Characters Some recurring characters on
The Great Eastern were: • Paul Moth (played by
Mack Furlong), the mostly genial host. He has a
shoe fetish, a fear of being probed by aliens, a checkered past replete with
substance abuse and a past career involving such things as directing
Mexican versions of Lassie movies. These events are probably covered in his book,
The Rocky Road to Recovery. • Erling Biggs (played by Jamie Fitzpatrick), the BCN's erudite "Weather Watchdog" and occasional substitute host for Paul Moth. • J. Richard Candow, conservative pundit, lobbyist and political opportunist. • Hollis Duffett, sound engineer for
The Great Eastern and custodian of the "Noise from Newfoundland". • Ariel Flint, liberal pundit and host of BCN's
Show Trial. • Jerome Granger, earnest host of the investigative journalism show
Wearing the Wire. • Kathleen Hanrahan, book reviewer, featured in the segment
Wordworks. • Morris Jesso, mortician host of the popular BCN series
Interred. • Ishmael "Ish" Lundrigan (played by
Michael Wade), the BCN's surly director of radio and custodian of the BCN vault. Old Ish is a BCN company man, fighting the union and cutting every corner. • Rita Molloy (played by Jacinta Wall), host of ''The Five O'Clock News'' at 5:30. • Ari Uldmanis, the BCN's "Latvian" Head of Engineering, strongly implied to be a German ex-
Nazi and likely a reference to real-life Newfoundland political figure and reputed Nazi collaborator
Alfred Valdmanis.
Institutions Institutions and locations in
The Great Eastern universe included: • UNSJ, the hyper-corporate University of Newfoundland at St. John's. • Oougubomba, a fictional
African nation (capital:
Beepbobalula) and former colony of Newfoundland, through which Paul Moth made a
Heart of Darkness-esque journey over the course of two episodes. • The Funks, based on the real (uninhabited)
Funk Island, allegedly containing the BCN's massive
repeater station. Crewing the repeater on the bird-infested Funk Islands was an experience that brought near madness to BCN crew members, including Paul Moth and Erling Biggs, who were sent there. • Furlong Confections, the makers of
Furlong Knobs candy.
The BCN The real-world Broadcasting Corporation of Newfoundland ceased transmission in 1949 when it was absorbed into the CBC after Newfoundland joined Confederation. On
The Great Eastern, it had somehow endured. The BCN was based in a former
abattoir on Duckworth Street in
St. John's, proudly broadcasting "coal-fired radio" from its transmitter tower atop Mount Scio.
The Great Eastern was supposedly one show as part of a full week's roster of programming on the BCN. The full show was supposedly two and a half hours long, with Canadian listeners tuning in only to the final half-hour of the show. Promotional material for other shows was frequently heard during
The Great Eastern, including: •
Interred, a program devoted to death and dying, supposedly the BCN's most popular show. • ''
Paul's Pot'', a cooking show with various outlandishly-themed dishes. • ''Uncle Jack's Shack'', a supposedly family-friendly show whose titular character was always engaged in hijinks featuring some form of criminality, sex or violence. •
Nocturnal Emissions, a late-night music program. ==Creators==