Latest news with #TomClark

Globe and Mail
2 days ago
- Entertainment
- Globe and Mail
TKTK Canada Day in Central Park
'Okay, you guys wanna hear a song about a … trade war? Pfffft.' No, Sebastian Grainger, drummer of brilliantly abrasive Toronto punk-dance duo Death from Above 1979. They did not. After months of 51st state provocations, here, at the Canada Day concert at SummerStage in New York's Central Park, was the opportunity for rebuttal. Some concert goers must have come with anticipation. On some level, they probably hoped for a political bench-clearer to defuse the tension and settle things. 'Whaddaya call a roomful of Canadians?' goes the old joke. 'An apology.' Not anymore, buddy. The irate great north. Elbows up. Instead, they got – Canada Day. The show was held on July 2, after President Donald Trump had slapped a 99 per cent tariff on Canada's July 1 … Kidding. The delay was because of a scheduling conflict with a separate Canuck-themed shindig. For the Canada Day concert, SummerStage hosted Montreal DJ Martyn Bootyspoon with hits from Welland, Ont.'s engaging '60s folk-rocker Julianna Riolino and pummelling headliner DFA. Fireflies bumbled in the humid evening air, twentysomethings trooped across the astroturf to the beer stand while Gen-Xers and boomers sat in the stands languidly waving wee flags. But Canada's Consul-General in New York, Tom Clark, made sure to address the GOP elephant in the room from the stage. 'I know you're here to hear another speech…' he deadpanned to the kids milling in front of the stage. 'And it's safe to say that this Canada Day is a little… different from the ones we've celebrated here before.' Indeed. It came months after Mr. Trump lobbed a fiscal firecracker over the border, announcing massive tariffs across the entire spectrum of Canadian goods, alongside belligerent statements that the U.S. 'doesn't need anything' from Canada. (Cough, four million barrels of crude oil per day, cough.) Then, came talk of annexation and a '51st state,' and suddenly, a country with no enemies in the world found one on its 8,800-kilometre doorstep. Canadians reeled from baffled to outraged – and Jack Daniel's and Tito's were yanked (sorry) from the shelves. And so we had a narrative for this first Canada Day in the new cross-border era. But Canadians living in NYC tend to be dug-in, as Clark well knows. 'We are lucky to have friends all over the U.S.,' he said, 'but especially right here in New York City! We've been here for 100 years and we're going to be here.' Reconciliatory, he looked toward political efforts to lower the temperature. 'That's what diplomats do – we 'diplomat.' And the best compliment our New York friends can give us is inviting these great Canadian artists to play SummerStage!' As Riolino opened her set with Against the Grain, you might have thought, here come the politics. And you'd have been mistaken. For fiftysomething Melanie Ash of Kamloops, B.C., here on a work visa for the better part of 20 years, the trade war is 'ridiculous.' It awakened a 'steely reserve' within Canadians and while 'we're not showy about it,' when Canadian sovereignty is threatened, she doesn't hide her feelings, she said. Mark Weisdorf, a 65-year-old former Torontonian, said he feels Canadians in the city are 'under the microscope, if not actual attack' by Mr. Trump. Admittedly, New York is 'a bubble, lots of Canadians here who know lots of Americans, and we love one another. People in Toronto are angry, but that's not the right word here… What is that word when your lover scorns you?' 'Betrayed!' shot in Israeli friend Gabi Haberfeld, 68. While lamenting the 'heightened' atmosphere between neighbours, Sandra Pike of St. John's said that the national pride generated in Canada 'has been incredible. And it will have far more longevity than what triggered it.' Likewise, Kayla Weisdorf, Toronto ex-pat now U.S. citizen, said, 'I'm not into rah-rah nationalism, but I'm happy people want to protect what differentiates us. Canada should've been looking after its sovereignty long before this happened.' Pike, Weisdorf, Ash are all genially patriotic ex-pats who have lived in New York for about two decades, just slightly less time than the fans in front of the stage have been alive. But this was the wrong place to get a generational perspective on the cross-border issue. As DFA ground through the sinewy squall of Going Steady, every interaction with some two dozen young fans throughout the venue went the same way: 'Hey. Can I ask – are you guys Canadian?' Each responded with the facial flinch of mild regret. The girl with the maple leaf tucked into her scrunchie, the one fanning herself with the Canuck mini-flag, the dude in the Niagara Falls T-shirt – these were American fans. Grainger and bassist/keyboardist Jesse F. Keeler traded cheeky trivia about how New York's Shake Shack was somehow inspired by the Burger's Priest and self-deprecating gags about 'my home suburb, Mississauga,' and there was a squeal from the centre of the crowd. A Canuck! False alarm, upon investigation. Another Yankee gal here for the raw scuzz sound on a summer night. And perhaps there was a lesson here: Americans, Canadians, young, old, co-existing in the safe space of cultural intercourse, where no politics dare irrupt. Back to that scheduling conflict. The SummerStage show had been shifted to July 2 to avoid overlap with a Canadian Association of New York event at the City Vineyard club. Working for the Weekend (Loverboy) and Summer of '69 (Bryan Adams) soundtracked the soiree on the Hudson River, with folks sipping whatever-tinis and taking photos with the Celine Dion and Drake life-sized cutouts. Where Michael La Fleur, board member of CANY, offered the salve that 'initial fears are subsiding, leaders are talking and people are feeling positive.' And is there anything more Canadian than Canada Day stepping aside for another Canada Day? For a short while, the putative 51st state held sway in Manhattan. Peace on the Hudson, peace on the plains of SummerStage. Eleventh province, anyone? In Central Park, as DFA drove to its visceral close, fans were making their way to the exit turnstiles. You could pick out the Canadians, the ones stopping by the recycling bins.


Metro
7 days ago
- Metro
Cricket club heroes praised after trying to save children from collapsed tree
A cricket club has been lauded for their bravery after members sprinted off the field to help lift a tree that collapsed on five children in a park. Families were enjoying the warm weather in Chalkwell Park in Southend-on-Sea when a tree suddenly collapsed, striking the group. A seven-year-old girl was killed, three other children were injured, and a six-year-old girl is still in 'very serious' condition after the tragedy. A GoFundMe page has been set up for the young girl killed in the tragic accident and has currently raised over £23,000. Local community members jumped into action after the tree, which witnesses said was held up by metal poles 'for years', suddenly fell. Spokesperson for Westcliff-on-Sea Cricket Club, Tom Clark, told Metro the team didn't see the children before the incident, but quickly ran over to help. 'The area was behind our clubhouse and is busy with lots of families and children around,' he said. 'Between 50 to 60 people were involved in lifting the tree: players, spectators, members from Westcliff-on-Sea Cricket club, Old Brentwoods Cricket Club, Leigh-on-Sea Cricket Club and Redbridge Cricket Club, along with members of the public. 'It was a harrowing experience for all involved, with not only the sight of the children but the cries from the parents as well. 'Everyone reacted without hesitation and did all they could to help the children, including performing CPR and assisting the emergency services who were on the scene quickly and took control of the rescue effort.' First team captain of Westcliff Cricket Club member Joe Robbins, said on Facebook: 'It's absolutely heartbreaking as a parent of two young girls to see what happened, and mine and the whole club's hearts go out to the parents of those children involved. 'I want to comment on the unbelievable heroism of the members at the club and our first 11 members who sprinted off the field to attend and do their best to help, and to all of those who assisted and provided for the amazing emergency services who were at the scene. 'All of us at Westcliff Cricket Club are heartbroken by what's happened, and we pass on our regards to the families involved. Have to say those police officers at the scene were a credit to Essex Police, as well as all of the emergency services.' The club also released an official statement, reading: 'Everyone at Westcliff-on-Sea Cricket Club is devastated to learn the news about the young girl who passed away at Chalkwell Park on Saturday afternoon. More Trending 'Our condolences and thoughts go out to the little girl's family. We cannot begin to imagine the pain they must be going through. Our best wishes are with the remaining casualties, and we can only hope they pull through.' Chief Superintendent Leighton Hammett said: 'It's not lost on me how traumatic it must have been for the members of the public who witnessed this awful incident. 'Across a matter of moments, many of them went from enjoying the warm summer weather to rushing to the aid of strangers without a second thought. 'They showed the best of Southend today, and I'm sorry this update does not bring them more positive news.' Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@ For more stories like this, check our news page. MORE: Tree that killed girl, 7, and badly hurt another 'was propped up by metal poles' MORE: Traffic delays on M25 after multi-vehicle crash MORE: Second miracle of 11A after another Brit was booked onto Air India plane but had to change flights