Lol. Watch a lot of games on the radio do you?I’d be offended as a Hindi if they thought this would get me to watch their game
As part of Diwali celebration
I thought Vancouver did it a few years ago?
Edit
Sorry it was Punjabi
Why ? Hockey Night in Punjabi is huge. 0I’d be offended as a Hindi if they thought this would get me to watch their game
Presumably more people identify with Punjabi on a personal level whereas Hindi is more of a lingua franca much like English.It's curious that Punjabi is the language they've gone with, as both Mandarin and Hindi are more widely spoken, and Punjabi is neck-and-neck with Spanish for being 5th most popular (most Hindi speakers in Canada at least probably know Punjabi however).
Presumably more people identify with Punjabi on a personal level whereas Hindi is more of a lingua franca much like English.
Probably Cantonese would work better in that case too, besides CCTV5 already broadcasts games in Putonghua (Mandarin).
The Asian Indian population is the fastest growing immigrant population in the Bay Area. That’s also showing up in the tech sectors in the Seattle and Portland areas. I’ve also noticed an interesting increase in the population among, of all things, truckers… not to mention a small Indian-owned transportation system including a small chain of truck stops and another chain offering an offshoot that caters to said truckers.Silicon Valley employs a lot of people from India. Is this going to work?
I believe at the time they started it Punjabi was 3rd in Canada and that's why they chose it.Sportsnet does Hockey Night in Canada: Punjabi Edition every Saturday night, and has done so for years now. It gets broadcast on a secondary channel (OMNI) but is still widely available. One of the former announcers, Harnarayan Singh, who actually helped start the Punjabi Edition, has now switched over to calling games in English on a regular basis.
Google suggests Punjabi Edition has been done since 2009.
It's curious that Punjabi is the language they've gone with, as both Mandarin and Hindi are more widely spoken, and Punjabi is neck-and-neck with Spanish for being 5th most popular (most Hindi speakers in Canada at least probably know Punjabi however).
There have been one-off games done in all kinds of languages.
I thought Vancouver did it a few years ago?
Edit
Sorry it was Punjabi
Yes, Putonghua literally means common speech, so the lingua franca that is nowadays taught in schools all across the PRC and increasingly promoted over other languages in most contexts. But not that many people speak it as their native tongue, and because it's the official state language in which most PRC-based media operates anyway, there's not the same kind of emotional attachment to it as many Cantonese speakers have to their language (also lingua franca by nature, but regional and without the official status). Overseas the diaspora is mostly from the southern coastal provinces of Guangdong (Canton), Fujian, as well as Zhejiang, and not from the areas where Mandarin varieties have traditionally been prevalent. Sometimes it also occurs that newcomers speaking Mandarin are not viewed entirely positively by everyone among the established overseas communities.While historically most Chinese-Canadians came from Hong Kong and other Cantonese-speaking areas I believe that is no longer the case and mandarin is now more widely spoken (although a lot of the information I've seen just say "Chinese").
Although based on your avatar maybe you have more knowledge than I do on the topic.
Yeah the Indians in Vancouver largely seem to have Punjabi heritage.
Sportsnet does Hockey Night in Canada: Punjabi Edition every Saturday night, and has done so for years now. It gets broadcast on a secondary channel (OMNI) but is still widely available. One of the former announcers, Harnarayan Singh, who actually helped start the Punjabi Edition, has now switched over to calling games in English on a regular basis.
Google suggests Punjabi Edition has been done since 2009.
It's curious that Punjabi is the language they've gone with, as both Mandarin and Hindi are more widely spoken, and Punjabi is neck-and-neck with Spanish for being 5th most popular (most Hindi speakers in Canada at least probably know Punjabi however).
There have been one-off games done in all kinds of languages.
Don’t know where you got that Hindi is more widely spoken in Canada than Punjabi. A quick google search would tell you Mandarin and then Punjabi are the most widely spoken languages after English and French. Hindi is probably more spoken in the Bay Area as there is less Punjabi immigrants in that area compared to immigrants of other regions of India.
As for why Hockey Night in Canada didn’t opt for a Mandarin version is beyond me. I will say this from personal experience. I meet more South Asian kids that actually play or just enjoy watching hockey than East Asians. It could also be due to the increasing number of south Asian immigrants in the country. Another thing about Punjabi culture is that it’s a very prideful and loud culture, which meshes well with the Canadian hockey atmosphere. It seems that East Asian culture is more sophisticated in a sense. These are just hypotheticals though from personal experience.
As for why Hockey Night in Canada didn’t opt for a Mandarin version is beyond me. I will say this from personal experience. I meet more South Asian kids that actually play or just enjoy watching hockey than East Asians. It could also be due to the increasing number of south Asian immigrants in the country. Another thing about Punjabi culture is that it’s a very prideful and loud culture, which meshes well with the Canadian hockey atmosphere. It seems that East Asian culture is more sophisticated in a sense. These are just hypotheticals though from personal experience.