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How Toronto residents are reacting to Coldplay's show at Rogers Stadium

How Toronto residents are reacting to Coldplay's show at Rogers Stadium

CBC5 days ago
Coldplay is expected to perform another three shows this week at Toronto's Rogers Stadium. CBC's Dale Manucdoc speaks to concertgoers and residents who live near the venue about how Monday night's opening show went.
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50 years after Jaws, will B.C. ever see more great white sharks?
50 years after Jaws, will B.C. ever see more great white sharks?

CBC

timean hour ago

  • CBC

50 years after Jaws, will B.C. ever see more great white sharks?

Fifty years after Steven Spielberg's Jaws set the template for the Hollywood summer blockbuster movie, the spectre of a great white shark attack still looms over anyone who goes swimming in the sea. Jaws was released on June 20, 1975, and the film is set in New England as a vicious great white shark kills summer beachgoers, and a police chief takes on the scary task of tackling it. Scientists say B.C.'s waters are still too cold for the great white shark to proliferate on Canada's West Coast, but that they could become more common as the Pacific Ocean warms due to climate change. Still, they say over a dozen sharks call B.C.'s waters home, and measures to protect them from hunting are resulting in more of them recovering in population. "Sharks are part of what brings natural balance to ecosystems by exerting this top down predation pressure, so species never get out of control," said Andrew Trites, a professor at the University of B.C. Institute for the Oceans and Fisheries. "We are seeing a recovery of sharks, I would say probably worldwide, but particularly in North America." Among the most common sharks that call B.C. home is the spiny dogfish, which Trites says many fishermen have accidentally caught in the Salish Sea. Danny Kent, curator of fishes at the Vancouver Aquarium, says another common shark is the sixgill shark, which divers may have encountered in the Howe Sound region. But the curator says many sharks in B.C. waters thrive on the open ocean, and not close to land. "I think most people would be lucky to see [a shark] just cause they're not often seen," he said. "They might be common, but not commonly seen." Other sharks that inhabit B.C. waters, according to Kent, include the salmon shark, the mako shark and the thresher shark. Another is the basking shark, a 12-metre long shark that is one of the largest fish in the world. Kent said basking sharks used to be plentiful in B.C. waters, feeding on plankton. "They were almost completely eradicated and ... almost nobody ever sees them anymore," he said. "And, you know, if we started seeing them coming back, I think that would be a good sign, just like we're seeing other marine mammals coming back that haven't been around for a while." Trites said the great white is very uncommon in B.C. waters, and even though their prey of seals and sea lions are recovering in population, the ocean on Canada's West Coast is simply too cold for them to become a regular feature. "The great white is really, really rare — although maybe it'll become more common in another 50 years when we do another anniversary for the movie Jaws," he said. "Maybe [then], we can talk about great whites, because what is changing is the waters are warming."

Raymond J. de Souza: Memories of Live Aid and a different era
Raymond J. de Souza: Memories of Live Aid and a different era

National Post

time3 hours ago

  • National Post

Raymond J. de Souza: Memories of Live Aid and a different era

Article content Yet it was as a cultural phenomenon that Live Aid seems from an entirely different era. Would it be possible today to assemble a cast of musicians sufficiently well known across the generations to attract the viewers that Live Aid did in 1985? The stadium show itself no longer has the cultural power it did in the 1980s, when it was a staple of summertime. Article content Taylor Swift's recent tour, concluded in Canada, attracted such attention partly because it was so unusual — a pop star selling out massive stadium after massive stadium. It happens, but not like the 1980s, when Springsteen and Jackson and others packed football stadiums night after night, summer after summer — and it didn't require debt financing for the fans to attend. Article content Perhaps Swift marks a return to popular live music. A new outdoor concert facility — capacity 50,000 — opened on the old Toronto Downsview airport site last month. Coldplay did four shows there, part of their multi-year Music of the Spheres tour that has now sold more tickets than any other tour in history. Article content Article content But Swift and Coldplay are more likely exceptional. Which is a shame, because the joyous exuberance of the stadium tour is not replicable in the privatized music listening environment of the digital world. Article content Article content In 1985 the Sony Walkman was still relatively new, launched only in 1979, and had not yet reached its peak. Still running on audio cassettes, the Walkman was a cultural earthquake, converting music from an ambient communal experience to a singular, even private, one. Article content It was still possible in the early 1990s to walk around a university campus and to hear the current anthems wafting out of open windows; now everyone is wearing earbuds and no one hears each other's music. Something was lost when parents and children — and brothers and sisters — fought over what was on the radio or the home stereo. The first act to play the new Downsview site was Stray Kids. It's a K-pop group I have never heard of. To be fair, I don't know any K-pop groups. To be honest, I had to look up what K-pop is. Article content Article content The stadium and arena tour is not entirely dead. Springsteen is still performing and Elton John's farewell tour went on so long he may still revive it. Article content In 2019, Princeton economist Alan Krueger, chairman of the council of economic advisers under Barack Obama, wrote a fun book called Rockonomics on the music industry. Pre-digital, artists could earn well from sales of recorded music. Streaming killed that off, similar to declining sales in printed media. The big money now is in live concerts. According to Krueger's research, even McCartney, who dominated the world of records with his long list of No. 1 songs, now earns 80 per cent of his income from live concerts. Article content

‘A magical place' : New little free library brings poetry to the Fredericton Botanic Garden
‘A magical place' : New little free library brings poetry to the Fredericton Botanic Garden

CTV News

time3 hours ago

  • CTV News

‘A magical place' : New little free library brings poetry to the Fredericton Botanic Garden

Fredericton Mayor Kate Rogers (left) and Fawn Parker, the city's newest poet laureate, are pictured beside the Little Free Poetry Library in the Fredericton Botanic Gardens. (Courtesy: Fawn Parker) There's a poetic new addition to the Fredericton Botanic Garden. It's now home to a Little Free Poetry Library. 'It gives the message that poetry is for anybody and everybody,' says Fawn Parker, the city's fourth Poet Laureate, who is behind the initiative. 'You don't have to be really well-read or experienced. It's just there for you.' While 'little free libraries' are a common sight around the region, this one in the park caters specifically to poetry. It was unveiled on Tuesday and contains donated books that include works by New Brunswick poets Lynn Davies and Ian Letourneau. Little Free Poetry Library The new Little Free Poetry Library at the Fredericton Botanic Gardens is pictured. (Courtesy: City of Fredericton) 'You can take something. You can leave something. You can just read something and put it right back. I really want it to feel like it belongs to the whole city,' says Parker. Parker started her two-year position as Fredericton's Poet Laureate in September 2024. The 31-year-old, who is working on her PhD in writing at UNB, came into the role with the goal of making poetry more obtainable. 'I just find poetry is so often inaccessible or feels inaccessible,' says Parker. 'Even to me as someone who was a writer and studies writing in the institution, it just feels like it's a language that we're not really taught to speak. And because there's that kind of difficulty of getting into it, I think a lot of people don't try or pre-emptively think it's not for them. And I just think that's so untrue. I think poetry can be anything, whether it's simple or it's rhyming or it's really complicated.' The Little Free Poetry Library was built by woodworker Vic Dunphy. The design, with its red metal roof and distinct 'backwards' orientation, pays homage to late Fredericton-native and internationally acclaimed poet Bliss Carman's home that's still standing in the city's downtown. library under construction The Little Free Poetry Library is pictured, under construction in Vic Dunphy's woodworking shop, before it was installed in Fredericton's Botanic Garden. (Courtesy: Fawn Parker) 'Finally seeing it installed and available was fantastic because it actually has the true likeness of Bliss Carman's home, which makes it a bit unique,' says Julie Wright, a board member for the Botanic Garden. 'It's just a wonderful addition.' The Garden is located on a 21-hectare property at the west end of Odell Park and is open to the public, free of charge, year-round. 'It's also located in our NB Literature Garden,' says Wright. 'So, when you walk through that particular garden, there is a little a poem or something specific that has been done by a New Brunswick author for each of the different plants.' Poet sign One of the signs honouring New Brunswick authors in the Fredericton Botanic Gardens is pictured. (Courtesy: Julie Wright) The community garden, which is marking its 35th anniversary, had a local company create custom bookmarks for the celebration. 'We thought that'd be something nice to be able to put in it as well,' says Wright, who hopes people will take the opportunity to sit down with a poem on one of the Garden's memorial benches. 'The garden's kind of a magical place, and poetry is a little magical as well. They're just a good fit for one another to be able to read a beautiful little poem while you're looking at some beautiful plants and listening to the birds sing.' Bookmark A custom bookmark created to commemorate the 35th anniversary of the Fredericton Public Gardens is pictured (Courtesy: Julie Wright) Parker says she hopes to continue making poetry more accessible by adding free books to spaces like waiting rooms, long term care homes, and hospitals. 'Spaces that maybe feel a little isolated or lonely, and where it wouldn't be easy to go to the library or go to a bookstore,' says Parker. 'Just have books kind of right there for people to grab.' For more New Brunswick news, visit our dedicated provincial page.

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