
Terrebonne Cinemas Guzzo reopens after months-long closure
A Guzzo cinema sign is seen on a store front in Montreal on Tuesday, June 18, 2019. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Paul Chiasson

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CTV News
11 minutes ago
- CTV News
B.C. man recovering from debilitating motorcycle accident by pursuing art
PORT COQUITLAM, B.C. — To appreciate where Ron Friesen is heading on the path of life, we need to rewind to when he was lying on a road lifeless, surrounded by a crowd of concerned strangers. 'You can't move, so all you can see are feet,' says Ron, who was paralyzed following a motorcycle crash. 'But you can hear them, and somebody said, 'Is he dead?'' When you're this close to death, you can't help but think back on the life you've lived. 'When cars still had steel dashboards, my mom was taking me to the art gallery,' Ron smiles. For as long as he can recall, Ron's been painting pictures, taking photographs and making music. 'Something makes you feel something,' Ron says of his creative process. 'And you want to express it to someone else.' If you ask him to express how it felt after the accident caused a debilitating spinal cord injury, Ron will tell you it's like flipping your canoe in the middle of a lake without a life jacket. 'You're going to look one way and then the other and see what's closer,' Ron says. 'Then you're going to swim and try to make it.' And thanks to support from his health-care workers and family members, Ron learned to do almost everything again, from tying his shoes to walking. But being creative again was different, because of permanent nerve damage in his fingers. 'It's frustrating,' Ron says while trying to focus his camera. 'But it's the way it is.' Now he can't feel the buttons and dials on his camera, the pain makes him struggle to strum his guitar, and he can't consistently control the paint on his canvas. 'You're making [the paint] go one way,' Ron says. 'And all of a sudden there's this little [twitch].' But Ron is refusing to give up on his passions and is pursuing his art professionally. 'Just carry on,' he says. 'It's not going to get better because you're miserable.' But Ron says it can get better, if you're determined to learn new ways of doing things. 'You stand back,' Ron says. 'And go, 'OK, I can work with that.'' And rather than looking back, Ron is moving forward, along a path that may be unexpected, but in a direction that couldn't be more positive. 'Rather than wish it wasn't the way it is,' Ron smiles. 'Be grateful for what you do have.'


CTV News
13 minutes ago
- CTV News
Dairy Queen Canada offers Oilers fans a way to chirp back in sweet campaign
A viral moment during the Stanley Cup Playoffs is taking a sweet twist - allowing Edmonton Oilers fans a chance to get under the skin of the Florida Panthers. Panthers forward Brad Marchand was caught sneaking a mid-game snack during intermission in Game 3 of the Eastern Conference Final. It sent the internet into a flurry with many believing he was eating a spoon of a Dairy Queen (DQ) Blizzard treat. Marchand later said it was a spoon of honey, but declared a liking for DQ's Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough Blizzard. DQ Canada is playing into the fun with a 'chirp back' for Oilers fans in a series of events in and out of the arena. Some of the teases include: a renamed Blizzard called the Chocolate Chirp Cookie Dough which will be sold in stores; free custom fan signs that will be handed out in Edmonton's Ice District; social media chirps aimed at Marchand; and LED truck ads near the arena and player hotels. The campaign will run from Thursday to Saturday.


CTV News
38 minutes ago
- CTV News
‘I didn't expect it': Alberta dancer Katie Anderson living her dream as a Riverdance performer
The 30th anniversary of Riverdance comes to Calgary June 27-29, and it will include an Alberta dancer—Katie Anderson from Sherwood Park.