Archive | July, 2011

Post-Game: Roughriders Vs. Stampeders

In the first two and a half minutes of last night’s game, both the starting quarterbacks for both teams got hit.

It was that kind of game.

In the end, the Calgary Stampeders came out over the home team, the Saskatchewan Roughriders, 22 to 18. Like a lot of the CFL games I’ve seen recently, the score doesn’t quite capture just how well the winners actually played.

The Riders showed some fight. When their defense was on their game, they could drive Calgary quarterback Henry Burris into some tight situations. The Riders offense manage a few great plays, including a 58-yard touchdown pass in the opening of the third quarter.

For most of the game, though, Saskatchewan quarterback Darian Durant couldn’t connect with his receivers. More often, they couldn’t seal the deal and actually catch the ball, while occasionally, he just couldn’t find them. This was also another game where people weren’t treated to Durant running the ball.

The same couldn’t be said of Burris. He rushed for 47 yards during the game. Beyond that, he was simply playing really well. There were plenty of calls of “Hen-ry” through out the stands –– a little girl behind me asked her dad what everyone was saying, clearly not caught up on the drama between Saskatchewan and the former Roughrider – but he made the big plays. He ran the ball when needed and found all the un-harrassed receivers.

You couldn’t argue with the level of their game. Here’s hoping the Riders get it together for next week’s game against the B.C. Lions. If we can’t beat them this time around, that’ll just be depressing. Although, I imagine it would be more than a little vindicating for defensive back Tad Kornegay, recently released by Saskatchewan then picked up by the 0-5 Lions.

Stray Observations
1) During one of the commercials for the Rider Oath, I heard someone behind suggest an addition: “They should say that they will sleep with any Rider in the oath.” I think it’s comments like that in front of children that actually gave them idea to do this oath thing.
2) I know that this isn’t the case, but I like to imagine that the 15-second bursts of popular songs were some kind of commentary on the game, like I might better understand the meaning of what was happening because they were playing “Hell’s Bells”.
3) The guy who won a Sirius Radio by guessing that the clip he heard was Nickelback’s cover of Elton John’s “Saturday Night’s All Right for Fighting” did not look excited at all. If he was jazzed in the slightest, he was hiding it very well.
4) I have the feeling that the Subway Kids Correspondent may have been told to ask her player what his favourite sub is. Just a hunch.
5) The fourth-quarter hit on Stampeder Romby Bryant was absolutely brutal. It looked just devastating. On the screen at Taylor Field, they showed it from every angle that they had, and one elderly woman was just delighted at every view they could give her of it. It reminded me of the joy my grandma used to take in watching Chuck Norris stomp someone’s ass in Walker: Texas Ranger. Check out the hit yourself here, at about the six-minute mark.

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Sunday Matinee: Pre-Code Part 5

This final installment on Hollywood’s Pre-Code era comes with a NFSW warning. Some of the clips feature more adult material and are not safe for work.

While there were a lot of films that pushed the bounds of what some people believed to be morally acceptable, some films helped signaled the end of the Pre-Code era. Tarzan and His Mate (1934) was a sequel to the extremely popular Tarzan, the Ape Man (1932). The films starred Johnny Weissmuller as Tarzan and Maureen O’Sullivan as Jane. They were clearly in a unmarried relationship and in Tarzan and His Mate Tarzan and Jane go for an extended naked swimming scene which after the public outcry of several religious institutes was removed from the film.

Eventually fear of government control and the constant outcry of various religious groups lead to the formation of the Production Code Administration. The Legion of Decency kept watch and over the years would protest films that they felt were immoral and condemned them as they saw fit.
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Also, A Debt Ceiling Deal Is Apparently Near

From The Washington Post:

Things began changing shortly after 10 p.m. Saturday night when Senate Majority Leader Harry M. Reid (D-Nev.) announced that talks between McConnell (R-Ky.) and Vice President Biden had made significant progress, prompting Reid to delay a vote that had been scheduled for 1 a.m. Sunday on his own debt-limit measure.

“There are negotiations going on at the White House to avert a catastrophic default on the nation’s debt,” Reid said, after announcing that the vote had been pushed back to 1 p.m. Sunday. “There are many elements to be finalized, and there is still a distance to go before any arrangement can be completed. But I believe we should give everyone as much room as possible to do their work.”

Full story here. Jaded analysis here.

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They Fixed The Water! We’re All Going To Live! Hooray!

It’s fixed! But we still need to hold back on water use. From the City’s website:

The Buffalo Pound Water Treatment Plant is operational, however the repair is temporary and residents must continue to reduce their water usage to reduce demand on the plant and increase the reserve supply in case the plant shuts down again.

Sounds like I’m going to be a smelly for a little while longer. I apologize to the PD writers I’m having breakfast with in a few minutes. Smellysmelly.

Because it’s apparently tricky to find “City Of Regina” on Twitter (ROSIE!), here’s the link. You can find new announcements and the City’s full press release here. It’s after the jump, too.

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Regina’s Running Out Of Water! We’re All Gonna Die!

Actually I’m sure Regina will be fine, but the Buffalo Pound water treatment plant is knackered again. The City is asking everyone to back off on water use. So no lawn-drenching, laundry-washing, or three-hour-long garden hose fights until the problem is fixed, please. The last time something like this happened, the City asked us to cut water consumption by 50 per cent. We managed a mere 18 per cent, which kinda made us look like assholes. Let’s try to do better this time, okay?

Thank you. Press release here and also after the jump.

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My Music

Anybody want to be featured in prairie dog’s My Music column in the Aug. 11 print issue? I’ve had a number of people bail on me and find myself without someone to profile. What it involves is you selecting six songs from any genre (song title, artist, album, year released). Sometimes people write up their own reasons for why the songs are special to them, other times I have a short chat with them over the phone about their picks. The feature runs about 330 words so it’s not necessary to go into great detail. 

To meet deadline, I’d need the songs by Wednesday. That’s short notice, I know, but if anyone would like to give it a shot post something in the comment section and I’ll follow up with you. Thanks.

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Pre-Game: Roughriders vs. Stampeders

I don’t think I was alone in thinking that the Saskatchewan Roughriders wouldn’t be getting their first win of the season last week. Started off the season 0-3, with the third being an especially thorough trouncing at the hands of the Hamilton Tiger-Cats, any hope of winning against the Montreal Alouettes in our second match-up with them seemed far off.

Anthony Calvillo dropping out due to blurry vision no doubt helped. (I know blurry vision is associated with concussions and would also make the whole quarterbacking job harder, but it’s still an excuse I’m going to bust out next time I’m staying home from work.) But the Riders themselves seemed reinvigorated.

This is all part of the topsy-turvy we’ve been having. I’m clearly not an expert analyst, but I in no way expected Edmonton to be on top, Hamilton, Toronto, and Winnipeg to be performing as well as they have been, and for the Riders, B.C., and Calgary to be struggling as much as they have been.

But, I’ve been looking forward to this game. At this point, there’s no indication that the Stampeders will be coming back. They couldn’t get anything together against Edmonton, and hopefully we can pick them apart tonight, too.

And then next week, we tear apart B.C. This feels like when our season turns around.

I’ll be going to the game and posting some recaps on Sunday.

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Meanwhile In America, America Is Broken (UPDATED 11:16 p.m.)

The two factions of Congressional Republicans have come together to pass a bill that is so insanely divisive it has zero chance of passing in the Senate and less than that of President Obama signing it. From Politico:

In closing remarks, from the well of the chamber, the weary Ohio Republican was alternately defensive and defiant. “I have worked with the president and the administration from the beginning of this year to avoid being in this spot. I have offered ideas. I have negotiated,” Boehner said emotionally. “I stuck my neck out a mile to try to get an agreement with the president of the United States. I put revenues on the table in order to come to an agreement to avert us being where we are.”

Left unsaid was how much the forces in his own party had pulled him back—especially on the revenue issue. “To the American people I would say we’ve tried our level best,” Boehner said. “We’ve done everything we can to find a common sense solution that could pass both houses of this Congress and end this crisis.”

And of course, this:

In an emotional moment Thursday, Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. (D-Ill.) angrily accused the GOP Thursday of mounting a thinly-veiled campaign to browbeat Obama over a debt crisis that had been building long before his presidency. “No other president has been shook up’, shook down or held hostage as president of the United States over this debt vote,” Jackson shouted over the pounding gavel. “This is fundamentally unfair to change the rules in the middle of the game.”

Here’s the Washington Post story on the House’s bill and The Guardian’s piece on the stock market hit caused by all this crap. In case you want to read more about the ongoing collapse of the United States. Whatever. The idiotic and psychotic Tea Party continues to hold their country’s and the world’s economy hostage to their insane delusions of no-government, no-taxation anarchy (but naturally there’d be a huge military budget somehow).

Wonder if they’d be such dicks if there was a white, Republican president (answer: no, the Tea Party movement is maggot-shot with racists as well as troglodytes).

This is not going to end well for anyone, but it’s definitely the beginning of the end of what will turn out to be an irreconcilably-divided Republican party. The majority of Americans are not Tea Party hosepails who can’t negotiate and won’t compromise on their extremist views. Since the Repubs can’t keep their imbeciles and psychopaths in line, Americans will inevitably leave the party.

Or alternately someone like Michele Bachmann becomes president and the world is annihilated in thermonuclear apocalypse. Yay.

(This post has been injected with additional ranting since its publication.)

POST-BAR UPDATE: The Senate shot down the idiotic Tea Party bill, as expected. Here’s the story. Want a ray of sunshine? Well, there’s this paragraph on the difficult position of the Republican House leader, John Boehner:

Boehner is likely to suffer defections if he brings up a Senate-passed compromise, and he would need House Democrats to fill in the gaps — a difficult position for him politically. But GOP senators said they believe Boehner stands ready to do what it takes to avoid a default.

And if he does, the Tea Party will doubtless eat him. Still, at least there’s some confidence that someone is willing to take a political bullet for the good of the American economy.

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New Dog!

The new issue is out and you should grab a copy. Why? You ask “why”? Because everyone loves prairie dog! And by “everyone” I mean the supercool folk-women of the Regina Folk Festival (pictured), who read and re-read our cute and crazy little independent newspaper all day long, every day.

(I took that photo yesterday, but I guarantee you’ll find them sittting on their back couch like that whenever you visit their office. Ladies, please! Put our incredibly funny, informative and unique newspaper down for a minute! You have a festival next weekend! You shouldn’t be relaxing and reading, you should be shaking in terror at the amount of stuff you still have to do! And think of all the things that could still go wrong! YOU’RE FREAKING ME OUT!)

So grab a copy. Especially if you’re leaving town today — it’s a good read at the beach or the cabin or even in a park or whatevs.

After the jump, details on some of the stuff that makes the new PD so very very very very very very worth your while.

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The Off-Leash Dog Park Is Open This Weekend

From the press release that arrived in my in-box a little while ago:

Volunteers will be cleaning up the off-leash dog park tonight with plans to open the site to dog owners and their pets this Saturday, July 30 with some precautions. Due to the flooding experienced this year, there are still some fence panels down so owners are asked to exercise caution when nearing pedestrian pathways and vehicle traffic areas. There will also be some debris remaining in the area that was difficult to get to with the clean-up project. All dog owners are reminded that they are required to accompany and retain complete control of their dog at all times as per Regina Animal Bylaw (2009-44). For more information please visit Regina.ca or call 777-7000.

I couldn’t actually find any more information on Regina.ca, but maybe there will be something later Here’s the link. But still, tThis is great news for all those poor puppies that are sad and lonely and stuck inside. Woof!

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Friday Afternoon Octopus!

Turns out PD writer Charles Sheppard and I are both cephalopod-loving kooks, so I’ll dedicate this Friday Afternoon Kitty Octopus to him. Here’s the CBS story, from April 2010.

octopus steals my video camera and swims off with it (while it’s Recording) from Victor Huang on Vimeo.

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Six In The Morning: Rednecks, Teabaggers, Starvation, Vonnegut Gets Banned, Plaza Gets Open!

1 DEBT CEILING ARGLE BARGLE The Republican’s anti-tax, anti-government, pro-liberty (which means legal assault weapons and illegal abortion) Tea Party faction continues to sabotage their own political party (sounds like Karma to me) and hold the global economy hostage. I suggest the first wave of government shutdowns be directed to Tea Party congressional districts. But wait!!! They’re still negotiating! Maybe they WILL craft a plan that can pass Congress and then die in the Senate. Meanwhile, U.S. president Barack Obama says there are solutions to the de3adlock but “we are almost out of time.” Also, Apple literally has more money in the bank than the United States. Uh oh.

2 PLACES WHERE THEY DON’T CARE ABOUT THE U.S. DEBT CEILING Somalia, Afghanistan, Syria,

3 NOT THEIR FAULT The federal government won’t be liable for damages in lawsuits against tobacco companies. Also, Canada’s economy is shrinking, boo.

4 I AM SIMPLY SHOCKED Saskatchewan’s rate of ATV injuries is double the national average. Will I get in trouble if I suggest that is a hilariously rednecky statistic? “That’s funny, right?” I ask our designer. “No, it sucks,” he says. Awesome Klassen is a better human being than I am.

5 SAN FRANCISCO WON’T PUT CIRCUMCISION BAN ON THE BALLOT AND SOME IDIOTIC SCHOOL IN THE BULLSHIT STATE OF MISSOURI BANS KURT VONNEGUT”S SLAUGHTERHOUSE FIVE Okay then. But male circumcision is still kinda evil. Also, Missouri sucks. What a stupid place.

6 THE PLAZA IS PARTLY OPEN! And we have photographic evidence, thanks to Awesome Klassen! Behold!

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Pick of the Day (Tomorrow Edition): Queen City Ex Parade

Everybody loves a parade, don’t they?

Saturday morning at 9:30 a.m., the annual parade which kicks-off the Queen City Ex will be held. Because of continuing construction in downtown Regina, the parade route will skirt the downtown as it did last year.

The parade starts at the intersection of Dewdney Ave. and Cameron St. and will travel east from there through the Warehouse District to Broad St. From there, it will head south to Broadway Ave., ending up as it usually does at the Tartan Curling Club.

As for the above picture, it’s not actually from the Queen City Ex parade. But there’s a certain media outlet in Regina that’s currently in negotiations with Saskatchewan Roughrider mascot Gainer the Gopher to borrow his mobile burrow so that we — I mean, they, can have a float in the parade too.

How cool would that be?

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Viet-Thaiming

The staff of Viet-Thai, local restaurant and dominant force in spring rolls for years now, have gone on vacation. The lady and I found this out when we called to place an order for take out the very first day they were shut down.

That led her to develop the following phrase, which we can all put to good use, I’m sure:

Viet-Thaiming. Noun. The choice, judgment, or control of when to go to Viet-Thai and not catch them while they’re on vacation. I couldn’t order our usual #44s; our Viet-Thaiming was off.

Use accordingly.

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Bonus Column Bonus

If you pick up the print version of the July 28 prairie dog, you’ll see that the Bonus Column is a review by Aidan Morgan of Hill Tower III (concept drawing, pictured left) that’s under construction in downtown Regina. Here’s a link to Harvard Development’s website where you’ll find a web cam offering girder by girder coverage of the tower’s construction.

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Stephen LaRose’s Top Thix, Courtesy Then Denthisth’s Office (Will Rethsume Normal Spellingth When Theh Freezing Abates)

1 SO SAYS THE KILLER OF CARROTS Morrisey, like Glenn Beck and Micheal Coren, is the latest to jump on the Norway massacre bandwagon for his own political ends. He says fast food is worse than murder. Too bad another famous vegetarian, Adolf Hitler, never thought to use that reasoning … (The Telegraph)

2 … SAUCE (OR WHATEVER THE KIDS CALL IT TODAY) FOR THE GANDER Since the exploitation of young women is what made Hugh Hefner a rich man, it’s interesting to see what happens when the shoe — or in this case, the Jimmy Choo with the eight-inch heels — is on the other foot. (KOMO)

3 MAYBE IF HE TAUNTED THEM ON MYSPACE, HE’D STILL BE A FREE MAN A man wanted on domestic violence warrants in upstate New York posted on his Facebook site, ‘come and get me, coppers, I’m in Brooklyn.’ Man, what would Lenny Briscoe have done with the other fifity-eight minutes of that Law And Order episode … (NY Daily News)

4 HEY SEANBOT3000, THIS POST IF FOR YOU Jon Stewart shows how right-wing Christians have been ‘persecuted’ in the wake of the Norwegian shootings. (Gawker)

5 PAUL HILL CREATED A SCHOOL AT THE UNIVERSITY OF REGINA TO PREVENT YOUNG BUSINESS PEOPLE FROM MAKING THESE KIND OF BAD MANAGEMENT DECISIONS Somebody at Harvard Radio’s IT department really, really goofed: they didn’t re-register the domain of their flagship country/sports radio station and now the website domain is for sale. This wouldn’t happen to a company that was dedicated to getting ahead of the technology curve … (Riderfans.com)

6 THE LATEST FACEBOOK CAMPAIGN Of course, Margaret Atwood would make a better mayor of Toronto than the current jackass. So would Ed the Sock. But since he’s not making the offer (at least until the Ford brothers promise to close the Brass Rail strip club), Peggy’s going to have to do. Not that she definitely won’t do a better job … (Facebook).

YOUR MUSICAL MOMENT OF ZEN Get bored, type in ‘North West Company’ in Google, and what do you come up with? A 60′s beat group from Vancouver grooving it out on grainy black and white video.

Not a damn fur trader in the bunch. Ripped off, man.

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Regina Folk Festival Program Guide

If you check our July 28 issue, due on the streets any minute now, you’ll find a 32-page program guide to the Regina Folk Festival which is being held in Victoria Park from August 5-7.

Space ended up being a little tight in the guide this year, so we didn’t have room to run the RFF staff photo as we have in previous years. So here it is. (Photo credit: Chris Graham)

Thanks to the ladies at the RFF for all their hard work in putting the festival together, and here’s hoping we have a great one.

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Pick Of The Day: Bill Cunningham New York

Characters like Bill Cunningham were made for documentaries.

He would otherwise be unknown to me, as I don’t follow the New York Times photo columns. But the 2010 documentary Bill Cunningham New York is giving me the opportunity to get acquainted with this fascinating man, who lives a monk-like existence devoted to seeing and chronicling the fashion of others.

Slate, as happens quite often, has already covered this movie better than I could hope to. Their Culture Gabfest podcast had a fine discussion of the film, and Nathan Heller’s review glows: “Using the low-key approach that shapes Cunningham’s column, [director Richard] Press works up a portrait that’s as raw, gentle, funny, and – in the end – irresistible as the pictures themselves.”

I’ve a few twists of the movie revealed to me and while I’m still eager to see it, maybe you should just go to the movie knowing that you’ll be seeing something good, a film so loved it got a 98% rating at Rotten Tomatoes out of 47 reviews. (The one naysayer being Armond White, which essentially tells you this should be a 100% rated film on RT.)

Bill Cunningham New York is playing at the Regina Public Library Film Theatre at 7 p.m. tonight and runs through the weekend. Look up other show times here.

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City Square Update… With Photos!

In the most recent Ultrasonic Alarm Call (that’s the prairie dog podcast) I did a series of city hall updates, and among them was some info on the soon-to-be-opening City Square.

When we were recording, I said that the plaza would be open a week before the Folk Fest. And, as commenter anonymous points out, that would be like the day after tomorrow.

Well, that was the plan like three weeks ago when I first interviewed city square project manager, Denise Donahue (who I misidentified as the “general manager of the downtown” in the podcast — I don’t think there is such a position, btw). But, as you can probably guess from the pic at left and the pics below, there’s still a lot of work to go on the plaza.

In fact, I interviewed Donahue again shortly after the podcast, and it sounds like opening a week before the fest is not going to happen. How come the delay? Well, you can blame the weather again. Donahue says that high humidity isn’t great for laying paving stones. And apparently that night of storms we had a week or so back washed away all the sand they’d put down.

All together, it put them behind by a few more days.

But, last I heard (via a press release from city hall), they are still on pace to have the fences down for folk fest. The plaza won’t be complete. But it will be done enough so that it can be home to the crafter market and the beer tent.

So, yay! I guess. Now we just have to keep our fingers crossed that we don’t get another torrential downpour between now and next weekend.

Incidentally, you can read more details about the city square project in the next issue of the prairie dog, which will be hitting the streets sometime today.

And now, by request, some pics of the plaza which I took yesterday afternoon. Click to embiggen.

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Regina Transit Centennial Celebration

If you’re a supporter of public transit, Regina Transit turns 100 this year. To celebrate there’s a gathering at City Hall Mall Thursday from 1-3 p.m. According to Regina Transit, the event commemorates the date (July 28, 1911) when four streetcars left City Hall (pictured), then located on 11th Ave. between Hamilton and Rose St., to begin transit service. This apparently makes Regina Transit the oldest public transit system in Saskatchewan.

There’ll be displays of transit memorabilia, including buses from past and present, and refreshments. So if you get a chance, check it out.

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