Showing posts with label CBC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CBC. Show all posts

Thursday, February 14

Canada Reads! Yes We Do!

It is Canada Reads time!
Five more books to add to my reading list.
One or two are twenty years old; several new to literature.
I love Canada Reads, in particular the radio debate.
Keeping books and radio alive!

The contenders:


(Excuse the fuzzy books.  Read them anyway.)

Friday, November 11

Remembrance Day, Three Thoughts

Thought One

On Remembrance Day I think about my Grandfather Lester Schmidt and the few stories he used to tell us, his grandchildren, about his experiences in World War II.  He never served on the front lines but he did provide supplies for others in the war.  He used to also tell me not to get old, it was hell.  This comment still makes me smile, like any of us have a choice.  Les dies many years ago and he passed away while sitting in his favourite chair.  I did not have the chance to say goodbye but I am glad that I did learn more about him after living with him and my step-grandma, Marjorie, for a year in Calgary.  If the Oral History Archive project had been around while he was alive, it would have been very interesting to have heard his more detailed stories and to have added them to The Memory Project.  I am of the generation in which people say we are in a war and my life continues as normal.  War is an experience that happens in other countries, is a ceremony we have every year at this time, it is a museum I visit whose exhibits I view, an thing with a name that is remote and distant.  Others, who are Canadian and from other countries, have experienced more personal journey's through war.  My hope for them today is that through remembrance, thoughts, tears, we can find a place closer to peace and farther away from war.

I also wonder about my grandfather Lloyd Bates.  He died due to suicide the year before I was born.  From the stories I have heard through family, he bore the physical, emotional and psychological scares of war, and in the taking of his own life, I wonder if those issues were ever resolved.  What supports were there in the 1950's for returning soldiers, nurses and doctors?  Who was helping those with the yet unlabelled issues of PTSD?  How many others needed help and did their best to make their way in life as best they could?

 

Thought Two

I have memories of my father asking me if I wanted to go to Flanders Fields every November, when my family lived in Brussels, Belgium.  Every year I remember saying yes.  On one particular Day of Remembrance, we approached the fields of crosses, row on row, but could not see due to the hovering fog.  As we quietly approached the ceremony area, a trumpet began playing the Last Post, and as we slowly approached the song we began to see shapes of people, crosses and the gathering remembering those who had fought and died, as well as those who had lived.  As a pre-teen I did not understand the broad scope of the ceremony, the graveyard, the uniforms, the sacrifices, the years of repair, but I am fortunate to have had parents who took me to a place that have provided me with a personal connection to an historic place.

After the ceremony, large planes would fly by and drop thousands of poppies across the graves of the dead.  The children, including myself, would jump and run about collecting as many poppies as we could, but there were always too many to hold.  One year the wind was not taken into consideration and during the first fly-by the poppies landed on the highway next to Flanders Fields.  On the second fly-by, the poppies landed on the graves.  I would like to attend this ceremony again some time during my life as it is burned in my memory and to compare a childhood experience to an adult experience would be interesting.


Thought Three

While living in London (almost two years ago) I took the opportunity to go on a guided tour of France's  northern World War II sites.  We visited the D-Day Beaches, the towns first liberated in 1945, memorial museums, and cemeteries.  It was mind blowing as the guide's knowledge was incredibly extensive and he provided us with a two hour lecture of information as we bused from London to northern France.  It brought the previous stories I had heard, the museum exhibits I had visited, the people I had met who had been part of the war all together and connected to a place.  Here were the craters 60 years later, the cannons, the now clean beaches of operation Overlord, the remaining buildings and pieces of history that the French have left in place to remember.  If you ever have a chance to visit these places, please do.  The type of experience that causes you to think deeply and with great care.  Another opportunity to remember and attempt to understand.  

Standing in one bomb hole at Point du Hoc.
Bomb holes all around this entire field close to the cliffs of beaches.

The American Cemetery at St. Laurant

Juno Beach where Canadians first landed.
The first tank to have landed that became stuck and
remains as part of the museum collection.

Pegasus Bridge, the first bridge to be liberated
between Caen and Ouistreham, in Normandy, France.
Utah Beach, one of the locations where thousands of soldiers
who had just crossed the canal in tightly packed ships that landed
and begin the land attack in hopes of ending World War II.
Arromanches, Gold Beach, the remains of the temporary port
built by the UK government and its Allies as part of the liberation. 

Added Thought:

PS.  Listening to CBC's The Current and five grown men just started talking about what they cry from now after having been in a war: Tim Horton's commercials, kitten and Kleenex adds, one man just said he cries all the time.  Love it.  Men letting down their 'tough guy' guards and enjoying a moment honesty.

Wednesday, November 9

Canada Reads Non-Fiction 2011

The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) has a yearly fiction literature competition, Canada Reads, in which it chooses 10 books from the past year, and matches each up with a well-known Canadian figure to debate its greatness amongst other books with their well-known figures.  This year there is a new competition, Canada Reads: True Stories competition.  A list of 40 books from several decades, cut down to 10 books, all non-fiction with a goal of only leaving 1 as the ultimate winner.  Upon review, I have read none of them.  How many have you read or will you read?

The Boy in the Moon by Ian Brown
Cockeyed by Ryan Knighton
The Game by Ken Dryden
Louis Riel by Chester Brown
On a Cold Road by Dave Bidini
Paris 1919 by Margaret MacMillan
Prisoner of Tehran by Marina Nemat
Shake Hands with the Devil by Romeo Dallaire
Something Fierce by Carmen Aguirre
The Tiger by John Vaillant

As stated before each book with be matched with a well-known figure, a panelist, which will be announced on the CBC Radio 'Q' show November 23.  Debates begin on the show in February.  So excited!

While researching the authors above, I came across new and interesting websites below:
bookbuffet.com
librarything.com
canadianbookclubs.com

Saturday, August 27

RIP Jack Layton

Just wanted to commemorate the listening of Jack Layton's funeral on CBC Radio.
I know that we idealize people during funerals but with teach talk, speech, piece of information about Jack, he is more amazing.

For a person to pioneer causes such as decreasing violence against women; improving the situation of the poor; to listen to the issues facing immigrant individuals and families; fighting for the rights of the gay and lesbian community; speaking on behalf of the middle and lower income groups in this country; teaching each of us that our contribution does make a difference.  To fight for these causes as a white, heterosexual, middle to upper class man and to not be afraid of sharing power, decision making processes, money, and access to the good of the world is what is most impressive about Jack Layton.  Our cities, our country and the world would improve if we lived more like Jack, not leaving anyone behind.

The more I live, the more I realize that I am not a democratic capitalist.  Far from it.  (I say this as the US is slowly imploding from over consumption and over accumulation of the ruling class and others).  Money is helpful and useful in a world that circumnavigates production, consumption, consumerism, and there are many things in my life that require money (place to sleep, food, clothing, writing, reading, education, ceramics, photography, entertaining friends) but I want money so that I can live.  I don't live for the accumulation of money.  I am not a capitalist.  Jack and his life's work makes me more motivated to be even less of capitalist and more of a democratic socialist, the policies, procedures and laws that leave no one behind.  A world of private enterprise and things is a world in which there are fewer people willing to share, and in which accumulation and having more at any cost is the priority.  Others are always more important than things and accumulation of things.

Thank you democratic socialist and activist Jack, for this reminder.

From Google Pictures

Monday, July 4

I Am Not American

Ok, even though I am partly American (as well as French, Irish, British, Scotish, Metis, and Canadian), I have one niece and two nephews who are half American, I have lived in the US and I have many friends who are American, I thought for July 4th I would share with my 9 readers the incredibly intelligent humour of The Arrogant Worms.  The first time I went to their concert I laughed so much and so hard that the next day my stomach muscles hurt.  Yes, that funny!

Even though this is all in good fun and I don't really want to hang out with penguins, don't want to be called Antarcticans or Northern North Americans, it does bother me with the United States (or the States) is called 'America'.  The rest of us are here and we do need to be acknowledged in the language that is used in casual conversations and in the media (George Strombo makes this error consistently and often in his show).  Either way, enjoy this video and check out a Canadian band whose joy in life is to mock Canadians and others, The Arrogant Worms.




If you have a chance, listen or watch these as well.  Arrogant Worm classics and the ones you sing along to during concerts:

The Last Saskatchewan Pirate

Rocks and Trees (using Japanese Anime)

I Am Cow

Celine Dion (click on the Celine Dion song on the right)

Sunday, July 3

William Shatner and His Canada

Here is a video that I have taken from the blog Joe. My. God., who also posted it from YouTube, and was created by the National Film Board of Canada.  Shatner hilariously rewrites the Canadian anthem to update it for the 21st Century with regards to health care, native rights, religion or no religion, marriage equality, gender neutral language, size of country, all through the enjoyable medium of video with humour.  This I find incredibly interesting especially due to the previous Canadian government's discussion to attempt to change the national anthems lyrics and the enjoyable debate I had with a few friends on this blog.  Don't forget to listen to and watch then credits.  Tongue-in-cheek hilarity!




Monday, May 2

Go!!!!

Elizabeth May!!!

Green Party may get their first seat on Parliament Hill ever!!!

NDP make us proud!!!

Liberals, maybe next time more blue will be turned red.

Harper Government Government of Canada:
do not screw up health care in 2014
don't bring up gay marriage again, it's legal, leave it alone
don't revisit the abortion debate, it needs to stay legal
we don't need more cuts to corporate taxes
we need funding to organizations that represent and give voice to the poor and the oppressed
remember, Canada is not a totalitarian democracy
you are not the government
you are merely elected to listen to us, the people, as we tell you what to do
so listen this time
listen

Friday, April 29

You Can Take the Woman Out of London but....

Yes I did it.  I watched the Royal Wedding.  After having danced and chatted with fellow graduates until midnight on Thursday at the end of year party, I woke up at 4 AM to head to a friend's house and watch the events unfold.  Here is why I watched:

After having lived in London every summer for 4 years and almost one year after that, 
I miss the vibrant, eclectic, pulsing city at least once per week.  

Changing of the Guard up the Mall in front of Buckingham Palace.

I was able to hear the names of the places I visited, the streets I walked, the ones spaces that came to dwell in my heart as historical connections to the past that healed my reckless existence.  


Greenwich Village looking out from the Old Navy College.

Art installation at Trafalgar Square using the roots of trees from a
South American rainforest to increase awareness of the destruction of these forests.

On the London Eye with Marcia and Art, looking out over
Westminster Abbey and Houses of Parliament.

Almost 30 years ago my Aunts and Uncles woke all us Pilling kids up at 3 AM Shuwap, BC time and we watched Diana and Charles wed.  They had a long stretch of foam mats, blankets, pillows that we cuddled under wondering why we were so lucky to be up partying at this hour.  I  also remember a delicious selection of treats, although I cannot remember what they were.


My Grandpa Doral Pilling in the shores of Shuswap Lake in the 1980's.

To see an inner bird's eye view of a magnificent gothic abbey.  Having been on three tours during my stay with various groups I remember the six crystal chandeliers are 6 feet high but are dwarfed in comparison to the actual height of the 102 foot nave.  I believe 3,000 people have been buried or memorialized inside the building.  A juxtaposition of a new relationship budding from the surrounding lives that have ended. 


From Google Images, goingtolondon website.

Having attended Evensong on several occasions at the abbey, I wanted to hear the boys and men's choir one more time.  Mmmmm....love their soprano to bass voices intermingling and resonating of the stone of the Norman interior.

Thank you CBC for this shot!
Thank you CBC for the live coverage.  Thank you to my father who let me move back in with him while he was living in London and while I was in my late 30's.  Thank you mum my who was our part-time roommate and the one who took me to so many West End shows I lost track of how many times I have seen Billy Elliot, Wicked, Oliver, and Sister Act.

Greg and I on the top of a double decker bus,
just south of his flat on Regent Street.

Wyona, Marcia and I in Camden Town Market, North London.
My time in London was brief but will stay with me for years to come.  
You can take a woman out of London, but you can't take the London out of the woman.

Wednesday, February 23

Photography with Freeman Patterson

After my quick trip to Costco during which I bought excessive amounts of prepared foods as my time is limited over the next month, I came back to my apartment to begin the organization of said foods in grab-and-go containers.  There is no television in my apartment as it is a distraction from actually completing my Master's Degree and I live alone, so listen to CBC radio quite a bit.  Local radio here consists of 1970's classic rock (ugh!), a sports radio station (no thanks) and some post World War 2 station I happened upon once.  Interesting station for an hour or so but I am not a 1950's war vet and I have no memories with which to associate their tunes.  So CBC Radio it is!

Strangely I sound quite interesting and intelligent lately as I am learning many current and historical things on our government sponsored radio station.  While preparing foods a show I have not often listened to with a host whose voice is as deep at the Grand Canyon,  had a special photography guest on, Freeman Patterson.  He reminisced about growing up on a farm, then attending theology school while in his early 20's.  During this time he purchased a camera and began taking a few pictures.  He eventually came to love the process and creativity of photography, which he quickly incorporated into his education.  His story continues through words, sounds, stories and 36 trips to Africa as he builds an accidental then purposeful career while creating an incredible body of work.  Currently living in the Maritimes, Patterson shares with the listening audience his many talents, including being an eloquent speaker, published author, well-known Canadian photographer, lover of nature, and meaningful advice giver to current photographers.

May I suggest you listen to the podcast: Ideas with Paul Kennedy

Then look at his website and stunning work: Freeman Patterson

When I am done school, I am going to add the bottom row of these to my book collection: Books

Glad I went to Costco and don't have to cook for a month.
More excited that I turned on the CBC.