
Burger Wars: La Fromagerie's Patty-Time Burger
Burger Wars continues in support of L'arche Sudbury with Rick Wyman heading downtown to La Fromagerie and joining owner Valerie Fremlin to try their Patty-Time Burger
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CTV News
20 minutes ago
- CTV News
Here's how a Montreal teen is helping Ukraine
Aleksander Yakimiw-Martin, 26, is raising money for his home country of Ukraine, one haircut at a time. Aleksander Yakimiw-Martin first learned to cut hair in school. Now a part-time barber, he takes each client's haircut seriously, with passion and precision. But lately, each cut has taken on more meaning. 'I wanted to do something personal to help Ukraine, so I'm a barber, so I thought, why not use that skill to do some good?,' said Yakimiw-Martin. The 16-year-old created 'Haircuts for Hope.' He first got the idea after giving a haircut to a Ukrainian refugee at his church. Now he's doing it at Dynasty Barbershop in Pointe-Claire, where he's worked for the past year. He donates $10 from every cut to help keep lights on in classrooms and rebuild schools in war-torn Ukraine. 'It gives them the same chance that I have to learn with light and without bombs,' he told CTV News. The teenager says he feels lucky to live here, especially since he has relatives back in Ukraine. What's happening to his family's home country is never far from his mind. He wears a Ukrainian trident around his neck; a symbol of resilience, amid the ongoing fight for freedom. 'My grandparents are Ukrainian, my parents are Ukrainian. We grew up speaking Ukrainian in our house, and we stayed really close to our heritage.' His coworkers say taking on the fundraiser at such a young age proves why he's a cut above the rest. 'I'm super proud of him and all of us here are it's super cool that he could, like, use his passion and his craft to fund this whole thing and make a real difference in the world,' said Dynasty Barbershop manager William Godbout. Yakimiw-Martin's goal is to raise $1,000. One of his clients, Kyle Gales, said, 'It's nice knowing that my money's going to like a good cause' after getting his haircut. The barber hopes the buzz continues to grow, so he can give back even more to schools in Ukraine, one cut at a time.


CTV News
2 hours ago
- CTV News
‘This is totally unique': Why the RAM is rejuvenating a taxidermied elephant from the 60s
The Royal Alberta Museum is giving new life to a taxidermied elephant and using it as an opportunity to show guests what goes on behind the scenes. The Royal Alberta Museum (RAM) is giving new life to a taxidermied elephant that lived in the Calgary Zoo in the 60s. The museum says Gyro the elephant has been hidden from the public for most of his life. 'We're just happy to have it out front of house and having fantastic conservation staff working on it,' said Nick Cairns, curator with the RAM. Gyro is a juvenile Asian elephant who came from Toronto in the 1960s. He lived in the Calgary Zoo until his death in 1967, after his female mate, Gyrette II, knocked him into a dry moat. He was 6-years-old and wasn't fully grown. The museum acquired him in 1979 through the Riveredge Foundation and has never been displayed to the public before. Now, visitors will be able to see history conservator Gigi Kulis give him a fresh look close to the entrance. Gyro the elephant Natural history conservator Gigi Kulis working on Gyro the elephant at The Royal Alberta Museum (Miriam Valdes-Carletti/CTV News Edmonton) 'I love working on taxidermy and I fortunately get to do that with the work I do but this is totally unique and novel, it's pretty amazing,' Kulis told CTV News Edmonton. Cairns says having Kulis working on Gyro in the public eye is also a way to show guests what goes on behind-the-scenes at the museum. 'They're working really, really hard at making things look amazing when they might have been stuck in a basement or stuck in an attic for half a century,' Cairns said. While elephants aren't native to Alberta, the museum says Gyro's time spent at the Calgary Zoo makes him a part of provincial history. Gyro the elephant Gyro the elephant celebrating one year living at the Calgary Zoo with a cake. (Glenbow Archives) 'He is, as far as we know, the only taxidermied elephant in western Canada and in our collection,' said Carme Li, head of curation at the RAM. It's one of the biggest reasons the museum is giving him a makeover. Part of the conservation process includes fixing the cracks on his body and getting rid of over paint to unveil more natural characteristics. The museum says Gyro will be on display for the next couple of months.


National Post
6 hours ago
- National Post
Raymond J. de Souza: Hulk Hogan told a simple story, but his life was far more complex
Article content Hogan did have charisma, as much or more than any other performer in any field. Wrestling is all about lights and music and grand entrances, but Hogan was his own source of energy, uniquely able to connect with mass audiences. The frenzy of a full Saddledome that night was a formidable thing — a frenzy that the world would see at the Silverdome the following year when Hogan body-slammed the Giant. Article content It was the capacity for public frenzy that struck teenage me as a bit frightening. I recall a woman, climbing atop her chair, face contorted and screaming, resembling a woman possessed. She was my mother's age, so should have known better. Article content The performers in the ring were scripted, directed toward telling a story. The frenzy on the outside was harder to control. In time, others would learn, in wrestling and the broader culture, that frenzy could be put to other purposes. Article content In the 1980s, McMahon presented Hogan as utterly wholesome, advising kids to 'train, say your prayers, and take your vitamins.' Eventually, Hogan's fans would discover that he 'trained' with steroids, said nasty racist things, and took other men's wives. Alongside that, as is always necessary in wrestling, Hogan became a villain. Frenzied adulation or frenzied vituperation matters less than the frenzy itself, which generates attention and relevance and revenue. Article content Article content Fifteen years after the Saddledome, Hogan fought The Rock at the Skydome in the most memorable match of WrestleMania X8 (18). Remembered now as one of the historic moments in wrestling history, it was the pro-Hogan frenzy of the crowd that determined the outcome of the story, an unusual reversal of manipulators and manipulated. Article content Toronto 2002 would be the effective end of the Hogan era. Then, nearly fifty years old, boasting a litany of back and hip and knee surgeries, Hogan was losing the sheer athletic ability demanded of professional wrestlers. Soon, he would descend into scandal and, despite WWE's attempts to restore him to prominence, his last wrestling appearance ended in an embarrassment of booing. The frenzy had turned. Article content Hogan's career then slipped from wrestling into reality TV — and eventually to politics. For those of us who long ago explained that Donald Trump could not be understood apart from professional wrestling, Hogan's introduction of Trump at the Republican National Convention last summer was sad confirmation of a malign cultural force converted to demoralizing political effect. The frenzied woman of 1986 was the Trump voter long before there was Trump to vote for. Article content Article content WWE will honour Hogan in death, recalling the glory days of the 1980s. Vince McMahon himself will not do so, banished from the company he built after a flurry of sexual misconduct claims. Perhaps his wife Linda might, serving as she does as Trump's secretary of education. Article content