
Little Canada marks the 80th anniversary of The Liberation of the Netherlands
Little Canada is known for shining a big spotlight on out country's most notable landmarks. Now, as the world marks the 80th anniversary of the liberation of the Netherlands, Canada's role is being celebrated at the exhibit. CTV's Jessica Smith reports.
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National Post
26 minutes ago
- National Post
London Knights redeem themselves with Memorial Cup crown
Article content They finally wrote their storybook ending. Article content Article content The London Knights converted last year's Memorial Cup heartbreak into the ultimate comeback tale by scoring the game's first four goals in a 4-1 victory over Medicine Hat to claim the Canadian Hockey League's biggest prize before 4,512 on Sunday at Sun Life Financial Coliseum. They shrugged off an early push from the well-rested and previously unbeaten Tigers, then held them off during a furious finish. You need your best players to rise to the occasion and, after a dud a year ago at Saginaw, got that and more here in Rimouski. Article content The OHL champs won their record-tying third Cup title in their fifth trip to the final in the past 20 years. Dale Hunter equalled Don Hay as the only two coaches with three CHL crowns. Article content The Knights were ready for anything. They didn't let any missed call or lapse in momentum bother them. They were the best team in junior hockey this year and proved it when it mattered most. Article content 'It's a tough tournament,' said London defenceman Sam Dickinson, who earned three assists in the final. 'It's one game. You never know what can happen going into it. I think of last year and how the game went from the flat start to the comeback to 22 seconds left. You can't have any idea of what's going to happen out there.' Article content The Tigers' best player, Gavin McKenna, got the Western champs on the board in the third period. But a second goal by the wunderkind was called back because of a missed high stick with 5:30 left in regulation. Article content It was a break for the Knights and they shut it down from there. Article content Hunter reunited Easton Cowan and Denver Barkey and it turned into a master stroke. Article content Article content Barkey scored twice in the decisive second period and Cowan had another and was named tournament MVP as London built the four-goal lead. Cowan should have had two, as well, in the middle frame but one was snuffed out on a goalie interference call against linemate Sam O'Reilly. Article content The foundation of the Knights' three-year run of success started with the drafting of Barkey, Cowan and Oliver Bonk in 2021. Once they added Dickinson to the mix the following season, they were on their way. Article content London goaltender Austin Elliott's final won-loss record? He was 55-3 in his last junior season. We won't see that again for a long time, if ever … Cowan entered the final one point shy of his childhood idol Mitch Marner's franchise record 15 points in Cup play and matched it in the second period … Londoner Jacob Julien, the Jets prospect, played his best hockey of the season at this tournament, opening the scoring on a nifty deke … Earlier in the day, Medicine Hat star defenceman Tanner Molendyk described London as the best team he had faced all year. 'They have a lot of skill but when a team works hard and has skill, it's one of the hardest things to beat,' the Nashville Predators first-rounder said. He felt it and the rest of the hockey world saw it up close this week.

Globe and Mail
28 minutes ago
- Globe and Mail
2025 Canadian Screen Awards cap an uneasy edition by honouring Trump biopic The Apprentice
Kicking off with an obligatory Drake joke and ending with the Canadian entertainment industry sending a message straight to the White House by awarding the dark Donald Trump biopic The Apprentice the Best Motion Picture trophy, the 13th annual Canadian Screen Awards offered enough talking points during its live gala Sunday to fill a 51st state. Before the CBC decides to invent a random hockey game next year to air instead of the 2026 CSAs, The Globe and Mail presents the best, worst, and weirdest moments from Canada's equivalent of the Oscars, Emmys and a couple other award shows squeezed into a single two-hour evening. Comedian Lisa Gilroy possessed the necessary energy and commitment as the evening's host, if not quite the material. While she led with an enjoyably self-deprecating energy ('From the first Canadian Screen Awards hosted by comedy legend Martin short to me, Instagram holder Lisa Gilroy...'), a wan pre-taped sketch featuring actor Will Sasso failed to deliver the humour needed to get the audience immediately on her side. And as the evening stretched on, her gags oscillated between wobbly and desperate. I'll award bonus points for Gilroy's joke about Rumours star Cate Blanchett being in the house (with the camera instead cutting to a mannequin creepy enough to headline its own Guy Maddin movie). But the CSAs, especially in this 'Canada-is-not-for-sale' edition, needed bite. We got baby teeth. While the CSAs arrived in an era of acute geopolitical anxiety – even if no one onstage dared to utter the word 'tariff' – the Academy Of Canadian Cinema & Television voters sure did feel generous toward our U.S. neighbours when it came to doling out the statuettes. American Sebastian Stan took home the Best Performance in a Leading Role (Drama) CSA for his sly performance as Trump in The Apprentice (a Canada/Ireland/Denmark coproduction that was shot in Toronto), while Stan's costar and fellow Yank Jeremy Strong nabbed the Best Performance in a Supporting Role (Drama) in a separate CSAs ceremony Saturday. (Surprise: neither actors were in Toronto to accept.) Meanwhile, Citytv's Law & Order Toronto: Criminal Intent – a thoroughly Canadian production, albeit one that only exists because of its American mothership – won three CSAs, including Best Drama Series. And though Cate Blanchett is Australian – and excellent – it cannot help but feel strange to see the Rumours star triumph in the Best Performance in a Leading Role (Comedy) category over seven unambiguously Canadian actors. Accepting the award for Achievement in Directing, Universal Language's Matthew Rankin gave the best acceptance speech of the night. First addressing the audience in a succession of English, French, and Farsi, Rankin shared his appreciation for his dual Quebec and Manitoba backgrounds ('Keep Winnipeg weird') before moving on to underline his film's themes. 'Every day, there are new Berlin Walls shooting up all around us. And if our film stands for anything, it stands for how kindness can in fact be a radical gesture,' Rankin said. 'Art can do something that politics can't do. And so I want to salute everyone in this room for the work that you do. To work in culture is to choose community over solitude, and that's very precious.' Although The Apprentice producer Daniel Bekerman gets the unofficial best speech runner-up award, opening his remarks by addressing his (absent) director Ali Abbasi: 'Ali, I told you – you have to come to Canada if you want to find some guts in this industry.' The 2024 CSAs were coming off a horrendous edition that was entirely pre-taped (much of it in New York City), so I was willing to cut the CBC some slack last year when it came to its sparse and rather cheap-looking stage inside the network's Studio 40 in Toronto. But it appears as if the entire set-up was simply recycled for Sunday's show, including the back-breaking fold-up chairs that attendees were forced to sit on. It is no secret that things are tight over at the CBC, but perhaps producers can shake down some of the Dragons' Den benefactors next year to spruce things up. Despite the Blanchett fake-out, there were some genuinely big names in the house Sunday. Hey there to Kiefer Sutherland (appearing unannounced onstage after producers rolled a tribute to his father Donald), Jason Priestley, and a gracious Manny Jacinto (The Good Place, Star Wars: The Acolyte), who was presented with the Radius Award (given to a Canadian film or TV professional who is 'currently making an impact internationally'). Although how fun would it have been if Mike Myers, the most vocal homegrown entertainer out there fighting for Canada's good name, would have popped in, too? Perhaps he was busy filming another Mark Carney ad. While the Canadian academy says that it constantly reevaluates its nomination and voting process every year, this edition's winners – as well as the titles that walked away with little or no hardware – suggests a top-to-bottom overhaul is needed for 2026. How, for instance, did David Cronenberg's The Shrouds – easily the best Canadian film of the year – only leave the CSAs with two awards (for best sound mixing and sound editing)? Meanwhile, Rankin's wonderful comedy Universal Language, the favourite for Best Picture going into Sunday night, was usurped by the Trump drama The Apprentice, which is as big an upset as far as the CSAs typically go. (Although as noted above, Rankin won the best director CSA, one of the six awards that the film scored over the course of a weekend's worth of events.) And then Atom Egoyan's psychological drama Seven Veils, the Canadian filmmaker's strongest work in years, only snagged one award, for best original score. Different strokes for different folks, I suppose, but Cronenberg, Egoyan, and Rankin's latest works are beloved by critics and audiences alike, here and abroad. Giving the three of them something of a cold shoulder feels dispiriting and confounding. Hopefully the members of the now-empty writers rooms that staffed CTV's Children Ruin Everything and CBC's Run the Burbs can find the humour in the fact that their series won top awards despite their shows no longer existing. Run the Burbs star Andrew Phung won Best Lead Performer (Comedy), even though the sitcom aired its last episode more than a year ago, in April, 2024, after getting cancelled in its third season. And while Children Ruin Everything ended after four seasons due to what Bell Media described as creative and not financial reasons, it still felt awkward to see the show win four CSAs (including Best Comedy Series) three months after it aired its series finale.


CTV News
2 hours ago
- CTV News
Jeff Skinner ‘deserved' chance to rejoin Oilers lineup in playoffs
Edmonton Oilers forward Jeff Skinner celebrates after scoring against the Dallas Stars during the first period of Game 5 of the Western Conference finals in the NHL hockey Stanley Cup playoffs, Thursday, May 29, 2025, in Dallas. On Sunday, Kris Knoblauch shared a scene he observed from his vantage point behind the Edmonton Oilers bench three days before early in the deciding game of the Western Conference final. The team had just gone up 3-0 early in the first period against the Dallas Stars, and initially, there was some confusion over who had scored it. 'When that goal went in, there's a little bit of doubt how that puck went in, when it went in, and who scored it,' Knoblauch said Sunday after team practice in preparation for Wednesday's Game 1 of the Stanley Cup final. 'I think it was Leon (Draisaitl) in front of me who shouted out (Jeff) Skinner's name – 'Yes! It was Skinner' – then the other guys just lit up.' That game was just the second game of this year's National Hockey League playoffs for Skinner – and the second career post-season game of his career. The 33-year-old winger, who joined the Oilers as a free agent last summer on a one-year, $3-million contract – hadn't been playing regularly heading into the playoffs as it was, suiting up for 72 games of the 82-game regular-season schedule and playing mostly on the third and fourth lines. Still, he scored 16 goals and 13 assists for 29 points, an offensive performance not unlike that of 40-year-old teammate Corey Perry, who recorded 19 goals and 11 assists for 30 points in 81 games. Skinner's 16 was good enough for sixth on the team goal-scoring list, Perry's 19 fifth. Skinner, in his 15th NHL season, had been recruited to the Oilers in hopes he could find chemistry with the likes of stars Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl, and patrol the left wing among the team's top six forwards. After all, he's scored a career 373 regular-season goals (and now one playoff goal) in 1,078 games. Five times he's been a 30-plus goal scorer. One season, he scored 40. Skinner indeed has hands but didn't make the top-line cut in Edmonton. But that hasn't gotten him down. Oilers Stars Hockey Edmonton Oilers forward Jeff Skinner (53) scores against the Dallas Stars during the first period of Game 5 of the Western Conference finals in the NHL hockey Stanley Cup playoffs, Thursday, May 29, 2025, in Dallas. (Julio Cortez/AP) Prior to suiting up for Thursday's eventual 6-3 Game 5 win over the Stars to set up an Oilers' Stanley Cup rematch with the Florida Panthers, Skinner related working with Oilers training staff to stay ready for a call to action 'The guys have been playing really well, battling really hard, and I just try to come in, read off those guys, try to keep it simple and try to contribute,' Skinner said. With Connor Brown, who has scored five goals in a depth role these playoffs, skating at Sunday's practice – and with both him and Knoblauch saying he should be ready to return to the Oilers lineup after missing games 4 and 5 against the Stars with an injury – the status of Skinner, who stepped into the lineup after Zach Hyman was lost to injury, is in question for the Cup opener Wednesday at Rogers Place. But Knoblauch said he's 'sure' Skinner will play again in the playoffs at some point. 'There's been a lot of adversity for him this year,' Knoblauch said. 'It hasn't gone as well as anyone anticipated, but for him being in the Stanley Cup final and for him be able to score a goal to help us get there, we're very, very happy for him, and he's deserved it.'