Puneet Varma (Editor)

The Beaverton

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Format
  
Tabloid and Website

Founded
  
2010

Owner(s)
  
The Beaverton

The Beaverton httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumb2

Type
  
Parody news publication

Editor
  
Luke Gordon Field, Alex Huntley, Alexander Saxton, Jacob Duarte Spiel, Laurent Noonan, Emma Overton

Headquarters
  
Toronto, Montreal, Whitehorse, Yukon Canada

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The Beaverton is a primarily online Canadian news satire publication, based in Toronto, Montreal and Whitehorse. It features news stories, editorials, vox populi and other formats (such as university reviews) whose structure and layout mirror those of conventional newspapers but whose content is contorted to make humorous commentary on Canadian and world issues.

Contents

The publication was founded in 2010 by Queen's University alumni Luke Gordon Field, Alex Huntley and University of Toronto graduate Laurent Noonan (1982–2014).

Kellie leitch conservative party ad the beaverton


Reception and believability

Several of The Beaverton's articles have been reported as real news. In May 2013, a story on Chris Hadfield's return to Earth and being greeted with a $1.3 million bill for cellphone roaming fees after spending several months in space received more than 400,000 hits. The story was reported as real news by Hong Kong-based newspaper Ming Pao.

In July 2013, a story about an English-speaking parrot being removed from Montreal's Biodome because it did not speak French during a government inspection was similarly received; according to The Economist it "shocked many Canadians" but "turned out to be a spoof."

The Beaverton has also been noted for its stories on Canadian politics. During Stephen Harper's state visit to Israel in January 2014, the publication mocked the Canadian Prime Minister's unflinching support of Israel by reporting that he was the Israeli Prime Minister returning from Canada after a long visit.

In September 2015, the site published an article which used Ashley Callingbull's crowning as Mrs. Universe to comment on the media's failure to adequately cover the issue of missing and murdered aboriginal women. After being criticized by Aboriginal groups, the article was pulled from the site and an apology was posted on The Beaverton's Facebook page.

In May 2016, the Hamilton Spectator made reference to a Beaverton article as factual in an editorial about the entire New Democratic Party caucus appearing in neck braces and wheelchairs after the infamous elbowgate incident. The Spectator changed the editorial, but did not issue a formal retraction.

Starting in October 2016 the site has been granted day passes by the Parliamentary Press Gallery, which allow writers increased access to Parliament but not full access granted to full-time Parliamentary journalists.

Television series

In July 2015, The Beaverton announced a TV pilot with The Comedy Network and Pier 21 Productions. In June 2016, the Comedy Network confirmed that it had picked up the series for airing in the 2016–17 television season.

The series debuted November 9, 2016.

References

The Beaverton Wikipedia