logo
New ‘Savor the North' docuseries shows support for Canadian brands

New ‘Savor the North' docuseries shows support for Canadian brands

CTV News5 hours ago

Video
Jon Montgomery tells CP24 that the show explores the stories behind some historic Canadian food brands and recipes.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Adventures in Streaming: Gary Oldman, John Le Carre and a series worth sitting through ads for
Adventures in Streaming: Gary Oldman, John Le Carre and a series worth sitting through ads for

National Post

time29 minutes ago

  • National Post

Adventures in Streaming: Gary Oldman, John Le Carre and a series worth sitting through ads for

Article content Back in the '80s, before I became an entertainment journalist, I worked my way through university at a video distributor, that is, a company that sold movies, mostly on VHS tapes, to video stores around the province. For a movie-crazy guy, it was an interesting gig, with benefits including unlimited posters, screeners and merch. Article content Few of those companies are around these days since physical media has been relentlessly downgraded due to the convenience of digital streaming. Article content Article content But one lesson I took from the marketing end of the home video business is the concept of 'piggybacking.' The word describes the art of selling one title using another title. To use a terrible '80s-era example, video marketing would tell you that if you loved Louis Gosset in his Oscar-winning turn in An Officer and a Gentleman, you'll love him playing a veteran pilot in the Canadian produced Top Gun knock-off Iron Eagle. Article content Slipstreaming is a column devoted to taking that concept to streaming services. If you like that, maybe you'll like this. Let me be your algorithm. Article content For example, if you liked seeing Gary Oldman play John Le Carre's legendary spy George Smiley in the movie Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy (2011), you'll love seeing him tweak the character outrageously in the series Slow Horses (Apple TV), bringing his wry, Oldman-esque aplomb to the character of flatulent, put-to-pasture spymaster Jackson Lamb. The seemingly decrepit Lamb is in charge of Slough House, a purgatory-like espionage station populated by agents that have, in one way or another, messed up an assignment. Article content Article content With each of its four seasons based on a novel by Mick Herron, the series updates Le Carre's espionage universe with slick technology and slicker action. Unlike Le Carre, women have a more active role in the story, especially in the case of Diana Taverner (Kristin Scott Thomas), an MI-5 director frequently at odds with the wily Lamb. Article content If the show's internecine intrigue captivates, you may want to return to the obvious source of Herron's inspiration. Article content The 1979 TV series Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy (BritBox and also available for free on YouTube) starred Alec Guinness as Smiley, just two years after he played Obi-Wan Kenobi in Star Wars (1977) and you would never know it. Guinness looks pouchy and depressed, like a Prufrockian bureaucrat. But he has talents, which is why Smiley is brought out of retirement to find a Russian mole in Britain's Secret Intelligence Service, a.k.a. The Circus.

Toronto casino slapped with $350K in fines after electronic dance artist hosts ‘impromptu' afterparty on gaming floor
Toronto casino slapped with $350K in fines after electronic dance artist hosts ‘impromptu' afterparty on gaming floor

CTV News

timean hour ago

  • CTV News

Toronto casino slapped with $350K in fines after electronic dance artist hosts ‘impromptu' afterparty on gaming floor

Ontario's gambling watchdog has hit a Toronto casino with $350K in fines after it allegedly allowed an electronic dance artist to host an 'impromptu' afterparty on the gaming floor following a concert that saw assaults, drug overdoses, and 'acts of public indecency.' The Alcohol and Gaming Commission of Ontario (AGCO) announced the fines against Great Canadian Casino Resort Toronto on Thursday in connection with an incident they say took place on Sept. 27, 2024. According to the AGCO, an electronic dance music event held that day drew thousands to a theatre adjacent to the casino at the Etobicoke establishment. The artist was not named by the AGCO. They said the event was 'marked by widespread intoxication, disorderly behavior, and numerous criminal and medical incidents,' both inside and outside the venue. At one point, additional police and emergency services needed to be called in to assist the paid duty officers who were present to 'manage the situation.' 'In the midst of this high-risk environment, casino management approved an unscheduled request by the performing artist to host an after party on the active gaming floor,' the AGCO said, noting 400 guests were permitted onto the gaming floor as table games and slot machines were running. The artist was also allowed to perform at that time. The AGCO said security personnel were unable to effectively control the casino floor and, at one point, one attendee was seen climbing onto one of the slot machines. The casino, according to the AGCO, failed to promptly report the incidents as required. 'Casino operators have a fundamental duty to control their gaming environment. Great Canadian Casino Resort Toronto's lapses in this incident compromised the safety of patrons and the security and integrity of the gaming floor,' Karin Schnarr, CEO and registrar of the AGCO, said in a news release. Great Canadian Casino Resort Toronto has 15 days to appeal the decision. CTV News Toronto has reached out to the casino for comment.

Gilbert Rozon's trial disrupted by exchange of insults and threats
Gilbert Rozon's trial disrupted by exchange of insults and threats

CTV News

time2 hours ago

  • CTV News

Gilbert Rozon's trial disrupted by exchange of insults and threats

Just for Laughs founder Gilbert Rozon is photographed during a break in his trial at the Montreal courthouse on June 2, 2025. (The Canadian Press/Christinne Muschi) Warning: This story contains details about sexual assault. The civil trial of Gilbert Rozon, who is being sued by nine women alleging sexual assault by the disgraced former comedy mogul, was the scene of a rare and spectacular outburst on Thursday when actress Danie Frenette, one of the plaintiffs, lashed out at him during a break. 'What kind of person lies like that? He's a f---ing liar. An a--hole,' she shouted in the courtroom after Rozon denied all allegations made against him by Frenette and her stepdaughter, actress Salomé Corbo, during his testimony. 'No class,' Rozon muttered as he left the courtroom. Threats After leaving the courtroom, Frenette's husband and Corbo's father, Stefano Corbo, allegedly first pulled Rozon's ear and then grabbed him by the throat and threatened him. Hurrying past journalists, Rozon criticized the fact that he had been 'insulted in court.' 'I gave my testimony, I took an oath, I told the truth. The allegations are implausible on their face.' Returning before Judge Chantal Tremblay, Rozon claimed that Stefano Corbo had said to him while grabbing his throat, 'You bastard, you s-n of a b-tch, I'm going to strangle you, I'm going to suffocate you.' Rozon's lawyer, Mélanie Morin, who witnessed the incident, said she was disturbed by what she had seen. Judge Tremblay immediately called Stefano Corbo to the witness stand to have him removed from the courtroom and asked him to follow the trial remotely by electronic means for the remainder of the proceedings. She then adjourned the hearing early for a lunch break to give everyone time to collect their thoughts. Rozon denies everything Earlier, Rozon had flatly denied all the allegations made by Frenette, who alleges she was raped twice and sexually touched by Rozon—once at his home during a party held at the end of the 1988 edition of the Just for Laughs Festival. Frenette had been hired to manage the street art component of the event. According to her, he allegedly took her to a wooded area on his property, removed her windbreaker, and laid her on the ground before raping her for the first time. Rozon described the possibility that he committed such acts in front of guests as 'completely implausible,' adding, 'There has never been a wooded area on my property,' and that he had no memory of even seeing her at that party. He also denied ever engaging in sexual touching on a park bench on Île Sainte-Hélène, saying he never went there with her. He also denied the second alleged rape, which Frenette claims occurred when he showed up at her home in the middle of the night and demanded she open the door. 'I've never been to her house,' he said. 'I've never had sexual relations with her,' he stated in response to the playback of a recording where she claimed to have later had consensual sexual relations with Rozon. As for Salomé Corbo—who is not a complainant in this case but testified about similar incidents—the actress told the court that when she was only 13 years old, Rozon allegedly cornered her in a stairwell, also during a festival closing party, and inserted a finger into her vagina. As a teenager, she got her first job in 1989 as a host at a festival booth. 'Put my finger in her vagina? That's unspeakably crude,' said Rozon, who denied the allegation. He said he wondered why she would say such a thing and concluded it was 'because she's Danie Frenette's stepdaughter.' Corbo also testified that about 11 years later, in 2001, he called her an 'f------ tease' during a chance encounter in a bar after a strap had slipped off her shoulder. 'I don't talk like that,' Rozon said firmly. The hearing was scheduled to resume in the afternoon. A long legal battle Rozon is being sued in civil court for approximately $14 million by nine women who accuse him of sexually assaulting them. The lawsuit—filed by Patricia Tulasne, Lyne Charlebois, Anne-Marie Charrette, Annick Charrette, Sophie Moreau, Danie Frenette, Guylaine Courcelles, Mary Sicari, and Martine Roy—followed a 2017 application to file a class action against the businessman by a group of women known as Les Courageuses. Initially authorized in 2018 at the trial level, Rozon successfully appealed the decision, and the class action was dismissed by the Quebec Court of Appeal in 2020. Meanwhile, 14 women had filed police complaints, but the Director of Criminal and Penal Prosecutions only moved forward with the case involving Annick Charrette. Rozon was acquitted in 2020 due to reasonable doubt. Patricia Tulasne, who acted as spokesperson for Les Courageuses, was the first to file a civil suit against Rozon in April 2021. The eight other women followed, and all of the lawsuits were combined into a single civil trial that began last December. The proceedings have been interrupted several times due to legal arguments. So far, 42 witnesses have testified for the plaintiffs, including the nine complainants and seven other women—among them Julie Snyder, Salomé Corbo, Pénélope McQuade, and Rozon's former partner Véronique Moreau—all of whom testified that they too experienced sexual abuse at the hands of the defendant. This report by The Canadian Press was first published in French on June 26, 2025. By Pierre Saint-Arnaud, The Canadian Press

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store