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Massive open streets festival planned for Toronto

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toronto open streetsA large stretch of Bloor Street, Yonge Street, and Danforth Avenue could be transformed into a massive 11 km car-free plaza for a series of community events this summer, organizers of a Toronto "Open Streets" event say.

The event, championed by Councillor Kristyn Wong-Tam and 8-80 Cities, a Toronto-based non-profit that promotes healthy forms of transportation and outdoor recreation, would (tentatively) see Bloor St. and Danforth Ave. closed from High Park to Greenwood on consecutive Sundays for events based around physical activity and community building. Yonge Street would also be closed south of Bloor to Lake Shore.

In cities such as Ottawa, New York City, and Guadalajara (pictured) that already do a similar thing during the summer, Open Streets festivals - sometimes called ciclovias - have seen cycling, picnics, storytelling, games, yoga and dance classes.

Intersecting streets would remain open and traffic would be allowed to cross Bloor, Yonge, and the Danforth. In September last year, Paul Kulig from 8-80 Cities said Bloor-Danforth and Yonge make good candidates because of the subway and their "iconic" status within Toronto.

The group also considered Yonge Street and Lake Shore Blvd.

The organizers received $180,000 of provincial funding in 2013 but are still seeking a big-name sponsor to cover the cost of policing the event. 8-80 Cities and Wong-Tam are also working on approval from city council for a pilot event this summer, possibly over three weekends in late July and early August.

What do you think of a Bloor, Danforth and Yonge open streets fest?

Chris Bateman is a staff writer at blogTO. Follow him on Twitter at @chrisbateman.

Image: 8-80 Cities


Is Marxist Nudist Taxidermy Club Toronto's weirdest?

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Nudist Marxist Taxidermy ClubLovers of the absurd often find themselves stranded amid a teaming mass of real, serious events and news items - not to mention awards shows. Now Toronto's Marxist Nudist Taxidermy Club, the campiest little extracurricular group you've never heard of, is about to host "The Minties," a "ceremony that will honour humanity's greatest achievements - as well as the Most Average Peanut Butter Sandwich."

This off-kilter awards show will be all in good fun and, in keeping with the club's mandate of all things wacky, strictly encourages fancy-dress as opposed to the nudity their name might imply. Some examples of the work of the Monty Python-esque Toronto-based club are below.

Nudist Marxist Taxidermy Club

Nudist Marxist Taxidermy ClubNudist Marxist Taxidermy ClubWhile you'll have to wait until Sunday, April 6th to see The Minties take over the Main Hall of the Tranzac - the show will be free to enter - for now you can make your nominations here. Categories include Best Intentions, Best Picture (of a Bear Fighting a Celebrity or Historical Figure), Best TV Show that You Think You Created, and Best Grocery List. I'm not sure where Best Fedora is on there. Maybe next year.

Know about any other strange clubs in Toronto? Let us know in the comments.

New snack bar brings a bit of Palermo to King West

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Bar BucaAfter much anticipation and a few delays, this sister space to King West's Buca has now opened around the corner on Portland. Featuring a menu of sharable plates meant to complement the extensive cocktail and wine list, it's a casual, booze-first version of the main restaurant.

Read my profile of Bar Buca in the restaurants section.

This Week in Film: Oscar Shorts, 360 Screenings, Our RoboCop Remake, Toronto Black Film Festival

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Toronto film listingsThis Week in Film rounds up noteworthy new releases in theatres, rep cinema and avant-garde screenings, festivals, and other special cinema-related events happening in Toronto.

SPECIAL EVENTS

Late Night Fridays: Our RoboCop Remake (Friday, February 7 at 11:30PM; The Royal)

Before you see the four trillion dollar remake that opens this coming Wednesday, and before you revisit the original Verhoeven film at the Lightbox next March, there's a third RoboCop you might want to take a look at. Screening as part of The Royal's 'Late Night Fridays' series, Our RoboCop Remake is a crowd-sourced film project assembled by a group of over 50 filmmakers from Los Angeles and New York, who split the original RoboCop up into individual pieces and have remade the movie themselves. It's essentially the cinematic equivalent of Occupy Conan.

360 Screenings presents: LOVE (February 7 at 7PM & February 8 at 2PM OR 7PM; Location: TBA)
The 360 Screenings series makes a return just in time for Valentine's Day. These events are "a fusion of live theatre and cinema, offering audiences the chance to become part of a movie rather than just watch it." As with previous 360 Screenings, "the scene is set in a historic venue and the location is kept secret until 24 hours in advance. Guests are immersed in the sights and sounds of the evening's film as soon as they arrive on site, with actors creating interactive, live theatre installations. Those with a keen eye may soon guess the identity of the film. Food, wine and beer are available throughout the evening at a cash bar."

REP CINEMA

Trash Compactor presents: Hollywood Babylon (Thursday, February 6 at 8PM; CineCycle)

Hotel BabylonToronto film zine Trashcompactor presents a rare 35mm screening of Hollywood Babylon, Van Guyler's "totally unauthorized and mostly un-clothed 1972 soft core romp based on Ken Anger's legendary underground expose of good old fashioned tinsel town sin n' sleaze." Guyler's film will be preceded by an actual Kenneth Anger film, his 1947 experimental short film Fireworks, which will be presented on 16mm. Doors open at 7:30PM.

More in rep cinema this week:

FILM FESTIVALS

Toronto Black Film Festival (February 11-16)

After a successful eight-year run, the Montreal International Black Film Festival expanded to Toronto last year to equally great acclaim. Now, the Toronto Black Film Festival returns for its sophomore year with a knockout lineup of features and shorts, both documentary and fiction. Among many highlights is the Toronto premiere of Mahamat-Saleh Haroun's new film Grisgris (Thursday, February 13 at 7PM; Carlton Cinema), which had its explosive premiere in the Competition slate at Cannes last May. For the full line-up and schedule of films, check here.

NEW RELEASES

Oscar Shorts: Animated and Live Action (TIFF Bell Lightbox)

The Oscars are less than a month away, and the TIFF Bell Lightbox is once again screening all of the short film nominees so Toronto audiences can make the most informed predictions for their Oscar pools. The predominantly European collection of films (all of the Live Action shorts are from the other side of the Atlantic) offers our first look at some of the possible auteurs of 10 years from now.

Also opening in theatres this week:

  • The Attorney (Cineplex Yonge & Dundas)
  • Gore Vidal: The United States of Amnesia (The Bloor)
  • The LEGO Movie (Carlton, Rainbow Market Sq., Cineplex Yonge & Dundas)
  • The Monuments Men (Varsity, Rainbow Market Sq., Scotiabank)
  • Sex After Kids (Carlton)
  • The Unbelievers (The Bloor)
  • Vampire Academy (Cineplex Yonge & Dundas)

Lead still from Our RoboCop Remake.

Your photos of the early February snowstorm in Toronto

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snow storm toronto february 2014Toronto got a healthy dumping of snow yesterday, which unsurprisingly made the commute to and from work a cold and wet mess. The SRT was shutdown throughout the day for snow and ice removal while major traffic arteries were jammed on account of various accidents and poor driving conditions in general. While none of this is out of the ordinary (especially this winter), try to bear in mind that this is also Toronto. We love to bitch about the snow. But we also love to snap pics of it and then marvel at how pretty it all is. Blah, blah, blah...here are some of those photos.

Check out the whole collection in our Winter Wonderleand stream.

snow storm toronto february 2014karen_m44

snow storm toronto february 2014sharonmarie5387

snow storm toronto february 2014adi338

snow storm toronto february 2014icttruman

snow storm toronto february 2014jamestruong

snow storm toronto february 2014blogTO

snow storm toronto february 2014mich_dee

snow storm toronto february 2014eddyg27

snow storm toronto february 2014jackmanchiu

Lead photo by griffian

Kew Beach

Breakout Toronto Bands: Birds of Bellwoods

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Birds of Bellwoods bandBreakout Toronto Bands features local artists that we think you should give a listen to.

Toronto four-piece folk ensemble Birds of Bellwoods seem to be incapable of doing wrong. With a mere four songs released on the band's SoundCloud page (each better than the last), the group has staked out a place amongst the city's most talented emerging songwriters, with no regard for due process.

WHO ARE THEY?

Longtime pals Joffe, Morningstar and Akiyama formed Birds this past summer as a trio, and soon added Blades after seeing his prowess on the banjo in the Summerworks production of The Life of Jude. Stevie tells me that the inspiration for their lovelorn tunes came after a particularly bad breakup, and although the pain does show in the songwriting, it shows well. The foursome took inspiration for their name from the youthful past time of enjoying Trinity Bellwoods Park in the warmer months, with liberal consumption of libations, and in their case, maybe even a couple of songs.

WHAT THEY SOUND LIKE

Although the name may sound populist in nature, their music is anything but contemporary mainstream folk. Birds of Bellwoods play strong indie melodies, built with folk instrumentation and peppered with classic Americana twang. Gang vocals, strutting bass lines and doting banjo flow effortlessly from verse to chorus, sort of like an Appalachian trail Band of Horses.

Although the band's existing online recordings are notably lo-fi - recorded in Akiyama's basement, all in one take, with one mic - the songs are solid because they stay within their means and are well executed. Joffe's Neil Young-esque vocal scratchings heighten the nostalgia factor on tracks like 'No Less Than All', while the duelling vocals in 'Train Song' give off an almost Barenaked Ladies vibe (at their best).

Birds of Bellwoods seem to soar even higher at more subdued paces ('Better Than Me', 'Felixstowe'), where they spike folk-pop motifs with R&B, slow-jam style anthems and beautifully crafted harmonies. Stevie tells me that they have loose plans to record a debut EP in the near future in-studio, perhaps keeping with the 'live take' feeling of their current songs.

SEE THEM / HEAR THEM

You can listen to Birds of Bellwoods on their SoundCloud page here, or catch them live at either of their upcoming residencies at Habits Gastropub on College, the next performance taking place February 22nd.

Southern-style barbecue joint opens in Greektown

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Smokehouse Danforth This newly opened BBQ destination on the Danforth opened just in time for last week's Super Bowl and is already seducing a steady stream of locals with the wafting scent of slow-smoked baby back ribs, wings, brisket, and pulled pork. Also of note are vegan options that don't feel like an afterthought.

Read my profile of Greenwood Smokehouse BBQ in the restaurants section.


Toronto Food Events: Latino 'licious, Pho Fo Brunch, Boeuf Bourguignon Supper Club, Beau's Tap Takeover

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Toronto Food EventsToronto Food Events rounds up the most delicious events, festivals, pop-ups, winemaker dinners, supper clubs and other food related happenings in Toronto this week and next. You can find us here every Friday morning.

THIS WEEK

UPCOMING

OTHER NEWS

  • Cafe Bar Pasta (1588 Dundas Street West) is launching a cooking class covering fresh pasta making techniques paired with a wine tasting hosted by master sommeiler John Szabo. Call the restaurant to for details, spaces are limited.
  • Pukka (778 St. Clair) has launched Meatless Mondays for the rest of February. The two course vegetarian menu is on offer for $20.14 per person.
  • Ki Modern Japanese + Bar (181 Bay Street) has introduced 50% off Caesar Fridays.

Photo from last year's Happy Fun Times Cannery Restaurant Drink Competition at Cold Tea

Huge music hub for indie artists set to launch in Toronto

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Weird Canada DistroWeird Canada talked extensively with us last July about their plans to use a $50,000 grant to build a distribution centre for Canadian music. Founders Marie Claire Flanagan and Aaron Levin explained that their music blog's new distro would focus on under-the-radar indie musicians, some in major cities but many in remote locales in Canada, connecting limited run physical releases (vinyl, CD, cassette, whatever) with fans and record stores around the world.

Back then the tireless couple were still working out the kinks of the hub, but now their time is up and Wyrd Distro will debut on Saturday, February 15th as part of the Wavelength Festival's celebrations in Toronto -- and in cities all around Canada including Montreal, Vancouver, Saint John, Guelph, Iqaluit, Winnipeg, and Yellowknife.

While Flanagan has been to seemingly every corner of the country giving talks on the distro's plans, I caught up with them via email to see what the launch will be like, and how the distro will change things for Toronto's indie musicians and music fans. It turns out not everything is cast in stone yet, but the mold is looking pretty good.

Marie, you've been traveling all over. What are you up to?

I've been working through my imposter syndrome, mainly -- it's hard to accept that people want to pay me to come talk. I went up to Music Survival Camp in Yukon, went to Dawson city to talk potential Weird/Dawson collaborations, went to Calgary for the Canadian New Music Network conference, went to Edmonton to film a greenscreen promo for the distro, and then finally back to Kitchener to set everything up.

The last time we spoke you were working the kinks out with the distro -- a little bit even within the conversation we had. What are some major changes that took place since we last talked?

Travelling all over the Yukon and Alberta really gave us a sense of how important this distro is to emerging Canadian musicians. The tools to make music are readily accessible in this brave new world, and the people who are making it. We're facilitating the relationship between makers and takers by removing the barriers between them.

Two things have changed. One, we've entertained the idea of variable markups on the prices. If you remember, the way Wyrd Distro works is that the artist sets the price on what they want to be paid for each sale and we add a small markup to cover our costs for handling, etc. Originally we were shooting to keep this markup at $1 per item (far below the typical rate). However, we're preparing for this markup to change, or be different across formats. The rate will still be transparent and visible to customers.

Another shift that isn't so consumer-focused has been us sorting out our fulfillment procedures (warehousing, shipping, and handling). We've been speaking with a few distributors on sorting this end out. This isn't too exciting, but we're hoping that we can find a company to take on this work for us so we can reduce our markup even more.

I had questions about how artists could mail their work to you and still make a profit, and one idea you had was hubs where artists could leave their work, such as record stores. Has this worked out, and what is Toronto's hub?

This is definitely a Phase II implementation. Through the organization and coordination of the Wyrd Distro launch gatherings our volunteers have made intimate connections with several record stores across Canada. We've begun to pitch this as an idea to many different store owners to get their thoughts. It's not likely to be ready at launch but definitely in the coming months. For Toronto, it's probably going to be June Records, but we're still convincing Ian.

Weird CanadaWhere will you be live broadcasting from for the launch, and what will the broadcast be like?

We will be broadcasting from the back of June Records. When we envisioned the launch gatherings we really wanted them to feel like a cohesive national gathering, and the broadcast has come to reflect this, simply by not being a broadcast. They're discussions.

They'll begin with Marie and I giving a short description of what Wyrd Distro is and how it works and we'll then answer some questions that artists and people from each city have. Some of the discussions will involve multiple cities, and in those cases we're really excited to help create simple social connections between them.

Will the distro site be live on the 15th?

If not, please kill me. Yes!

If artists want to drop off their stuff, what do they need to bring? Do they need to sign up first?

Please sign up first! We want to make the distro as accessible as possible, but we have priorities, just like we have priorities on the blog. You can assume you meet our priorities if we have written about you, but it is good to check in and make sure. We aren't serving anyone by carrying music that our audience isn't excited about.

The drop-box should be viewed as a way to test out the service and not as a mechanism by which you can give us your entire back catalog. A single entity (artist, label) can put 5 copies of a single release in the drop-box. There will be a laptop at the event where they can sign-up.

What's going to be for sale in the distro so far?

Lots of vintage Bruce Cockburn LPs. I'm kidding. As of the date of this writing about 35 artists have sent us massive boxes of music. There will also be several easter eggs at launch -- vintage Toronto punk dead-stock from a collector I know, some vintage experimental tapes I've been sourcing over the years, and some rare titles we've had at the HQ (think early Mac DeMarco, Grimes, etc.)

At least one blogger saw a problem with you not supporting "those not edgy, or daring enough for Weird Canada." How would you answer that -- especially the implication some people perceive Wyrd Distro as something that will gain a lot of power quickly in the Canadian music scene?

I thought it was valid and I was really into the discussion it brought forth. Musical tastes are a subjective reflection of personal histories and experiences. I'm still going to root for the people I see as marginalized, challenging, underdogs, or underrepresented, even if that makes me come off poorly to someone who can't see the thread between my values.

What's interesting is this criticism is only present by virtue of our Open Business initiative. We're being held to a standard no one else is because we talk openly about curation and its exclusionary result. There is a painful existential dialectic at play here whereby, as humans, we're only able to define ourselves by excluding others. And Wyrd Distro is no exception to this.

If we're ever in a position to gain a lot of power within the Canadian music scene (and let's be frank here: we're talking about an online distro for material largely self-released and self-pressed in tiny quantities) we'll be the first to challenge ourselves, and there will be an open dialogue.

If we had no curation we would not be providing a unique service. I hate to say it but CDBaby does an incredible job for servicing DIY artists. They totally crush at this. They take care of everything. What we provide that CDBaby doesn't is our identity, community, and curation.

How are you guys feeling?

Stressed. Scared. Wishing we had done a few things earlier.

Catch the Wyrd Distro launch in Toronto featuring a Google Hangout talk by Weird Canada's Marie Claire Flanagan & Aaron Levin and a live performance by Carl DidurSaturday, February 15 at 4pm at June Records (662 College St.) during Wavelength Festival. The event is all ages and free to enter.

New map plots where people run in Toronto

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Toronto run mapThose who share my predisposition for unique maps of Toronto will likely take interest in the latest series from Nathan Yau at Flowing Data. In it, he uses publicly available GPS data from RunKeeper, which thousands of runners use to track their workouts across the globe. What emerges in these maps are the desires lines of those users of the city who are typically looking 1) to avoid traffic (both vehicular and pedestrian) and 2) for nice scenery.

It's thus not much of a surprise that runners gravitate to the waterfront -- both in Toronto and everywhere else. If it also appears that downtown-types run more often, the saturation of routes in the core likely has to do with both its increased density and the fact that some runners jog along downtown streets on their way to the Martin Goodman Trail. None of this is altogether that surprising, but it is fascinating to see a visualization of how a particular group navigates the city. It's anything but random.

OTHER CITIES

Paris run mapParis

London run mapLondon

New York run mapNew York

San Francisco run mapSan Francisco

Miami run mapMiami

View all of Yau's maps at Flowing Data

The Best Donuts in Toronto

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Donuts TorontoThe best donuts in Toronto buck every health impulse in favour of deep fried, sugary deliciousness. Gluten-laden and calorie packed, the donut (or, doughnut) has it all, but do we heed the warnings? No. And while you can't call us pioneers exactly, as the Dutch invented the original donut and Americans made them fashionable, you could say our love of the donut has been a consuming passion.

A version of the sweet, fried dough exists in almost all cultures; so of course the most multicultural city in the world would raise the bar on the humble donut. Canada per capita consumes more donuts and has more donut shops than anywhere else on earth. Yeast, cake, ring, filled, holes, bits, twists, crullers, beignets, fritters, Dutchies, sprinkled, sugared, glazed and powdered - we eat them all.

Here is where to find the best donuts in Toronto.

See also:

The best cookies in Toronto
The best cupcakes in Toronto
The best macarons in Toronto
Where to find whoopie pies in Toronto

Now hiring: Associate Editor / Web Producer

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OfficeNow that we mostly have our Valentine's Day plans taken care of it's time for us to focus on finding someone to help us out with some things around here. And what better person than you? Yup, we're looking for the next superstar Associate Editor / Web Producer, someone who has the passion to be part of our team of raving Toronto enthusiasts but also the knowledge and skills to get the job done.

Here are the qualifications we're looking for in an ideal applicant.

  • You have experience in an Editorial and/or Web Production role at a web or mobile focused app or publication.
  • You are mobile savvy and must own either an iPhone 5c, 5s or 4s OR an Android phone using an operating system 4.1x or above.
  • You have your own laptop, copy of Photoshop and know how to use it at an expert level.
  • You are HTML-literate (you understand the basics and can recognize, write and edit basic code for hyperlinks, alt tags and other formatting.)
  • You know how to create Google maps.
  • You have experience working with Wordpress, Movable Type or a similar CMS.
  • You are extremely organized and detail oriented.
  • You have demonstrated online writing ability via a Journalism degree or related experience.
  • You are knowledgeable about SEO best practices.
  • You currently live in Toronto and consider yourself "in the know". Your friends are always asking you for suggestions of what to do and where to go.

And here's what you can expect to be doing.

  • Assisting and collaborating with current editorial team with day to day operations.
  • Working with our team of staff and freelance writers and photographers.
  • Copy editing posts.
  • Sourcing and editing photos to site specifications.
  • Formatting posts.
  • Research and database maintenance.
  • Community management, social media execution and oversight.
  • Creating Google maps and other related web production.
  • Comment moderation.
  • Post idea generation, execution and editorial planning.
  • Breaking news coverage.

For more details, just send an email to jobs [at] blogto [dotcom]. In your email to us, please state/include the following:

  • A bit of information about who you are and why you'd like to be on the team
  • Details and information about how you meet the above qualifications.
  • A link to your LinkedIn profile or online resume detailing related education and/or work experience.

Please note: This role is ideally suited to someone with about 1-2 years work experience in a similar role. The position is full time, available immediately and will start with a 3 month contract. When not in the field, you should expect to work out of our modern office space in the heritage-award winning Dineen Building.

Thanks in advance for your interest. We aim to respond to everyone who submits a complete, qualifying application as detailed above.

Vinyl art (not toys!) storms the Design Exchange

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Vinyl art toy design exchangeThis Is Not A Toy is a vinyl art exhibit curated by John Wee Tom of the Templar Hotel and Sara Nickleson of the Design Exchange with a little (ok, a lot) of help from rapper/super producer Pharrell Williams, who serves as guest curator. Featuring the work of vinyl art big-wigs like KAWS, Takashi Murakami, FriendsWithYou and Coarse, the pieces in the show range from a few bucks to millions of dollars. Alternately challenging, bewildering and fun, the exhibit gestures to the childhood fascination with toys while interrogating the degree to which these iconic objects function as cultural signifiers.

Take a peek at This Is Not a Toy in our photo gallery.

By the numbers: Snow in Toronto

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toronto snow plowThe great white winter of 2013/2014 has so far provided plenty of wild weather to keep city's transportation division busy - and there's likely plenty more work on the way. For comparison, the typical winter (based on a 30-year average) drops 133 cms of snow on Toronto, requiring 40 to 50 "de-icing events," as ploughing and salting runs are officially known.

So far this winter 77 cms of snow has been recorded at Pearson airport, well above the 64 cms expected for this time of year. There have been a total of five extreme cold alerts, covering 19 days. The all-time record is 27 days in 2008/2009.

Simply moving snow off Toronto's streets is a major undertaking. This year, 5,604 kms of roads - that's 133 kms of expressways, 1,096 kms of arterials, 889 kms of collectors, 322 kms of laneways, and 3,165 kms of local roads - were cleared by city-owned or contracted vehicles. 262,000 people had their driveways opened.

In December, the city set aside more than $80 million for ploughing, salting, and sidewalk clearing, which works out to a little over $30 per person.

Here's what this winter looks like in numbers.

BUDGET

toronto snow budgetThe biggest chunk of the city's winter operations budget goes on snow removal, specifically ploughing and driveway clearing. Salt purchasing and distribution are also a massive chunk of the overall budget. Toronto dropped $10.5 million on its road salt stockpile before the cost of spreading it was factored in. Clearing sidewalks and transit stops cost $17.1 million.

EQUIPMENT

toronto snow ploughsThat salt doesn't spread itself, so the city also employs a fleet of winter vehicles and a crew of more than 1,000 people to keep them working. The sidewalk ploughs - scaled-down versions of the street vehicles - pull double-duty, clearing transit shelters and the public walkway of snow when more than 8 cms is on the ground. Main roads get cleared when there is more than 5 cms of snow.

Snow ploughs and driveway clearing machines: 571
Sidewalk ploughs and transit stop clearing machines: 322
Salt trucks: 203
Crew: 1,100

SALT

toronto winter saltRoad salt is crushed granules of sodium chloride - the same substance that adds that all-important pep to food - sometimes in the form of a dry brine mixed with other agents to stop bouncing and reduce the impact on the environment.

A five-year study carried out by Environment Canada found road salt in significant concentrations can have a damaging effect on plants, animals and the aquatic environment, so the city has been committed to reducing its salt usage by 10 to 15 per cent this year. Still, de-icing is a massive undertaking.

Salt used in an average storm: 10,220 tonnes
Salt used in an average year: 130,571 tonnes
2014 salt budget: $10.5 million

Source: City of Toronto

Chris Bateman is a staff writer at blogTO. Follow him on Twitter at @chrisbateman.

Image: Scott Rogers, Benson Kua/blogTO Flickr pool.


Rob Ford demands Pride flag be removed from City Hall

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toronto rob fordRob Ford has asked the city manager to take down a Pride flag that was raised this morning at City Hall in solidarity with gay athletes at the Sochi Olympics.

"This is about the Olympics, this is about being patriotic to your country," Ford said. "This is not about sexual preference." The mayor says he wants it replaced with a Canadian flag.

The rainbow flag was installed on the courtesy flagpole outside City Hall with the help of Deputy Mayor Norm Kelly. The pole is reserved for flags that promote "activities such as fund-raising drives, multi-cultural events and national or independence days," according to the city website.

Toronto non-profit 519 Church Street Community Centre requested the flag-raising at the suggestion of Councillor Kristyn Wong-Tam.

Kelly called the Pride flag "a statement that we're not afraid to stand up for the rights and privileges that are being abused in other parts of the world."

"So there's nothing un-Canadian about that," he said. "In fact that's a very Canadian thing to do to be concerned and care about others."

Yesterday, Ford said he wouldn't be attending World Pride in Toronto this summer. "I've never gone to a Pride parade. So I'm not going to change the way I am," he said.

Right now the flag is still flying, as it is at other city halls elsewhere in Canada. Ford, meanwhile, has put up a Canadian flag in his office window.

UPDATE: 13:58: The CBC's Jamie Strashin reports on Twitter that the mayor has graciously allowed the flag to remain following a meeting with Councillor Anthony Perruzza, just as long as it's accompanied by a Canadian flag.

UPDATE: 15:00: Two uniformed police officers are in Ford's office this afternoon following a "threat" received by the mayor, according to Katie Simpson on CP24. The nature of the threat hasn't been made public.

Chris Bateman is a staff writer at blogTO. Follow him on Twitter at @chrisbateman.

Image: Chris Bateman/blogTO.

Weekend events in Toronto: February 7-9 2014

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Weekend Events in TorontoWeekend events in Toronto is our guide to events happening this Friday, Saturday and Sunday. Here's what's happening in Toronto this Feb 7-9, 2014.

People Put Out Productions Launch
Toronto badly needs more all-ages music infrastructure, so here's good news: People Put Out Productions is a brand new music collaborative that aims to book bands of all genres for affordable, all-ages shows (plus a portion of funds raised go to a local Toronto charity). The launch weekend will showcase a diverse range of bands at intimate venues: a punk night at Izakayai Sushi House, a weirdo-noise-pop show at The White House, a rock and roll mid-day show at June Records (all ages), and a hip hop night at Crawford. Notable bands include Stuck Out Here, Soupcans, Philly Moves and catl. Various venues, Feb 7-9.

ART

This is Not a ToyThis is Not a Toy
Pharrell Williams has always kept busy (the Grammy winning musician is also a fashion designer), and his newest project has stirred up lot of excitement in Toronto's art scene. The Design Exchange has teamed up with Williams to curate and present This Is Not A Toy, an exhibit dedicated to vinyl designer toys including the work of KAWS, Takashi Murakami, Yoshitomo Nara, FriendsWithYou, and more. Get a sneak peek at the exhibit here. Runs until May 19. Design Exchange (234 Bay St), various times and prices.

Hard Livin'
Is gaming all you dream about? Do you see the world in Pixels? #Hashtag has the show for you - Hard Livin' will be a "life-sized board game that will fill Hashtag's walls with over 500 unique pieces of hand-painted pixel art." Beat the game to win prizes from A&C Games, Snakes & Lattes, Snakes & Lagers, and Guerrilla Printing. #Hashtag Gallery (801 Dundas St W), February 8-28.

For more art listings, check out our Top 10 Must-See Art Shows This Winter post.

FILM

360 Screenings360 Screenings presents: LOVE
The 360 Screenings series makes a return just in time for Valentine's Day. These events are "a fusion of live theatre and cinema, offering audiences the chance to become part of a movie rather than just watch it." As with previous 360 Screenings, "the scene is set in a historic venue and the location is kept secret until 24 hours in advance. Guests are immersed in the sights and sounds of the evening's film as soon as they arrive on site, with actors creating interactive, live theatre installations. Those with a keen eye may soon guess the identity of the film. Food, wine and beer are available throughout the evening at a cash bar." February 7 at 7PM & February 8 at 2PM OR 7PM, Location: TBA.

For more film events, check out our This week in film post.

MUSIC

Long Winter
It's this season's fourth installment of Long Winter, complete with its usual collection of music, art, talks, food, and dance. The musical roster includes The Bicycles, Teenanger, Alvvays, HSY, Not the Wind, Not the Flag, and Sheezer, and to make this one a little spicier, there will be a NotOKCupid talk, where you can blatantly watch five people on dates, with some commentary from an "expert matchmaker." The first 350 people through the door get the Volume 4 split 7" that features Teenanger and HSY. Friday, February 7, The Great Hall (1087 Queen St. W.), 7pm, PWYC.

Bile Sister & Skull Bong double album release
This double album release show will be the first edition kick-off party of new Healing Power Records monthly shows at the Tranzac. Bile Sister, who were named a top band to watch in 2014, will have the new, skuzzed out record Faucet available, alongside Skull Bong's latest mental medicine, Burnt Endz. Afterwards Scalez will be dropping hip hop, funk, and avant garde bangers to maximize the good vibes. Saturday, February 8, Tranzac (South Cross), 9:30pm, PWYC.

See also

For more music listings, check out our This Week in Music and February Concerts posts.

FOOD

LatkepaloozaCaplansky's 4th Annual Latkepalooza Competition
Latkes might be the best food ever, and if you agree with that statement then Latkepalooza is the fest for you. Caplansky's Delicatessen (356 College Street), Sunday, February 9, 6pm - 8pm.

For more food events, check out our Toronto Food Events post.

THEATRE

Firebrand
Single Thread Theatre continues to unearth the seminal stories of Toronto's heritage through engaging, site-specific productions. Their past performances, The Campbell House Story and The Loyalists, have encouraged audiences to look differently at the city by revisiting moments that have shaped Canadian history. The Mackenzie House museum is the setting for Firebrand, a play profiling William Lyon Mackenzie, the city's first mayor. Mackenzie House (82 Bond Street), February 6-22 Thursdays, Fridays, and Saturdays at 8pm, $20.

For more events on stage, check out our The top theatre productions in Toronto February 2014 post.

COMEDY

Bob Stone Mayoral Campaign Launch
If you're burnt out on satire of Mayoral politics, this might not be the show for you. But if you're hungry for more, head to The Storefront Theatre on Saturday. "The event will include a stump speech by the mayor, followed by questions from the audience and a mix and mingle. The so-called NEWS NOW team will be on hand to ask Mayor Stone some hard-hitting questions." The Storefront Theatre (955 Bloor St. W.), Saturday, February 9, 7pm, free.

PARTY

Toronto Jungle PartyToronto Jungle Party
Toronto Jungle, a website dedicated to maintaining the roots of electronic music, is celebrating their 15 year anniversary. Along with Sonorous and Groundspace, they're throwing a huge bash at Guvernment, importing big names like Calyx & Teebee and Dillinja from the UK. Locals will recognize Rene Lavice, one of the biggest names to ever come out of TO's DnB crowd. Read our chat with Toronto's guru of everything DnB, Marcus Sills a.k.a. DJ Marcus Visionary here. The Guvernment (132 Queens Quay E), Friday, February 7, 10pm, $25.

Motor City Legends
Techno wouldn't exist if it weren't for Kevin Saunderson, so if you care about electronic music you should make sure you catch him DJing at least once in your life. Saunderson hits Coda (the new club run by the guys behind Footwork and Art Department's Jonny White) February 7 with fellow Detroit legends Octave One, who are one of the best no-laptop live techno acts around. Friday, February 7th, Coda (794 Bathurst), 10pm, $25.

See also

For more dance listings, check out our Top Dance Parties in Toronto in February post.

FASHION

Annex Flea: Valentine's Edition!
Shop for your sweetie/s at the Annex Flea this Sunday to find treasures from vintage clothes to homemade foods. Vendors are: Aliya & Lucas Vintage, AMP Sales, Baked Soap, Bewilderlings, Crass Stitches, Cubit's Organics, Earth & City, Fair Judy's, FoldIt Creations, FoodBenders, Galette Girls, Goldeen, Gotamago, Her Vintage Treasures, Jo Kim Crochet, Marigold's Finest, A Mischievious Marriage, Muizee, Odds & Mends, Sex on a Stitch, Silkpulp, Simone Collins Jewelry, Son of a Woodcutter, Sudsatorium, TKD Designs, Valient Bob, Wild Thing Vintage, Zazou Bisou. Centre for Social Innovation (720 Bathurst Street), Sunday, February 9, 10am - 4pm.

Gardiner Museum Jewellery Trunk Show
This Friday the Gardiner Museum Shop will be home to a one-day jewellery trunk show and sale featuring all sort of local gems. From 5 pm until 9 pm, shop bohemian necklaces by Armed, blinged out statement pieces by Cuchara, exquisite vintage costume jewels handpicked by Carole Tanenbaum, and more. Plus, there'll be a cash bar open so you can peruse with a pick-me-up! Friday, February 7, Gardiner Museum Shop (111 Queen's Park), 5pm-9pm.

For more fashion listings, check out our This Week in Fashion post.

PETS

PugalugPugalug Meet Up
Toronto can take pride in a ton of dog rescues doing great work, and Pugalug is one. This weekend they'll host a charity meet up at Pawsway's pet centre at the Harbourfront, which you can attend for only $7 (proceeds go to cute pugs in need like new rescue Rocco, pictured above). Bring your dog, or just meet some new friends. Stop by early for the Frenchie (French bulldogs) meet up from 11am-1pm. PawsWay (245 Queen's Quay West), Sunday, February 9, 1:30pm - 3:30pm, $7.

VALENTINE'S DAY

Couples and Singles Valentines 5K
Looking for love in all the wrong places? This race over in Burlington gives new meaning to speed dating. Couples and singles co-mingle for a fast 5K around Cedar Springs Health Racquets and Sportclub. All couples who finish receive a heart shaped metal (aww!) and singles hopefully scoop up a last minute Valentines date. Cedar Springs Health and Raquet Club (960 Cumberland Ave, Burlington), Sunday, February 9th, 10am.

Get ready for V-day with our Valentine's Day ideas in Toronto 2014 post.

Have an event you'd like to plug? Submit your own listing to the blogTO Toronto events calendar or contact us directly.

Photo of Catl by Steve Mallinson

Make Love, Not War

That time a Toronto team won Olympic hockey gold

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toronto granitesThe 2014 men's Olympic hockey squad is a super team of NHL stars from across the country. As the most talented and highly paid individuals in their field, they are the Traveling Wilburys of hockey, if you will - the team could never exist if it hadn't been created.

90 years ago, it was a group of talented amateurs from Toronto who fought for, and eventually took home, Canada's first (and the world's first) winter Olympic gold in hockey at the 1924 Chamonix Olympics. With devastating efficiency they tore through the competition, scoring in bunches. The opposition didn't stand a chance.

toronto granite clubThe Toronto Granite Curling Club was founded by an act of rebellion. Five of prominent members of the Toronto Curling Club - two bankers, a politician, a lawyer, and a businessman - decided in 1875 that they were fed up with the sports society's plan to build a new enclosed rink on Adelaide Street.

The economy was struggling and many of its members viewed the arena as an unnecessary extravagance, record authors Rod Austin and Ted Barris in Carved in Granite: 125 Years of Granite Club History.

With the help of some 30 prominent members, a splinter group was formed. There was William Mellis "Mr." Christie, the namesake of Christie St., Robert Henry Bethune the first general manager of the Dominion Bank, and Robert Jaffray the director of The Globe newspaper, among others.

The first members would soon be joined by Toronto mayor W.B. McMurrich and J.D. Edgar, the speaker of the House of Commons. Sir John A. Macdonald was an honorary patron.

The founders named their new club after the dark grey rock of the Canadian Shield used in their curling stones.

The Granite Club's "uptown" clubhouse, a single-story wood hut surround by an ice sheet, was one of just three curling rinks in the city, and it quickly became a magnet for anyone of a sporting bent. It was also the only club located away from the waterfront, the frozen surface of which became a perfect natural ice sheet in winter.

The Granite Club expanded to a new two-storey red brick premises on Church Street in 1880. At the building's rear sat a massive enclosed rink with enough room for four curling sheets. Before the arrival of artificial ice and Zambonis, simply creating a rink big enough for the club members' needs was a serious undertaking.

"The poor, long-suffering ice man would sit up night after night, waiting for the temperature to drop. When it did, he would throw open the large doors of the rink, don his leather gloves and high rubber boots, and begin sprinkling the floor of the rink with water, adding a little more each time as it froze," Rod Austin and and Ted Barris write.

"Then, using hot water from a watering can, he would 'pebble' the surface to produce a beautiful checkerboard appearance. Ice making in the 19th century was not only hard work, it was also an art."

toronto granitesThe Granite Club's various curling teams had plenty of success but it was its men's hockey team that would make the biggest sporting impact.

In the early 1920s, the Toronto Granites were an emerging force in the Ontario Hockey Association. Under the guidance of Toronto Star sports editor William A. Hewitt, father of broadcaster Foster Hewitt, the team won the 1920 John Ross Robertson Cup, beating the Hamilton Tigers on aggregate over two games.

The team switched to the Allen Cup, the trophy awarded to the national amateur champions, in 1922, taking back-to-back wins against the Regina Victorias and University of Saskatchewan respectively.

The win against the University of Saskatchewan was particularly hard fought. The collegiate side repeatedly breached the Granites' defence only to be denied by the calm heroics of goalie Jack Cameron.

Forward Harry Watson - dubbed the "bad man" in the "Ambitious City" - scored the first goal for the Granites in front of some 6,000 rabid Winnipeg fans, many of whom had been in line for tickets since before dawn. Hard work over two games by captain Dunc Munro and forward "Hooley" Smith proved pivotal, leading to a 11-2 final score after two games.

As was customary until 1960, the Allen Cup champions in an Olympic year were automatically selected to represent Canada against the world.

chamonix olympics1924 was a special year for the Olympics as it was. For the first time in the modern era, the event would be divided in two: one event for summer sports, another for winter, both played in the same country a few months apart.

The little alpine village of Chamonix, tucked in the imposing shadow of Mount Blanc, would host hockey, bobsleigh, figure skating, and winter patrol - a cross-country combination of skiing, rifle shooting, and mountaineering that would eventually morph into the biathlon - while Paris would be the site of the summer games a few months later.

toronto granitesThe Toronto Granites left for Europe with several new players aboard the RMS Montcalm on Jan. 11, 1924. A vicious winter storm had whipped the Bay of Fundy into a nauseating froth. Forward "Hooley" Smith bet Toronto Evening Telegram writer Harry Watson that he wouldn't be seasick, and lost. The next morning only three of the nine-man squad made it to breakfast.

"[Dunc Munro] was afraid he was going to die; the next day he was afraid he was not going to die," Watson wrote.

The team arrived in Chamonix via London and Paris and were clearly impressed by what they found. William A. Hewitt cabled his bosses at the Toronto Star gushing over the "towering mountains," the glaciers, and the mountain stream that bisected the village.

Also writing for the Star and quoted in Carved in Granite: 125 Years of Granite Club History, captain Dunc Munro sketched out the team's day-to-day activities:

"Mr. Hewitt has the boys under strict discipline. They are to retire at ten o'clock and rise for an eight o'clock breakfast. I may say that by ten o'clock they are all glad to go to bed, as the wonderful air here makes you very tired ... Chamonix is the St. Moritz of France. There are many things to do here, but most of them are out of bounds until after we win the world's championship."

The Olympic hockey games were played outdoors on a natural European-size ice rink, which was considerably bigger than what they were used to in Canada. The Granites were also forced to adapt to tiny 1-foot boards that eliminated heavy body checks and practically all dump-ins. The main hockey stadium was "twice as large at the University of Toronto stadium" and could hold about 5,000 people.

They needn't have been worried by the unfamiliar playing surface because few countries managed to mount a defence against the all-powerful OHA champs. The Granites crushed Sweden, Czechoslovakia and Switzerland without conceding a single goal. Great Britain capitulated 19-2, leaving only the United States between the Canadians and a first Winter Olympic gold.

toronto granitesThough it would have made for a great story - victory in the face of defeat, an unlikely come from behind win, etc.. - the Americans also didn't present much of a challenge either. "The Canadians won rather easily," wrote the Toronto Star. "Their passing back and forward was a treat. Their teamwork was the predominant feature of the victory."

The Granites stormed to an early two-goal lead with markers from McCaffrey and Watson in the first period. Watson, one of the most talented players on the team, faked and deked through the American defence for the second goal. Spectators called it a thing of beauty.

A deflected shot beat Canadian goalie Jack Cameron for the only American point moments later. Three goals in the second and another in the third from Munro, a stunning individual effort in the mould of Watson's goal earlier in the game, sealed the victory 6-1. It was never close.

Despite a cross-check bursting his lip in the first minute, Harry Watson was the undoubted star of the match. "After the game the Americans declared Watson the greatest hockeyist of all time," The Star wrote. "They said no other player ever took so much punishment and played such brilliant hockey."

Moments later, the band struck up "The Maple Leaf" and the Canadian ensign was raised to the top of the stadium.

Canada had its first hockey gold at the Winter Olympics.

Chris Bateman is a staff writer at blogTO. Follow him on Twitter at @chrisbateman.

Images: City of Toronto Archives, Public Domain

Annex bakery calls end of days for mediocre pies

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pie shop annex torontoA pie revolution is afoot, at least if you believe the branding rhetoric of this new Mirvish Village bakery, a tiny little underground spot run someone as sweet on vegan politics as she is on vegan baking. Insofar as the end is nigh, I indulged in her pie.

Read my review of Apiecalypse Now! in the bakeries section.

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