Tourism in the pandemic leaves much to be desired. Forget flights
or trains. All destinations are local. There is much to witness from your
window or balcony. Birdsong. The moon. A cloud. Maple blossoms (which you’ve
never noticed before) are striking. Sunset is must-see.
Venturing further afield, find somewhere you can walk without
breaking the two metre protocol. Forget dining out. If there is any good in this, it’s that you can’t stage a food-porn photo of your restaurant meal. The new normal is you, all
alone, sightseeing in your mask. Post that to social media and wait for Likes.
A sometimes surreal exercise in cooperative writing to be performed by a rotating cast of Torontonians, one hundred words at a time.
Thursday, May 21, 2020
Saturday, May 2, 2020
Home Delivery in the Time of Cholera
Towards the end of my career with the Toronto Star, and with a young entrepreneur’s eye to scoring a few more tips from that year’s final collection, a fifteen-year-old me bought a bunch of Christmas stickers to stick on my copies of the Saturday paper.
Okay, so that didn’t work.
But I’ve learned a lot in the last four decades, and since they have yet to come up with festive pandemic stickers, I decided to create some myself for my current route, not for the money this time, just for something to let folks know I was thinking of them.
Okay, so that didn’t work.
But I’ve learned a lot in the last four decades, and since they have yet to come up with festive pandemic stickers, I decided to create some myself for my current route, not for the money this time, just for something to let folks know I was thinking of them.
Thursday, April 30, 2020
Pandemic Togetherness
There are no clubs or cozy cafés, no pints on tap, no films downtown, so at exactly 7:30
we stand on the sidewalk, appropriately distanced of course, and launch into cacophonous
tribute with our pots and pans as a between-calls ambulance cruises slowly past
and replies with a siren WHOOP and
lights, and we bang our cookware
harder, hearts bursting, who doesn’t love a parade, grinning like idiots and telling
the kids, you’ll remember this—then we all peaceably disperse, thankful for our responders
and our fellow citizens and the relative sanity of our politicians, and knowing
we are #StrongerTogether.
Photo by Ron Thompson, April 2020
Photo by Ron Thompson, April 2020
Thursday, February 13, 2020
One Adult, Please.
Please tell me there’s a decent action-adventure playing downtown tonight, without a stupid romance crammed in, because that’s really the movie I’d like to see . . . alone this time; or even a drama, where the first girl to get the obvious close-up doesn’t automatically go on to become the love interest; or one where so much is happening in the hero’s life that he doesn’t even need a girlfriend; because, you know what, most of us never do get to meet our obvious girl, or worse, the one you thought was your obvious girl doesn’t find you the least bit appealing.
Image from The Summer of ’42, obviously.