
How to tune in to the 2025 Juno Awards
Get full details below on how to tune into this year's big broadcast, hosted by Michael Bublé.
Catch the 2025 Juno Awards on Sunday, March 30
Bublé is back on Junos hosting duty for the first time since 2018, in Vancouver at Rogers Arena. Sum 41 will be inducted into the Canadian Music Hall of Fame with an electrifying final performance, and more performer announcements are expected in the coming weeks.
The Juno Awards will be broadcast and streamed live across Canada from 5 p.m./8 p.m. ET/9 p.m. AT on CBC-TV, CBC Gem, CBC Radio One, CBC Music, CBC Listen, and globally at CBCMusic.ca/junos and CBC Music's YouTube page. Get tickets here.
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Global News
15 hours ago
- Global News
Influencers capture moment SUV crashes into Texas restaurant during filming
Two influencers narrowly escaped a deadly situation as an SUV smashed through a restaurant window in the midst of their food review — and the shocking moment was caught on camera. Social media influencers Nina Santiago (also known as NinaUnrated) and Patrick Blackwood were enjoying a meal at Cuvees Culinary Creations in Houston, Texas, when a car crashed through a restaurant window and hit their table, knocking the pair to the floor and sending shattered glass flying everywhere. They were filming themselves eating sliders at the restaurant on Aug. 16 around 4:40 p.m. local time. As they took a bite out of the sliders, the vehicle plowed into the window. 'Tomorrow Is NOT Promised…,' Santiago wrote on X after the incident. She also shared photos of her injuries after the crash on Instagram, which showed cuts on her face and arms from the broken glass. Story continues below advertisement 'I am beyond grateful to be alive after an SUV crashed through the glass wall at @cuveesculinarycreations in Houston, TX, shattering everything while @IAmPatrickBlackwood and I recorded an eating show,' she wrote in her caption. Get breaking National news For news impacting Canada and around the world, sign up for breaking news alerts delivered directly to you when they happen. Sign up for breaking National newsletter Sign Up By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy 'It hit us directly me on his left, him on my right as I bit into a delicious salmon slider. Out of nowhere, but we survived,' she added. Santiago said the experience 'showed me who truly matters; life's too short for grudges or anger.' 'Let go, forgive, live in the now, and cherish those around you this could've been our last meal,' she added. Blackwood also shared a post to Instagram showing his injuries. 'Grateful to see another day, walking away from the small stuff with a big purpose. Live bold, love deep, and make every moment count,' he wrote. Story continues below advertisement The driver of the SUV was reportedly heading to the restaurant for an event. 'The female driver of the vehicle advised that she thought she had placed the vehicle in park and upon releasing her foot off the brake, the vehicle rolled into the business, striking the building, and breaking the glass,' a spokesperson for the Harris County Sheriff's Office told the New York Post. 'There were two people inside the business, one male and one female, sitting inside in a booth that were injured and transported to a local area hospital,' they added. Santiago and Blackwood also addressed the incident in a YouTube caption that accompanied a video on their channel. 'We can't even begin to express how incredibly fortunate we feel to be alive after what happened to us,' the pair wrote. 'We were laughing, having a great time, and right as we tapped our sliders together in a 'boom!' cheers moment, out of nowhere, this SUV came barreling through the glass wall at 35-40 mph.' 'No warning at all glass shattered everywhere, chaos erupted, and it hit right next to Patrick on the outside of the booth. We were inches from disaster, but by some miracle, we're both okay, just shaken and forever changed,' they added.

a day ago
'Skibidi' and 'tradwife' are now part of the Cambridge Dictionary
Skibidi, pronounced SKI-bi-di, is one of the slang terms popularized by social media that are among more than 6,000 additions this year to the Cambridge Dictionary. Internet culture is changing the English language and the effect is fascinating to observe and capture in the dictionary, said Colin McIntosh, lexical program manager at Cambridge Dictionary, the world's largest online dictionary. Skibidi is a gibberish term coined by the creator of an animated YouTube series and can mean everything from cool to bad, and is also used with no real meaning as a joke. Other planned additions include tradwife, a contraction of traditional wife referring to a married mother with so-called traditional values — often one who cooks, cleans and posts on social media — and delulu, a shortening of the word delusional that means believing things that are not real or true, usually because you choose to. TikTok influence in some cases Christian Ilbury, senior lecturer in sociolinguistics at the University of Edinburgh, said many of the new words are tied to social media platforms like TikTok because that is how most young people communicate. However, Ilbury said some of the words, including delulu, have longer histories than people might think and have been used by speech communities for years. An increase in remote working since the pandemic has created the new dictionary entry mouse jiggler, a device or piece of software used to make it seem like you are working when you are not. Environmental concerns are behind the addition of forever chemical, a harmful substance that remains in the environment for a long time. Cambridge Dictionary uses the Cambridge English Corpus, a database of more than two billion words of written and spoken English, to monitor how new words are used by different people, how often and in what contexts they are used, the company said. If you look at what a dictionary's function is, it's a public record of how people use language and so if people are now using words like 'skibidi' or 'delulu,' then the dictionary should take account of that, Ilbury said.


CBC
a day ago
- CBC
'Skibidi' and 'tradwife' are now part of the Cambridge Dictionary
What the skibidi is happening to the English language? "Skibidi," pronounced SKI-bi-di, is one of the slang terms popularized by social media that are among more than 6,000 additions this year to the Cambridge Dictionary. "Internet culture is changing the English language and the effect is fascinating to observe and capture in the dictionary," said Colin McIntosh, lexical program manager at Cambridge Dictionary, the world's largest online dictionary. "Skibidi" is a gibberish term coined by the creator of an animated YouTube series and can mean everything from "cool" to "bad," and is also used with no real meaning as a joke. Other planned additions include "tradwife," a contraction of "traditional wife" referring to a married mother with so-called traditional values — often one who cooks, cleans and posts on social media — and "delulu," a shortening of the word "delusional" that means "believing things that are not real or true, usually because you choose to." TikTok influence in some cases Christian Ilbury, senior lecturer in sociolinguistics at the University of Edinburgh, said many of the new words are tied to social media platforms like TikTok because that is how most young people communicate. However, Ilbury said some of the words, including "delulu," have longer histories than people might think and have been used by speech communities for years. An increase in remote working since the pandemic has created the new dictionary entry "mouse jiggler," a device or piece of software used to make it seem like you are working when you are not. Environmental concerns are behind the addition of "forever chemical," a harmful substance that remains in the environment for a long time. Cambridge Dictionary uses the Cambridge English Corpus, a database of more than two billion words of written and spoken English, to monitor how new words are used by different people, how often and in what contexts they are used, the company said. "If you look at what a dictionary's function is, it's a public record of how people use language and so if people are now using words like 'skibidi' or 'delulu,' then the dictionary should take account of that," Ilbury said.