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One step forward, one step back. Nova Scotia, fresh from legalizing gay marriage, went and voted to continue the ban on Sunday shopping. The premier said he won’t be revisiting this issue for some time.

So let me get this straight: grocery stores, drug stores, convenience stores and movie theatres can open on Sunday. Some stores in Halifax (in the historic properties, a heavy tourist zone) are allowed to open on Sunday. All stores are allowed to open on the 6 Sundays immediately before Christmas. And the Casino Nova Scotia can stay open all year round, even on Christmas Day. Add to this the fact that Nova Scotia’s economy — specifically in the rural areas, who voted “no” — is perpetually in the tank, you’d think people would *want* a chance to earn 16% more income. Furthermore, a good portion of the economy is based on tourism, and tourists are routinely confused by not being allowed to spend their money on certain days of the week.

I don’t understand my people sometimes. Oh well, the MBA prevents me from moving back for at least 6 years anyway. Maybe by then they’ll have woken up.

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So, as we’re waiting for friends to show up tonight at the Rebel House we see none other than Ontario premier Dalton McGuinty slide up to the bar (with what appeared to be his family). He and his party were eyeing our mostly vacant table for six, but we gave him a dirty look. If I’m paying a health tax, I’m keeping my table, mofo!

Nellie discovered a new beer tonight — Neustadt 10W30 (yes, it’s named after oil) — which seems to be fairly tricky to find. I guess we need to take a trip down to Queen’s Quay now.

The Awful Red-Hot Passion

We recently finished watching season 1 of Michael Moore’s old show The Awful Truth. I’d never seen it before, though I’d seen clips (Moore leading the voice-box quior in christmas carols outside of Philip Morris, for example) here and there. It would’ve been a good series to watch, but it was a little too much to take in all at once. I don’t think I’ll bother with season 2.

Around the same time we got the South Park episode “Passion Of The Jew” from Zip. The episode itself wasn’t that great, though it did skewer all the hype around the movie. The real horribly disgusting and wonderful gem on the disc was “Red Hot Catholic Love”. It involves religious hyprocrisy, systemic corruption and defecating from the mouth. It was sick and brilliant and made me laugh my ass off. The last episode where Cartman becomes a Christian pop star was funny too, but just couldn’t compete.

I kick myself for not watching South Park the last few years. I’ll have to rent the DVDs. I’ll also have to watch them myself. My wife? Not really a fan. I can’t imagine why…

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Had an impromptu dinner with G & C last night. They came over, we all made dinner, we sat around, ate, drank wine and watched Daily Show repeats (too bad we didn’t think to watch Crossfire!).

Meanwhile Stanzi was having drinks with a friend, and some people who I used to work with…she just can’t remember who.

Tonight we’re meeting up with a friend from university at the Rebel House for dinner. Mmmmmmmmm…Muskoka short ribs…

Jon beats up on Tucker

From Salon:

Jon Stewart: Crossfire “hurting America”

“I think you’re a lot more fun on your show,” said Tucker Carlson to “Crossfire” guest Jon Stewart this afternoon. “And I think you’re as much of a dick on your show as on any other,” Stewart shot back. It wasn’t the faux avuncularity we’ve come to expect from Stewart on “The Daily Show” but there, of course, he’s playing a role. Here he was himself — and he wasn’t buying any of it.

From the moment Stewart sat down he made no secret of how repugnant he found the show. In fact, he said to Carlson and co-host Paul Begala that he had been so hard on the show he felt it was his duty to come on and say to their faces what he has said to friends and in interviews. What he said was that their show was “hurting America,” and he was being only slightly hyperbolic. Stewart told them that when America needed journalists to be journalists they had instead chosen to present theater.

Carlson, trying to affect an air of dry amusement that a comedian would presume to lecture him, important pundit that he is, but looking as if his bow-tie were about to start spinning, could barely contain his outrage. In an absolutely mind-boggling moment, Carlson tried to counter Stewart’s criticism by pointing out that during John Kerry’s recent appearance on “The Daily Show,” Stewart asked the candidate softball questions. “If you want to measure yourself against a comedy show,” Stewart said, “be my guest.”

Paul Begala tried to put a more conciliatory face on things by pointing out that theirs was a “debate” show. Stewart was having none of it. “I would love to see a real debate show,” he said. And went on to tell them that instead of holding politicians’ feet to the fire by asking tough question, “you’re part of their strategy. You’re partisan — what’s the word? — uh, hacks.”

It’s almost a cliche by now to talk about “The Daily Show” being more trusted than real newscasts, but Stewart showed why. He pointed out to Carlson that he had asked Kerry if he really were in Cambodia but “I don’t care,” and when Carlson asked him what he thought about the “Bill O’Reilly vibrator flap,” Stewart said, “I don’t.” It was as concise a demonstration of the triviality of the media as you could hope for.

“I thought you were going to be funny,” Carlson said toward the end of the interview. Stewart responded, “No, I’m not going to be your monkey.” And that was what was so bracing.

Stewart’s “Crossfire” appearance is going to generate talk about how prickly he was, how he wasn’t “nice” like he is on “The Daily Show.” But prickliness is just what was needed. If you’ve built your reputation as a satirist pointing out how the media falls down on the job, you’re not going to make yourself a part of their charade.

I’ve heard people talk about “The Daily Show” as an oasis of sanity, a public service. I couldn’t agree more. Stewart’s appearance on “Crossfire” was another public service. He went on and acted as if the show’s purpose really was to confront tough issues, instead of being the political equivalent of pro wrestling. Given a chance to say absolutely what he thought, Stewart took it. He accomplished what almost never happens on television anymore: He made the dots come alive.

— Charles Taylor

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I made a hard decision last night. For about 6 years I’ve been a faithful Globe and Mail subscriber, but last night I cancelled my subscription. I was incredibly annoyed by two things: 1) their move to paid-only content on their site, and 2) that someone like myself, already paying $28 a month for the paper edition, would be forced to spend another $8 to get to the same articles online. I can understand paying extra to get additional online stories and functionality, but paying twice for the same content just pisses me off.

I often link to stories from my blog, in order to discuss or further a point. I will no longer use the Globe as a source for many stories (nor could I; many stories are off limits to the general public).

So, as much as it pained me to do so, I ditched them. The Globe has lost my monthly subscription fees, and my advertising-revenue-generating web traffic (light as it may be). I’ll hate not being able to read my beloved Globe in the mornings, but I disagree with what they’re doing. I encourage all of you to cancel your subscriptions if you feel the same way; if you’re not a subscriber, send the Globe an email (Letters@GlobeAndMail.ca) to complain.

Artifacts

Cleaning out my hard drive, I’ve found some old concert reviews & such from before the days when I had an “official” blog (what I used before I built before we called it “blogging”). They’ll be posted here in the next little while. Since I’m going to properly timestamp them I’m not sure they’ll show up in the RSS feed; if they don’t, these are what I’ll be posting:

  • Sigur Ros – Sep 2001
  • …Trail Of Dead – Mar 2002
  • Spiritualized – Apr 2002
  • New Pornographers – Jul 2003
  • Blue Man Group – Jul 2003
  • top ten cd list – dec 2001
  • top ten cd list – dec 2002