Mail.
  12. "The Greatest Canadian Invention". CBC. 2007. Archived from the original on 17 February 2007. (Archive webpage)
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