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October 29, 2007

The Internet is a Series of Tubes That Stop at the Border

danu_dailyshow.jpg

A couple of weeks ago, The Daily Show upgraded their website, adding a free and fully-searchable video database of the past eight years of programs from the Jon Stewart era. For fans of the show, it was heaven. Imagine being able to instantly watch one of those old “Even Stevphen” segments with Carell and Colbert, before their bloated comic egos whisked them away to greener pastures and/or the studio down the block. Or how about something from the Indecision 2000 campaign trail, which as you might recall ended up going into overtime (“Electile Dysfunction”)? It almost sounded too good to be true…and it was, at least for Canada.

Perhaps as a rebuke to our sky-high dollar, the powers that be at Viacom have blocked the new site. Instead, Canadian visitors to The Daily Show or Comedy Central’s webpage get redirected to the Comedy Network, its less funny bastard stepchild to the north. There is no video database to peruse, just a handful of recent videos and episodes on a pumpkin-coloured template of a site. (Need we remind you, this is a network that puts the Ray Romano in comedy.) Their FAQ page insists that “You'll be missing nothing. NOTHING! So don't fret.” The natural response to this is somewhere around Lewis Black territory: it’s akin to the crudely super-imposed CTV or Comedy Network logos in the bottom-right corner of the screen during the show that actually end up masking certain punch lines (or at least the last few letters of “Mess O'Potamia”).

But Canadian (and American) broadcasting regulations prevail, so until the border magically disappears (or Stephen Colbert wins the presidency) it looks like we’ll have to settle for the somewhat comforting fact that we live in a country where The Daily Show and Colbert Report air on national broadcast television.


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Comments (8)

WTF? Nice job on alienating loyal viewers, Viacom.

 

Addendum: I'm also tired of other American networks blocking online access to exclusive clips, commentary tracks, and other bonus material to shows I like (Heroes, Battlestar Galactica, etc). Why the hell?

 

It goes both ways. I tried to log on to the Canadian site from the USA so I could tell my mom when to watch Sarah, and it directed me to Comedy Central, without even the apology page. And when I want to watch fresh episodes of Degrassi on CTV, where they air before they make it to the N here - I'm out of luck. Boo hoo.

 

With all the videos on these TV sites bandwidth costs would be pretty huge and it seems like someone did a cost-benefit analysis thingy and pulled the plug.

The Daily Show site still works for me so it's worth trying, though none of the other US TV sites do.

 

its' probably a copyright thing.

until then enter the brave new world of P2P and bit-torrent. the WORLD is there!

 

hey danu,

just a heads up... i've been able to watch the entire daily show archive at www.thedailyshow.com

i only experienced redirects when i tried to access videos through comedycentral.com

 

You can use an American proxy server to get around the block. I use one to watch BSG clips on scifi.com and it works great.

-Brian

 

One would think that those who use the net would see how useless it is to block Canadians. Whatever country the the information is on, not a problem I can be from any country I really want to be, it is the internet after all and is not to hard to fool into thinking your from wherever they want ......

 
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