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Toronto Life - The Wire

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

All stories relating to Calgary

The Hype

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Four things we learned from Justin Vernon, a.k.a. Bon Iver, on Q today

Bon Iver coos out his oft-inscrutable songs to a DC crowd (Image: angela n.)

Justin Vernon, the voice behind Bon Iver, gave a revealing and Canada-praising interview this morning to Jian Ghomeshi on Q. Bon Iver first made its way onto the indie music scene in 2007 when the album For Emma, Forever Ago became an international hit. Since then Vernon has recorded and performed with a number of different collaborators, including Gayngs, Volcano Choir and perhaps most notably Kanye West, whom Vernon supported during Kanye’s headlining performance at the Coachella Music Festival in California. Check out four things we learned about collaborating with Kanye, the latest album and Vernon’s Canuck love life, after the jump.

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The Hype

To-Do List

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Saturday’s NXNE picks: Handsome Furs, Memoryhouse, Chad VanGaalen and more

Tonight is the unofficial last hurrah for the North by Northeast faithful—and that means it’s going to be a good one. The bars are open until 4 a.m. and the concert lineup is chock full of quality acts. We have vacation brain just thinking about it (this weekend is supposed to be sunny after all), so here are a few of our favourite summer picks. The best part: they’re all on one sweet day. Check out selections for Saturday, after the jump.

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The Dish

TV Diner

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Top Chef Canada recap, episode 7: placing products

The giant Michael Smith and the merely tall Thea Andrews (Image: Food Network Canada/Insight Productions)

TOP CHEF CANADA
Season 1 | Episode 7

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Top Chef and blatant product placement have always gone hand in hand, with each season ratcheting up the level of sponsor integration. Far from being an outright fault, it has become something many fans almost look forward to—albeit with a little cringe. Top Chef Canada really outdid itself last night in that regard, with both the quickfire and the elimination challenges centred around a sponsor—a real milestone in the annals of Canadian TV brand integration. But episode seven was about more than just the all-important sponsors; it also featured a delightfully snarky Michael Smith, some adorable pictures of chefs with their significant others and rhyming put-downs from the judges. We recap it all, after the jump.

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The Informer

Election Whoas

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Ignatieff resigns from politics and returns to the Ivory Tower

Ignatieff, in the Ivory Tower again (Image: Micheal Ignatieff)

On Tuesday morning, Michael Ignatieff publicly announced his resignation as the leader of the Liberal Party of Canada. By Thursday afternoon, the former lecturer at Oxford, Cambridge and Harvard was the subject of another (equally unsurprising) announcement: that he would be returning to the academy, this time on home soil at the University of Toronto. Ignatieff worked at the U of T previously, albeit briefly, before he jumped into the political fray back in 2006. In his new post, he’ll be handed multiple roles, including that of senior resident at Massey College.

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The Dish

From the Print Edition

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The sipper club: meet the city’s competitive cabal of top sommeliers

Will Predhomme belongs to a competitive cabal of top sommeliers who sniff, sip and spit their way through hundreds of bottles a week. They do this to help you decide what to drink with your dinner, while making you think it was your idea all along

One hundred and fifty-one people have reservations at Canoe tonight. Among these are many Bay Streeters, a couple celebrating their 25th wedding anniversary, dozens of people on dates, including the bar manager from Crush, and a young woman who plans to propose to her boyfriend over dinner. The two private dining rooms are fully booked.

Canoe, part of the ever-expanding Oliver and Bonacini empire, is routinely considered one of the finest restaurants in the city. Last summer, in a rigorous competition held by the Canadian Association of Professional Sommeliers, known as CAPS, Canoe’s head sommelier, Will Predhomme, was proclaimed Ontario’s best. Predhomme has devoted a third of his life—he’s 29—to wine scholarship. He now knows more about wine than almost anyone in Toronto.

Just after 5 p.m., the bar area begins to fill up with commuters sipping cocktails as they wait for the traffic on the clogged Gardiner, 54 floors below, to dissipate. One of the restaurant’s first guests, a retired trial lawyer, arrives. As a young female host escorts him to his large corner table, he puts an arm around her shoulder. “I don’t like to pay bills,” he says. “I want a fucking account. Last time I was here, I offered those ladies”—referring to the hosts who greeted him at his last visit—“$300 and told them to set up an account for me. And I still don’t have one.” He and his three dining companions, Canoe regulars, have brought in several bottles of their own wine, including a cabernet franc from the ex-lawyer’s private vineyard in Tuscany. When Predhomme arrives at the table to discuss the wine, the ex-lawyer, captivatingly bratty in a way that only the rich and sort-of-powerful can be, repeats his complaint. “Look, I spend about $50,000 a year at Bymark, and I’d do the same here if I had a fucking account.” Predhomme is unmoved, but gracious. “If you give me your contact information,” he says, “I’ll make sure that it gets to the right people.”

“You’ll get me an account?”

“I’ll look into it.”

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The Informer

From the Print Edition

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Q&A with Ezra Levant, professional loudmouth and TV host on the spanking new Sun News Network

Portrait of Ezra Levant

(Image: Adam Rankin)

Do you find it ironic that you had to move from Calgary to Toronto to host a conservative-friendly TV news show?
No, for the obvious reason that Toronto is the media capital of Canada. But from a philosophical point of view, there is a tremendous number of conservatives in this city, starting with the mayor, almost half the MPs in the province and institutions like the National Post and Toronto Sun. Toronto is more liberal than Calgary, but so is every other place in Canada. I think it’s the opposite of ironic. I think it’s exciting.

You were known at one point for driving a Hummer. Do you still drive one?
No, I’m close enough to walk to the Sun’s studio on King Street East.

What’s your take on Rob Ford? Is he doing a good job so far?
I was encouraged by his election, and like everyone else, I’m trying to figure out if it signifies a larger trend. I think it does. It felt like a Tea Party rejection of the status quo. It felt like a rejection of elites, and I like that, because that’s one of the themes that Sun News will surely reflect.

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The Informer

In Transit

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Remember that high-speed train from Windsor to Montreal? Here’s where the federal leaders stand on it

Imagine, imagine, we can imagine (Image: Jon Curnow)

Finally, transit infrastructure has made it into the federal election news cycle. NDP leader Jack Layton was in Quebec today, where he told an audience that he supports federal funding for high-speed rail along the Quebec City-Montreal-Ottawa-Toronto-Windsor corridor. Ontario and Quebec have had this on their wish lists for some time. The Liberals have put it in their platform, Dalton McGuinty and Jean Charest both support it, and now an ascendant NDP is getting behind it as well. Apparently the only one who isn’t a fan is Stephen Harper.

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The Informer

Federal Election Guessing Game

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Canada’s big-city mayors have a wish list for Ottawa—except for Rob Ford

Respect for taxpayers wanted, but money would be nice too (Image: wonkanerd)

With the budget coming next week from the federal government, one big question is whether, or what, Ottawa will has in store for Canada’s biggest cities. Traditionally, urban centres haven’t been a priority for the Conservative government, which a) talks a big game about respecting the constitution when it keeps them from doing something they don’t want to do, and b) doesn’t have a lot to win, especially in the big three cities of Vancouver, Toronto and Montreal. Nevertheless, the mayors of Canada’s big cities do have a list of things they’d like to see from Ottawa. Well, everyone except Rob Ford, who responded to the Globe and Mail’s inquiry with a three-word email: “Respect for taxpayers.” Undaunted, the reporter rounded up the mayors of other cities and got their hopes for next week.

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The Informer

To Market, To Market

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BMO: Canada real estate market heading for bubble—but not Toronto

(Image: Rhett Maxwell)

A new report out from BMO Capital Markets suggests that Canada is in increasing danger of a housing price collapse—especially if prices keep going up. The good news for Toronto is that while other provinces are steadily inching closer to the danger zone, Ontario doesn’t seem to be.

The problem is that the value of homes have increased much faster than incomes. The bank says average home resale prices compared with personal incomes are 14 per cent above the long-run trend, up from last summer, although still below the 21 per cent peak that preceded the 1989 crash.

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The Informer

The New Normal

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Toronto fourth most livable city in the world: The Economist

The big easy: life in T.O. is relatively sweet (Image: Still The Oldie, from the Torontolife.com Flickr pool)

According to The Economist’s annual ranking of global cities, Toronto is the fourth most livable city in the world. Hogtown scored 97.2 out of a possible 100 points—a rating that considers a number of indicators under the categories of stability, health care, culture and environment, education and infrastructure. Each indicator is rated according to acceptability, and each category is given a certain amount of weight, all of which are then amassed to assess the locations around the world that have the best and worst living conditions. Toronto’s scores, after the jump.

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The Informer

The New Normal

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Is Mississauga going lefty cyclist bleeding-heart pinko?

Last week, the city was swooning over Calgary mayor Naheed Nenshi’s visit. Since his election, the jokes among lefties about moving from Ford’s Toronto to Nenshi’s Calgary have been pretty steady. But for those who aren’t ready to commit to colder winters and electing Conservative MPs, there might be hope: Mississauga may slowly be turning in to a big-government liberal city we can flee to. Or so reports the Globe and Mail.

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The Informer

My Name Is Lucre

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In T.O. speech, Calgary mayor joins chorus of cities asking for sales tax cash: first Miller, then Stintz and now Nenshi

Calgary mayor Naheed Nenshi (Image: 5of7)

Canada’s municipalities, desperate to raise new money and move off their reliance on property taxes, have long wanted a crack at levying sales taxes. David Miller famously had his “One Cent Now” campaign, which proposed that cities get one percent of the GST. Miller’s plan went nowhere, but the idea of sharing some of the GST (or, 2011 terms, the federal share of the HST) with cities is appealing enough that it never really dies: yesterday Calgary mayor Naheed Nenshi carried the torch another mile in a speech at the Toronto CivicAction Summit.

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The Informer

Slow News Day

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Groundhog Day forecast: almost all pivotal groundhogs agree that it will be a short winter

Wiarton Willie saw a winter this big (Image: Explore the Bruce)

The groundhogs have weighed in, and it’s nearly unanimous: Punxsutawney Phil, Wiarton Willie and Nova Scotia’s Shubenacadie Sam all failed to see their shadows today, declaring that Canada and the U.S. would see an early spring. With arbitrary, superstitious consensus like that, it’s a sure thing, right?

Not so much. Check out this quote from the website of Alberta’s Balzac Billy.

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The Informer

From the Print Edition

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The unaffordable city: how did Toronto get so !@#$%&* expensive—and is it worth it?

Middle-class life isn’t what it used to be. Thanks to a heated real estate market, a strong dollar, new taxes and stagnating incomes, Toronto has become, improbably, one of the world’s most expensive cities. Is it worth it?

(Illustration by Julien Pacaud; skyline photo by Brian Summers)

Today, an average Saturday, I spent the following: $6 on a round-trip TTC ride; about $17 on groceries from the Wychwood Barns farmers’ market (organic Crispin apples, an olive boule and free-range eggs); $34 on two bottles of wine (one decent, one plonk); almost $20 on the recent Superchunk CD and $11 on toiletries. Lunch was cheap and simple: a peanut butter sandwich, an apple and a few spoonfuls of raspberry yogurt. Dinner was free: homemade rice-and-bean burritos at a friend’s house. On the way home from that modest dinner party, waiting forever for the Dufferin bus, I almost splurged on a cab, but it seemed wasteful. Then I got home and booked a flight to New York on Porter for a friend’s 40th birthday: another $326. There’s also what I spend on my mortgage, property taxes, insurance, utilities, cellphone, Internet, YMCA membership, charitable donations and credit card debt. All of that adds up to roughly $65 a day. So, as a childless, home-owning, not-terribly-extravagant-but-not-entirely-miserly-either Torontonian, this one day at the tail end of 2010 cost me—not counting the airfare, which, for argument’s sake, I’m setting aside as an exceptional expense—about $153.

That doesn’t sound like a lot, but it’s about $20 more than what I make every day, after taxes. And it leaves nothing, obviously, for home repairs, clothing, vet bills, investments, medical expenses, birthday presents, savings, recreational drugs, holidays or the kid that Liz, my fiancée, and I have been talking about having this year but which, if things continue in this fashion, we’ll have to postpone having until we get jobs that net us more than $50,000 each a year.

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The Informer

The Feds

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Reaction roundup: what the country is saying about Stephen Harper’s fifth anniversary as prime minister

Sunday was big in Ottawa. January 23 marked five years ago to the day that Stephen Harper won his first election victory. His talk had all the hallmarks of a campaign stump speech, noting all the positive changes the Conservatives have made in Canada since 2006 and carefully omitting some of the more divisive history. Hey, it’s a party, right?

How are people taking this anniversary? We survey the country’s media to find out.

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