Posted on 22 January 2010. Tags: Celine Dion, movies, Music, Nelly Furtado, TV, Wayne Gretzky
While George Clooney and Co. are running a star-studded telethon across several networks on American television, some of Canada’s biggest names will gather for an hourlong event that has a list of celebrities that more than holds its own.
The CBC reports:
Prime Minister Stephen Harper and Gov. Gen. Michaëlle Jean are scheduled to deliver messages, and the Tragically Hip and K’naan will perform live.
Other prominent Canadians from music, film, television and sport to appear on the special include:
Musical acts Nelly Furtado, Measha Brueggergosman, Justin Bieber, Céline Dion, Sarah McLachlan, Barenaked Ladies, David Foster, Chantal Kreviazuk, Raine Maida and Simple Plan.
Directors James Cameron, Jason Reitman and Norman Jewison.
Actors William Shatner, Joshua Jackson, Pamela Anderson, Eugene Levy, Sandra Oh, Tom Jackson, Ryan Reynolds, Michael J. Fox, Rachelle Lefevre, Will Arnett, Hugh Dillon and Brent Butt.
TV personalities Mike Holmes, Rick Mercer and Alex Trebek.
Sports stars Gretzky and Steve Nash.
Humanitarian Craig Kielburger.
The money raised during the telethon will be distributed equally amongst a coalition of 10 large Canadian non-governmental organizations — including World Vision Canada, Canadian Red Cross Society, UNICEF Canada, Oxfam Canada and Save the Children Canada — with the funds exclusively earmarked for Haiti.
Posted in News
Posted on 18 November 2009. Tags: hockey, Wayne Gretzky
Wayne Gretzky was unceremoniously dumped as head coach of the Phoenix Coyotes after nearly a decade of trying to make the desert as hockey crazy as he made Los Angeles in the 1990s. He officially stepped down in September and has spent the last couple of months as nothing more than a spectator.
“An NHL without Wayne Gretzky in it is like Christmas without Santa or The Doors without Jim Morrison,” writes George Johnson of CanWest News Service in an insightful piece about how wrong it is that the the game that owes “The Great One” so much can be just another fan.
Johnson talked with Gretzky at a hockey camp for teenagers in Calgary and the best player to ever lace up skates said he’s in no hurry to return to hockey, despite the fact that he misses some aspects of it.
The full story is well worth a read, and you can find it here.
Wayne Gretzky was unceremoniously dumped as head coach of the Phoenix Coyotes after nearly a decade of trying to make the desert as hockey crazy as he made Los Angeles in the 1990s. He officially stepped down in September and has spent the last couple of months as nothing more than a spectator.
“An NHL without Wayne Gretzky in it is like Christmas without Santa or The Doors without Jim Morrison,” writes George Johnson of CanWest News Service in an insightful piece about how wrong it is that the the game that owes “The Great One” so much can be just another fan.
Johnson talked with Gretzky at a hockey camp for teenagers in Calgary and the best player to ever lace up skates said he’s in no hurry to return to hockey, despite the fact that he misses some aspects of it.
See more of the story here.
http://www.nationalpost.com/most-popular/story.html?id=2229824
Posted in Featured, News
Posted on 16 February 2009. Tags: Canada, Canadians, CBC, Pierre Elliott Trudeau, Terry Fox, Tommy Douglas, Wayne Gretzky

Picture this: America, November 2004. Half the country, riled up over election results, threatens to move to Canada.
At the same time, Canadians were casting their votes. For what? To decide who is “The Greatest Canadian.” Were they just showing off? Trying to show us how awesome they were as we realized how lame we are?
Perhaps, but Canadians don’t need to prove to us how awesome they are. They know it and so do we.
Without Canadians, we wouldn’t have “Saturday Night Live,” Jack Bauer or more than one hockey franchise west of the Rockies.
While the jury’s still out on “loonies” and “toonies,” our relationship with Canada, on a popular cultural scale, is pretty much the opposite of the currency exchange. Every Canadian unit of cache is worth just a little more than ours.
But as I examined the results of the CBC’s landmark vote to decide upon “The Greatest Canadian,” I realized they’re really on to something up there.
Even beyond Bryan Adams, Seth Rogen and George Stroumboulopoulos, there have been some really tremendous Canadians. See the full list here.
The winner of the coveted title was Tommy Douglas, Canada’s “father of Medicare.” (Doesn’t that say something about Canadians, too? My guess would have been Wayne Gretzky, and he came in 10th!).
Take Terry Fox. Here, he was a one-off feature on a short-lived NBC show called “Real People,” but in Canada he was a national hero and second on the CBC’s list of Greatest Canadians. After a cancer scare that resulted in having his leg amputated, he ran across half of Canada to raise money for cancer research on a prosthetic leg.
He started his “Marathon of Hope” in April 1980 and made it just past halfway across the country (5,376 kilometers — which is, like, 9,000 miles!) in four and a half months.
His health took a bad turn and Fox died from cancer complications and he had to abandon his effort to run across the country, but he inspired a nation and reached his goal of raising $1 for every Canadian resident — reaching $24.17 million when the country’s population was at 24.1 million in February 1981. He died June 28, 1981, but his legacy lives on with races that are held in his honor every year in 60 countries.
Here’s the CBC’s complete Top 10, with links to their profiles on every one of them.
We can’t have a Tommy Douglas or Terry Fox every week, but we’ll be looking to take note of a worthy Canadian each week and have a little fun in the process.
Posted in News