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The comprehensive index of every blog post, magazine story and restaurant review that appears on Torontolife.com

All stories relating to advertising

The Dish

Restauran-TO

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La Carnita’s Andrew Richmond shopping for permanent digs

(Image: Renée Suen)

After drawing monster crowds for his La Carnita pop-ups, it seems design-director-cum-roving-taco-man Andrew Richmond is scouting King West for a space that could accommodate a 50-seat La Carnita restaurant. Richmond told the Toronto Star’s Corey Mintz that if he can get the place up and running by spring, he would leave his current post at OneMethod Digital and Design (though a King Street location would mean his advertising buddies could still stop by). Sounds like Richmond’s got a busy few months ahead; with no formal training in the kitchen, he’s been getting some help from chefs like Guy Rawlings and Steve Gonzalez. He’s also hoping to complete a stagiaire program with Matt Blondin at Acadia to get himself up to speed. Read the entire story [Toronto Star] »

The Hype

From the Print Edition

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The Conversation: artist-illustrators Gary Taxali and Graham Roumieu on art, wine and wolverines

The Conversation: Graphic Jam

(Image: Daniel Ehrenworth)

The place: The Gem on Davenport.
The people: artist-illustrators Gary Taxali and Graham Roumieu.
The subjects: art, wine and wolverines

Gary Taxali’s quirky, handcrafted illustrations, reminiscent of early 20th-century advertising and comics, have graced the pages of Esquire, Entertainment Weekly and Rolling Stone, as well as several book and rock album covers (his collaboration with singer Aimee Mann earned him a Grammy nomination). The high art crowd loves him, too: his work has appeared at the Whitney and the ROM, and he was a featured artist at the Made in Polaroid 50/50/50 exhibition in New York earlier this fall. Graham Roumieu (above, right) creates droll weekly editorial cartoons for the Globe and Mail and often illustrates for the New York Times and The Walrus. He’s best known, however, for his Bigfoot books—wry, raunchy tomes about a sasquatch who just wants to be understood. Both have new books out: two European publishers have assembled collections of Taxali’s work, while Roumieu recently collaborated with Douglas Coupland on Highly Inappropriate Tales for Young People, which features, among other nefarious creatures, a homicidal juice box. We met the pair for drinks at The Gem and listened in as they chatted about the state of their art. Click here for Taxali and Roumieu’s conversation »

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The Informer

The New Normal

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Does a new naming rights policy mean Toronto has a revenue problem after all? 

Mayor Rob Ford and his pals on the executive committee recently approved a policy for naming rights in the city, one that will have the government seeking corporate cash from those that want their brands stamped on a city asset. But if you’re worried that tomorrow you’ll be boarding the Go Train at Pizza Pizza Station, don’t be—there are provisions in place to protect significant sites like Union Station and city hall. (Of course, opponents still worry that this will lead to an influx of advertising in public space.) Regardless of the merit of the policy, it’s certainly indicative of this administration’s approach to generating revenue: think lower taxes (ideally, non-existent taxes) and more corporate involvement. And, of course, corporate involvement isn’t necessarily a bad thing. Now Magazine reports that even the usual lefty suspects on council didn’t reject the proposal outright. But we thought Toronto had a spending problem, not a revenue problem. Read the entire article [Now Magazine] »

The Informer

From the Print Edition

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Tony Keller: How group buying sites have spawned a breed of fickle, bargain-addicted consumers that will never pay full freight again

The Price is Wrong

Late last year, Marlon Pather, owner of a midtown meat shop called The Butchers, embarked on an ambitious plan to sell thousands of online coupons. Like other merchants seized by the daily deal mania of websites such as Groupon, he thought that his deep discounting would bring in new shoppers. It did. He quickly became Canada’s biggest coupon merchant, selling 22,000 coupons, worth millions of dollars, in a few months. Pather thought the new customers would redeem the value of their coupons gradually, but they cashed in all at once. By spring, he realized that his loss leader strategy had turned into a straight loss. Customers were lined up around the block, and the fridge was constantly running out of stock. The coupon clients came for the discount—$400 worth of steaks and burgers for just $100—but every time the cash register rang, Pather lost money. And his established clients, who until then had been willing to pay full price, were having trouble even getting into the store.

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The Hype

The Interweb

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Eska bottled water caricatures Aboriginal community in TV ad, is accused of racism (surprise)

Screen grab from Eska’s now famous bottled water (yep) advertisement

It’s hard to imagine what Eska expected after recently running a TV ad depicting Goofy Guy Number One warning Goofy Guy Number Two not to pour orange juice into a glass of Eska water (why he’s considering this in the first place is beyond us), because “Eskan warriors” have been protecting the water’s purity for eight millennia. After a rumbling drum roll and an arbitrary cry from an off-screen eagle (presumably the wild bird is soaring somewhere above the serene suburb), we are treated to the big reveal: three cartoonish faux aborigines—one fat, one short, one lean—standing with comic-strip menace in the kitchen, armed with all the stereotypical fixings, including war paint, spears, loincloths, headdresses and a blowgun. We can’t say for sure, but maybe this primitive depiction is how the company’s ad executives imagine the natives who live on the Algonquin land where Eska water is sourced. The widespread reaction can be seen after the jump.

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The Informer

Streetcar Named Disaster

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TTC inks an advertising deal—cue station naming rights bonanza (or not)

Is this what the future holds for the city’s subway stations? (Image: Robert Taylor)

The TTC got its advertising deal. On Wednesday, the cash-strapped transit agency approved a 12-year, $342-million contract with Pattison Outdoor Advertising that could see your local subway stop renamed Pizza Pizza station, or something to the effect. The deal is supposedly part of the TTC’s plan to work its way out of the budgetary hole it’s found itself in—but given that the added revenue will work out to roughly one per cent of the agency’s $1.5-billion operating budget, it seems the transit commission may have sold its soul for a ham sandwich (or perhaps a slice of Pizza Pizza?).

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The Informer

From the Print Edition

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In the ’60s, Marshall McLuhan was Toronto’s most famous intellectual; now, the world has finally caught up with him

In the ’60s,  McLuhan was hobnobbing with celebrities, advising politicians and forever changing how we think about mass media. A hundred years after his birth, the world has finally caught up with his theories

Marshall McLuhan

Marshall McLuhan. (Image: Robert Lansdale Photography/University of Toronto Archives)

Nineteen sixty-five was the turning point of Marshall McLuhan’s career—the Annus McLuhanis, the Year of Marshall Law, the heady, vertiginous breakout of McLuhan-mania. It was the year the irreverent journalist Tom Wolfe published a star-making profile of the Canadian media guru in the New York Herald Tribune that repeatedly asked, in Wolfe’s typically antic, hyperbolic way: what if he is right? “Suppose he is what he sounds like,” Wolfe wrote, “the most important thinker since Newton, Darwin, Freud, Einstein and Pavlov, studs of the intelligentsia game—suppose he is the oracle of the modern times?”

In the 40-odd years since Wolfe first posed this question, many others have asked it again and again. McLuhan was right about so many things. Browse his books, dip into any of the interviews he gave, and almost every probing, aphoristic utterance feels preternaturally prescient. Decades before doomsayers decried the Internet’s negative rewiring of the brain, he dramatically outlined the psychic, physical and social consequences: “One of the effects of living with electric information is that we live habitually in a state of information overload. There’s always more than you can cope with.” He predicted the slow death of magazines and newspapers: “The monarchy of print has ended and an oligarchy of new media has usurped most of the power of that 500-year-old monarchy.” And he foresaw the rise of crowd-sourced news: “If we pay careful attention to the fact that the press is a mosaic, participant kind of organization and a do-it-yourself kind of world, we can see why it is so necessary to democratic government.” McLuhan anticipated reality TV long before it was a glimmer in the Survivor producer Mark Burnett’s eye: “I used to talk about the global village; I now speak of it more properly as the global theatre. Every kid is now concerned with acting. Doing his thing outside and raising a ruckus in a quest for identity.” When, in his bestselling book The Medium is the Massage, he wrote, “Wars, revolutions, civil uprisings are interfaces within the new environments created by electric informational media,” he could have been writing about how Twitter and Facebook shaped the Arab Spring. The world that McLuhan conjured is a world that now looks an awful lot like ours.

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The Informer

The New Normal

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Toronto District School Board acknowledges reality and allows young folk to bring cellphones to school

Students can bring their mobile phones to school, with or without a cute quilted cover (Image: Wednesday Elf - Mountainside Crochet)

We’ll wager that this is going to make the deliberations about advertising on screens in schools a bit harder: on Thursday the TDSB relaxed its restrictions on cellphones. Come September, students will be allowed to use cellphones and other personal electronic devices in school hallways, though it will be up to individual teachers to decide whether phones can be brought into the classrooms themselves. Just yesterday we were saying we wanted to the city take a more laid-back approach to its rules, so we heartily approve of the board’s decision.

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The Dish

Foodie Follies

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Ever wonder what it looks like when a lavish breakfast is thrown in the air in slow motion?

OK, we didn’t either, but that’s no reason not to watch this strangely lovely video, shot at 1,000 frames per second by St. Louis advertising creative shop Bruton Stroube Studios.

Breakfast Interrupted [Bruton Stroube]

The Informer

Cityscape

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Astral Media finally admits that its sidewalk rubbish bins are garbage

Changing of the trash guard: the pedal operated bin (right) replaces an older model (Image: Neil Ta, from the Torontolife.com Flickr pool)

When the city started rolling out its new streetside garbage cans four years ago, we were taken with them in a “huh, that’s new” kind of way. It didn’t take long for us to find that many of the bins had broken foot pedals that had to be forced open by hand, making the foot pedals a waste. Astral Media, which is providing the bins to the city as part of an advertising contract, has finally admitted that, yes, the bins have some serious engineering problems.

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The Dish

Pantry Raid

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MPP Rosario Marchese floats private member’s bill destined to make Doug Ford very, very angry

Marchese v. Ford

Only days after the City of Toronto voted not to further restrict the sale of sugary pop through vending machines on city properties (with Doug Ford’s memorable endorsement of free-market obesity-mongering), an MPP has introduced a bill that must reek of what Ford called “socialism at its best”: Trinity-Spadina incumbent Rosario Marchese wants to ban junk food advertising that targets children.

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The Informer

Streetcar Named Disaster

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New TTC customer service chief from U.K. to replace old customer service chief, nobody

Yesterday afternoon the TTC announced the hiring of their first chief of customer service, fulfilling one of the recommendations of the Customer Service Advisory Panel. This is a welcome change from the previous customer service position, which didn’t exist. The lucky first chief is Chris Upfold, who comes to the TTC from London’s much more extensive Tube system. What kind of recommendations for Toronto can we expect from Upfold? Based on some of the press he’s had in the last 24 hours (it’s never too early to jump to conclusions!) there are several hints.

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The Informer

From the Print Edition

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The great burnout: recession survivors didn’t count on the surge in workload, the smaller paycheque and the all-consuming resentment. A story about workplace hell with no escape

It’s been three years since the mass cull of the Great Recession began.

Three years since all those jobs were zapped into oblivion, and the people who remained employed were left to shoulder double, triple or quadruple loads.

For my generation, the timing couldn’t have been worse. My close friends and university classmates are exiting their 30s and have mortgages and kids and barely enough minutes to shovel the driveway. They’re entering the phase that used to be called “mid-life,” which in the best of times is a moment for evaluation and maybe even reassessment. But after the worst economic upheaval we’ve ever known, they’re reeling. A financial analyst in her early 40s tells me how 12-hour days—which used to be the exception—are now the norm: she puts in full and breakless stretches at the office, then keeps the laptop burning for hours every night after her two young kids have gone to bed. Another executive was burned out after her company took on dozens of new projects and she was left to run everything. She now works up to 100 hours a week and gets phone calls from friends she hasn’t seen in months, asking if she’s moved or died.

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The Hype

Prime Time

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Move over, burning log: Swiss Chalet partners with Rogers to launch the Rotisserie Channel

Not the actual channel

Remember when Rogers introduced the fireplace and aquarium channels for people to waste electricity relax? Starting February 28th, if those same viewers have a hankering for chicken, channel 208 will be the station for them. Swiss Chalet has partnered with Rogers to launch the Rotisserie Channel, featuring non-stop footage of chickens turning on a spit.

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The Hype

Power Couples

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Odd couple alert: Justin Bieber and Ozzy Osbourne to star in Best Buy Superbowl ad


Together at last: Justin Bieber and Ozzy Osbourne

If you somehow hadn’t reached full Justin Bieber saturation yet, the Biebs will be making an appearance at the Superbowl, starring in a commercial with rocker Ozzy Osbourne for Best Buy. Yes, you read that correctly—according to the Daily Mail, the electronics retailer paid over $1 million (U.S.) for Stratford’s finest to appear in its ad.

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