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The Dish

Opening

11 Comments

Introducing: Bloke and 4th, King West’s newest big, shiny resto-lounge

What was once M:Brgr is now the 7,000-square-foot, 400-seat Bloke and 4th (Image: Signe Langford)

At the end of May 2011, the Toronto outpost of Montreal’s M:Brgr shut its doors after a very brief run (perhaps they didn’t sell enough $100 burgers). Now that space at King and Spadina has been taken over by five first-time restaurateurs, all in their 20s, each from a different field and all exuding a preternatural confidence about their new venture. In short order, they took an upmarket burger joint and turned it into a stylish 400-seat resto-lounge: Bloke and 4th.

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The Hype

TIFF Talk

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TIFF after hours: the 44 (and counting) film fest venues with the coveted 4 a.m. last call

(Image: walknboston)

Every year celebs from all over the world flood into the city for TIFF, but for many, it’s the Alcohol and Gaming Commission of Ontario that’s the real star throughout the month of September. Just in time to combat post-summer blues, the AGCO grants certain venues the rights to the elusive 4 a.m. last call. While last year’s list clocked in at 44 venues This year’s list of venues with extended hours finally caught up with last year’s, bringing the current number to 44—some of them not open to the public (we’re looking at you, Windsor Arms) and others open for one night only. Check out the list of late-night watering holes after the jump and stay tuned for updates on extended hours, as more are expected to roll in before the festival.

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The Informer

From the Print Edition

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Reason to love Toronto: because the TDSB isn’t afraid to let its rainbow flag fly

July 3, 2:18 p.m., Pride parade, Yonge and Bloor

July 3, 2:18 p.m., Pride parade, Yonge and Bloor. (Image: Ian Willms)

Gays and lesbians have been able to marry legally in Ontario since 2003, which makes our province an international leader in the most important civil rights movement of our time. The fact that progressive Americans see Ontario as a bastion of equality is a source of, well, pride. Which is why we have been so unsettled by the actions of Rob Ford, who snubbed the Pride parade, and so disappointed by the Catholic schools that banned student-run clubs designed to provide support for LGBT kids. Their actions go against our contemporary vision of equality, which is now, happily, enshrined in law. It’s also why we’re so charmed by the Toronto District School Board, which has decided to blow a big fat raspberry in the Catholic boards’ direction. We’re referring, specifically, to a recent spate of initiatives that celebrate diversity and acceptance. There’s TDSB director Chris Spence’s Positive Space program, announced last fall, which dictates that, by June of 2012, each of the board’s 600 schools must have an LGBT-safe room and a counsellor trained to discuss issues of sexual health and identity. In April, the board’s trustees voted to designate themselves a gay-straight alliance. And in June, they launched the Director’s Gay-Straight Alliance Awards, which recognize achievements in anti-homophobia activism. High school may still suck, but by becoming an advocate for tolerance, the TDSB is reclaiming it from the bullies and the bigots and helping to banish homophobia to the history books.

The Informer

From the Print Edition

76 Comments

King State of Mind: When did the once-cool King West strip descend into a mess of stretch Hummers, drunken bachelorettes and last-call brawls?

Scenes from a never-ending party

2:45 a.m., Cobra

“Let’s get drunk and fuck! Let’s get drunk and fuck!”

I’m at Cobra, a King West club in a sprawling basement underneath a 19th-century warehouse. In this neighbourhood, the best parties are either deep underground or high above in a rooftop bar. Cobra is decorated like a gothic funhouse, with a wall of glowing skulls and lots of black. The get-drunk-and-fuck directive bleats from a techno remix as coloured lights, inducing a kind of electric synesthesia, pulsate on the basement ceiling. To my left, two girls make out and topple over, knocking down their bottle service glassware. Guys eagerly watch from the sidelines, plotting how to make their move. My teeth chatter from the vibrating bass. I down a shot that’s half Sour Puss and half vodka, proffered by a human Barbie doll bartender.

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The Hype

TIFF Talk

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Toronto strip clubs see TIFF revenue increase as stars unwind with lap dances

Fortunately for Toronto’s classy (or conservative) reputation, Yorkville and King West bars and clubs see most of the late-night dollars at TIFF. But make no mistake, Hogtown’s more licentious hangouts see plenty of, er, action throughout the fest. According to Tim Lambrinos of the Adult Entertainment Association of Canada, strip clubs in the city enjoy a 20 per cent increase in sales (mostly in American cash) as stars indulge in a lap dance or two when they’re in town. “A lot of people come out after hours and they want to socialize,” he told the Toronto Sun. Bruce Willis, Samuel L. Jackson, Mickey Rourke and Queen Latifa have been spotted at Four Your Eyes Only on King.

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The Hype

TIFF Talk

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The 75 must-know TIFF hot spots

From Yorkville to West Queen West, here are the 75 restaurants, bars, clubs, cinemas and party venues that every festival-goer should know. Be sure to check back throughout the Toronto International Film Festival as we plot new celebrity sightings, event locations and more.

See the full-sized map »

The Dish

Opening

1 Comment

Introducing: Stirling Room, the Distillery District’s first and only nightclub

Glow job: Stirling Room's new bar in a classic building (Image: Jon Sufrin)

There are no ghosts in one of the buildings at the old Gooderham and Worts Distillery, at least not according to entrepreneur Albert Rishes. He would know, too, since he and his partner Simo Korac—both veterans from Embassy nightclub—spent months there setting up Stirling Room, the first and only nightclub in the Distillery District. Open for just over a month, the new venture fills the space that once housed A Taste of Quebec and brings parties and live music to a neighbourhood known more for sleepy evenings than pumping nightclubs.

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The Dish

From the Print Edition

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Best of the City 2010: four top new venues to drink, dance and party

Happy campers: Business Woman’s Special (Image: Jay Shuster)

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The Informer

Summit Survivor

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Five things we learned from Jon Stewart’s coverage of G20 Toronto

Jon Stewart shows G20 leaders how to put the moves on Toronto women (Image: Comedy Network)

We’re as guilty as anyone for noting that coverage of the G20 was kind of sparse in the international media, but we knew that our summit (and its associated riot) had finally hit something of a media bonanza when it was featured on the most reputable source in fake news, The Daily Show With Jon Stewart. Last night’s segment dedicated to G20 Toronto told the Comedy Central audience exactly five things about Toronto that are worth repeating.

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The Dish

Bottoms Up

42 Comments

Just Opened: FOMO, Adelaide Street’s newest bar, tries a “zero douche policy”

Inside the "anti-douche" force field (Image: Fraser Abe)

There’s a new development on Adelaide Street—and this time, it’s not a condo tower. Tucked in a downstairs corner at the corner of John Street, right where Up and Down Lounge used to be, is FOMO, which stands for “fear of missing out.” This newest addition to clubland comes from Eve Fiorillo, the self-described “party artist” known for throwing hipster bacchanals like Circa’s Randomland under the name AD/D. She’s joined forces with Patrick Hodges, Luke Vitale and his brother Gregory Vitale to open this “fantasy luxury spaceship boutique champagne lounge.” Beyond the string of random descriptors, FOMO tries to set itself apart from such larger clubs as Mink and London Tap House by having a “zero douche policy.” That’s mighty big talk for a bar located right across from Hooters.

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The Informer

The Sporting Life

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Toronto is party central for pro athletes looking to dodge the limelight

Just one of the places to go after defeating one of Toronto's sports teams (Image: Señor Codo)

Toronto is the place to party if you’re a professional athlete. According to the Wall Street Journal, the uptight banker’s go-to social guide, our town has made a name for itself among MLB, NBA and even NFL players for its plethora of skin bars, bicultural girls, low drinking age and a woman named Mona Halem. According to Raptors forward Antoine Wright, Halem is “notorious” throughout the sports world for “assembling attractive party guests to fête nearly every franchise that comes to town.” The Journal details how the pros operate here, in a city once “decidedly off the sports radar,” without being followed by paparazzi. In the end, though, the article reads a bit like an advertorial for Ashley Madison. Three examples, after the jump.

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The Goods

Gossipmonger

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905 faces off against the 416 in fashion battle

Memo to 416ers: the 905 is not like the Jersey Shore (Photo via MTV)

They walk among us to learn our language and customs. They could even be in the next cubicle. They’re everywhere, and nothing can be done about it. That’s right; despite our best efforts, 905ers are infiltrating the city’s chicest restaurants and clubs unbeknownst to downtowners, writes Kim Izzo in her latest column for the Star, which chronicles her move from downtown to uptown.

Since November, Izzo has been documenting the pains of moving north as if she’s dealing with a terminal illness or moving to the other side of the world (Richmond Hill, to be exact). Now that she’s fully integrated into suburban society, she feels that 905ers get a bad rap from their downtown counterparts, who think people living north of Bloor have big hair, fake tans and souped-up cars. (When did Markham become Jersey Shore?)

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The Dish

Bottoms Up

3 Comments

Toronto New Year’s Eve celebrations: a 10-part field guide

<strong>Venue:</strong> Nathan Phillips Square<br />  <strong>Dining options:</strong> $3 hot dogs ($5 with fries)<br />  <strong>Libations:</strong> Tim Hortons and Starbucks to offset the hypothermia—that is, if it’s even possible to get inside the coffee joints, which have to serve hundreds of people throughout the night<br />  <strong>Atmosphere: </strong>Collective feigned enthusiasm to mask the bitterness of not having worn enough layers, kids asking how much longer till midnight<br />  <strong>Entertainment: </strong>Scripted bantering by newscasters, an unidentifiable VJ, Shawn Desman/Danny Fernandes/Massari (it’s Karl Wolf this year), Jarvis Church, Anjulie, Kardinal Offishall, cast of <em>Rock of Ages, </em>the Mission District<br />  <strong>Likely to happen at midnight: </strong>A good but modest fireworks display so as not to set the city on fire, followed by a massive evacuation at 12:01 in order to beat the traffic<br />  <strong>Who will be there: </strong>Out-of-towners, fathers with shoulders strained from carrying their kids all night<br />  <strong>Who should go: </strong>Junior high students venturing downtown for the first time without parents, boyfriends who want to be that guy who proposes on live TV, families composed of people who really get along with each other<br />  <strong>Avoid if: </strong>You have a TV that carries CityTV<br />  <em>100 Queen St. W., <a target=" blank" href=

Choosing one New Year’s Eve event over hundreds of others can be daunting, especially when all the descriptions meld together with promises of a glass of champagne (read: cheap sparkling wine) and various misspellings of “hors d’oeuvre.” To help in the decision-making process, here’s a roundup of 10 very different events taking place on December 31st.

(Looking for the best NYE prix fixe menus? Click here »)

Also: Check out our picks for the best NYE prix fixe menus »

The Dish

Bottoms Up

20 Comments

Just Opened: Dolce Social Ballroom, condoland’s new dance club, goes after 30-somethings

The ladies of Dolce (Photo by Karon Liu)

The ladies of Dolce (Photos by Karon Liu)

Yet another dance club at King and Bathurst awaits downtown condo dwellers who made it to this side of the recession with some cash in their pockets. Dolce Social Ballroom, which opened this past weekend, is the latest venture from Travis Agresti—the man who, at 22 years old, linked up with Vince Carter to open Kai and Inside Entertainment Complex (all three are now history). Agresti is back, having spent 16 months and $2 million merging an Indian restaurant with a derelict lounge to create Dolce, a venue aimed squarely at mature partiers (dubbed “sophisticats” in press materials). “It seems there is a lack of nightclubs for the 30-something crowd to let loose in. You’ve got kiddie-land on Richmond and pockets here and there on Ossington, but that’s about it,” says Agresti, himself 28 years old. “We’re trying to discourage the younger crowd who spray champagne and go wild.”

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The Goods

Toronto Fashion Week

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Jessica Biffi shows legs, cleavage and ass for spring-summer

Photo by Jenna Marie Wakani

A look from Jessica Biffi's spring collection (Photo by Jenna Marie Wakani)

We have to fess up: we’ve known Jessica Biffi for several years now and rooted for her on the last season of Project Runway—so this is a completely biased report. Be warned.

With a neon spray-painted first number, black lights and hip hop blaring, Biffi presented a ghetto fabulous, club-kid friendly spring collection. We couldn’t imagine ourselves squeezing into gold bootie shorts, ultra-low bustiers (yes, those again) or hot pink sheer jumpsuits, but then again, we’re not really the type to party on Richmond Street, either. But for the legions willing to line-up behind velvet ropes on a Friday night, this is just the stuff for you. It’s also so refreshing to see a different kind of designer here at fashion week—someone clearly not interested in courting the Rosedale matron or Yorkville PYT.

See the full collection after the jump.

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