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* ''WebVideo/{{Rerez}}'' is a Canadian {{Lets Play}}er out of Ontario, Canada, but makes a point of doing things that present his series as being distinctly American, such as holding up an American $10 bill during a skit on his ''It's Just Bad'' review of ''[[VideoGame/FlatOut FlatOut 3: Chaos and Destruction (2011)]]'' or showing the American prices of things in screenshots of online stores.

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[[folder:Film]][[folder:Films -- Animation]]
* Inverted in ''WesternAnimation/TurningRed''. The movie is explicitly set in Toronto, Canada and never lets you forget it with the CN Tower in many shots, frequent mentions of Canadian things and so much other stuff distinctive to Canada that it fills most of a [[ShownTheirWork/TurningRed subpage]]. You'd be hard pressed to find a scene which ''doesn't'' contain something that relates to Canada.
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[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]



* Inverted in ''WesternAnimation/TurningRed''. The movie is explicitly set in Toronto, Canada and never lets you forget it with the CN Tower in many shots, frequent mentions of Canadian things and so much other stuff distinctive to Canada that it fills most of a [[ShownTheirWork/TurningRed subpage]]. You'd be hard pressed to find a scene which ''doesn't'' contain something that relates to Canada.
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* ''Series/AreYouAfraidOfTheDark'' was filmed in Canada, but isn't stated to be there. In an episode involving a ghost train, however, locomotives and rolling stock with VIA Rail Canada and Canadian National lettering and paint schemes feature prominently; in addition, a soldier on board the ghost train wears an ambiguous khaki uniform that isn't quite American ''or'' Canadian.

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* ''Series/AreYouAfraidOfTheDark'' was filmed in Canada, but isn't stated to be there. In an episode involving a ghost train, however, locomotives and rolling stock with VIA Rail Canada and Canadian National lettering and paint schemes feature prominently; in addition, a soldier on board the ghost train wears an ambiguous khaki uniform that isn't quite American ''or'' Canadian. The writing is ''very'' distinctly American, if ''The Tale Of The Long-Ago Locket'' unambiguously portraying the British Redcoats as the villains is anything to go off of.

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