Rudy Buttignol


Rudy Buttignol is a Canadian television network executive and entrepreneur. Buttignol is president and CEO of British Columbia's Knowledge Network, BC's public broadcaster. He is also president of Canadian subscription television channel BBC Kids.

Early life

Rudy Buttignol was born in 1951 in Pordenone, Italy to Nelda and Marino Buttignol. In 1955 at the age of four, Buttignol and his mother boarded the MS Vulcania and immigrated to Canada via Pier 21 in Halifax. In Toronto, they were reunited with Marino Buttignol, who had immigrated in 1954 to work for Canadian National Railway laying rail in northern Alberta. Buttignol was raised and educated in Toronto. From 1971 to 1975, he attended York University, Faculty of Fine Arts, where he studied film under James Beveridge, Louis de Rochemont 111 and Terence Macartney-Filgate.

Career

Buttignol's career spans more than four decades. At the beginning of his career, he worked as an independent producer, director, writer and editor of documentary and children's programs, and later as a commissioning editor, television programmer, and broadcast executive. He has been called "Canadian broadcasting and documentary guru" and "friend of the auteur in Canada and abroad". Buttignol is acknowledged for his roles developing Canadian cultural policy related to documentary film funding and broadcasting and advancing the creative documentary genre in Canada and on the world stage. Rudy Buttignol originated the idea behind the 2014 television series '. He stressed the distinction between the genre of the series, which is a documentary, and that of reality-based entertainment.
Rudy Buttignol works from within the Canadian media system to improve and protect it. He has published criticisms of the governance of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.. Buttignol has moved beyond policy on public broadcasting to Canadian federal policy governing the cultural industries. He has raised the alarm about the gradual dismantling of the Canadian media industry in the face of ever-increasing dominance by a handful of powerful American corporations. Buttignol has gone on the record against the Silicon Valley Internet giants being allowed to operate in Canada, and other countries, free from regulation and taxation.
From 1975 to 1993, Buttignol worked as an independent filmmaker creating film and video works. His early documentaries were about an Italian dairy, a Canadian artist, a pop history of neon lights, an Apollo-era astronaut who became an artist, and the early history of the Russian space program.
In 1993, Buttignol began work as a public broadcaster when he joined TVOntario as commissioning editor and creative head of independent production. From 2000 to 2006, he was TVOntario's creative head of network programming, green lighting commissions such as:
In 2004, he shared the Gemini's Donald Brittain Award with documentary filmmaker Allan King for Dying at Grace. In 2007, Buttignol was awarded the inaugural Hot Docs' Doc Mogul Award. All together, Buttignol was the recipient of nine Gemini Awards, from the Academy of Canadian Cinema and Television.
In 2007, Buttignol was appointed as president and CEO of British Columbia's Knowledge Network. In 2011, he became president of BBC Kids. His mandate includes outreach through events throughout British Columbia.
Along with his professional success, Buttignol contributed to and participated in a number of organizations. He is current Chair of the International Advisory Council of the Hot Docs Documentary Forum, Vice-Chair of the Canadian Association of Public Educational Media; and a Director on the Boards of the Vancouver International Film Festival, Knowledge West Communications Corporation Board, and the Cultural Properties Export Review Board which is a Canadian federal government tribunal. Buttignol is also a director on the board of the Britannia Mine Museum, Britannia Beach, British Columbia. In the past, he was founder of the Hot Docs Financing Forum, elected chair of the board of the Academy of Canadian Cinema and Television from 1997 to 2003, President of the Academy of Canadian Cinema and Television Foundation, director on the boards of Banff Television Foundation, Canada Media Fund, Canadian Conference of the Arts, and moderator at the Hot Docs Documentary Festival Summit. Buttignol was also a member of the European Television and Media Management Academy's Advisory Council in Strasbourg. In 2013, Buttignol was awarded the Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Medal in recognition of his contributions to British Columbians and Canadians, and for his role in transforming the Knowledge Network, British Columbia's public broadcaster. On December 30, 2015, it was announced that Buttignol was appointed as a Member of the Order of Canada for his contributions as a champion of Canadian documentary filmmaking and for his transformative leadership at the Knowledge Network. In 2017, Buttignol's arts advocacy was recognized with an honorary Doctor of Letters from Thompson Rivers University, Kamloops, British Columbia. That same year, he was the recipient of York University's Tentanda Via Bryden Alumni Award. The Tentanda Via Award reflects York University's motto, “The Way Must Be Tried”.