What's your act of green? CBC News World hopes you're getting on board. It's one million acts of green, one act at a time. Check it out and register online at www.1millionactsofgreen.com. Next time, on The Passionate Eye. A dream is about to come true. Next Monday, the documentary that rocked the dog world in England. The dogs are falling apart. And the number of genetic problems are increasing at a frightening pace. The RSPCA is extremely concerned. People love these animals, you know. It's like seeing a close relative falling apart. No. Gorgeous boy. The controversial British documentary that exposed what can happen when some dogs are bred to be perfect. The vast majority of dog breeds are, and dogs in those breeds are healthy, healthy dogs. That's Pedigree Dogs Exposed, next Monday on The Passionate Eye. Early to bed, early to rise, makes each of us healthy, wealthy and wise. That's a bunch of crap. Venture inside the restless mind of an insomniac. Over the years I've tried valerian root, sex, marijuana, homeopathic medicine. Nothing worked. I've been tired my whole life. Follow award-winning director Alan Berliner as he explores his lifelong struggle with sleep. What is your best time of the day? The night. Did the sheep work? No, I lose interest after a couple of hundred. He's on a mission to find a cure. In our society today, nobody protects sleep. But does he really want it? Is there a drug where I could still be a night owl, get five or six hours sleep and feel great? There'll be plenty of time to sleep. After I die, that is. Wide awake. Stay up to watch it. Sunday night on The Passionate Eye. Wednesday night on Wild Docs. How far would you go to break your addiction to junk food? I will eat anything as long as it's quick and it's got no vegetables in. Eating takeaways is a drug and I'm hooked. In an extreme TV experiment, four fast food junkies go all the way to northern Pakistan. Where they'll trade fat, sugar and salt for a primitive but healthy diet. Is this butter? Butter, yes. Yag butter. Yag butter. Can they change their fast food habit in just one month? Try to be polite and eat all their food but I just can't stand the cure. And everything is tasting so much sweeter. Fast food junkies go native. I'm dead. Wednesday night on Wild Docs. Never miss another great documentary. Visit cbc.ca slash docs and click the link for newsletters. A wild day. The opposition reaches common ground on a historic coalition deal. Will it amount to anything? And what's in the fine print anyway? In-depth coverage including our ad issue panel tonight on The National. Separated at childhood. I remember saying to myself, I'll get you back someday. Sibling love reunited them. But can she continue to keep him and her promise? Norm, Tuesday at 10 on CBC News World. Telesteps. The world's only adjustable telescopic ladder. With a patented one-touch release. What a great idea for a gift. Now available all across Canada at these fine stores. I really need to talk to you about these. Come on in. My investment statements. I'd like some answers. None of these are from Scotiabank. I'm looking for a second opinion. So let's get started. Right now. Get a second opinion from a Scotiabank advisor. A way to explore your options and make sure you're investing in what's right for you. We can help you make the most of what you have. Scotiabank. It doesn't take much to ruin a moment like this. So get Secret Clinical Strength. With odor-absorbing capsules that capture odor and release a fresh scent the moment your body needs it. For unbelievable odor protection. Secret because you're hot. This is how you could feel without heartburn. Take Pepsit Complete for fast, long-lasting heartburn relief. Pepsit Complete. Start living. Here at our remote test facility, we put the Nissan Altima through over 5,000 extreme tests. To help ensure long-lasting quality and durability. Through whatever the world throws at it. The Nissan Altima. Made to drive. Built. To last. Girls? Hi, Dad. Hello. For once, I absolutely know what to get your mom for Christmas. What's that, Dad? A coffee maker. Eater 12 cups. Stainless steel or black. Espresso or drip. French press or stovetop. With a bean grinder. And frothing wand. You gotta have a frothing wand. Or I could get her a Canadian Tire gift card again. $50, Dad. Or $100. Give the gift of choice this Christmas. With a gift card from Canadian Tire. On the front lines of the day's top stories, we're live on CBTV. And his unwillingness to back down from a fight. In the 1990s, Ted Rogers bid to enter the pay TV business resulted in a public battle with the CRTC, which tried to block his move. Canadians are to continue to see, hear and read about ourselves. We must compete with these global giants on our own turf. His effort to create a giant cable company was seen as monopolistic, but Rogers always saw himself as the underdog. Our growth will come, I think, as it often does, from new ventures, creating new opportunities. Hey! Surviving near bankruptcy in the 1970s and 80s, today Rogers Communications runs one of Canada's largest cable companies. One of Canada's largest cell phone and cable TV providers owns the Toronto Blue Jays and dozens of television and radio stations across the country. But experts say Ted Rogers' investment in high-speed internet around 10 years ago solidified the company as a worldwide giant. More recently, Ted Rogers has donated millions to help fund universities. Education is the key to the nation's future. Education can remake a country, a city, a community into a different place. This country needs more graduates from business schools if this country is going to move forward and be owned by Canadians. A strong belief from a man who will be remembered as one of Canada's great entrepreneurs. Ted Rogers was 75. Michael Dick, CBC News, Toronto. Now returning to the day's top story, the political goings-on in Ottawa. It used to be that Stephen Harper was considered a master political strategist. Well, that was before last week's economic statement, which turned out to be quite a miscalculation, according to some critics. Now the Prime Minister is fighting just to stay in power. Michael Meehan is a Conservative Senator who has been watching events unfold. He joins us now from the House of Commons. Michael Meehan, good to see you. Thank you for joining us today. My pleasure, Eric. How do you view this? Was this to some extent a conflict that was inevitable in this Parliament, or is this pretty well a self-inflicted mess? Well, I think there's obviously a combination of a number of factors. It's pretty clear now that the opposition parties had this in mind for some time when the so-called trap was going to be sprung, as anybody's guess. Also, I suppose one could argue, as has been argued, that the economic statement, by including some perhaps extraneous factors, such as the elimination of political contributions, just lit the flame, and that provoked the crisis. But the governments now, as everybody knows, withdrawn the contentious items. So we're left with an economic statement that is just that, outlines a general approach, may not be as specific as some people would like, but I frankly don't think it's something upon which the government deserves to fall at this stage, given the circumstances, economic climate surrounding it. If I'm clear on what I'm hearing you say, it was a little bit of the worst of both sides. But generally, prime ministers tend to surround themselves with sage advisors, people like yourself who are in a position who have seen through other governments the things that can go right and go wrong. So how does something like this happen? How does something like this spin so badly out of control? Well, as I said at the outset, I think that it was planned by the opposition for quite some time. As one of them said, you don't just put an agreement between three disparate parties, very disparate parties with very different views, together in three hours. I mean, this had been planned for quite a while. So Stephen— The excuse. The excuse was the economic statement. Yeah, I was just going to say, do you think then that Stephen Harper fell into a trap, that he wasn't clever enough to see the trap had been set? Well, I don't know who did know the trap was set. You know, you have to be pretty smart to know what's going on in the minds of the opposition unless you're told or unless there's a leak. All I was saying about the economic statement was perhaps if the extraneous factors hadn't been included, we wouldn't be in as far as we're in right now under this constitutional crisis. But that being said, I've come to the conclusion that the crisis is going to come sooner rather than later. Now we've got to decide as to whether or not it justifies the bringing down of a newly elected government just received a stronger mandate, albeit a minority one. Well, given what you have said, that those measures, those—what some have perceived to be partisan measures have been withdrawn from the statement by the prime minister, what advice would you suggest now for a prime minister in this position? What should Stephen Harper be thinking about and doing now to forestall or avoid what seems to be the inevitable that his government will fall? Well, I don't know that it's inevitable. I mean, you know, members of parliament are independent people.