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Tim Hitchner

Brocket 99
Genre Parody
Running time 112 minutes
Country of origin Canada
Language(s) English
Home station CHEC
Syndicates None
TV adaptations None
Hosted by Tim Hitchner, others unknown
Starring Tim Hitchner, others unknown
Announcer Tim Hitchner, others unknown
Created by Tim Hitchner, others unknown
Written by Tim Hitchner, others unknown
Directed by Tim Hitchner, others unknown
Senior editor(s) Tim Hitchner, others unknown
Edited by Tim Hitchner, others unknown
Produced by Tim Hitchner, others unknown
Executive producer(s) Tim Hitchner
Narrated by Tim Hitchner, others unknown
Recording studio 1090 CHEC, Lethbridge & 1570 CKTA, Taber
Original release September 1986 – 1989
No. of series 1
No. of episodes 2
Audio format Reel to Reel(Side A) and Cassette Tape(Side B), transferred to Compact Disc

Brocket 99 is the name of an underground comedy audio tape that parodies aboriginal people in Canada and the name of two documentary films about the tape (one produced in 2005, and the other in production).

The parody played on numerous aboriginal stereotypes and has been characterized as racist. The tape included names of real people, stores and towns and is an "international underground phenomenon".

The tape was created in 1986 by radio DJs in Lethbridge, Alberta, purportedly inspired by a clip of a parody of gay men running a radio station called "AIDS Radio". The "Brocket 99" tape was never made to be marketed and was meant as a parody.

Brocket 99 Part 2 was recorded in 1986 but was released in 1989.

The premise of the tape was a fictitious radio station broadcasting from Brocket, Alberta, on the Northern Peigan reserve (a real reservation 70 km west of Lethbridge), hosted by a character named "Ernie Scar". It stereotypes natives as drunken bums, welfare recipients and drug addicts and uses pejorative terms to describe native men as "bucks" and native women as "squaws". Songs played on the tape included complete versions of multiple hits by artists such as AC/DC and Dwight Yoakam, often in a row. Between the songs and the DJ segments are fake ads for real products such as Dr. Scholl's foot powder and Lysol spray.

The tape was created by Tim Hitchner, who worked as a radio DJ at CHEC, CKTA, and CKIZ-FM from 1985 to 1992.


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