BC Living
How to Support BC Wineries Now
Embark on Culinary Adventures: 5 Must-Try Solo Dining Experiences Around BC
You Gotta Try this in April 2024
4 Tips on Balancing a Nutritious Diet with a Side of Indulgence
Choosing Connection: A BC Family Day Pledge to Prioritize Presence Over Plans
Embracing Plant-Based Living this Veganuary and Beyond
Inviting the Steller’s Jay to Your Garden
6 Budget-friendly Holiday Decor Pieces
Dream Home: $8 Million for a Modern Surprise
B.C. Adventures: Our picks for May
Spring into Fun in Kamloops: The Best Events in the City
7 BC Retreats Where Solo Travellers Can Find Inner Peace and Wellness
BC Distilled
Melodies and Museums: Solo-Friendly Entertainment for the Independent Traveller
Arts Club Theatre Company Celebrates 60 Years
SOLO CHIC: 5 Essential Pieces for the Stylish Solo Traveller
8 Gadgets and Gear for Your Solo Adventures
A Solo Traveller’s Guide to Souvenir Hunting in BC
Canadians will have two chances to catch new series Crossing Lines, as it airs this summer on NBC and once again on CBC in the fall
Donald Sutherland heads the cast of Crossing Lines, a new international crime drama debuting on NBC
With a cast headed by Donald Sutherland and William Fichtner (Prison Break), NBC’s 10-episode summertime drama Crossing Lines looks pretty impressive on paper, the story of an elite unit of police officers who work for the International Criminal Court, empowered to conduct cross-border investigations to track down international criminals and bring them to justice.
Created by producer Ed Bernero (exec producer of Criminal Minds), the show has a pedigree as international as its premise, being a German-French co-production that includes French actor Marc Lavoine and Germany’s Tom Wlaschiha in the cast.
Of course, if Crossing Lines were as good as it appears, it would have landed on the network’s fall schedule, instead of being buried in the summertime. You can be the judge of that when the series launches Sunday night, kicking off with a two-hour premiere.
Strangely enough, however, this won’t be the last that Canadian viewers will see of the show, since Crossing Lines will also be making a second debut in Canada, as part of CBC’s upcoming fall lineup — even though the show has zero Canadian content, characters or locations.
As it turned out, the two main selling points that wound up bringing Crossing Lines to Canada’s public broadcaster were the presence of Sutherland (arguably a Canadian screen icon) and the fact that it didn’t cost that much, a crucial factor in the face of the federal government’s cuts to the CBC budget.
“It’s not our preference,” admitted Sally Catto, CBC’s executive director of commissioned and scripted programming, in an interview with the Canadian Press. “We’re only in our second year of three years of cuts and so we just don’t have the funding to fill our complete schedule with original programming. But we really feel this is a wonderful complement.”
This leaves CBC in an unusual predicament. Given NBC’s woeful ratings this season, there’s a pretty good chance Crossing Lines will be chalked up as yet another NBC failure, and may even be cancelled before all 10 episodes air. If that’s the case, CBC will be stuck with a proven flop on its schedule, with no option other than to air all 10 episodes.
Originally published in TVW. For daily programming updates and on-screen Entertainment news, subscribe to the free TVW e-newsletters, or purchase a subscription to the weekly magazine.