Login
User name:
Password:
Remember me 
Search
Search all blogs
This Month
October 2007
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29 30 31
Year Archive
who employs me
I am a staff writer with CTV.ca News. That operation is part of CTV News, which is of course nestled into CTV Inc. and CTVglobemedia.

I don't speak for my employer on this blog. I don't comment about the internal affairs of my employer.

Any views expressed here are my own.
View Article  Hampton blasts the media

Ontario NDP Leader Howard Hampton roasted the reporters today with this:

During a speech in Hamilton, Hampton claimed the real issues affecting Ontarians, such as adequate care for seniors and child poverty, are being ignored by the media.

"All I've heard from the media is you want to talk about faith-based schools. There are real issues out there," Hampton shouted at reporters on Thursday.

"We've become the child poverty capital of Canada. Don't any of you people care? Don't you care about that? Don't you care that there are seniors living in soiled diapers?"

View Article  The sun today
I thought it packed a lot of heat for early October. And what's this I hear about a smog warning for Friday?
View Article  Global gasses 200

From CBC.ca:

Global Television is cutting 200 jobs across Canada as it develops new "state of the art" broadcast centres in four cities, CanWest announced on Thursday.

The company said the centres, to be located in Vancouver, Edmonton, Calgary and Toronto, will use the latest in broadcast technology. It will also mean local news programs can immediately begin the transition to high definition, CanWest MediaWorks Inc. said. 

Although CanWest is adding 50 positions as part of the process, it will lose 250 jobs, meaning a net loss of 200.

View Article  Toronto Star to revamp ad strategy

From TheStar.com:

Canada's most-read daily newspaper is hoping a daring advertising strategy will give it a leg up on the competition.

The Toronto Star is planning a revamped approach to selling newspaper advertising, including a switch to modular ads and sectional pricing, starting Jan. 1, 2008. Sectional advertising means advertisers will be charged a different rate depending on which section their ads appear in.

The changes are expected to provide advertisers with the standardized sizes and targeting opportunities being offered by online media, television and radio.

   more »
View Article  Ig Nobels announced!

From the BBC:

Pioneering research into a "gay bomb" that makes enemy troops "sexually irresistible" to each other has scooped one of this year's Ig Nobel Prizes.

Other winners included work on treating hamster jetlag with impotency drugs, extracting vanilla from cow dung, and the side-effects of sword swallowing.

The awards, founded in 1991, mark achievements that "first make people laugh, and then make them think".

The prize ceremony took place at Harvard University, US.

Genuine Nobel Laureates handed out the much-coveted awards to the winners, who took away no cash, but instead received a handmade prize, a certificate, and, of course, the glory of such an illustrious win.

Here's the home page of Improbable Research, the magazine that sponsors the awards.

View Article  Gangsta culture and guns

I found myself up at Lawrence West and Dufferin today. As I headed towards the Lawrence subway station on the Dufferin bus, I saw a rather disturbing t-shirt dedicated to the theme of no snitching as I passed by the Lawrence Square Mall (Lawrence Heights, the infamous "Jungle," sits just to the north).

"Warning: Snitch at own risk," read the shirt in one area, worn by a guy who, frankly, didn't look that hardcore to me. There was a hand holding a handgun in the background. There was also a stop sign graphic on the shirt with the word "snitching" on the sign.

I know these shirts have been around for a while. According to this Wikipedia article,  they first surfaced in 1999. I know some wear them more to provoke than anything.

However, one reason I find them problematic is because of conversations like this, overheard on a Bathurst St. streetcar last night:

Teenage girl: You'll never guess who got shot yesterday!

Friends: Who?

TG: (Gives name). He's the nicest guy around, and he gets shot.

I find it sad that kids can have such a conversation with such a blasé tone.

A question I can't answer is whether those kids know who shot their friend. If they do and they don't tell the cops, are they part of the problem? Remember Amon Beckles, shot to death at the funeral of a friend in 2005? He knew who shot his buddy, but wouldn't talk to the cops. "Too bad. Maybe if he did, he'd still be alive," I remember The Globe and Mail's Margaret Wente writing at the time.  

If such people chose to live the gangsta life and they die as a result, then too bad for them. Unfortunately, these guys tend to take people like Jane Creba, Shaquan Cadougan or Tamara Carter, the young girl wounded in 2004 on the Jane Street bus, with them. Carter got caught in the crossfire after some "gangstas" shot a guy who had asked them to pipe down on the bus. Here's a version of his story and what he has to say about those who say what happened and chose to say nothing:

What bothers me most about the shooting is the lack of witnesses stepping forward. I don't expect the witnesses to care about me beyond a "Thank God I'm alive" feeling, but the fact they didn't say anything means they don't care about themselves. Making a choice to not come forward is taking the armour off and ignorantly thinking, "They're not gonna shoot me." But look what happens with stray bullets.

If two gangstas want to shoot each other in a duel and the other gangstas want to keep their mouths shut about it, I suppose that's their business.

If some chickenshit gangstas shoot an unarmed person on a bus, or wherever, and other people don't to step forward and help the cops remove these violent, nihilistic thugs from the streets, then they're contributing to the problem. They really should show some courage and snitch.

email this blog
Don't have a reader account, but still want to commend/castigate? Send an email.
blogs i don't admit to viewing