W5 profile | The Canadian who creates the real, but fake, sounds in Hollywood blockbuster films

Ashley Judd says she had to re-enroll herself in trauma therapy to cope with the recent media coverage of her mother's death.
Country musician Naomi Judd, a five-time Grammy winner, died by suicide in April last year after a long battle with anxiety and depression. She was 76.
In an interview with the Guardian newspaper published Monday, Judd said she thought she was done with Eye Movement Desensitizing and Reprocessing (EMDR) therapy -- a type of psychotherapy used to target underlying trauma -- until she was forced to revisit her trauma when media outlets published pictures of the scene of her mother's death and the contents of a suicide note.
"I re-enrolled myself ... just to make sure that my healing was concretized and stout and was going to hold," the "Double Jeopardy" actress said.
Following Naomi Judd's death, her family unsuccessfully petitioned to seal reports and recordings made by police during the course of their investigation.
Last August, Judd -- who discovered her mother after she suffered a self-inflicted gunshot wound -- opened up about her family's experience in an essay for the New York Times, titled "Ashley Judd: The Right to Keep Private Pain Private."
"The trauma of discovering and then holding her laboring body haunts my nights," she wrote at the time. "As my family and I continue to mourn our loss, the rampant and cruel misinformation that has spread about her death, and about our relationships with her, stalks my days."
Judd is now lobbying for a change to Tennessee law to limit access to confidential records pertaining to non-criminal deaths, to prevent other families from going through the same trauma.
"The dark past, in God's hands, becomes our greatest asset," she said of her advocacy. "With it, we can avert misery and death for others."
However, Deborah Fisher, executive director of the Tennessee Coalition for Open Government, told the Times Free Press in December that the bill would further impinge on the public's right to have critical information related to law enforcement investigations "when police were investigating one of their own."
Despite this opposition, Judd told the Guardian she is hopeful the bill will pass when it is brought before the legislature for consideration.
As questions continue to swirl around the issue of other countries' meddling in Canadian affairs, interim RCMP Commissioner Michael Duheme says he's 'very, very concerned' about foreign interference, and would like to see the national force be able to use intelligence as evidence in its investigations.
After the bodies of several people were discovered in the St. Lawrence River, who authorities say were likely trying to cross illegally into the U.S., a migrant advocate is questioning why people are fleeing Canada.
Cape Breton University has more than doubled in size by enrolling thousands of international students, and critics say the campus and community weren't ready. Watch the documentary 'Cash Cow' on CTV W5, Saturday at 7 p.m.
The latest seasonal outlook from The Weather Network shows early April will continue to be chilly with flip-flopping temperatures bringing above and below the usual levels of precipitation seen around this time.
Storms that dropped possibly dozens of tornadoes killed at least 18 people in small towns and big cities across the South and Midwest, tearing a path through the Arkansas capital, collapsing the roof of a packed concert venue in Illinois, and stunning people throughout the region Saturday with the damage's scope.
A new Canadian study of 4.8 million people says a daily alcoholic drink isn't likely to send anyone to an early grave, nor will it offer any of the health benefits touted by previous studies, even if it is organic red wine.
The federal minimum wage is increasing from $15.55 per hour to $16.65, and taxes are going up on gas and alcohol nationwide starting April 1.
W5 profiles the man who makes the sounds for breaking bones and squealing tires in Hollywood’s biggest films; and he does it from a small town in Ontario. Watch 'Sound Farms' at 7 p.m. on CTV W5.
Statistics Canada has released its new report about the Canadians level of confidence in Canada’s institutions, finding that recent immigrants are more likely to express confidence in the media and parliament.