Your Netflix binge might miss a few Kelowna moments
Good morning from the Okanagan — the lake is calm, the vines are growing, and we have things to discuss. So, you're hearing about Netflix and these big K-Pop groups like BTS getting these massive documentaries, right? Everyone's buzzing about how streaming is changing everything. Okay, but here's the thing nobody talks about: what does this mean for *our* stories, the ones bubbling right here in Kelowna? It's great to see global content, but are we losing out on telling the tales that truly define us?
### Our Stories on Screen
Think about it:
* The hustle of the Rockets players who've come through Prospera Place, some of them future NHL stars. That's a story!
* The families who've built these incredible vineyards from scratch, turning a few rows of grapes into award-winning wines that taste like the very soil of Summerland.
* Or even the sheer grit of our community during smoke season, when the air is thick, but people still come together to protect what they love.
These are the narratives that resonate when you're biking the Kettle Valley Rail Trail or grabbing a peach at the Dilworth Centre farmers' market. We're not seeing those deeply local, uniquely Kelowna experiences get the big-budget, global streaming treatment. It feels like a missed opportunity to share the real heart of our city beyond the pretty postcards of Okanagan Lake.
For us, it's about whether the global focus of these streaming giants leaves enough room for the vibrant, complicated, and utterly beautiful stories happening right in our backyard. Because every resident here knows Kelowna is a city figuring out how to survive being discovered, and those stories deserve to be told, not just streamed from somewhere else.
Keith and the crew dive into what this means for local arts and culture every morning — don't miss it live at mornings.live.