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The Hype

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Culture Picks: what to see, hear and read this month

They love it. We want it. Three red-hot releases
Eastern Yoo and his video pick
“This doc follows Joan Rivers over the course of a year, getting underneath all that makeup to expose a real person with vulnerabilities and tragic flaws. It’s a brutally honest, emotional movie; I’d compare it to The Wrestler. She’s become such a joke yet is one of the greatest stand-up comedians ever—dirtier, more offensive and more hilarious than anyone working today. Offstage, she’s a moving shark, relentlessly trying to keep busy and stay alive.”
— EASTERN YOO
Staffer at Suspect Video

Joan Rivers: A Piece of Work, directed by Ricki Stern and Annie Sundberg (Dec. 14).


Derek Antonio and his CD pick
“Everything Kanye does is an event—he lives on hype and headlines—but he has the talent to back it up. He’s known for his great hooks, for taking obscure music off the streets and turning it into something really radio-friendly. This new album is more purely focused on rap than his last, 808s and Heartbreak, but it’s no less catchy: the single ‘Runaway’ (cover at right) has an amazing piano intro and ’90s-style backbeat running through it.”
—DEREK ANTONIO
Assistant general manager of HMV Superstore

My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy, Kanye West (Nov. 22).


Chris Johnson and his book pick
“The latest book by this year’s Canada Reads champ is an engaging, offbeat coming-of-age story about two Quebec teens, a boy and a girl, who are forced to reckon with their families’ quirkiness. The girl’s relatives have visions that predict the end of the world—and when, of course, it doesn’t happen, they go mad. Her own apocalyptic prophecy is fuzzy on the specifics, so figuring them out becomes her quest. Dickner pushes the imaginative story forward by setting it against a backdrop of world events, from the fall of the Berlin Wall to Y2K.”
—CHRIS JOHNSON
Co-manager of Nicholas Hoare bookstore

Apocalypse for Beginners, by Nicolas Dickner (Dec. 7).

Illustrations: Dan Williams. Top courtesy of IFC Entertainment, middle courtesy of Universal Music, bottom courtesy of Random House.

The Dish

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Gordon Ramsay’s unfavourable reviews, eating on $50 a week, coffee addictions justified

Eating cheap doesn't have to mean Kraft Dinner (Photo by Sharla Sava)

Eating cheap doesn't have to mean Kraft Dinner (Photo by Sharla Sava)

• Perhaps we shouldn’t be so anxious for Gordon Ramsay to open his new Toronto spot: the critics are bashing the foul-mouthed chef’s new Parisian venture, calling it boring, pompous and a producer of “Xerox food.” [Guardian]

• Trimming the weekly grocery bill doesn’t have to mean dining on Kraft Dinner. Some of Canada’s top chefs tell Chris Johns how to eat well at home for $50 a week. [Maclean’s]

• Ladies, stop feeling guilty about frequenting Toronto’s slew of new cafés. Spanish and American researchers have found that coffee drinking can lower a woman’s risk of stroke. Sorry, boys. [eCanada Now]

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