“…In the years since then, several "regional" comedy hits have emerged that have proven, despite their specific geographic positionality in Canada, to have appeal abroad (Corner Gas on CTV, Trailer Park Boys on Showcase, and Little Mosque on the Prairie on CBC), thus challenging the de-Canadianization model that shaped much production policy in the 1990s. Furthermore, during the early 2000s, the CBC "Canadianized" its brand (Bociurkiw, 2011, p. 36), as signified by the introduction of the word "Canada" into its slogans (e.g., "Canada's Own," 2001-2007, and "Canada Lives Here," 2007 and its expanded use of what Cormack and Cosgrave (2014) call "state celebrity": that is, CBC personalities who appear across CBC programming as ideal citizens and representatives of both the "nation" and the public broadcaster itself (see also Cormack & Cosgrave, 2016). This kind of stardom, as will be discussed further, serves as a significant contrast against the stardom of both Eugene Levy and Catherine O'Hara, whose fame is neither sutured to the CBC, nor contained within the (imagined) borders of the Canadian nation-state.…”