CBC announced last week the participants selected for the second year of AccessCBC: A CBC Initiative for Creators with a Disability, a national program providing pre-development training, mentorship and financing support to Deaf and disabled creators.

Fifteen participants across seven projects have been selected for the scripted comedy/drama and kids streams. In addition, as part of the unscripted stream, production is underway on four short projects from the CBC Creator Network, and a short documentary from the first round of AccessCBC has advanced to the second phase of development, according to a CBC press release.

For the second iteration of AccessCBC, which launched in February 2024, CBC is collaborating with the Disability Screen Office (DSO), a national, disability-led, not-for-profit organization that works with the Canadian screen industry to eliminate accessibility barriers and foster authentic and meaningful disability representation on and off screen. Award-winning disabled writer and performer Ophira Calof, a recognized leader and champion for accessible storytelling and project curation, is also a consultant on the second year of AccessCBC.

The four scripted comedy/drama projects and the AccessCBC participants involved are:

The three kids projects and the participants are:

The participants of the kids and comedy/drama scripted streams are currently attending development workshops led by CBC executives, “where they receive practical experience writing pitch documents, individualised feedback, and coaching on how to package and market their project,” CBC’s press release says.

The four short unscripted projects from creators and filmmakers working with the CBC Creator Network that are currently in production are:

The short documentary from the first iteration of AccessCBC that has advanced to a second phase of development is:

More information about the participants of the second year of AccessCBC is available here.

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