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Netflix is courting controversy in Canada not for the usual reasons of hurting public sentiments. The streaming platform&rsquo;s fantasy epic Bigfoot Family has been targeted by a Government-funded lobbying group of peddling lies about the oil and gas industry.</p>
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Featuring a human family whose father is Bigfoot is centered on the nefarious scheme of an energy company to detonate a bomb in Alaska&rsquo;s pristine valley in order to flood with crude oil.</p>
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The Centre&rsquo;s criticism of <em>Bigfoot Family</em> deals with a plot to blow up a valley in Alaska to release its oil. An article in The Guardian, states that according to a statement emailed to media outlets, Tom Olsen, the Canadian Energy Centre&rsquo;s head says: &ldquo;It villainizes energy workers and disparages the industry&rsquo;s record on and commitment to environmental protection.&rdquo;</p>
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Many were quick to point out that the reel story was not very different from the real one. In 1950s, the Alberta Government had approved a project to detonate a nine-kiloton nuclear device near the town of Fort McMurray to release releasing oil from subterranean bitumen. The plan rebranded &ldquo;Project Oilsand&rdquo;, was cancelled in 1962 when the federal government joined a ban on nuclear testing.</p>
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Though set in US, the film is being opposed by the Canadian Energy Centre, which is funded by Alberta province as it alleges that the movie &ldquo;brainwashes&rdquo; children with &ldquo;anti-oil and gas propaganda&rdquo;.</p>
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According the article, the Centre has said: &ldquo;Our children are the key to the future &ndash; but they can&rsquo;t succeed if they&rsquo;re filled with misinformation.&rdquo; It also mentions that the Centre claimed that more than 1,000 people have already emailed Netflix over the film.</p>
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<strong>Alberta background</strong></p>
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Alberta&rsquo;s &ldquo;energy war room&rdquo;, created in 2019 by the in power United Conservatives party, is working to combat negative portrayals of the province&rsquo;s energy sector which has come under scrutiny for high emissions and environmental degradation.</p>
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The Centre also took up the issue of how scribes report on the energy industry of the province. Recently, it has been investigating into charges that &ldquo;foreign-funded special interests&rdquo; have been spurring the criticism.</p>
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