Heritage Minute

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Heritage Minutes (Historica Minutes: History by the Minute) are sixty-second short films each illustrating an important moment in Canadian history. They appear frequently on Canadian television and in cinemas before movies. The minutes were first introduced on March 31, 1991 as part of a one-off heavily-promoted history quiz show hosted by Rex Murphy. The thirteen original short films were broken up and run between shows on CBC. The continued broadcast of the Minutes and the production of new ones was pioneered by Charles Bronfman's CRB Foundation and Canada Post (with Bell Canada being a later sponsor). They have been produced and narrated by noted Canadian broadcaster Patrick Watson.

While the CRB has not paid networks to air the minutes, they have made them freely available. The main attraction to running them is that the CRTC has ruled that they can each count as ninety-seconds of a station's Canadian content requirements.

The Heritage Minutes themselves have become part of Canadian culture, being frequently parodied. The high production values and entertaining but educating content has met general acclaim and today there are over sixty of them. While popular, they have been criticized. Robert Fulford, for instance, has attacked them for their solemn pomposity.

[edit] List of Heritage Minutes

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