Thursday, July 14, 2011

Playing chicken with world financial system

If the U.S. doesn't get an agreement between extremists in both parties by August 3 they are down the tubes and we will be sucked in after them. Tempting to sit back in Canada's comparatively stable economic climate but they are our biggest customer by far. If they go broke, we go broke. Hopeful quote from Winston Churchill, “You can always count on Americans to do the right thing - after they've tried everything else.”

London Bobby
Time traveller from previous century

Thursday, July 7, 2011

Keep them in until somebody owns up!

Oh Obama, such a schoolmaster! He had them all in his study today and he's making them all come back on Sunday. All the top people of both parties, both houses. These are rich people, how many Sunday pool parties, yachting jaunts and keggers have been disrupted? The wives must be furious.


Sunday, July 3, 2011

I left my cash with Tony Bennett

To be fair, I bet he was heartbroken he didn't get to sing "I Left My Heart in San Francisco" for the Torontonians last night. About twenty minutes into his set it started to rain and the promoters, citing safety concerns for crew and audience, announced a ten-minute break to let the storm pass over. About forty-five minutes later, after a few more ten-minute delay announcements, they cancelled the show.

There had been a long intermission after Diana Krall's set with slow clapping from the crowd indicating impatience. If they had kept the intermission to twenty minutes perhaps the show would have been finished before the rain came. Presumably an outdoor theatre has a sharp eye on the weather so the long intermission was unconscionable. So we didn't get The Big Finish.

For James Taylor's show the previous week the parking was free, apparently prepaid by the promoters. For the Bennett/Krall show it was twenty dollars, this price not mentioned anywhere in the promo. Line-up to get into the parking was chaotic, about forty-five minutes. For twenty bucks a little more efficiency would be appreciated. More gates, better signage. And lower cost, this is not downtown.

While our theatre scene is quite vibrant, outside the theatres Toronto has some catching up to do. Nearly anywhere else in the world there is some place to eat after the show. I am not asking for fine dining but there must be something more civilized than Chinese takeaway or McDonald's drive-through. The chance of finding anything to eat near the Rexall Centre is particularly grim, it is a cultural oasis in an epicurean waste-land, about fifteen kilometres from downtown Toronto.

It is nice to see a live star in a live performance, but to tell the truth the theatre is so big I was watching the giant video screen most of the time. So is the cost, the parking, the line-ups, the driving, the weather uncertainty all worth it? Not really.

Bob Smtih
Time traveller from the twentieth century.