– is CBC Radio 1’s slogan at the moment, unless they’ve taken it off the air out of embarrassment – it’s hard to miss. One the one hand, this is just truth in advertising – CBC Toronto, which serves all of south-central Ontario, at least in principle, has always been indifferent to the large partscontinue reading
Current Events Archives
Good news for newspaper readers
…and another failure in the long list of failed online newspaper ventures. From business headlines on CBS Marketwatch: 7:24[NYT] New York Times: Free access to Web content to start Wed. 7:23[NYT] New York Times to open up free access to online content 7:22[NYT] New York Times ends TimesSelect online service Prepare for more liberal sprinklingscontinue reading
I hope this involves some papier mache
SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) — Frustrated by one of the worst situations in air travel — passengers kept waiting in grounded, crowded aircraft for as much as 11 hours at a time — a consumer group is planning to stage a recreation of an extreme tarmac delay in the nation’s capital next week. p> The expectedcontinue reading
Change in tone
Months of smug, rah-rah, our market’s different from every other area with a housing boom in the world coverage are followed inevitably by: Scotiabank: [T]here is growing evidence of overvaluation in home prices in some parts of the country — a precursor to a period of softening conditions… the further domestic home prices climb above underlyingcontinue reading
ISO a media criticism category
I’m sure whoever wrote this felt very clever, but it’s just unprofessional, in my view. Or maybe I’m just annoyed because I felt stupid that I couldn’t guess what “the obvious” was in this headline on globeandmail.com: Bush to announce the obvious Will endorse recommendation this week from his top commander in Iraq to bringcontinue reading
Three takes
What’s more compelling for a newspaper reader, like me, who checks in to see what the latest news is on her favourite papers’ websites: Would it be: The Globe’s 12:28 headline story, “Canada’s changing family”, topped by a photo of a gay couple waving what is presumably a marriage license, or The Post’s non-time-stamped CanWestcontinue reading
Snap, crackle, and possibly pop
Finally, an article on real estate appears in the Canadian media that is not written by someone using the Canadian Real Estate Association talking points. Saturday’s Financial Post has a comment from a Lakehead University economics prof, who has done some basic analysis of prices to annual rental value to come up with a price-to-earningscontinue reading
Digging himself an ever-deeper grave
John Tory now favours not just funding private religious schools teaching the Ontario curriculum, but also supports these schools’ rights to teach creationism: Creationism raised as Ont. election issue CAROLINE ALPHONSO AND TENILLE BONOGUORE Globe and Mail Update September 5, 2007 at 2:41 PM EDT TORONTO — Publicly-funded religious schools would be allowed teach creationismcontinue reading
Cheap, secure parking in central London
From the Daily Mail: A hedge fund tycoon who ran up thousands of pounds of motoring fines abandoned his £80,000 supercar in a pound for three months – because he was too busy to collect it. … When they towed away his Maserati Cambiocorsa from a square in Knightsbridge in May, they were certain hecontinue reading
Up with Mondays
Back in the early part of 2001, when the tech meltdown was underway, the stock markets were incredibly volatile, as a look at the CBOE’s VIX index since 1990 shows: A pattern emerged: throughout the week, things would get progressively worse, with Fridays ending down a few hundred points, the decline usually accelerating after 2continue reading