Archive for June, 2011

June 4, 2011

The Daily J.P. Arencibia to Cooperstown Watch, Game 57: Slamfest

JP Arencibia homersIf J.P. Arencibia never gets to the Baseball Hall of Fame he might have a shot at becoming a legend of golf. That is if his first career MLB grand slam is any indication of his golfing prowess. The Jays’ rookie catcher walloped a breaking ball that was just inches from his toes into the left-field seats at Camden Yards, clearing the bases in the fifth inning and giving the Jays a 7-0 lead en route to an 8-4 victory over the Orioles. Arencibia drove lefty Zach Britton’s breaking ball that looked like it was heading for the dirt over the fence and did it in a way reminiscent of a younger Tiger Woods ripping a tee shot toward a fairway at Augusta National.

SEE THE VIDEO REPLAY

Arencibia’s lone hit of Friday’s series opener turned out to deliver the winning RBI as the Jays (29-28) once again climbed over .500.

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June 3, 2011

Tom Wilson talks travel, Blackie & the Rodeo Kings and life

Tom Wilson at Union Station in TorontoTom Wilson may look exactly what you would think a rock star would look like. His personality, though, is blue collar and down to earth. I found Wilson early Sunday afternoon lounging on a metal seat at Union Station as he waited to catch a GO Bus back to Hamilton. We were meeting to discuss his travels for an upcoming article for the “On the Road” series in the Star.

He impressed me for a number of reasons, not least of which was his genuine interest in Julia and me. He asked where we were from and had great things to say — and terrific, albeit unmentionable stories to share — about her hometown (Poughkeepsie, N.Y.) and mine (Kitchener). Once he was on his bus, he emailed to thank us for making him feel comfortable.

Musicians don’t do that. Actually, few people in any walk of life do that.

As well as being gracious, Wilson also spoke thoughtfully about a variety of issues and shared photos of a trip he took to Versailles with his kids on his 50th birthday a couple of years ago, where he had a bit of fun with narcotics at Marie Antoinette’s estate. (He’d just come back from Amsterdam – what do you expect?)

Most importantly, though, is the excitement building toward the release of the seventh Blackie & the Rodeo Kings album, “Kings and Queens,” due out Tuesday, June 14. You may not have heard a lot of music from the band, but I think they’re going to get plenty of critical praise in coming months. Tom teams with Colin Linden and Stephen Fearing in BARK and “Kings and Queens” features vocals from a host of big names: Roseanne Cash, Patti Scialfa, Holy Cole, Emmylou Harris, Sam Phillips, Serena Ryder and Lucinda Williams among them.

“You had to write for those voices and hopefully they would like those songs,” Wilson says about the challenge of penning tunes for the album’s stellar roster of guest vocalists. “We had to jump through fiery hoops to write those songs and Colin Linden had to jump through fiery hoops to knit all together.”

As for the highlight of the process, Wilson singled out the finished product.

“What was a kick was getting some of the mixes back. Getting a track with my voice and Lucinda Williams singing together is pretty cool, you know,” he says of the album’s first song “If I Can’t Have You.”

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June 2, 2011

Hazelton Hotel scores big with Canucks fans in Toronto

2011 Stanley Cup Finals at Hazelton Hotel

Almost like being there? The Hazelton Hotel's Silver Screening Room was a terrific spot to see the goal on Wednesday.

George Cavey should’ve been there when Raffi Torres scored the goal. The Canucks’ fan had tickets to Game 1 of the 2011 Stanley Cup Finals but had to give them up when a last-minute business trip jettisoned him to Toronto on Wednesday. Luckily for Cavey, the Hazelton Hotel helped to ease the sting of not being there.

The hotel is showing all games of the best-of-seven NHL series in its 25-seat Silver Screening Room, a superbly comfortable Hollywood-style theatre with a giant 16×9 screen that delighted Cavey. “We just got off the plane and came straight to the hotel and they asked us if we’d like to watch the game down here. We said, ‘Sure.’ This is great.”

Cavey was high-fiving with the others in the room — all cheering for the Canucks — when Torres lit the lamp at Rogers Place on a terrific feed from Jannik Hansen with 19 seconds left in the third period. The 1-0 win over the Bruins moves Vancouver a step closer to bringing the Cup back to Canada for the first time since 1993.

“This is a big event. It’s a big deal to have a Canadian team in the finals. We wanted to do something special and open up this space for people to enjoy it,” said the Hazelton’s general manager, David Mounteer.

The hotel threw in some complimentary beer, soft drinks and popcorn for guests, who could also order food and drinks from ONE, Mark McEwan’s on-site restaurant.

Dan Winer wasn’t a guest at the hotel but he’s held a few events in the Screening Room and got the invite to attend from the Hazelton. He brought along a few friends who responded to his posting on Facebook that encouraged them to come.

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June 1, 2011

Lots of political moxy at Spirit of Hope in Toronto

Alan Dershowitz and David Gergen at Spirit of Hope panel discussion

Alan Dershowitz and David Gergen got into it at Spirit of Hope panel discussion in Toronto on Tuesday night.

David Gergen has a lot of fans — me included — because his even-tempered demeanour only seems to get broken when it meets blatant hypocrisy. On Tuesday night, Gergen, the CNN political analyst, winced and shook his head and appeared to be struggling with a virtual straitjacket as he forced himself to stay seated while colleague Alan Dershowitz spouted some bewildering balderdash in front of an audience at Beth Tzedec Congregation at 1700 Bathurst Street.

Gergen and Dershowitz, colleagues at Harvard University, were joined on the Spirit of Hope panel by the Washington Post’s Bob Woodward and Robert Gibbs, Barack Obama’s former White House press secretary. The night featured some fascinating discussions and revelations.

Woodward, whose recent book is “Obama’s Wars,” thinks “the Arab Spring has been misnamed. It’s more like the Arab Convulsion” and it could be “this president’s 9/11.” The situation is so tenuous, he said, that it threatens to dominate the remainder of the Obama administration’s first term, which would be damaging considering the president and his staff need to concentrate on the U.S. economy. Gibbs, who left the White House in February but remains a staunch Obama supporter and adviser, told the audience of about 2,000 that the president has had more close, private conversations with Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu than with any other world leader since taking office. Gergen said the killing of Osama bin Laden “blunted the opposition argument that Obama was weak on foreign policy” so much that it could win a second term as long as the economy shows some improvement. “Obama got Osama. The Democrats are going to shout that at their convention.” And Dershowitz revealed that Netanyahu changed “the speech he wanted to give to Congress” last week in response to a perceived slight in an address Obama gave announcing his support for returning Israel to the 1967 boundaries that divide it from Palestine.

Dershowitz’s comments all evening seemed politically motivated rather than analytical and while that won him applause from the audience, it rankled the other panelists, who each took turns correcting his errors. Dershowitz, who had been asked by Netanyahu to be an Israeli ambassador, even went so far as to say, “The United States can always count on the support of Israel but Israel cannot always count on the support of the United States.” Fact is, the U.S. gives at least $3 billion annually in economic and military aid to Israel.

Gergen was continuously agitated by Dershowitz’s comments and in his closing remarks at the event sponsored by the Friends of Simon Wiesenthal Center for Holocaust Studies called for more conciliatory language from both American and Israeli politicians and commentators. Otherwise, he said, Israel could continue to lose support globally, leaving just Canada and the United States on its side. “That wouldn’t be good for Israel and it would be a concern for North America,” he told the attendees, which included moderator Heather Riesman, founder and president of Indigo Books & Music.

With the United Nations General Assembly ready to pass a motion in September that will recognize an independent Palestinian state, the Middle East tensions are only going to ratchet up it seems. But Woodward had a more dire concern.

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June 1, 2011

Toronto Tourism aims to reach higher

toronto-island-view-skyline

Walk on the outside of the CN Tower or sit on a bench on Toronto Island watching it? Easy choice if you ask me. (Julia Pelish copyrighted photo)

Are you ready to go on the EdgeWalk at the CN Tower? Tickets go on sale this week to those members of the public who want to take a few death-defying steps on the outside of the tower, 116 storeys and nearly 1,200 feet up. It’s the newest attraction to the city and one that’s already creating buzz around the world. The hope is EdgeWalk will join Toronto’s other great attractions and characteristics to keep visitors coming in record numbers. In 2010, the city attracted 10 million overnight visitors who brought in $4.5 billion in revenue.

As Toronto’s tourism industry boldly proclaimed its intentions of “Reaching Higher” on Tuesday it also soberly acknowledged the strong headwinds it faces in maintaining the tremendous momentum it has established in the past few years.

A stronger Canadian dollar, higher gas prices and the moribund U.S. economy have continued the decline of American visitors to the city. Tourism Toronto president and CEO David Whitaker said the numbers so far in 2011 “have been relatively flat, but we’re hanging in there with our international visitors through the first four months.”

Whitaker was speaking at Tourism Toronto’s annual general meeting at the Air Canada Centre, an event attended by members of the hotel, food, hospitality and other related industries. He and other members of the organization that advocates for the city around the globe insisted that the way forward is to continue to build on the international clientele. Overseas visitors to Ontario are up 2.4 per cent from this time last year, according to data Whitaker presented. The vast majority of those visitors land in Toronto. That increase is impressive when you consider that tourism to Canada as a whole is down 11.3 per cent from this time in 2010. (The year after the Olympics will do that to you.)

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