Toronto Mike'd: The Official Toronto Mike Podcast - 12:36: Toronto Mike'd #591
Episode Date: February 27, 2020Mike chats with Marc Weisblott of 12:36 about the current state of media in Canada and what you oughta know....
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Welcome to episode 591 of Toronto Mic'd, a weekly podcast about anything and everything.
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I'm Mike from TorontoMike.com
and joining me this week
is 1236's
own
Mark Weisblot.
Where do we start?
Complaining about the weather
that I experienced on the way getting here?
A lot of snow,
even more wind in the air.
My diva demands
of wanting now a hot cup of coffee
when I come sliding through your door.
Created all sorts of consternation
because your wife Monica is working from home today.
And you insisted that she should bring it to me
by walking down the stairs.
And I found this completely uncomfortable.
This whole concept that I come to your house
and I ask for something and you make your wife
bring it to me? Do you know how
awkward that experience is?
If I may.
I made the coffee and I just wanted us
to press record sooner
just so that, you know, we have a two and a half hour
limit of sorts, but it's a soft
cap. And if we leaked over because there's so much to cover, I thought, OK, well, we can start earlier and that can happen.
But all it required was Monica bringing the coffee down the stairs.
I can't handle any of this.
I guess that's why the only media appearance I do outside of sitting at home and writing newsletters is coming to your basement once a month,
and here we are at the end of February.
You know who else demanded a coffee
when they appeared on Toronto Mic'd?
Todd Shapiro.
Not only a coffee,
wanted you to cook an entire breakfast for him?
There was so many demands, and I was...
But that was part of you and him
getting into business together, right?
You were being tested.
It was kind of like this idea if he's going
to get you some money for helping
him with his podcast. When he
started his Todd Shapiro show
on SiriusXM, he modeled it
after the Humble and Fred show. So he
went to the architect of that show
and said, I'd like the same
setup. And so
I designed the back end blueprint
that I did for Humble and Fred. So yes,
Monica took photos of him
here, and we built
him a website, and we got the XML
stuff. We did our thing. This is back when he
started. And coincidentally,
he announced yesterday that that show
has come to an end. No more Todd Shapiro shows.
And as usual, you know a little bit more drama
behind the scenes. But I wanted to cut
to the chase here in talking about an FOTM who's gotten, I think, the greatest job going from being a Toronto-miked guest,
who I'd barely, if ever, heard of at the time, to now being the main guy on the morning show, CFNY 102.1 The Edge,
Jay Brody.
I'm so excited for this guy
and feeling really invested in his success.
Well, it's a great segue off the Shapiro update
because I met Jay Brody
when I guested on the Todd Shapiro show.
And at the time, he was just like,
I think he was,
you know the story better than I do because you recently
revisited his last appearance
if I'm going to stand for Jay Brody here
and the B team
the show that he does with
Shauna Whalen
and Chris Z
not Zed
probably what some long last name
what ethnicity
is he trying to mask there?
I'm going with Polish, but who knows?
Who knows?
If I'm going to stand for Jay Brody,
I had to go back and listen to his first Toronto mic'd appearance.
It was back in June 2018.
And it's an amazing episode to look back on.
Because there he outlines his plan for radio domination,
how he was working on construction sites.
What was his position?
He was some sort of foreman?
A title like that,
but he essentially explained
what his job was to do.
He changed his name
so his boss at the construction site
wouldn't hear that he was on the radio.
And he described these construction sites
that were run by the mafia and that whatever fancy
title they gave him, his job basically amounted to picking up the piss bottles left behind
by construction workers.
And while he was doing that, came up with this dream.
What do I have to do?
How much do I have to hack to get my way onto the radio?
And a whole bunch of dominoes had to fall in order for this to happen.
He found out about Todd Shapiro, formerly of Dean Blundell, on 102.1.
He noticed that Jason Barr disappeared from the show.
Then Todd Shapiro.
There was some drama surrounding them.
He recognized this thing couldn't last.
But what were the odds that it would start to fall apart like it did?
When Todd started on Satellite Radio Sirius XM, Jay offered himself up like as a volunteer correspondent, be a guest, he'd
hang out, he'd be an intern, he'd pour coffee, do whatever he had to do.
And because Todd, the way it sounded, had no real concept of what he was going to be
doing there, I guess it amounted to some sort of infomercial model where he would bring
in guests who would pay for the privilege and he would talk up the sponsors.
where he would bring in guests who would pay for the privilege,
and he would talk up the sponsors.
There wasn't a salary in it for him,
so much as there was the airtime and the opportunity.
Jay Rohde comes along, calling himself Jay Brody,
so that his boss wouldn't know that he was sneaking away to do this radio show,
and Todd just threw him on the air, right?
He didn't need a helper.
He didn't need an intern.
But the price was right.
Yeah, the price was right.
He didn't need somebody to fetch coffee for him.
He needed a sidekick, and Jay Brody was perfect for that role, right?
And, of course, Roddy Comer, who was, what was the name?
Rebel Emergency.
So he was a musician with Rebel Emergency.
And he was also kind of the house band.
It was kind of an interesting vibe at the time,
way back when I would appear on there,
that you had, Jay was there,
and Anna Saison, who eventually became an FOTM. But there was no real money in it.
No money.
Maybe they got paid a little bit somewhere down the line,
but they found...
Well, okay, Jay Brody came on the show with Roddy Comer
and basically took a big dump on Todd Shapiro.
And that was why.
That was because they weren't formally employees.
And then after a while,
they felt like Todd was ghosting them
because he had his priorities.
Sure.
He got married.
He was having a kid.
He had to figure out what to do with this airtime.
It became less freeform than before.
And in the process, maybe Brody felt like he wasn't being treated as well as he could have been.
Right.
But had enough talent to strike out on his own and get his own satellite radio show at the same time that he was feuding
with Todd Shapiro, the guy that brought him in in the first place.
And Brody, very diplomatic.
He didn't want to trash talk Todd, who gave him the opportunity at the same time you hear
that after a while, things got frosty.
They weren't getting along.
And from there, you know uh whether it was doing the
satellite radio show or the podcast of the satellite radio show and he had his own separate podcast
how could he hack his way into a full-time radio job the opportunity came because why 108 chorus
radio station out of hamilton had a changing of the guard on its morning show. Right.
Which was rather dramatic, and I'm not sure I ever got all the details.
It involved this Ben McVie.
Right.
Part of the story, although not the specifics,
but Shauna shared the gist of the story when this whole Y108 morning show,
which is now the B team, which is now the 102.1 morning show,
came on Toronto Mic, like all three of them.
Not too long ago, like maybe November 2019. A lot of fun.
And I actually, and Shauna shared a bit
of the story that something went down.
They did a remote from a tropic, I can't
remember, Dominican Republic or something.
And there was a bit of a
Me Too thing went down, but no specifics
were delivered, and Ben McPhee was let go.
Okay, another domino falls,
giving Brody a chance to work his way in there.
First, he was doing fill-ins.
They were trying him out on the air,
and they realized that he was good enough
that he could actually be the morning show sidekick,
if not considered the co-host.
Right.
And this was summer 2018 that he was on with you,
just trying out, getting his feet wet, trying to work his way into chorus.
We're talking like just a year and a half ago now.
Right.
And they called that show The Morning Grind.
It was The Cougar and The Cub before that.
That's kind of a Hamilton style of morning radio.
I think that wouldn't fly here on the alternative rock station, 102.1 The Edge.
In a relatively short period of time, they showed that they had what it takes.
And over at CFNY, they had to have two different morning shows full.
The Adam and Melanie show didn't get any traction.
Melanie's show didn't get any traction.
In the interim, one of the failed FOTM's Kid Craig,
known for one of the most difficult episodes of this podcast,
he was filling in but maybe also trying out.
Right.
I guess he counts as half a show.
They talk about having seven morning shows in seven years.
I was trying to calculate maybe he counts as one of the seven because he was doing it for a few months.
And then the sibling radio, Ruby and Alex Carr,
and we deconstructed before how they were just ill-suited for the station.
I didn't understand what they were trying to do.
Why did they pick these people?
What was going on?
It was only a matter of time before they came to the conclusion that this was all wrong, this was the wrong show.
The right show was over Y108 in Hamilton,
and that's now the B team.
You can do the math and wind your way through all the different firings
and meltdowns that were required for Brody to work his way in there.
It was his dream job through his life
to be on the morning show, 102.1 The Edge.
I'm ride or die with this guy.
I need to see it happen for him
because I think in the history of Toronto media,
this is a remarkable story
that not a lot of people really know about
because you have to be an FOTM,
but you also have to remember. I I mean I had to go back and
listen you're pumping out so much content here how often do I really feel the need to go back
and listen to an old episode into the archives but they are out there right and you can hear
Jay Brody from the first time he was down here with you to second time uh very sincere about it all. And I think a terrific voice too.
Like he sounds like no one
else who's ever been
on the radio in this market.
Because he's so real.
It's real and it's also very mellow.
But it's not forced and it's not
fake. It's not contrived.
Very natural. You know his voice
reminds me of someone who to you would be
completely obscured. It's a guy named Chris. who did a talk show on WFMU in New Jersey, a non-commercial radio station.
And that's who he reminds me of, but that's a deep cut.
That's an obscure reference.
But just like, you know, he's from the outside of the commercial radio shtick.
And very natural, but he's got a remarkable reverence for it all.
I heard he gave a shout-out to Humble and Fred on the air.
Yeah.
And he mentioned Dean Blundell.
Didn't really get into the details of the seven morning shows in seven years.
Didn't want to talk about Josie Dye.
Right.
Which is a competition now they have to steal listeners away from.
But some acknowledgement.
To get there, all he wanted to do was be
this kind of morning radio host in Toronto.
He had a dream. He saw it
through. That's an inspiring story for
everyone.
Here he's writing songs, sending them in
to Howard Stern, doing these Robin
Quivers song parodies.
You played one or two of them here. You
wondered, even on this uncensored podcast,
if you're allowed to play
these songs. They're so
lewd. These homages
to Robin
when she does her newscast, a long time
Howard Stern tradition.
Jay Brody, all the
way. B-Team 102.1, The
Edge, started earlier this week here at the end of February.
They've got some long odds here.
Part of the marketing for the show is the fact they've got to see if they don't get fired.
And as you kind of figure out what's happening at Chorus Entertainment,
I think they have an agenda to develop a morning show
that's worthy of national attention
that can be syndicated on multiple radio stations
because that's a model they've got going on.
Yes, indeed.
And they're now in the running to make it happen.
We're going to see where this ends.
Does CFNY stick around as an edge radio station in that format?
I'm not so sure.
But that's okay.
I mean, the music is transforming as well.
It's a little bit different than it was.
It's a poppier sound.
Fewer guitars than there were on the station even, I don't know, a few weeks ago.
They're tweaking it.
Q107 is up for grabs, I think, at some point in time.
When the morning grind,
the three of them from Y108 Morning Show,
who are now the 102.1 Morning Show,
when they were all on this show in November 2019,
I suggested that Chorus drop them in the Derringer spot
when Derringer retires.
They've now got big John Derringer billboards around Toronto.
So no imminent retirement.
He might be around for a while.
I don't know.
It's because we're just looking.
Each episode we talk here about,
the people get tapped on the shoulder
and told, your time's done.
We paid you enough money.
You had Rick Hodge here on the episode before.
Oh, what'd you think of that?
You can comfortably retire,
and now it's time.
Although the way Rick describes it,
he actually had the upper hand
in that act. It sounds like it was Rick's,
according to Rick, it was Rick's decision. Yeah, Rick, very
emotional. I think he needed the therapy
that you have. We all do. All the
FOTMs need a little session
with you, but it seemed like Rick was
starving for it a little more than
a lot of the guests down here. I didn't see that coming.
I thought, okay, Rick's coming on.
We'll kick out some jams, shoot the shit, find out how it's going.
Did he really retire?
And then it got, I admit, it got emotional in the room anyways.
You could tell he needed some catharsis, like he needed to share something.
Also, Perry Lefkoe earlier this week.
I've known Perry's brother, Elliot Lefkoe, for a long time.
I haven't seen him in years.
But he was a concert promoter in Toronto.
He established those relationships, you know, in the pre-grunge years.
A lot of rock stars and the people handling them that grew up to be important.
And he wrote it all the way to working in Los Angeles.
There was his brother, Perry Lefkoe, a brand new
FOTM, and he also got very emotional
at the end about this song,
The Promise, by
When in Rome. I did not see that
coming either. That's twice.
All of a sudden, it got
really emotional and heavy, and I was like,
wow, you never know what's going to happen in this basement
here. You never know what's going to happen in this basement here. You never know what's going to happen.
Hello? Okay, I have loved this song ever since I first heard it. At this point, that must be now going on 36 years ago.
The Word is Out by Jermaine Stewart, brought back into my life by the return of another FOTM, Scott Turner.
What did you think of that episode?
I was always intimidated by Scott Turner growing up, I think.
You talked about the evolution of his broadcasting style,
how he used to have more of an affected radio voice.
You had an old clip from him.
And, you know, he seemed like a serious dude.
Like he was, you know, so far ahead of the curve
that he was intimidating and unapproachable.
I think it was partly because of how he spelled his name.
That S-K-O-T, one T thing.
You know, he's like, this guy's really hard.
I can't relate to someone this cool.
He claims David Marsden suggested he do that when he arrives at CFNY.
But in that episode, he shares with me something.
I can't remember which station, but it was before he was on CFNY.
And it was some advertisement.
And he was spelling it S-K-O-T in that pamphlet, so
he got busted there.
Anyway, later on
I got to know Scott a little bit.
We'll talk about this when he comes back.
I helped him out do some copy editing
on the Energy 108
charts that
came out in iWeekly.
I would get on the phone with him and we
would review what songs they were spelling wrong
in the chart that was in the newspaper,
and that's where I could connect with the guy.
Even though I haven't had contact with him in a while,
it was because he was down here with you
that I got the sense,
wait a second, I read this guy all wrong.
He's just a radio and music geek like the rest of us.
He comes down here with his chum charts
and his book of historical notes
and trying to sort his way through everything that he wants to tell you.
Right.
And the guard was let down because he's a radio professional.
He knows how to say what he has to say in a succinct amount of time
and get out of the way of the music.
But to hear him lay it all out here and be the genuine guy that he is,
that was an experience I got here on Toronto Mic'd.
To be continued April 1st.
So April 1 is the return of Scott Turner.
So we'll talk about that.
I'm staying by it.
Yeah, I want to hear about the history
with me copy editing the Energy 108 charts.
And that, Jermaine Stewart, the word is out, right?
He kicked out that jam.
And that was a song we ascertained on Twitter.
He made that something of a hit in Toronto
by playing it on Radio 790.
That's it.
Chow Radio, where he's working at the time,
and he introduced that black music format to Toronto radio
at a time that it was pretty elusive.
And it ended up crossing over.
You'd see it on the music video shows,
and it made it onto the Chum Chart.
And Jermaine Stewart,
you know that song,
We Don't Have to Take Our Clothes Off
to Have a Good Time. He got picked up
by
Arista Records, Clive Davis,
and they kind of tried to mold him
into a male version of Whitney Houston.
And mostly it was about
that one big hit, and then there was another
slow song after that,
Say It Again.
He ended up dying young, not even 40.
Complications from AIDS might have been a factor there
and by the time he died, not a lot of people remembered him
and that song, The Word Is Out,
it wasn't really much of a big hit anywhere.
It was bubbling under on the British music charts. it was scott turner who i have to thank for bringing that song into
my life something i learned about on toronto mic'd okay so we've talked about the recent
rick hodge episode scott turner episode uh what did you think of your old pal mike wilner
i still can't tell whether mike wilner has any idea what I'm doing with my life right
now because he's the most famous person who I ever met when I went to high school.
As he mentioned here, he he's not even the most prolific Toronto Mike guest to go to
his high school, just like Dan Schulman is more famous than him.
And they went to the same elementary school.
Mike Willner can't even say that.
He's the most famous baseball play-by-play guy to come out of his elementary school.
Nice to reunite with Mike.
And I only do it by listening to you chatting with him.
And he's now a five-timer.
Is that it?
He's a five-timer.
Absolutely.
I'm dying to know your thoughts on one of my favorite episodes in a very long time,
Sass Jordan.
I don't know if that was so much my thing,
but it was good to hear a deep dive interview with somebody
who I don't think has gotten that treatment too much before.
And as you have the experience with a lot of these music guests,
they come down here not really expecting what's going to go on,
and I think they're shocked and surprised by the amount of prep that you put into talking about them that like the table is set
the coffee is made i mean that metaphorically speaking only for special and uh you got uh you
got some stuff out of sass jordan that no one else would ask her in any other form. And what's she doing now? She's still doing music.
She's trying to, like these older rock performers,
trying to trade on her reputation that she's got her name out there.
New blues record.
A new blues record.
I guess that's a more mature, sophisticated side of what she was doing before.
I think that original music that she put out was pretty cringe.
Very Quebecois.
You said nice things about it anyhow, right?
That's your style.
Yeah, you know, we talked about how they're
of the decade when they were made,
but her vocals are fantastic,
and there's some good hooks in there.
Yeah, and then she went down this other road
like a Black Crowes style.
Right.
Got some stateside attention for it.
Working against the grunge rock revolution.
And then Canadian Idol,
which gave her a full-time job for a number of years.
And, you know, you've just begun to scratch a surface, I think,
of the legacy of Canadian Idol,
which came out at a time, I think, of the legacy of Canadian Idol, which came out at a time,
I think the last era,
when there was that consensus of
viewership for a television program.
Like, they caught the last wave.
And the running joke was
that the winners of Canadian Idol,
except for Carly Rae
Jepsen, who did not win, wasn't even
the winner. But the people that got all
this attention for the show weren't able
really to leverage that into a real career.
These winners like
Ryan Malcolm became
a bit of a joke when it was realized he was going to
have to go back to his job being a waiter.
That it wasn't going to work for him
with album sales, and I don't know what
they did. A few of them got nominated for Juno
Awards.
Do you remember these Canadian Idol winners?
Rex Gowdy, Kalen Porter.
They all had to go back to reality.
I got an email today.
They had to get day jobs.
Maybe they went back to school.
I got an email today offering me as a guest,
Manila native Mikey Bustos.
Does that name mean anything to you?
It means, is that a Canadian Idol person?
Is that what it was?
That's a Canadian Idol person.
A winner? A contestant?
Did not win, no.
But it was, I guess, one of the bigger names
to come out of the Canadian Idol.
Well, the joke at the time was
that there wasn't much of a career in it for these people
after they won Canadian Idol.
But I think we're at the point now,
we're talking over a decade later,
where it also doesn't mean anything
if you win American Idol.
That doesn't guarantee you stardom either.
Oh, no, right.
It puts you on the map professionally.
Maybe you can get booked on a cruise ship, and they'll put in small print under your name,
winner of American Idol.
But that's the level we're at right now.
We're not going to see a case like Kelly Clarkson becoming a bonafide celebrity now
with her own daytime TV talk show
on the back of winning American Idol.
It's just a reality check, I think, to reflect on how far we've come here
in 10 or 15 or 20 years and what the media means
and what having this singing competition show
might have done for your career and your attention
at the time that it was originally on.
We all know Sass Jordan was on Canadian Idol.
That's something that wouldn't happen today.
It was a good move for her at the time.
Sure.
You might not even have remembered her name
if it wasn't for her being on Canadian Idol.
No, I would.
Okay, you're on your way now to having FOTMs,
all four Canadian Idol guests.
Sorry, Canadian Idol judges
complete the set out of all of them.
I'm just hunting down wherever Zach Werner's at.
I don't know.
I think he's out in Newfoundland or something like that.
Now, we're not video streaming this episode,
so we can pretty much guarantee that people can only hear this via audio.
I personally want people to subscribe to the podcast,
so it's very rare I ask people to watch an episode.
In fact, I'm doing that right now.
If you haven't yet heard the Sass Jordan,
or even if you have as a podcast,
I strongly urge you to watch the Periscope stream,
the Sass Jordan episode.
It's just bananas to watch her reaction.
And when I play her first song that she was on
and she doesn't recognize it,
it really is an extra dimension to watch Sass during
that episode. Now,
okay, we talked about Jay Brody, FOTM
Jay Brody, and of course the whole
B team they're called. They're all
FOTMs because they've all been on Toronto Mike.
What role, just before we move on from that,
how much credit do I get for this
huge promotion for that
Y108 Morning Show team?
How much credit do I get for Jay Brody's success?
Well, it's good to have friends in high places.
And it's all relative today, right?
What's a more prominent job in the media ecosystem?
A morning host on 102.1 The Edge?
Or an FOTM who gets to appear every month on Toronto Mic'd?
Like, who is more famous at this point?
Me or Jay Brody?
He gets money, right?
I just want to point that out.
You get coffee, and you also get beer.
Let's do this right now, because I'm going to crack one open.
Great Lakes Brewery has sent over another six-pack for you, Mark,
and I know you love your Great Lakes beer.
You know who loves his Great Lakes IPAs?
Jack Armstrong.
He asked for a delivery.
And he can get free stuff anytime he likes. who loves his Great Lakes IPAs? Jack Armstrong, he asked for a delivery.
Like, I know.
And he can get free stuff anytime he likes.
I don't think he has to buy
a drink anywhere anymore.
But he loves the IPAs.
Now, they make a bunch
of great beer at Great Lakes,
but I'm going to crack open
an IPA, one of my favorites.
So I'm now opening
a cold Octopus Wants to Fight.
And you chilled it for me, too.
I got to say,
on behalf of Great Lakes Brewery, I heard they got a
shout out on News Talk 1010 from Richard
Krause. Good. Because
I don't know, they were having some discussion about the future
of the beer store.
And Richard Krause made a reference about how
he likes being able to get craft beer
at the LCBO.
Not the foreign-owned
monopoly of the
beer store having to fill out a form and get your case on a conveyor belt,
primarily for Molson and Labatt to enrich themselves,
but that he had become a craft beer connoisseur.
He mentioned on the radio that he's into beer that has an octopus on the can.
Octopus wants to fight.
And if it wasn't for me coming down here and drinking your GLB,
I would know that that's what he's making reference to.
You know, Richard's an FOTM who left this show
with a six-pack of fresh craft beer from Great Lakes.
Okay, well, I'm not leaving with a six-pack
because, as usual, I'm donating one to you.
Yeah, I made you a coffee.
Well, my coffee's done.
We can now start drinking.
Okay, we've got to get through this intro intro it's already a half an hour deep here now okay so in addition to the jay brody thing i want to ask you about another huge morning show change
at least in my circle which is that uh fotm ashley docking is no longer on the fan 590 morning show
and i think that reflects the reality of the business here
because anything could happen to our buddy, Jay Brody,
and that could include, after one year,
they decide his services are no longer required.
And that was a wonderful story here
about how Ashley Dawking was in your basement
beginning of 2019,
talking about how her goal for that year
was to get a full-time job. Where was she
before? She was making the rounds in sports
media. Her name was known well enough for her
to come on and be a guest with you. Well, it was the Gruber
thing. She actually didn't like that I used
that as a way to promote the episode, which, you know,
that's what I do. Because we talked
about the Kelly Gruber pitch talks
controversy where I think
Kelly was inebriated and rude
and there was a whole, like, it went viral in this market anyways and that's sort of I think I said it to her but that's
like the best thing that could happen to her because it totally made people aware of her
and she's very good and I told her on that program when she was here I said Ashley
you should get a full-time job on the fan 590. Enough is enough. And it was like one month later, it was announced that she was joining
the Greg Brady, Hugh Burrell version
of the morning show.
And it was only a matter of time before
they got rid of those two guys.
Hugh Burrell, they, I don't know if they demoted him,
but they reduced his airtime, right?
His role was to do the morning sports updates.
He's like a pre-morning show now.
It's like a, yeah, it's like a scoreboard show.
Yeah, I think that, I don't know if I'll use
the word demoted because I don't know if they,
but I just, yeah, he has less time in the morning.
They took him off the posters.
You can no longer include him in the white
men of the fan 590
who would all pose together
with their sunglasses on
surrounding Bob McCowan
and he's gone too.
A lot of turnover there
in the last few years.
And Ashley Dawking,
now one of the casualties
because even though
they replaced the two other guys
that she was doing
the morning show with,
brought in Scott MacArthur.
F-O-T-M, Scott MacArthur.
Scotty Mack.
And the other guy on the show?
Mike Zigglemanis.
That's it.
Who politely declined my invitation to come on Toronto Magic.
Notice that unlike Chris Z, on 102.1 The Edge, he uses his whole last name.
Because it was already his brand, because you can't short in the last name when you're an NHL hockey player.
So that's why.
He'd be Mikey Z if he was starting in radio.
Under mysterious circumstances, Ashley Docking was no longer employed at The Fan.
And this was a TorontoMike.com blog entry that has generated a lot of comments.
They're still going on, right?
Right, because people go to, and I think it's Rob J, not to be confused with FOTM,
Robbie J,
but who we'll talk about in a minute
because I want to talk about
this Canadian podcast award.
Okay.
But Rob J.
I was going to say,
a recurring complaint then
about Ashley Dawking.
Oh, I don't get to finish my thought?
Whose show is this?
I gave you a coffee.
Hold on.
Real quick to finish this thought.
Rob J is always curious
why all of a sudden
there's something will happen like an entry
about the Ashley Dockett leaving the Fan 590 Morning
Show and there'll be all these comments from
people who don't normally comment, like not
regulars. And he says, what are they, lurkers?
This is just what strikes a nerve. But the
fact is, and I explained it to him, is that these are
Googlers. So somebody will hear
the Fan 590 Morning Show and won't
hear Ashley's voice. They'll go to Google
and they'll say, Ashley Doing gone Fan 590 or something,
and inevitably they'll end up on my site,
and then they'll leave a comment saying
she was the best part of the show,
or thank goodness I can listen again.
One of those two things.
You shouldn't have let me finish my point
because it was a perfect segue into your point.
Well, we got to figure this out.
It's only your 27th appearance.
Too much wokeness seemed to be the drive-by comment
that was recurring there on torontomic.com, right?
That there was Ashley positioned as, I guess,
the contrarian voice to the sports radio orthodoxy.
I can't pretend I really listened.
But based on the reviews of hearing her on the air,
that the whole idea that she was going to interject
and kind of bring, let's call it a women's liber perspective,
as Archie Bunker might say,
that this didn't sit so well with the sports radio listeners,
even though they thought maybe on paper this was a good idea to have.
Now, in my experience with Ashley,
she's an early recipient of the Palma Pasta lasagna.
And at the time, I was very excited that I had good instructions on how to make it.
And at the time, I was quite excited that this is a frozen lasagna I'm giving you.
By the way, shout out to Palma Pasta, great partners of the show.
Go to palmapasta.com and cater your events
and go to skip the dishes and get some Palma
or go to the locations in Mississauga and Oakville
because it's the best Italian food you can buy.
But I was excited to give Ashley her frozen lasagna
and I informed her that you cook it at 375 for 45 minutes
and it's going to be great.
And she accused me of mansplaining how to make lasagna.
But she was just rehearsing, Mike,
for the persona that she was going to bring on the air.
And ultimately it worked for a while.
She kept the job for a year.
They rebuilt the radio show around her.
And I think the consensus,
a conclusion here on what's happened,
the conventional wisdom, is that it all comes down to the fact that
TSN 1050 is now considered a real formidable competitor against the fan.
And that they're quaking a little bit over there.
Rodgers, because they're losing market share.
The sports radio thing where they could treat chum 10 50 chum changing to sports
as a joke going back to the team 2001 right the tsn made the right strategic hires and
people ruled their eyes when they put michael landsberg in the morning but i think landsberg
has managed to steal an audience away that had
been listening to the fan house.
You explain two morning shows in two years.
Now, it's not seven and seven yet, like the Edge.
It's getting there, though.
They're on their way.
And then people love talking about this overdrive.
Brian Hayes, son of Bill Hayes, FOTM, nephew of John Hayes.
Eventually, I'll get that guy as an FOTM.
Derringer, who you see on billboards around town,
and I'm sure very proud of his nephew, who's a rising radio star.
He might be the next Q107 morning man.
Who knows?
But it seems like hockey was the main investment in that overdrive show,
that they figured out to do hockey talk,
something that Bob McCowan was not considered conventionally good at.
And because people want to hear talk about the Leafs,
not just David Ayers, the Zamboni driver,
but I guess general ins and outs of what's going on
with Maple Leafs sports entertainment.
Sports and Entertainment?
Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainment.
And Entertainment.
M-L-S-E, yeah.
Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainment.
And Entertainment.
There's an ampersand in there.
I think it's Wrestling, WWF Wrestling,
which is Sports Entertainment.
Right, that's right.
No ampersand in there.
And that overdrive on TSN radio has now surpassed the fan that they're trying to put Tim and
Sid on in the afternoon, doing a TV show on the radio.
People are annoyed by the bits.
Well, Bob McCowan, come back to radio.
Is Rogers willing to make amends and put him back on the air?
You saw my tweet that people guffawed at
which I said Tim and Sid in the morning
and bring back
McCowan for afternoon drive and people are like
no way, but I'm just saying
this is all speculation, but
it could happen is all I'm saying.
If I may, real quick, the fan should have kept
FOTM Greg Brady
and FOTM walker right where they
were when they were gaining momentum and getting a pretty good share instead the program director
don collins thought he would pursue the uh the uh the dean blundell share that he had at some point
at 102.1 and uh you know turf those guys to 1 p.m but they should just kept them going they'd still
be there so we haven't heard the last of Ashley docking,
whether or not she gets back down here.
Based on what you're telling me, the chances are slim.
I don't think so.
She's invited, but I just don't think she'll come back.
But if I, do you have other, is it just ratings
and they had to make a change?
Is that the, do we know why Ashley got the boot?
Well, your comments are open.
You're waiting to hear the inside dirt.
How much can you trust based on anonymous people
leaving a comment on a blog?
No, I would never trust an anonymous comment,
but I do know ratings are down,
and the January rating for their targeted demo
was like a 1.9,
and this is really not good for that show.
What I fail to understand is I don't know how they decide what to change. They got rid of one-third of the show. And what I fail to understand is
I don't know how they decide what to change.
Like they got rid of one third of the show.
I don't know why.
I'm hoping at some point somebody like an FOTM,
Scott MacArthur, who I believe will come back,
will come on and maybe shed some light on it.
In New York City, WFAN, Mike Francesca.
He was the afternoon drive-by.
Mike and the Mad Dog,
legendary New York radio show.
At one point he retired, and then a matter of months later,
he announced he was coming back,
even though he was falling asleep on live TV while doing his show.
Like Peter Gross.
Like nothing ever happened.
Bobby Ewing on Dallas.
Wake up.
It's all a dream.
Here I am taking a shower.
It is conceivable.
There is a precedent that Bob McCowan will get back to where he was before. It's all dream. Here I am taking a shower. It is conceivable. There is a precedent that Bob McCowan will get back to where he was before.
It's possible. Kathleen Wynne and I have been exchanging emails,
and I was very clear with her about my rule, and she respects it.
Of course, she has to respect my rule. What's she going to do?
Break in and force me to interview her?
But I don't talk to active politicians.
But is there some word on this front that perhaps
she could soon become an official FOTM? Well, upstairs, your wife Monica is waiting by the
door for Kathleen Wynne to come back. That's right. After her first try. And Ralph Ben-Murgy,
who was embarrassed by the idea that Kathleen Wynne would want to come over to your house,
and she was perfectly fine with it.
Of course, and I knew she would be, too.
That's on Ralph.
And here are Ontario liberals on the verge of picking a new leader,
and it's almost certain it's going to be this guy Stephen Del Duca,
even though there's a bit of a scandal here
where he built a big pool in his backyard
without getting the right kind of environmental protection permission.
He was embarrassed by the whole thing, a bit of an expose,
very much in line with his character,
the kind of policy wonk that he presents himself as.
Whatever the case, whatever happens there with Stephen Del Duca,
my assumption is then Kathleen Wynne will resign her seat
and make way for him to run there,
and then he can actually sit there in the Ontario legislature, I think.
Something like that is on the cusp of happening.
Okay, so we're close to Kathleen Wynne.
There are only so many Ontario liberals left to resign their seat
and give up for a potential leader.
Then again, there's the same riding where John Tory once tried to run
and get a seat as an MPP for the Conservative Party
and ended up losing to Kathleen Wynne.
Strategy didn't work for him,
but I don't know if it's a safe seat
and Kathleen Wynne will be able to retire with dignity
and appear on Toronto Mike.
There's a lot of people wanting you to speak
on this controversy with Tanner Zipchen.
What can you, and I have the edition loaded up,
so tell us about this and then let me know
when you want to hear it.
This came about because of an article in the Toronto Star
that appeared in the business section.
And the headline there was that Tanner Zipchen,
a struggling disc jockey from Saskatoon, Saskatchewan,
entered a contest to host the pre-show at Cineplex Theaters,
and that at first he was only paid in scene points.
There was no cash exchange for
his services.
There was a problem, though, in the
argument that he was making.
They never promised
him anything more than that. There was no
money involved in the contest. There was
no cash prize available.
The whole idea is, if you
wanted to make it and get your social media
votes and appear as a pre-show host at Cineplex as three people did before him,
that Tanner Zipchen would get an opportunity to be the Cineplex pre-show host,
and he was pretty much on his own doing a day or two a month of filming bits
in his hometown of Saskatoon.
or two a month of filming bits in his hometown of Saskatoon.
But look, he had illusions of grandeur,
and he figured that he might as well leverage it. He had already been a radio DJ,
and they had to figure out how to turn this into a full-time job.
So Tanner Zipchen, who was originally contracted to work for ScenePoints, who did it for a year, managed to stick around for something around four years,
going into year five as a pre-show host at Cineplex.
Did they start paying him after the first year?
They started paying him after that.
So his complaint really didn't make any sense,
but the Toronto Star turned it into a headline,
make any sense, but the Toronto Star turned it into a headline, made it a story that Tanner Zipchen ended up disavowing, and on Twitter, he regretted that he ever agreed to participate
in the first place.
Well, we'll get to this very shortly, but the Toronto Star is hurting over there, and
they needed some clicks.
I'm not surprised by that, but you want to hear a little bit of the Tanner audition?
Yeah, let's go back to the beginning of where we first met Tanner Zipchen.
Hey, I'm Tanner, and I want to be your next Cineplex pre-show host.
See, here in Saskatoon, I'm a radio show host.
I host shows on the radio, and when you're on the radio and your name is Tanner,
eventually people make that connection, and they start calling you DJ Tanner, but it's okay.
I'm a pretty big Full House fan.
But when I'm not inside there, I'm out here hosting events around the city.
Charity fundraisers, parades, movie premieres,
even the opening of that brand new Cineplex VIP Theatre here in Saskatoon.
I also host panels with celebrity guests at the Saskatoon Edmonton and Calgary
Comic Entertainment Expo. See right there I'm even on the front page of the
Calgary newspaper for it. Well at least the back of my head anyway.
See there's my hairline and Brienne of Tarth. But that's why I'm here. I think
it's time we let the front of my head get its time to shine on the big screen.
Right?
And that whole face for radio thing, I think that can just go away, too.
All right, you want me to keep going, or we got a field?
We're on right now.
Well, I'm not sure if anything happens after this point.
Look, one of the prior winners of the Cineplex contest
is Shannon Burns.
She's now a DJ on Chum, an iHeartRadio station.
She's on nationally.
They do the syndicated Virgin Radio, iHeartRadio thing.
Okay, good for her.
And as far in the modern radio paradigm,
she's got big things ahead of her,
and I'm sure she has.
Her volunteer
scene points payment being at
Cineplex, a thank for all of this.
Tanner Zipchen,
he gets the opportunity,
turns it into a gig
that he did for a number of years and he got paid a little
bit, but they let him go
because Cineplex got sold to
this British company Cineworld, although maybe they were trying to figure out how to get rid of him little bit but they let him go because cineplex got sold to this british company cine world
although maybe they were trying to figure out how to get rid of him anyhow and he goes and he talks
to this freelance journalist peter nowak writing for the toronto star and tanner did not like hey
how he was portrayed you know they sound a little bit bitter like he he sounded after that article
like the kind of guy who has a habit here of maybe agreeing to things.
And then after they don't work out in his favor, complaining about them.
That's not cool.
That's not cool.
And that's where we're at with Tanner Zipchen.
See him at the Niagara Falls Comic Convention this June.
He'll be signing autographs and, I don't know,
asking for a job, begging
for forgiveness, looking for attention.
How many more times
am I going to have to,
not that I'm complaining, like Tanner there, but how many more times am I going to have to, not that I'm complaining like Tanner there,
but how many more times am I going to have to play
this Beach Boys ditty, Marcella?
What's wrong with complaining?
It's your podcast after all.
Well, then thank you.
I have other complaints.
We're not finished yet with Marcella Zoya, the chair girl.
We thought going into 2020, maybe one more court appearance.
She'd get her sentencing.
It would be over and done with.
And yet, in February 2020, we had yet another day where a chair girl appeared in court.
And because of the procedure that they put her through, leading up to her potentially getting a sentence of up to six months,
getting a sentence of up to six months, mischief charges for a year ago,
throwing a chair off a balcony of a condo in downtown Toronto,
not actually striking anyone, but coming pretty close,
that we've gone through yet another month where Chairgirl has to come back to court in March,
you know, awaiting her fate.
And there we had even more details coming out about the story behind how the whole Chairgirl saga happened.
Remember we talked about here,
they were trying to prove or disprove
whether or not it was Marcella herself
who posted the ultimately incriminating video.
And whether or not she had issues with being this sort of exhibitionist on social media,
and whether or not this should be a factor in her ultimate punishment, that they want
to make an example of her and make part of her sentence.
Like, maybe she shouldn't be sent to jail.
Maybe she should just be banned from Instagram.
And that that would be like an appropriate punishment
under the circumstance.
Just like, take the phone out of her hand.
Delete all her accounts.
Don't let her post anything anymore.
And that trauma
might be even worse than being sent to a women's
prison. Right. Under
the conditions through which she has
lived her life.
The sentencing didn't happen, but
Chairgirl was on the front page of the print edition
of the National
Post, an amazing
essay. Look it up if you haven't read it. It's by Joe Breen, Joseph Breen of the National Post, an amazing essay. Look it up if you haven't read it by Joe Breen, Joseph Breen of the National Post, where he
talks about through a philosophical lens about what Chair Girl tells us about the evolution
of punishment.
And we will see once again in the March update, the 1236th episode, whether I come back here
with a final chapter of what happened to Chair Girl. Okay, a couple of items tied to Mick Jagger.
Tell me about Ray Dawn Chong.
Well, this story kind of had a fast fade.
As far as celebrity scandals go,
it didn't have a whole lot of likes, but I was still
fascinated by it because it was Ray
Don Chong,
daughter of Canadian icon Tommy Chong,
who got
a little bit of celebrity
out of her appearance in a movie,
Quest for Fire, which is
almost 40 years ago.
Do you remember that?
She's got a nude scene.
And she was pretty young at the time. So was I.
And her age factored
into the anecdote that she dished out
on a podcast with the Hollywood
Reporter where they go and do interviews
with, I guess, forgotten
B-list celebrities and they were talking about
her role in the movie Commando,
that she was in 1985.
And she blurted out in the podcast that, in fact,
she had an intimate encounter with Mick Jagger
when she was 15 years old.
Whoa.
And then she gave an interview where she had to clarify
this wasn't going to be some sort of Me Too story.
That she wasn't traumatized by the experience or anything.
That she might have actually been proud of the fact that this happened.
If it even happened at all.
Because is Mick Jagger going to give his side of the story at this point in time?
Nope.
At his age?
Have you ever heard Mick Jagger do an interview where he says absolutely nothing?
Right. He's just a master
of dishing out quotes. John Derriger
on Q107 interviewed Mick Jagger. It was a big
deal, right? Exclusive chat about that
tour where he ended up
being sidelined from heart surgery.
No real talk from Mick. Never.
That's why he's not invited on Toronto Mike.
He is the worst.
I mean, how can you be Mick Jagger, been around for all these years,
and have nothing to say in public about anything, ever?
Just, like, dishes out these platitudes.
The most unquotable rock star in history.
It's up to other people to do the talking about Legacy of Mick Jagger
and Ray Don Chong talking about this.
And maybe looking for some resurgence, a recharge for her own career.
And it was the fact that she was in this Mick Jagger solo video, his first, what was supposed
to be his first solo hit, Just Another Night.
It was a hit, right?
I mean, I remember it being a hit.
It did okay, but it didn't do good enough for him to leave the Rolling Stones.
No, of course not.
And that's what he was betting on, on to break up to not have to return the
phone calls anymore from ron wood asking him when the next gig was going to happen and uh from there
uh we got you know mick jagger's solo career a bit of a non-starter uh but that he he left this
song and this video behind and i don don't know, gossip about how he treated women,
especially ones who were underage, courtesy of Ray Dawn Chong.
At the same time, the Rolling Stones announced they're going back on tour.
So we go through another guessing game as to whether the Rolling Stones will once again
play that return visit to the El Macombo.
Do we know when the El Macombo, and this kind of ties in with Monday's guest.
Are you familiar with the name Sam Grosso?
Am I Grosso or Grosso?
Oh, I don't know.
You're going to have to figure that out by the time he gets down here.
But he at some point, at some point,
he ran the El Macombo at some point.
It fell into the hands five and a bit years ago.
Michael Weckerle.
Whose mom taught at my high school.
Eccentric, rich guy
who's into rock and roll.
And it's part of his personality now
that he's going to be the guy
that brings the El Macombo back to glory.
At this point, we're talking like
a half decade or more
of renovations being promised at this point we're talking like a half decade or more of renovations being promised at this
nightclub on on spadina right college and spadina didn't your son work at burger king
caracha street 100 100 yes because i know so you've been around the omicombo you got to see
the neon palms as they're brought back to life but no one has ever seen the inside of the place. They held a little Chinese New Year celebration outside of there.
I think Gallagher might have got in there at some point.
I don't know.
It seemed a bit elusive.
Like, I think they let people into the lobby.
Toronto City Councilor Michael Thompson,
that he had a picture on the inside,
and there was another neon palm when you walk through the door well well believe it when
we see it if the alma combo ever opens or if this is some kind of scheme going on here where the
whole idea is he just wanted to say that he was the owner of the alma combo michael wackerly and
he really is and he can talk about it right you really have to go through the trouble when we're
talking about like the guy who's trying to revive by. Isn't it just enough to say to all your rich friends that you're bringing Byway back?
Do you actually have to go through the effort of losing money by reopening the store?
Why not just have the El Macombo sitting there as a hypothetical nightclub?
Does it not serve the same purpose for the ego of the guy wants to run it
right you got dave grohl to wear an el macabre t-shirt and remember that was better than having
dave grohl show up and do a concert if you could even get him there the the city toronto is obsessed
with our signs anyways like we just want like the sam the record man we don't care if the record
store is open we need the sign okay there's a lot examples. The chum, the 1050 chum sign.
Make sure these signs are preserved.
We really just need the El Macombo palm.
Okay, but for five years now,
Michael Weckerle has been saying
that his whole ambition here
is to get the Rolling Stones
to come back to the El Macombo.
And maybe you can even get
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau
to make an appearance
and show up there
at a legendary venue
that's synonymous with his mother
hanging out with the Rolling Stones back in 1977.
Right.
Everybody's getting on in here.
Oh, yeah, I know.
But the Rolling Stones announced another tour,
and I think you can compute on the tour dates
like there's a point in time
where they can maybe make a detour to Toronto
somewhere coming up this spring or this summer,
and maybe they'll show up there
Michael Weckerle waved enough money in Mick Jagger's face well Keith loves the city they
showed their willingness to do these kinds of club shows they performed Horseshoe Tavern
and what was it RPM the government that club down there yeah Cool House whatever the hell they call
it Cool House Queens Quay the condos was a thing, the surprise Rolling Stones Toronto nightclub concert.
Will they do it one more time?
Stay tuned.
Quick aside, because I mentioned Gallagher, which is to say two of my TMDS clients, two
different TMDS clients had heart scares last week.
Just throwing that out there, because if you listen to the Perry Lefkoe episode of
Peter Gross, Peter read the text from
John Gallagher about how he was having
pain in his chest
and he was admitted into the hospital
for several hours and I think
he's okay. But Humble Howard
on vacation in the USA
felt faintish
and he went into the hospital. Man, Mike, you
gotta get some younger clients.
I'm working on it.
I don't know.
I don't really look forward to the day
when our obituary recap at the end of the episode
starts getting into clients of TMDS.
Well, you know, we've never mentioned an FOTM
in the obituary yet.
So that'll be a terrible day when that eventually,
that's inevitable.
But a plea, if you're under the age of 60
and you want
a podcast, reach out. I need to
reduce the average
age of my clientele. So,
where do I go next? How about
Bernie Sanders, feeling the burn?
Talk to me about Ontario Place
and Bernie Sanders. Oh, well,
they're doing some
awful research on Bernie Sanders, right?
I mean, there are people
running against him
in the Democratic primary.
I mean, it's going through
every scrap of video,
any evidence that you can find
of Bernie Sanders
talking about anything.
There's going to be
somebody out there
doing research.
What do we have to watch
to sync this guy with?
And it turns out
in the process,
people talking about
all these vintage
Bernie Sanders
videos that he did on Vermont
public television that he did a show in the late 80s.
In Burlington, Vermont.
Burlington, Vermont.
That he had an episode of the show
where he was in the mall talking to
passers-by about
good ideas for government. How can
we bring more socialism
to this corner of the United States of America?
This is part of the pitch with Bernie Sanders.
He's always been consistent in his beliefs.
You can't really find any dirt on this guy
because he always espoused the same thing for all these years,
whether you're a fan of his thinking or not.
And here was a clip from the mall in Burlington, Vermont. Bernie Sanders talking about a visit to
a Toronto water park called Ontario Place.
Your mother mentioned, if I remember correctly in her literature,
she used as an example a park in
Toronto, Ontario. Remember that? What's it called?
Ontario Place, is it called? Yeah, and there's also a place called in uh... toronto ontario member of the school of interior places of course
and there's also a place called zachary wrinkles in
pennsylvania and i went there
during summer and i gave her the idea that i really really liked it and you
give your mother the idea i think that you know they got all the good ideas for
from you
and not all of them
over the model here for herself or yet but
she just
i just told her that it, and she said,
gee, that'd be really neat because there's space down the road.
Actually, what I should say is I don't know how many of the viewers
have been to a beautiful park in Toronto.
I was there, I would say, about four years ago,
and it's called Ontario Place, right?
And it's a fantastic family place where it is reasonably priced.
And people have a chance to do some boating and skating and listen to music.
It is a very lovely place.
And I think your mother's idea is a very good idea.
Listening to Bernie and that little girl talk is like listening to you and me trying to get to the point.
That's how I felt listening back to that.
So Bernie Sanders, give it a shout-out for Ontario Place.
I was standing by waiting for the Toronto Star article.
Bernie Sanders mentions Toronto.
Didn't happen yet, but it was in the 1236 newsletter, 1236.ca,
and, of course, this being Canada.
Everyone is always standing by
for that Canadian content, right?
In any American political story,
especially presidential race.
So you had Amy Klobuchar
mentioning that she can see Canada
from her porch, right?
Playing off of Sarah Palin
there in Minnesota,
that she felt some affinity with Canada.
And, of course, Pete Buttigieg, his work with McKinsey & Company,
a now legendary meme from New York Times reporter,
Benjamin Applebaum, saying to Mayor Pete during the interview,
you worked for a company that fixed bread prices.
That being consulting work he did for Loblaws.
And still investigators are trying to get to the bottom of whether Mayor Pete was responsible for the crime that Loblaws admitted to.
Bob Laws admitted to of fixing bread prices for a few years and trying to buy people off with a $25 gift card.
Back to Bernie.
We've got a big moment for an FOTM, Chuck D.,
who is going to be the headliner as of this date,
coming up to March 1st, a big Bernie Sanders rally.
Fighting the power right alongside Bernie.
Feel the Bern.
Imagine that, from the Toronto Beer Fest last summer to a rally for Bernie Sanders.
No, better to say this, from Toronto Mic'd to a rally for Bernie Sanders.
I still, when you say the words FOTM Chuck D, I feel like I get choked up a little bit,
like Perry listening to When in Rome.
That's amazing that I'm still tickled pink
that Chuck D's in FOTM.
But this is the real deal.
This is Bill's public enemy,
and we learned from his Toronto Mic'd episode
that there is public enemy The Band,
where he brings out the full regalia.
Flavor Flav.
And public enemy radio, which is like the scaled down thing, a band where he brings out the full regalia with Flavor Flav. And Public Enemy
Radio, which is like the scaled down thing
where it's just like Chuck D showing
up. It's everything minus
Flavor. Just buy him a plane ticket and he'll be there.
When you're out of them, I think it's
if you're in the USA, you get Public Enemy
and if you leave the USA, you get Public
Enemy Radio right now. Okay, Public Enemy
with Bernie Sanders and
his opening act,
Dick Van Dyke.
Wow, how old is Dick?
Do you know offhand?
I won't put you on the spot,
but over 90, right? We don't have him
in the obituary section yet.
Good for Dick.
Okay, now we talked a lot
about radio already
because we covered
The Morning Grind
becoming the B-team
on 102.1
and we talked about
Ashley Docking
being let go
from her gig at 590,
but almost, I will call them an almost FOTM because when I was recording the party for Marty at the Opera House
in the corner of my eye not only did I see Scott Turner there who didn't want to bother me by
coming on as if that would bother me because that's what I actually wanted but Carlos Benavides
I saw him in the corner of my eye and I I'm like, time to get Carlos on Toronto Mic'd, but then he was gone.
Another shout-out here to long-distance FOTM, I think,
because he tweets about listening episodes.
Matt Cundall, longtime radio guy, does a podcast called Sound Off.
It keeps on getting better because through his different guests
that he has on there, I learn little tidbits about what's going on
in the radio industry, Canadian media scene in general.
The more, the merrier. He covers what's going on in the radio industry, Canadian media scene in general. The more the merrier. He covers what's going on
in other markets, other
countries. He brings personalities
to my attention that I've never heard before.
His most recent guest, as of right now,
Carlos Benavides,
talking about his history
of, just like FOTM
Jay Brody, having his
eye on CFNY,
that he wanted to be on 102.1 The Edge.
It was his dream gig.
Started out handing out condoms for Humble and Fred
for their promotions that they were doing
and making his way on the air.
20-plus years ago, another story of someone.
That was their dream.
That was their ambition.
He got there.
He managed to do it, but ultimately he found his bliss
in the Kitchener-Waterloo market.
He got to be a morning man over there.
And Carlos now on the Jack FM radio stations with Rogers doing a show called Jack Up the 80s.
And I think he has, I don't know, you would describe it as like a game show host personality
that on these Jack FM stations bring a bit of personality
to radio stations that are a little too reliant here
on autopilot automation voice tracking.
And that's a good sign that they see
maybe we should have a lively person on the radio.
It turns out to be Carlos Benavides,
former, almost F.o.t almost
if we count like a twitter dm relationship he actually is an f.o.t.m but we got to get him on
the show now because you can be an f.o.t.m and not be a guest on the show there's many loyal
listeners that are f.o.t.m you know that mark come on now let's do a couple of quick cbc hits uh
there was breaking news as you were on your way to the TMDS studio.
What did you learn took place?
This is like an hour old, this news.
This is super fresh.
But something, a big change at the top of CBC News.
I'm not sure exactly what we learned outside of the ability of CBC News
having all the platforms required when they part ways with a prominent person in the organization, it's CBC that's able to spin the story, right?
If you're CBC News and you're writing about the head of CBC News leaving the company, you can pretty much be ahead of the curve in spinning the narrative any way you want, right?
Now, we're standing by for, let's say, Simon Haupt from the Globe and Mail to get in there
and tell us what's really going on.
Right.
And in the meantime here, we find out that leaving the CBC after over 10 years in charge,
Jennifer McGuire, head of CBC News,
she was responsible for that four-headed anchor thing on The National.
And the speculation is she's taken the fall here
for what didn't work out as far as executing those plans of the CBC.
But there's also the factor of the CBC on the internet,
the fact that they basically run what amounts to a newspaper,
which is subsidized with federal tax dollars.
And that's also a big point of contention.
I'm not sure if that'll play a role in explaining what went down here, decisions that she made.
It is time for me to spread my wings and imagine a life outside of the CBC while I am at the height of my skills.
How's that for spin?
That is some wonderful spin,
but I'm so used to spin now.
Everybody who gets shit-canned or whatever,
gets pushed out,
gets to say that they're,
I want to spend time with my family,
all these wonderful things.
So no surprise there.
But CBC, I'm listening,
I'm playing right now,
Favorite Boy by Half Moon Run.
Half Moon Run, a band from Montreal.
And I put this on the playlist only because it was a song I would know about
if it wasn't for the CBC music radio station.
And this is an example of the kind of music that defines the current format of CBC music, the FM radio
stations that they work. Great, great harmonies here. Listen to this. Wonderful. It's on its
way out, just in time for you to raise the volume.
Better late than never.
But listen, you don't hear this stuff on any other commercial radio station, even though it seems perfectly suited for, I guess, the old stock adult contemporary format.
We lean on CBC Music to provide exposure for this sort of act.
And CBC Music is getting a new boss in March 2020, a guy named Steve Jordan,
who's been around for a long time, most recently, years and years,
In March 2020, a guy named Steve Jordan, who's been around for a long time, most recently, years and years,
heading the Polaris Music Prize, which was his own invention. He got the right kind of funding to turn this thing into, I think, what has now eclipsed the Junos
as the most prestigious Canadian music award, which you only give to one album.
Right.
And the whole idea is like any genre,
as long as the person behind it is Canadian,
Justin Bieber, Drake,
Shawn Mendes are just as qualified
to win this thing
as much as Godspeed
You Black Emperor
or Fucked Up. These
are the bands that actually did win.
Right. And that he's
moving from the years of running this Polaris thing
to be the head, the chief, the honcho at CBC Music.
And we've talked a bit about CBC Music
because FOTM Raina Doris was doing the morning show there
for quite a while.
FOTM JJ Laborde working both behind the scenes
but also doing stuff on air.
Like chart stuff. I know he was tweeting
about being on the air for some music
chart stuff. This is Canada's national
music radio station
with some controversy and
consternation. They pivoted away
from being a primarily classical
music format. They sell some classical
middle of the day. Shout out to
Danny Graves, FOTM Danny Graves as
well, who shows up the odd time.
And FOTM Laurie Brown, who was there for years and years
while they figured out what to do with CBC Radio 2.
We've got now, we've got a new program director coming in.
And it's got to be, in large part, part of his assignment
is to figure out how to get audience paying attention to this
thing at one point they were allowed to sell commercial time and they practiced for a while
uh they gave reina the morning show which is a challenging position i think because even though
she was doing it in the morning it's not live at the same time across the country. The opportunity for spontaneity might be slim,
but she was still there.
She was able, as a host, to comment in relatively real time
on what was happening in the world.
Be a real morning show host.
Right.
Who had cut her teeth in some commercial radio able to do it.
That's why they hired her for this World Cafe at NPR.
I mean, it was inevitable that bigger things awaited.
So at the same time, you know, they've got a permanent space to fill there at CBC Music.
And I looked at their chart most recently, and I calculated, came up with this number,
ran it through my statistical system.
And I think CBC Music has to still move 23
degrees to the right.
That is, like, they play
The Weeknd and Harry
Styles and
Billie Eilish and
other acts that are considered
celebrity icons
of our time. But I don't think they play them
enough. And I don't think the station is fully
accessible.
That's why I wanted to nominate on here, in this many minutes,
where we are in this episode of Toronto Mic'd.
If anyone's listened to this long.
Scott Turner is the kind of person that should be on CBC Music.
I mean, I think they should just hire him.
Now, he's mostly known as Southern Ontario for all those years,
Energy 108, 102.1, The Edge, or CFNY before that.
Did that Spirit of Radio Sunday show, which is now infamous for the fact that they canceled the highest-rated show on the station because it didn't fit with their demographics that they were chasing.
But Scott, a terrific storyteller, has a history with all these sounds.
He should be live on CBC Music Radio.
JJ and Melanie, former Flow Radio hosts from Toronto,
still do their act together on the podcast,
and they both have different jobs.
They're the kind of show that should be on CBC Music.
So only FOTMs.
Have a commercial mindset morning team
at the same time that you're playing some eclectic, eccentric music.
Liven this thing up.
Make CBC music sound like something that someone who is otherwise defaulting to a CHFI or Chum FM,
HFI or Chum FM, that they would relate to what's being transmitted there and lose that public radio cloak because it's not going to build the audience.
I know this, Steve Jordan, a little bit.
I'm trying to see if I can talk about something on your podcast that will actually make a
difference.
I'm not asking for a job.
Even though at one point,
FOTM Gene Volaitis approached me
and asked me to kind of help brainstorm something with him.
But this is over a decade ago.
And I think at the time,
I came up with a really sharp idea.
And I should have done it at the time.
And I would now be 10 years into my career
as a public radio player. Oh, you'd be. And I would now be ten years into my career as a public
radio player.
Oh, you'd be good. I would listen. But behind the
scenes, that was it. That was all I wanted
to do. Listen, Gene asked me
and, I don't know, they didn't accept the
proposal or they didn't want him on the air.
And what my idea was at the time was
that Gene should essentially be hosting like
an on-ramp. That he should be
talking about music
from the perspective of giving somebody
who can't keep up with what's going on.
This is over 10 years ago, before Spotify,
before like this onslaught of options.
You need a filter.
You need a curator.
How can you know what's going on in music
if there's not somebody to be that roadmap
and tell you what you need
to care about.
It doesn't matter
if it's the stuff happening now
or like Scott Turner's show down here
that he can talk about things
even if they're from 30 or 40 years ago
through a contemporary lens.
Here's a guy that's been around
and sounds as youthful as ever.
I'm standing by
to be a consultant
to the new CBC Music
if they will have me.
And if they don't,
I'm just going to tweet about them all the time.
And I'm going to tell you what I like
and don't like about what they're doing.
A new dawn awaits for CBC Music
on the FM dial.
I just checked the time here, Mark.
I'm giving you five minutes for you to go off, if you will,
because I love it when you go off, on the Canadian Podcast Awards.
Do I have to?
Is it necessary?
There was a Canadian Podcast Awards ceremony.
It was a real thing.
It took place in Toronto in February 2020.
It's an annual event tied to something that they've done every year
ever since podcasting became a thing, and it's called PodCamp.
This was a trend at the time, more in the mid-2000s,
where you would have unconferences, where essentially anyone could sign up and give a talk, unstructured, say whatever they had to say, whether they were doing it out of the bottom of their heart, whether this was some kind of sincere thing they wanted to get out there. They wanted to impart their expertise.
Or whether maybe there was a little bit more of a business interest
behind what they had to say.
I don't think they discriminated there.
This pod camp event.
They let people speak.
Let them say whatever they thought.
Were you ever invited to one of these events?
Did you ever get to go?
Yeah.
Do you know the name
Karim Kanji?
Oh, I know him well.
I was on his show
three times.
I know you did.
With varying degrees
of success.
I don't know if he's
returning my calls anymore.
But you were
at one of these
pod camp events.
He used to be on
some kind of a,
maybe the board
or something at pod camp
where he had some say
in who would present.
And he invited me
a few years in a row
where I made the way
to the Ryerson campus there and
had sessions, well-attended
sessions. And then, I guess, I don't know
if Crim left the board or if he lost interest
in me, but they stopped inviting
me. So I'm no longer on
the PodCamp panels.
For all I know, they've had the Canadian Podcast
Awards for the past 10 or 15 years.
I don't even know. But look, podcasting
is at a point, as we discussed here
last November, that more
corporate interests have worked into it.
And if you say you're doing a
Canadian podcast
awards, and there's no one
else out there doing anything
comparable to the Canadian podcast awards,
I guess, if you're
trying to get podcasts happening at a
company like Chorus or Rogers, Bell Media has also appointed somebody to be in charge of podcasting.
Maybe they feel a little bit behind the curve.
And no matter how organized, disorganized the Canadian podcast awards are, if you give such an award to a corporate show, I guess they're going to crawl about the fact
this thing won a Canadian Podcast Award.
I mentioned Robbie Jay.
Who picked these Canadian Podcasts?
You can't even figure it out from their website.
Like, how did they determine who was worthy
of a Canadian Podcast Award?
And yet, Chorus put out a press release,
a future FOTM, Jordan Heath-Rollings.
Already on schedule.
Very proud of the fact that he won.
Who wouldn't be?
He won some podcast awards.
The Gravy Train.
Listen, Gravy Train, another show, frequency, podcast network from Rogers.
I don't know.
This thing, I don't want to call it a scam, but it's just nothing.
We can set up our own.
We can start our own awards right here in the middle of this episode.
With Coke and Hookers.
That I think will be as credible as the Canadian Podcast Awards.
We can give all the awards to TMDS clients.
We can just make the award winners
Gallagher and Gross,
Ralph Ben-Murgy,
Hebsey on Sports,
Larry Fedorek,
Humble and Fred.
We've got a trophy for everyone.
And I think it would be just as credible as these awards.
And by the way, on the award website, one of the jokes,
one of the hosts of this great podcast from Vancouver, Blocked Party,
was joking about the fact that there are nominees that have more episodes
than the show has Twitter followers.
And on top of that, they couldn't even spell
nominees right on the website.
There are two
M's in nominees.
This is where we're at in this country?
This is what you're supposed to take seriously?
I realize the Canadian
Screen Awards, which is a very
establishment operation,
isn't that much better. You can't
take that seriously either.
You can take that as seriously
as the Oscars, for example.
Well, they nominate themselves.
There are three nominations
for the previous year's award show
in the Canadian Screen Awards.
And not only that,
but the more amateurish the award show,
the more categories they have.
Like, I think there were more categories
in the Canadian podcast awards
than, like, the Oscars
and the Grammys
and the Golden Globes combined.
But what does it say
to honor a Canadian podcast?
Toronto Mike,
I mean, part of the problem was,
I think Al Grego said,
hey, you got to go in
and nominate your show
or something.
And I actually said,
okay, well, Al wants me to do it.
He's a very good FOTM.
I'll do it. And when I went in to, well, Al wants me to do it. He's a very good FOTM. I'll do it.
And when I went in to do so
via the PodCamp website,
it said...
Well, I'm glad it didn't work
because now we can dunk
on the whole thing
with the opportunity.
So I never...
No TMDS shows.
I was going to nominate
all my shows.
But would they...
I don't know who was judging.
Would they even have
listened to you?
What would it have been based on?
I have no idea.
I don't blame Chorus
for putting out a press release yeah we rule
right rob johnston over i just try to say i won canadian podcast awards listen right it's a
thankless job no one else is acclaiming him for anything else if i had won i'd make noise about
it right so it's like i i didn't get nominated so no i didn't win i didn't even you couldn't
even get your intro the can Canadian Podcast Awards winning Toronto Mike.
Probably.
So I can't judge.
I can't judge Chorus and Rogers for screaming from the rafters about their big wins.
Well, not only that, but Bell feeling like they're out of the loop, that they're left behind.
They appointed one of their executives, Tyson Parker,
to be in charge of podcasting.
I know him a little bit. He's a sharp guy.
But here they are. I'm subscribing now. We're well into past
1,500 podcast subscriptions.
You've got to win me over before you get to
anyone else. You know what happened to me? I'm going to tell a quick story.
I went to log in to
nominate my shows and
I connected with Google.
One of the options was connect with Google, so fine.
But Google warned me that this was an unauthorized partner,
and it was dangerous to proceed,
and I basically decided in that moment,
when I had a million other things to do,
that it ain't worth it.
I'm just not going to win any Canadian Podcast Awards.
And then I went about my day
creating compelling content for the universe.
Okay, so you'll get Jordan Heath Rawlings down here,
host of the Big Story podcast on the Frequency Podcast Network.
I'm convinced he got the job because he was the guy hanging around there
who sounded the most like Ira Glass.
Right, he has a great voice.
I listen to the gravy train.
And I think down here you should brainstorm.
How can you come up with a better version of the podcasting
awards
that not only
spells nominees correctly,
but I think also reflects
what's going on on this scene.
You should be in charge. What do you need
podcasting awards for at
all? But why don't we create
our own awards and have you, who listens
to a thousand plus podcasts, you're probably the best guy in the country.
I also don't see any reason to trust this pod camp operation.
This is pretty inside baseball.
And I'm sure there's a few people out there who take this thing very seriously.
And I see people that are very much into talking about online communities, reminding us maybe of the early days of blogging,
like when people thought that,
oh, we'd set up our own parallel universe of media
that never really interfaced with the mainstream,
like we hate people that make money,
and we're all in it for this socialist utopia of the internet.
And then also like the social media expert scene,
which emerged around know around the
the late 2000 early 2010s you know people that were very much in this idea that you you try and
sell people on the idea that they don't they don't understand these different platforms pay me money
to run your instagram account and there are people who manage to build careers on this sort of thing.
I know many, yes.
Arguably, you do it now.
You facilitate podcasting.
You have people in here who, admittedly,
could more or less figure out how to do this on their own,
but I don't know if they have the confidence
that they would do it very well.
And you're able to bring them, what do you call it,
the turnkey solution.
A to Z. And don't forget, the greatest value out of working with me is you get to work with me.
You get to work with you and you get to hear all the behind the scenes dirt of all the things you
can't say on the podcast about all the people you've met and all the D-list Toronto celebrities
that you've had down here and all the experiences that have come out of producing Toronto Mic'd and how someone else can have this happen to them too.
Because you're the regular guy, right?
I want to be like you.
Thanks to good people like you.
I won't mention his name.
It's too unique.
But you know who?
Your buddy who I quite enjoy working with.
There's a whole bunch of corporate podcasts.
Well, he wants his name mentioned, but I refuse to mention it.
Can I say it?
No, no.
I don't want to mention his name. Can I say his first name? No, no. That's part of the shtick. Well, he wants his name mentioned but I refuse to mention it. Can I say it? No, no, I don't want to mention his name.
Can I say his first name?
No, no, that's part of the shtick
that we don't mention his name.
He is one of your clients, right?
And you met him through me.
Right.
And you do a podcast for him.
He was my first corporate client.
You go to an office on Bay Street
and you record a podcast
and they love you there.
Okay.
Because you're the guy
with the podcast.
There's no one else
hanging out on Bay Street
who has a podcast.
Oh, thank you.
I didn't know they loved me.
But I can tell you that Mark Hebbshire was my first external client,
besides myself, obviously.
Toronto Mike was for Hebbsy on Sports.
And your buddy, Manny, was my first corporate client.
There you go.
You ruined it.
You mentioned his name.
So he does a podcast.
He talks about what?
Stocks? Investing?. So he does a podcast. He talks about what? Stocks?
Investing?
It's definitely an investment podcast.
And they have to be within...
You have to have money to listen to this podcast.
Within the legal borders of what you're allowed to say on a podcast about investing.
There's a lot of disclaimers on these episodes.
Now, Mark...
We get no disclaimers at all.
No.
No.
But I have learned to be careful because, you know, I've been warned by people like Lorne Honigman,
speaking of Bay Street.
Now, I need to cover what's going down at the Toronto Star
because FOTM Peter Howell was in here fairly recently,
and we had a great chat.
And it feels like five minutes later,
he took a buyout.
So what happened?
Look, it was already in the air.
But the way he explained it here on the show,
he expected to be around at the Star for at least a little while longer,
not forever.
He had to retire at some point.
Well, they were going to make him an offer he couldn't refuse.
He's a movie reviewer.
This was not a job that you can't do into your 70s and 80s
if you're still in good health.
But it turned out, yeah, in February 2020,
we learned that Peter Howell had taken a buyout,
as we understand.
People like FOTM Jim Slotek
will dish about how this process works.
That, you know, it's not necessarily a tap on the shoulder,
you're out of here,
but you're given a compelling case
with a dollar sign attached
to move on from the company
and you've got to make your decision pretty
quick. That there's often
not a lot of warning when someone leaves
due to a buyout and it's not something
that gets announced very often
in the newspaper. They're just not
there anymore. So here we had
Peter Howell who was doing movie reviews augmented
by ones that were through American outlets,
American syndication and wire services.
Reviews from the Chicago Tribune and the LA Times and the Washington Post.
But Peter Howell reviewing all the movies that he could.
And all of a sudden, one week there in February, right after the Oscars,
no more reviews from Peter Howell in the Toronto Star,
symbolic of the fact that they were winding down the idea
of having staff writers dedicated to entertainment.
Which you called this.
You were very clear, I think, back in December,
you were kind of explaining how it was all good.
It was in the air, and I think FOTM Ben Rayner was also insinuating
that something like this was going to happen very soon.
And he's been reassigned.
As far as I know, he's still the star.
He took some time off to deal with some mental health.
Maybe he has not disclosed what he hopes to do in the future.
But, yeah, I mean, look, it's the kind of corporation where if they had to take that kind of time off for those reasons, health-related,
then they would have been able to accommodate him accordingly.
And we'll see if he's back in the paper in the long haul.
But Peter Howell, gone from doing movie reviews in the star.
And I don't know, whatever you think of Peter Howell.
I like him.
It's symbolic of the fact that you hear you had a staff critic
at what touts itself as the biggest circulation newspaper in Canada.
It's a principle of the thing.
And even if he's just reviewing
Hollywood schlock 90% of the time,
it means that it's still 10%
where he can credibly be a reviewer
of Canadian cinema
and talk about trends
that are happening unique to Toronto.
And that no longer exists
as a full-time job at the Star.
It's conceivable he could return
as a freelancer
they have like damien cox former writers there given that sort of deal so i think for that
reason he doesn't want to portray himself as an ex toronto star person right they've been great
to him throughout his career and he hasn't burned any bridges as far as i know no uh that there's
some kind of deal they can make to bring him back.
It's happened a lot.
Laurie Goldstein at The Sun,
who's still in there writing for them all the time,
I think also an editor.
At one point they laid him off,
and he made some kind of deal to come back.
It goes on.
F-O-T-M Damien Cox,
because he's so familiar with listeners of Toronto Mic'd.
He blocked me on Twitter for making fun of his tweet about just a selfie from right now is good.
That got me blocked.
He didn't love me asking about that either.
Forever.
And he let me know.
Damien Cox, no friend of 1236.
But he is a four-time Toronto Mic'd guest, and we got to get him to five to tie Wilner.
Yeah, well, maybe by the fifth time,
you'll figure out what was going on with that tweet.
I want to touch on these,
since we're in the newspaper portion here,
and I need to get to the memorial section.
Could you talk about Wayne Parrish here to save Torstar?
And then segue, we talked about Peter Howell
taking the buyout, FOTM Peter Howell.
And I think about FOTM Norm Willner,
speaking of Mike Willner,
that's Mike Willner's brother, as you know.
And I wonder if you could touch on Now Magazine's future.
Oh, well, Wayne Parrish,
who was at one point a sports writer with the Star,
and he worked for Post Media for a bunch of years.
He was part of that plan backed by American hedge funds
to reconstitute Post Media after the Ken West global bankruptcy.
And Wayne Parrish, an architect of the way that they figured out
how to do things over there,
at the same time that he was transforming Post Media,
at one point Tor Star ran a headline saying,
post-media is a cancer on Canadian journalism.
And that would have been Wayne Parrish,
who was at that point running the show, editorially speaking.
Here we are four years later,
and the cancer on Canadian journalism is now working
as the last, I think, turnaround guy at the Toronto Star.
The speculation based on how they're doing financially,
they had their year-end quarterly results coming out.
That's only a matter of time before they change the business model over there.
Either somebody takes it over, it becomes some sort of non-profit or owned by a foundation.
They've got these subsidies now through the federal government supporting journalism.
We're on this track that the Toronto Star, as we know it, was run by five families that were sitting on a board
that all owned a piece of the paper that is not very long for this world.
And I think as we
progress here in the monthly episodes of 1236 tor star will be a recurring topic as you try and
figure out what happens to it uh norm wilner over at now magazine uh by virtue of the fact they let
peter howell go from full-time work at the star mentioned that in the toronto film critics
association that he was the last of the original founding members
who has a full-time job writing for a publication.
That at the time, you know,
this was a common enough thing
that you could have a committee
that could start this kind of group
that could do their own awards dinner every year,
you know, get together,
further the cause of film criticism.
There he was, Norm Willner,
being very wistful about the fact that he was last man standing
and working for NOW Magazine with this company, Media Central Corporation.
They're still putting out a lot of press releases.
The press releases need an editor.
They also need someone to maybe ask before you hit send,
why are you even sending out this press release?
But it's part of this vision that these investors have that this company listed on the Frankfurt Stock Exchange
are going to save the alternative weekly,
make it a vehicle for the creative class,
connecting it to cannabis content.
A skepticism about anything.
If any of this can work.
But look, enough money, Now Magazine,
which had to admit in the filing
that it was losing $80,000 a
week, and there's very little to be gained for anyone else who now goes out of business.
Hanging in there, Alice Klein, with her then-husband Michael Hollett, one of the founding editors,
she said she was going to stick around, and you look at the masthead, she was gone within
a matter of weeks.
She's not there anymore. The format is stick around, and you look at the masthead. She was gone within a matter of weeks. She's not there anymore.
The format is still around, still alive.
The alternative weekly thing, let's see if it survives.
Let's see if a new model rises up to replace the rule that's had.
And, of course, I like to talk about here that my sensibility
as a product of the old weekly generation goes into what I do
with this 1236 newsletter, even though it's a different thing.
It's the lessons that I learned from that kind of journalism, whether it was from growing up reading the Village Voice from New York or being a part of iWeekly, both at the beginning and the end of its existence.
Here I am trying to define, you know, what would this thing mean here in the 2020s?
Now going on five years later with the newsletter.
Still waiting for this company, St. Joseph Media,
to believe in me a little bit more.
I believe in you.
It's going all right.
I think the newsletter thing has more future now
than it did before.
Like, I was coming on here wondering,
am I going gonna be doing
this much longer um i have a notion of where i can go with this thing and we'll see if it fits
with this company and the different plans and all the magazines they're putting under one roof
i am looking forward to being a part of it if it doesn't work out hey that showbiz
i can be a gossip item media gossip item here. How do I subscribe?
1236.ca
gets you the 1236 newsletter
and that's a daily
digest about the things we talk about here
on 1236 episodes
and it's my effort,
my attempt to put together for me.
We talk about people like Jay Brody. He had
his sights on 102.1 The Edge.
We talk about Mike Willner living his dream
as a play-by-play guy for the Toronto Blue Jays.
In a very weird, abstract way,
I'm doing what I always wanted to do.
All these FOTMs living their dreams.
Can't be a coincidence.
But you also can't write one newsletter after another
where you revel in the fact
that there's turmoil in the media industry
and not expect that someday it might happen to you.
But right now, everything's all right.
And it might even be better than ever.
And I look forward in 2020 if I could take this in the direction that I want it to go.
In the meantime, it's just a matter of having all these subscribers, being in touch with
all these people.
It's worth a lot.
You know, they invested in me, my vision.
We got it to this point.
Let's see where it goes
from here now before i give you your toronto uh mike sticker from sticker you.com uh shout out to
fotm roger ashby who finally got his uh golden oldies show what do you call that show well there
was some skepticism about whether the fact that on his day of his retirement bell media president
uh randy lennox went on the air.
He said, Roger, we're not letting you go just yet.
We're going to give you your own streaming radio channel
on the iHeartRadio Canada platform.
And based on what was implied at the time,
this was kind of going to be like a whole history
of the chum chart, pop music,
and there would be Roger dropping in with his
little trivia bits.
That also sounded like a lot of work.
Like, how do you make this thing something that people will actually want to listen to?
And it sounds to me like they went back to the drawing board, and they realized that
rather than try to be so ambitious with some 24-7 streaming thing, and it's a steep climb to get people to listen to it
i think roger is alive and well but he is you know past 70 years of age i don't think he has
the 20 or 30 years required to make this thing a success what can we efficiently do in this amount
of time bring back the roger ashby sunday morning oldie show which was a hit on 10 50 chum
going back to when chum was a top 40 radio station there was roger doing the oldies on sunday morning
i once won a kinks greatest hits album by calling into roger sunday morning on chum went there
picked it up got a little tour of the radio station 1331 Younger. I remember that forever. Of course. Of Roger back on the air, back through Bell Media.
They did live up to that promise
through their Orbit syndication division.
In Toronto, Bell doesn't have a station
that would run a music radio oldies show.
I mean, they could put it on CFRB.
But it would be kind of incongruous.
Symbolically, it would be interesting.
Like, I would crank up my AM radio to hear Roger on there.
And Zoomer Radio 740 does still play music.
Right.
At one point, they were running spots,
inviting Roger to come and join the staff over there.
Come work for Moses.
But no, his loyalties are with Chum.
So he's still producing a show at Chum,
but it runs in Toronto, terrestrially speaking,
on 88.5 The Jewel, So he's still producing a show at Chum, but it runs in Toronto, terrestrially speaking,
on 88.5 The Jewel,
because that's the appropriate station.
They have a relationship there, Evanov Radio.
Right.
And I guess they give it,
whoever these things work, I don't even know.
What am I trying to say?
Like they let the station run it for free and then they sell the commercials.
You know, Brian Master,
he resigned from his role at
The Jewel after, I think he said
51 years on
GTA Terrestrial Radio. Well, was it consecutive?
He could still come back somewhere?
They would have him? Is the housing market
really that good? I'm supposed to have brunch in the next week.
He left radio to be
a full-time real estate agent?
I'll give you an update. Now, I just, again,
the time is our enemy here. So,
congrats to
FOTM Roger Ashby.
There is a Toronto Mike sticker from
StickerU. I really do think you need
to go to StickerU.com
and order 1236
stickers. I want you to, like, plaster
them all over the city. I want to see 1236
stickers. Wait until I get that commitment
as to whether this newsletter is going to
How many years? It's been five years.
That's not enough time? Okay. It's been amazing.
Listen, I send this
thing out, you wouldn't believe.
You wouldn't believe the powerful names
that read this thing every day. I'm not even allowed to
tell you. Toronto Mike reads it every day.
That's a powerful name. There's a privacy policy.
You're not allowed to divulge
this stuff, but I can dig in.
I have some idea.
They follow me on Twitter anyway.
I know who they are that way.
You look up the Twitter followers.
Where does it go?
How do you sell this thing?
What do you do with it?
It's all a work in progress, just like what's going on down here in the basement.
It's been ostensibly this idea.
So no stickers, you're saying?
Well, I would come on here and promote the newsletter.
That was what I was coming on here for,
and I don't even know if I'm really doing a good job of that anymore.
Well, yeah, because I ask you how you subscribe, and you tell me,
and then people listening go, I should subscribe, and you really should.
Yeah, I've got lots of FOT in the loop as a result of this show,
but look, I developed the base here.
I need to build up the power that I have in this media market.
And as we see, other business models fail to catch on.
And legacy newspapers fall apart.
I'm standing by to make this thing work.
And as far as I can tell, it's only a matter of time.
I'm amazed that I stuck it out this long. They believed in me now for half a decade to get to thing work. And as far as I can tell, it's only a matter of time. I'm amazed that I stuck it out this long.
They believed in me now for half a decade to get to this point.
And I have to bring it every day.
I have to wake up every morning, okay?
I have to think, like, what can I put in this newsletter
that's going to get people talking and get attention?
And it's very incremental.
Like, you know, it doesn't, it's not, I don't think it's any one day.
I don't think it's any one item. I don't think it's any one item. I don't think it's
any one thing. It's just kind of like this
relationship. You get it to the point where
if it disappeared, that people
would start lamenting that it went away.
I would lament.
I hope I've gotten to this point now
where at the very least they keep me around
because they don't want the bad press that comes with
everybody complaining it's not around there anymore.
But it has opened up other opportunities,
and wherever this thing goes, there are more things that are going to happen.
Maybe they happen with you, and maybe they happen with TMDS and podcasting.
How many jobs can I come down here and beg for?
Once things came together for Ashley Dawking,
that put the bug in my mind that I also should be coming on Toronto Mic'd
and beg for a job.
And Jay Brody, don't forget.
A lot of great,
a lot of people come on Toronto Mic'd
and then their dreams come true.
So why not me?
But when I went into this spiel
in some episode,
I don't know,
somewhere in the heat of last summer,
someone left a comment
where they thought this was deranged.
What am I doing coming on here?
Don't read the comments.
Asking for new and different opportunities out there in me,
especially when, at this point, I am pretty employed.
Like, there's a lot going on.
But I want bigger and better.
Like, I want to see how much longer do I have to live?
Forget about Roger Ashby.
I want to see this dream through.
And what do I have to do to get there?
What do we have to do, Mike?
How are we going to make it happen?
Well, first you're going to get stickers
at StickerU.com
because they're fantastic quality,
reasonable price.
I thought that commercial was done.
Everybody is looking forward to
TMLX.
Oh, it's not happening at StickerU.
I'll tell you later.
Six, seven, eight? Six, and it's going to at sticker. Oh, I'll tell you later. Six, seven,
eight,
six.
And it's going to be at a great lakes brewery in June.
So I'll update you later,
but I'm still going to check out someday.
The sticker.
You should sticker museum,
six 77 queen.
You should check it out.
It's amazing.
It really is amazing.
Uh,
check out the sticker and then,
you can Instagram it on the 1236 account.
Now, I want to play a little updated ad from my pal Banjo Dunk.
Banjo Dunk.
Anyways, I'll let Stompin' Tom tell you about Banjo Dunk.
Here's a little of Duncan Fremlin.
Hello, Toronto Mic listeners.
This is Duncan Fremlin from Banjo Dunk headquarters.
For many weeks now, you've been hearing me talk about my annual Stompin' Tom birthday show
coming up on April 16, 2020.
This is a co-production with Zoomer Media.
And you may be wondering, who the hell is this guy?
And what's he got to do with Stompin' Tom?
Well, it all began in 1990 on my first cross-country tour with Tom.
What followed was many years of great music, crazy off-stage shenanigans, and a whole lot of warm beer.
And the rest, as they say, is history.
Each night from the stage, Tom would introduce me this way.
The coordinator and originator of the Whiskey Jack plays the meanest banjo that you'll hear the sight of anywhere. The leader of the Whiskey
Jack himself, Duncan Fremlick. So please join me, my Stompin' Tom band, Whiskey Jack, and
many special guests as we take time to celebrate Tom and his lifelong contribution to Canada.
The list of Canadian stars joining us on stage that night will be announced soon. Get your tickets early.
Go to hellooutthere.ca.
That's hellooutthere.ca.
We'll see you on the 16th.
Thanks to Toronto Mike, I got to read My Good Times with Stompin' Tom.
What did you think?
Written by Banjo Dunk.
Well, I didn't know until I read the book that Banjo-Dunk was the opening act for Stompin' Tom Connors
and that I guess it was stipulated by Tom Connors himself
that if you're going to be the opening act for Stompin' Tom,
you should only play Stompin' Tom songs.
And to me, that made perfect sense
because you're going to a Stompin' Tom concert.
Why not hear an opening act that plays the music of Stompin' Tom?
I also think Stompin' Tom had a little bit of an ego, right?
I mean, he announced his retirement because he wasn't being played on the radio.
He was protesting against the fact that he wasn't considered genuine Canadian content.
Even though his music was so corny
that no radio station would have wanted to play it.
Margo's got the cargo, Reggie's got the rig.
And he laid low through the late 70s into the 80s,
and then it's like the world was ready for him, right?
There were people like at college radio stations
that would get into the irony of Stompin' Tom Connors.
And there we had the Stompin' Tom comeback.
And by now, people know Banjo Dunk was a part of
that paradigm. He was right there having good times with Stompin' Tom. And there was the opening act
for Stompin' Tom. And if you're paying to buy a ticket to a Stompin' Tom concert, I guess,
it was Banjo Dunk warmed up the show by playing more Stompin' Tom songs. I didn't know that before, and I learned that from reading my good times with Stompin' Tom.
I love the fact,
I love the way that Banjo-Dunk
has integrated himself
as a character on the show.
Like, just what a sweetheart.
And then I realize
Austin Keitner from the Keitner Group,
I haven't played enough of his voice.
Like, he is an equal sweetheart.
What a great supporter of the Real Talk.
Well, he's got a long way to go, I think,
to catch up to the other real estate agents
who advertised on Toronto Mic'd.
But he's in for the long haul, right?
Austin Kytner?
He's going to make his name through this show.
Anyone who's listened to you
knows the real estate agents you had on here before.
Brian Gerstein?
Am I allowed to say their names?
Yeah, of course. Brian Gerstein. Am I allowed to say their names? Yeah, of course.
Brian Gerstein is an FOTM emeritus.
Brian Master?
Afformentioned from Juul.
Yeah, no longer on the air.
And now it's time for a new generation.
What's his name again?
Here we have some work to do.
Okay, so Austin Keitner from the Keitner Group,
he's helping to fuel the real talk. He can help you. He is a great guy. I'm going to play a little
clip from him in a moment. But if you text Toronto Mike to 59559, he will be there to serve. Here's
Austin. My fellow Torontonians, real estate inventory in most markets is down by 27%.
We have similar interest rates as we did two and a half years ago. We are similar conditions
overall in the market as when we were at the peak. People who have been on the fence about selling
are calling us right now to get free home evaluations. And a lot of them are surprised
with how much their house is worth. If you're looking for a free home evaluation,
just text Toronto Mike to 59559.
That's Toronto Mike to 59559.
And we'll get you a free valuation for myself
or one of my listing specialists.
So thank you, Austin.
Mark, I need to get us to,
I need us to change the tone here.
We've been having a really good time,
but I'm going to talk about friend of the show,
Ridley Funeral Home.
They're at 3080,
so 3080 Lakeshore.
That's at 14th Street.
Brad Jones there
has been a tremendous
FOTM himself.
He's a sweetheart.
At Ridley Funeral Home,
you can pay tribute
without paying a fortune.
And this memorial section of the 1236 appearance on Toronto Mic is brought to you by Ridley Funeral Home. Thank you. words and papers words and books words on tv, words for crooks, words of comfort, words of peace, words to make the fighting cease, words to tell you what to do, words are working hard for you.
Eat your words but don't go hungry, words have always nearly hung me.
A bit of a deep cut here,
but it only takes a little bit of Googling to know that this was one of Christy Blatchford's favorite songs.
Because she mentioned it in at least two of her columns.
Wordy Rapping Hood
by the Tom Tom Club.
And this is maybe,
how many songs out there
have ever been written
about journalism?
Right.
But I think at least
through the lens of Christy Blatchford,
this was her song.
You know, you've got the typing there,
and you're talking about writing words, and this is what she did with her life. Well, we lost
Christy Blatchford in February 2020 at age 68, and I think it was mentioned on News Talk 1010
where they ended up doing a full day of tributes to Christie.
Talk about her impact there on the radio.
That she got, you know, the closest thing to a state funeral for someone who was a journalist,
let alone a journalist who pulled no punches, who ridiculed Justin Trudeau in his black face
in her last series of columns when she was writing about the federal election last fall on his campaign.
And he recognized the fact that she made that impact here on Canadian journalism,
working for every one of the four Toronto newspapers over the years.
And I think making a huge impression by being on the radio,
on CFRB News Talk 1010 every weekday for so many years, like close to a quarter century.
And the culture of print media, maybe they didn't know.
They didn't know about the fact that Christy was beloved also by having her voice on the radio.
You would have heard her on there over the years, right?
Originally started like her doing a commentary, kind of reading her column in a bridge version into the radio. You would have heard her on there over the years, right? Originally started like her doing a commentary,
kind of reading her column in a bridge version
into the phone.
But she was part of the round table discussions
they would do every morning and afternoon.
And that Christy was there.
She was part of it every single day.
Like the technology allowed for her to dial in
and sound like she was in the studio,
even though she was usually on some kind of ISDN line from home.
And it was there, doing that extemporaneous commentary
on whatever was happening every day,
that I think Christy Blatchford had helped her reach a level of fame
that was over and above what she already had
by being that kind of newspaper columnist.
Mike, what was your impression all the years of
Christy Blatchford?
Well, I must confess I never heard her on 1010.
So I can't
speak to that.
Just my theory then, really,
about how she became
the kind of person that would get that level
of attention. But it wasn't only that.
She started off
straight out of journalism school
into working for the Toronto Star,
breaking the glass ceiling as a female sports reporter.
She's the first one in the country, right?
Yeah, that was the title that she had.
I wasn't sure because there was also Alison Gordon,
and I wasn't sure who was there first,
but it sounds like Christy was there first.
Christy was at the forefront.
Right.
She made it happen.
After working at the Star and the Globe,
joined the Toronto Sun.
First as a kind of lifestyle correspondent.
She was representing that young baby boomer woman
who was coming of age in the big city,
and she wrote a lot about her life.
People remember that she would always refer
to her significant other.
She ended up marrying and divorcing
one of her two marriages, the boy.
She would always talk about the boy in the column.
And from there, into more serious column writing, including covering criminal trials.
There was a Paul Bernardo case, which she dutifully covered every day.
She really established herself as that kind of person who could cover a court case, sit in a courtroom.
This is not a very efficient way of doing journalism.
You have to sit there and listen to lawyers argue with one another.
There's a lot of procedure to work your way through, a lot of breaks through the day.
There was a certain discipline involved with covering courts,
and it was through that that Blatchford established herself into middle age
as someone who could be that kind of journalist.
Got hired by the National Post when it originally started in 1998.
Kenneth White, the editor-in-chief, hired her to be a specialist writing about legal trials,
that she would cover trials not only in Canada, like they had Conrad Black's bank account,
an unlimited budget in this fantasy where they'd fly her anywhere in the world to cover trials,
whatever was happening.
You know, if there was something like the O.J. Simpson trial again
or the Menendez brothers, you know, these big sensationalist events,
that Christy Blatchford could be that kind of correspondent.
She did a little bit of that work initially, but it turned out that she also liked hanging around home
and that she didn't want to stray too far.
And as a result, she ended up being an eclectic columnist
writing about anything and everything.
And that became her brand in those early days of the Post.
Very determined to get prominent placement for her columns.
She would make demands that she needed, deserved, merited,
being on the front page
that helped get her name out there.
And as that initial backing the Conrad Black idea of the National Post fell apart,
they kind of ran out of money, she decamped to the Globe and Mail.
They hired her back.
And for about eight years, there was Christy Blatchford writing like an establishment job
where you could tell it was
a little more constrained than what she could get away with at the Post. But there she was,
you know, basking in a certain amount of fame and attention. They wanted her there. There were,
I remember, big billboards for Blatchford on Toronto streets, that she was like a star attraction at the Globe, but the Globe is still the Globe.
It's that establishment Canadian newspaper, and I think at that point in time, maybe she
started pining for the fact that the National Post was her spiritual home, and she was part
of what made it possible, and as they reorganized as Post Media, the new company,
they managed to bring Christy Blatchford back.
And we're talking what turned out to be, over eight years,
a victory lap where she showed every side of what she had to write
and what she had to offer.
And she was able to exercise it through the pages of the Post
covering the Olympics every time it came up.
That was part of her tradition.
She would find the human stories there.
But also, when you're talking about controversial cases
and social disputes going on,
you're also going to make a few enemies.
And that also became part of the Blatchford brand.
And when she died, along with all the tributes,
was that undercurrent of resistance
and this whole idea that this woman's legacy
was maybe nothing to be celebrated,
that you could pick out different cases that she covered,
different positions that she took
that did not maybe fit with what has become a consensus
of what you are and are not allowed to say.
Now, anyone who knew her,
and I don't think I ever met her directly.
I was around an event or two where I recognized her.
At one point, I worked at Post Media,
and I started shuffling through the office. It didn't seem like she was big on showing up for a meeting at that point in
time that she was there. You would see her around downtown. She lived on some street somewhere near,
I think it was Lippincott Avenue, one of those streets close to Kensington Market downtown.
She moved later. She bought a condo around Bathurst and Eglinton, around that neighborhood.
So there were different opportunities where I might have had a sighting,
a Blatchford spotting out in the wild.
Never had the chance to talk to her.
But I guess, I don't know, do I risk some hit to my reputation
by saying that I was a fan?
Because there are a lot of people out there that say if you liked Christy Blatchford,
if you liked what she was doing and what she represented, that you were on the wrong side.
You would have read her after all these years.
Her columns about the Gian Gomeschi trial, I'm sure those came up on your radar at the time.
trial. I'm sure those came up on your radar at the time. She put out a book just a few years ago where she talked about some of these criminal trials that she was observing over the years.
At one point, she was out there with the Canadian forces covering a mission in Afghanistan.
Whatever was happening, Chrissy Blatchford was there.
She made it happen, and she had this dream career
in Canadian newspapers for 45 years.
And the legacy that she left behind, as far as I'm concerned,
was something to be celebrated.
It was nifty to know that she really liked that song
from the Tom Tom Club.
Wordy rapping hood.
And it came up a lot that she wrote a column about Jack Layton right after he died.
It was kind of the canonization of Jack Layton.
Speaking of state funerals, that he got a level of attention that she found, you know, completely over the top. That this was like saccharine and maudlin and, you know, what are you, you know, presenting
this guy as saintly when, you know, he was just human, he's just a regular guy, he was
a flawed politician.
And going back about 15 years, I found a column where she wrote about being on the campaign
trail with Jack Layton.
15 years, I found a column where she wrote about being on the campaign trail
with Jack Layton, and
as per the fashion of the
day, everyone had an iPod
loaded with music,
and she traded iPods
for a while with Jack
Layton, got to know
his musical taste,
exposed him to songs
that she liked, like Wordy
Rapping Hood by the Tom Tom Club.
And at the end of that column,
she determined that there was a song on Jack Layton's iPod
that resonated her the most,
maybe even brought her to tears.
A ballad by Gian Gomeschi.
Stuck in the 90s.
Who would have thunk that a decade later,
that would have been one of the big trials that she wrote about?
On the same day, in the same cancer hospital, Princess Margaret Cancer Center,
another journalist died later that same day in Kingston.
And she was 62 years of age.
And even though she had some parallels with Christy Blatchford,
they both worked in the early glory days of the National Post.
They were colleagues of some degree.
It's said they also couldn't have been any different.
And Anne Kingston's beat, even though she started out as a business reporter,
she wrote the biography of Dave Nicol,
the President's Choice Guy,
and she won the National Business Book Award that year.
But through the National Post,
she got into more covering society trends.
And she wrote a book called The Meaning of Wife,
just from the perspective, like,
what does it mean to be a married woman,
which she was not
and
got some acclaim for this kind
of book and a role with
McLean's magazine
she was also right there at the
Gomeshi trial
I think this was a milestone, a landmark
event in Canadian
history, the significance of this whole thing
foreshadowing the Me Too movement.
And even though the term social justice
has turned into a pejorative,
that she was seen as the kind of writer
who brought these issues to the forefront.
A third journalist who died right at the end of January
was Linda Dybell.
I think that is how you pronounce it.
I was researching enough to make sure I got it right.
We are trying to remember somebody who died after all.
And she worked on investigations for the Toronto Star,
same kind of job that Kevin Donovan has.
Is Kevin an FOTM yet?
Not officially.
We're working on it.
When the Star had a lot more employees,
Linda Dybel was one of them
who was working on these investigations.
Very thorough, intense work.
One of the last big stories she worked on there
was the case of Marineland.
There were allegations of animal abuse going on there.
And she was remembered, I think, most of all, as were Anne Kingston and Christy Blatchford.
And this is what you want to be remembered as, no matter who you are, no matter what you do.
As somebody who mentored younger people who
wanted to make it into the industry, someone who always had time to give to somebody who
wanted to know, how do I get to do what you do?
And that generosity was really part of her obituaries and how she was remembered by her
own newspaper, by the Star, which she had retired from,
and that she was remembered most of all for this reason.
And there's a big lesson there.
Because journalism, especially on Twitter, has become this game of shading people back and forth.
You pick your tribe.
It's kind of uncool to say anything nice about what anybody else is doing.
I'm not going to deny that I've been swept up in that over the years.
Being snarky became part of my brand.
But you also have to balance that by leveling up interesting things that people are doing.
It doesn't matter who they are.
It doesn't matter how old they are. That if somebody is putting themselves out there and doing quality work, if they make their way through the filter that you are able to know who they are and pay attention to them, that it doesn't hurt, especially nowadays, to give them a little nod, say something nice about them on Twitter at the very least,
talk to them directly if you think that you have some wisdom to impart to them.
Because you know what?
At the end of the day, they're never going to forget it.
And I think in the case of all these three women journalists,
that a big part of what they're remembered for is the fact they made this extra effort.
We hear those stories all the time here on Toronto Mike.
You had Anwar Knight down here,
and he was talking about he was the overnight guy,
some anonymous voice on Easy Rock,
and Gene Valaitis on his way to do his morning show
gave the guy a call.
It was like 25 years ago.
Here he is 25 years later remembering it, right, Gene?
He took the initiative to pick up his car phone
and tell me I was doing a good job.
So it was just good to know that in this cruel
and unusual profession of writing for a living,
that there are people that can still be remembered for this
reason, and that that's also worth remembering them for. I love the day games
The night games too
I love the clinchers
When they're tied at two
I love the coaches
The entire crew
I love the Blue Jays
I love the diamond
And a pitcher's seat Who's on the schedule Who can we defeat I love the diamond and the feature seat.
Who's on the schedule?
Who can we defeat?
I'll buy a hot dog, cause I love to eat.
And watch the Blue Jays.
Blue Jays!
Now batting for your Toronto Blue Jays, the shortstop, number one, Tony Fernandez.
Now, you are my main source for all nostalgia about the mid-1980s Toronto Blue Jays.
You came to the right place.
That drive of 95 was my entire life that summer.
That was everything to me in 1985.
In February 2020, we lost
Octavio Antonio Fernandez
Castro.
Known to all people that
heard Marie Eldon on the
Blue Jays public address system as
Tony Fernandez.
He had four
tours of duty for
the Toronto Blue Jays, and I
cannot, although Wendell Clark had three
I cannot name another
professional athlete in the city
who had four
Tony Fernandez four times he was a Blue Jay
okay now this was a death that was a little
bit more foreshadowed
even though he died
at what 57 years of age
that you kind of knew
it was coming I did of knew it was coming.
I did not know it was coming until Jerry Howarth,
F-O-T-M Jerry Howarth, came on Toronto Mic
and told me that he was in dire straits.
He needed a new kidney.
He had some kidney disease and he needed a new kidney
or he was in some serious trouble.
And yeah, he passed away far too young,
and he was a tremendous person by all accounts.
I never met him, but everybody who met him said he was a great person.
But also a fantastic defensive shortstop,
the best defensive shortstop in franchise history.
And the man could hit for average.
The man had the record for most hits by a shortstop
and a Blue Jay record for hits in a season.
Fantastic Blue Jay,
and I'm so glad he was a part of the 93 World Series winning team.
Another side of Tony Fernandez,
a point of trivia that came up when he died,
is that he was the first color front page photo of the New York Times.
He was playing 1997 for the Cleveland team.
Right.
That's what you say around here?
In respect to Jerry Howarth, yes, absolutely.
And what was it?
Extra innings?
Home run?
Something like that.
Yeah, against the Yankees.
Against the Yankees.
He won what?
ALCS? Playoff game?
It put them in the World Series, and then, of course,
I guess you'd call it a boner.
He had the error that you could argue
cost the Cleveland team the World Series.
The first color front page of the New York Times,
October 16, 1997,
along with his role as a Toronto icon
that Tony Fernandez, I'm sure he had that framed somewhere,
that he got that first front page color photo.
Speaking of nostalgia.
When Brian gets hungry, he goes wild.
So I tame my big appetite with a Swanson Hungry Man dinner.
A man-sized meal with extra meat and all the fixings.
The second helping's built right in.
I'm just a meat and potatoes man myself.
Then dig into a Hungry Man Entree.
Just meat and potatoes, but big on the meat.
Swanson Hungry Man Dinners and Entrees are enough to turn a wild man...
Into a pussycat!
Meow!
Meow!
Brian Glennie, who died in February at age, what have we got?
He would have been 73 years old.
A defenseman who played on what?
What teams?
Well, here's the thing.
LA Kings, Toronto Leafs.
He was a Leaf, of course.
He's in that ad with Lenny McDonald.
But titch before my time, I never saw the man play.
And yet there he is forever,
memorialized at a Retro Ontario upload of Swanson Hungry Man Dinner.
That's circa 1978.
He was famous enough to be right on there,
doing an endorsement for those TV entrees.
Right, the Hungry Man TV dinners.
And he was a celebrity on par with Landy McDonald and his mustache.
And in that commercial, he rips the door off the refrigerator
in order to enjoy some of the most frozen food ever created.
And they would always have that dessert in there, which kind of grossed me out.
I wouldn't say eating this stuff was part of my childhood.
It was like a conceptual thing for me that you could make these frozen things
and like a whole dinner with multiple courses would be presented to you.
This was some science fiction stuff back in the late 70s.
Oh, for sure.
I can't say I ever partaked in that ritual.
Well, you're your palma pasta all the way.
I think technology has evolved a bit
that frozen food isn't as terrible as it used to be.
But if you were watching your NHL hockey heroes
endorsing this stuff on TV,
how could you resist?
If it was good enough for them fighting on the ice,
it would be good enough for them fighting on the ice it would be it would be good enough for
your young appetite i recall just walking down the street trying to escape the city
i saw her from the corner of my eye yeah she looked so good i thought i'd die
my heart went bang, shang-a-lang
Bang, shang-a-lang
Bang, shang-a-lang
Bang, bang
My heart went bang, shang-a-lang
This is the second hit song by the Archies,
which has nothing to do with FOTM Andy Kim.
Sugar Sugar gets played enough,
but never enough respect for Bang Shangalang.
And listen, they mention death in the lyrics of that song.
And here in February, we lost Archie Comics editor-in-chief
Victor Gorlick, died at age 78.
If I didn't know his name before,
I was fascinated by the tributes to him because he
worked for Archie Comics his entire life. He was in high school when he went to work for the
company, wanted to work for Archie. He wanted to be in comic books and he talked his way into a job when he was around 16 years of age.
And he hung on to that job here until 2020,
ultimately rising to be the editor-in-chief.
Victor Gorlick,
there was some kind of workplace scandal at Archie Comics a few years ago.
I didn't quite get the gist of what was going on
that his name came up.
They were grateful to him
because he came up with the idea of using Archie
in commercials to endorse
other products. So where you
had Archie
and all the gang
showing up in different commercials, this was a
radical idea at the time, courtesy of this young guy
who was working in the art department of
Archie Comics.
And that here he was.
He was carrying the torch for this whole legacy of Archie
and the Archies and Betty, Veronica, Reggie, and Jughead.
Don't forget Big Moose and Midge.
And that he stayed on the job until the day he died.
Here he was at 78, and in his obituary, very simple,
he said, it said his last words were,
he hoped he put a smile on people's faces.
He put a smile on my face.
As a young, very young man, I was addicted to Archie Comics.
Like, I just ate him up like candy.
And double digest, here we go.
But I loved archie comics
the ultimate in screen terror the horror that was the nazi nightmare explodes on the screen
because of the shocking nature of many scenes in this film,
it is definitely not recommended for the squeamish or easily offended.
Ilsa, she-wolf of the SS.
In late January, gradually what trickled out was that Diane Thorne,
the actress who played Ilsa, she died in Las Vegas at age 83.
Ilsa is worth talking about here because this was a series of pornographic films
at a time when they would play on a big screen in a movie theater where the origins of the movie were entirely Canadian.
Ivan Reitman, who went on to so many bigger and better things under maybe a series of pseudonyms, was originally involved with the production of the Ilsa series.
It started with this movie where Ilsa was,
I guess she was in the thick of it all during World War II.
There was a subplot where Ilsa, as an agent of Adolf Hitler,
that she was capable of castrating men
who did not abide by her desires.
Does that make sense as far as you're concerned?
I think I've got it, yes.
Would you now want to see this movie?
We're talking about 1975.
Well, I just watched Black...
Playing in an X-rated movie theater.
I don't know about that,
but I will point out that at my convocation,
at Convocation Hall
when I had my convocation
at U of T,
the keynote speaker
was Ivan Reitman,
but it was not Diane Thorne.
It was Ivan Reitman.
Well, Ilsa She-Wolf
of the SS
was a successful enough movie
that they made
three sequels.
There was Ilsa,
harem keeper
of the oil sheiks,
where she slithered her way through Arabia. Ilsa, harem keeper of the oil sheiks, where she slithered her way through Arabia.
Ilsa, the tigress of Siberia,
which was filmed in Montreal, standing in for Russia.
These Ilsa movies, there wasn't much continuity
to the whole history of who Ilsa was and how this
came about, how she found herself in these different scenarios. But keep in mind, these
were porno movies. No one was too worried about the fact that it didn't make any sense that here
we had Ilsa showing up in all these scenarios. And the original Ilsa, fascinating enough,
was shot on the set of Hogan's Heroes.
After that show finished production,
the whole set was there.
It wasn't struck yet in Hollywood.
They were able to sneak in there and film the movie.
A real cult icon of midnight movies.
But listen, there was no genuine acting career
awaiting Diane Thorne.
She went into a whole other industry with her husband.
What they did, they ran a wedding business in Las Vegas,
you know, where they would do
these spontaneous destination weddings.
And you could ask Diane Thorne to dress up as Ilsa
and perform your wedding ceremony. Here's the thing, though. I don't know if she did it that often because the kind of to dress up as Ilsa and perform your wedding ceremony.
Here's the thing, though.
I don't know if she did it that often,
because the kind of guy that would want Ilsa performing his wedding ceremony
is usually not the kind of guy who's capable of getting married. And then I'm around the one selected there to lead you home.
You wander alone.
I feel the night.
I feel your heart. I feel somebody's right.
Took my cheat in the night.
I feel the light
I feel your heart beat
Something right
Too much heat in the night
In the night
You feel the sadness taking over
In the city
Here is a real retro Ontario jam.
I mean, here I am stealing more thunder from Ed Conroy
by bringing this down to Toronto Mike.
I don't think you have ever played the theme from Night Heat
in any context whatsoever before.
I don't think so, but you never know.
It might have leaked into an app, but I don't think so.
Who died in late January was Sonny
Grosso, and he
was a police detective who was involved
in a legendary case which turned out to
be the inspiration for a movie
called The French Connection.
It was Roy Scheider in that movie
who played the
fictionalized detective character
that had the same surname, and
that was him cashing in on his police career.
And he was able to work as a film and TV consultant
for people who wanted to make sure that their portrayal of police was accurate.
He helped out with The Godfather,
and he later worked on shows like Kojak and Beretta, and all this came together
once I read his obituary.
Why did the show Night Heat get any attention in the United States?
And it was because Sonny Grosso was behind the show, that he had those credits behind
him, that he had that history.
It was a guy from the French Connection who he was striking out on his own
with his own show, Night Heat,
about cops in Toronto,
even though they never said what city they were in.
Did they?
I have no idea.
I didn't see it.
The whole idea was that they masked it
as a generic metropolis,
but that everyone who lived here
could take pride in the fact
that it was being filmed in the city.
Gene Hackman was in French Connection, right?
Yeah.
Got the right movie, okay.
And one of the urban legends on Night Heat, maybe it was true,
the fact they had to add garbage to a Toronto street
because the streets were so clean.
Toronto the good.
This sounds like something that somebody would have once made up. But it also
could have been true to make
the city look a little grittier.
I mean, this is decades before
your favorite show, The Wire.
And it was very much, I think,
inspired by Miami Vice. That's where they got
Dominic Triano,
a Canadian musician
from the band Bush, and went
on to be a bit of a disco star.
And he was in The Guess Who.
Yeah, after Randy Kaufman.
Do you know who owns the, quick fun fact,
I know we're in the memorial section,
there's no fun facts allowed,
but of course there's always time for fun facts.
I guess you know this,
but who owns the name The Guess Who
in tours as The Guess Who?
Well, it is the drummer of the Guess Who that
owns the rights to the name, and
the singer of the Guess Who now
is Sass Jordan's husband.
Right? It was on my notes to
bring up of Sass, but I got
a five-minute wind-down
warning, and I never got to it.
Yeah, well, that's a bit tacky.
So a Guess Who cover band playing around
the casinos and the
summer fairs around america with the name the guess who they're allowed and meanwhile bachman
and uh cummings are uh they're they're touring without being called the guess who right like
it's kind of bizarre it's a little confusing and there's a lot of bad blood behind it but look
it's keeping sass j Jordan's husband on the stage. Baby welcome to the party I hit the boy up and then I go skating around it
Baby welcome to the party
Pitch a metat, get me lit
Got no money
One and a half
Ten and a clip
Baby
Baby don't trip
Just lower your tone
Cause you can get hit, don't let that hit you, you my sister
I got your body, next day I forget it Nigga try to score the body I don't know.
We seem to be talking about a different rapper in the memorial section every month that we never heard of before they died.
Because I don't know if Pop Smoke was somebody that you ever listened to.
Not until he died.
You rely on your kids for this stuff.
I asked my son, the hip-hop expert of my life.
I said, oh, Pop Smoke, gone.
Did you know him before he died?
And he confessed to me that he didn't know of him until he passed
so I don't feel so bad
well we want to sound
cool here
Mike as we creep
into middle age
so let's pretend
that we were well versed
with the discography
of Pop Smoke
do you like this song
straight up
real talk
Mark Weisblatt
like you know
we're listening to this jam
I never heard it
before he died
so now it has
this different resonance
for me I guess
but he's no XXXTentacion,
who at least I felt like there was something there.
This Pop Smoke, I'm not sure.
This is the only song I ever saw sort of referenced.
And no disrespect, not to speak ill of the dead here.
I know he was shot and killed.
Tragic.
Very young.
Very, very young.
20?
Was he 20?
19, 20, 21?
Something like that.
That's a kid.
I can't believe it.
But this was the jam that he's kind of famous for
and finally hit my radar by passing.
But again, I'm the guy who says there should be a word
for when you start to like something
because the singer passed away.
And this is maybe for that reason alone.
Yeah, okay.
Bashar Jackson
murdered at age 20
as a result of putting
his address on social media.
And these stories
are getting weirder and weirder.
Juice World was one before that
where he swallowed
a bunch of drugs on a plane.
Is it just that there's more
because of YouTube and other such it just that there's more, because of YouTube
and other such digital
enterprises, that there's just more famous
people now? That you're starting to
like, now you don't rely
on being in a movie
or on one of the three stations
of a television show on one of the three stations
or, like it's now there's just so
many more people of notoriety
because of, you know reality shows
and youtube etc etc spotify add him to the list along with xxx tantacion still trying to remember
how to pronounce that right uh juice world was another one just these strange stories of
circumstance and uh here we had pop smoke who was reportedly gang affiliated and uh here we had Pop Smoke, who was reportedly gang-affiliated.
And here he had his album debut
on the top ten of the U.S. charts.
As per your theory then,
I mean, these people do post numbers.
They would have followings
through streaming platforms
and stuff like that.
And in the process,
there we go, a gang hit,
taking out Pop Smoke, not Pot Smoke.
Pop.
And other stories involving rappers from Toronto.
There was a big Airbnb shooting, and it was a member of the duo, the Tall Up Twins, who was killed there.
Also had attention as 4400 Bully, rapper we
mentioned earlier, and another one called YS.
And that ended up
a bit of a coincidence because all these rappers
ran in the same circles and they were all murdered
under
circumstances that I don't think
were entirely solved.
A lot of tragic deaths all around.
I guess updating the list of
dead rappers younger than ever.
What to do for pleasure songs that you heard in your life you didn't know that they were songs that other people wrote. They were from existing albums.
The first time you ever heard them, it was somebody's theme song on a radio show.
You spent years and years
trying to figure out what Bob McCowan's theme
song was. I have a copy of it here.
Bob
Mackiewicz on QN07 when he would
do the music news. That was his theme.
Natural's Not In It by the Gang
of Four. Andy Gill was the Gang of Four. Andy Gill
was the Gang of Four member who died
in February. You mentioned him with
Scott Turner, and that was the song I Love a Man
in Uniform, which is a real jam.
Also
from this vintage, but it was on February
1st that the lead guitarist of Gang of Four,
Andy
Gill, real new wave legend for this
song, but remembered most by me for writing this song
that would introduce Bob Makowitz telling me the music news on Q107.
Thank you. This is not America.
Little piece of you.
Little piece in me.
Well, this is not America.
For this is not America.
A miracle, for this is not America.
Lyle Mays died in February 2020,
and he was a keyboard player with the Pat Metheny Group.
And if you know nothing else by the Pat Metheny Group,
you know that they wrote this soundtrack to the Falcon and the Snowman.
And one of their instrumentals, David Bowie, wrote some lyrics to it. And it turned out that this jazz act, Pat Metheny Group, could say that they had a top 40 hit song.
This is not America.
David Bowie with the Pat Metheny Group and the keyboards courtesy of Lyle Mays.
keyboards courtesy of Lyle Mays.
And after playing with Pat Metheny, he ended up working
in computers and
architecture. You know, a very scientific
guy after developing this
synthesized sound to the
wild-haired jazz
guitarist. Another
song they had called Last Train
Home, Pat Metheny group. You might
recognize it if I played it for you.
I think that was a bit of a radio airplay
item on different
radio stations at the time.
But most of all,
they left this song behind with Bowie.
I think this was like the
last hurrah
for the great avant-garde
David Bowie, at the same time
being able to crack the charts.
After that, he had that
Never Let Me Down album. He was trying to
cash in, trying to get back
to that glory, playing in stadiums.
It was alright. A couple of minor hits.
But after that, we had David Bowie and
Tin Machine. You know
David Bowie is still trying to reclaim the
legacy of Tin Machine, even though he's dead.
They just put out remakes of
those Tin Machine songs on an he's dead. They just put out remakes of those Tin Machine songs
on an EP that came out in February
of him trying to reclaim them.
But it's Lyle Mays who we remember,
and yeah, great, great jazz stuff
from the Pat Metheny group,
and it couldn't have happened without him.
Pat Matheny Group.
And it couldn't have happened without him.
I spend my time thinking about you constantly.
It's true that I want you.
You're the meaning of success to me.
Cause anything you want, you can get from me.
Don't try to work it out.
Just let it be.
Emotion has no price.
And love is free.
Really, I do this death section so I can live out all my fantasies of being like a 1980s corporate rock radio DJ. And we can get into deep cuts like that one from John Waite,
most famous for Missing You.
I've been missing you.
Yeah, absolutely.
And I think that was covered by Tina Turner, as I recall.
Guys like John Waite, even though you associate them with this slick corporate rock
like created in a boardroom,
I think John john wait always
fashioned himself an art rocker when we talk about somebody like david bowie like john wait would have
seen himself as being in the same sort of genre uh but but but not everyone could be david bowie
and he had to sell out he was in this bandies, and ended up with his solo career. And for at least part of his career, his bass player was a guy named Ivan Kroll.
And Ivan Kroll, before that, played with the Patti Smith group, also with Iggy Pop, also with David Bowie.
But the song that people associate with him most is one from Patti Smith called Dancing Barefoot.
Went on to work with John Waitin.
If you want to go by the Billboard chart books, that would have been the biggest song that he ever wrote.
A follow-up from the album that came after Missing You.
Every Step of the Way, died of Cancer, February 2020, age 71.
And because you're not going to hear this on the radio, not even on Jack FM,
here we got to remember Ivan Kroll. I want to hold the hand inside you
I want to take a breath that's true
I look to you and I see'll come apart and you'll go black
Some kind of light into your darkness
Close your eyes with what's not there
Baby
You didn't think there were that many verses before the chorus, did you?
I gotta say, I love this song and always have.
A Fade Into You by Mazzy Star,
a duo with a singer named, what was it, Hope Sandoval,
playing with David Roback.
And it was David Roback who died in February 2020, also cancer, at age 61.
And even though you'd think this Mazzy Star was some kind of one-hit wonder,
I don't know, you remember this song from your formative years?
But this is the one Mazzy Star song I could name off the top of my head
because I've listened to it a million times.
Oh, it made it to the pop charts.
And I think it was partly because, looking at the top of my head because I've listened to it a million times. Oh, it made it to the pop charts, and I think it was partly because
looking at the history of David Roback
that he came up with this sound.
Previously, it was a duo. He had a different
singer. It was called Opal.
Opal.
And the cowboy
junkies came along, and they got
all this critical acclaim, and they started
playing these big theaters, and
he felt like they kind of capitalized on this sound that he had,
this gothic folk music, which at the same time,
here was this group from Toronto that came in there,
and they were getting all this fame that he felt he could get a piece of too.
And ended up, probably because of the Cowboy Junkie's success,
got that major label record deal
and at least
had this one hit to show
for it in this weird time,
I think, when the grunge
explosion had already happened
and pop radio stations were
making room for more songs
like this at the time when the
Meat Puppets or the Butthole Surfers,
these acts that had been around the American Songs like this at the time when the Meat Puppets or the Butthole Surfers,
these acts that had been around the American indie scene,
all of a sudden there they were, the Billboard charts, and he had his turn too. But they had an early band with Susanna Hoffs who went on to the Bengals,
a band called the Rain Parade, part of the Paisley Underground.
But it's Mazzy Star, Fade Into You, for which we remember
David Roback.
Fade I don't need no doctor
Because I know what's killing me
I don't need no doctor
Because I know what's killing me
A Buddy Cage is who died associated with this band,
New Riders of the Purple Sage.
And Buddy Cage was a pedal steel guitar player from Toronto,
originally played in the band with Ian and Sylvia,
the Great Speckled Bird.
And he was along on the Festival Express concert tour.
It connected him with Anne Murray.
He played on our early albums, Pedal, Steel, Guitar,
and also Roar and Shipley.
But the Festival Express is where he came on the radar
with his band, New Riders of the Purple Sage,
because their Pedal, Steel, guitar player had a different job.
His name was Jerry Garcia.
And they were looking for a full-time permanent member to replace him.
And he got called up to the upper major leagues of hippie jam band music.
And for all those years there he was
Buddy Cage
with New Riders
of the Purple Sage
died February 2020
at age 73. She's a rich girl
She don't try to hide it
Diamonds on the soles of her shoes
He's a poor boy
Empty as a pocket
Empty as a pocket with nothing to lose.
Sing ta-na-na, ta-na-na-na, she got diamonds on the soles of her shoes.
Ta-na-na, ta-na-na-na, she got diamonds on the soles of her shoes.
Diamonds on the soles of her shoes.
Diamonds on the soles of her shoes. Diamonds on the soles of his shoes Diamonds on the soles of his shoes
Diamonds on the soles of his shoes
Diamonds on the soles of his shoes
Joseph Shabalala
He died in February at age 79
And I think he's somebody who a lot of people know who he is
Even if they don't know his name
And it has a lot to do with that song
Right? Diamonds on the soles of her shoes
From the Paul Simon album Graceland
That he was from, that vocal group
Lady Smith Black Mambazo, who I first saw live on Saturday Night Live
when Paul Simon debuted the incarnation of Graceland on SNL.
I saw it when it happened.
I thought this was something different.
Pretty exciting that he tapped into the South African musicians at the height of apartheid when the tensions were rising and that Paul Simon found these people to collaborate with.
And he was right in there with this song and the other song, Homeless, and the Graceland album, which would have been a must-own for every yuppie at the time.
I don't know if it was on your playlist, the mid-1980s.
Monster album, yeah.
It was across all the genres and generations.
Big, big deal.
And Joseph Shabalala met with a lot of tragedy.
Like different family members who were murdered.
You know, apartheid became a thing of the past.
South Africa became a tense place on a whole different level,
but amidst all the tragedies, he kept performing.
He cracked the worldwide market with his singing act,
and as a result, even if people didn't
know his name, that it would have been this guy
who sang with Paul Simon,
who was a crucial part of
Graceland, that he died on February
11th, 2020 at age
79. I never know why you don't know how to tell the truth.
You don't know how to tell the truth.
Yeah.
I'm a fool, fool.
I've been such a fool.
I'm blowing my coal with you right now
To tell the truth, truth, truth, truth
You say you went home early last night
As the age of death gets older and older and older,
I know we're coming to the end of the episode,
and I wanted to salute Orson Bean,
who died at age 91,
not of natural causes.
He got hit by a car.
Wow.
And Orson Bean,
mostly famous just for being famous.
He was the kind of guy that would show up
on TV game shows.
He would sit on the couch on all the different talk programs
including
Alan Thicke who was doing a show
for CTV in the early
1980s. They flew
North of the border
to make these appearances. Be this kind of rock and tour
on TV. And the show
that he was most anonymous with was this one.
To Tell the Truth. And the show that he was most synonymous with was this one, To Tell the Truth.
And I remember
this theme song from childhood,
not quite understanding
what it was all about, but being completely
freaked out every time I would hear it in a good way.
This is
an amazing song.
Could have been a hit in its own
right, I think. And even though it was from
the late 60s, it hung around as a TV theme song through the early 1980s.
Orson Bean was also married to the mother from The Wonder Years.
Wow.
Allie Mills, a few years younger than him.
A few?
I feel like we got like 30 years younger than him.
So how old was Orson Bean again?
Orson Bean was 91 years of age.
Also part of his legacy, he was the father-in-law of Andrew Breitbart,
the journalist who originally worked with Matt Drudge
and lent his name to a website.
Breitbart died at a young age.
You didn't get to see this become maybe the most infamous website in America
when it was taken over by a guy named Steve Bannon.
And Orson Beaton was one of these characters who was like a former communist
who became a real diehard conservative.
If he was blacklisted for his politics at one point in time,
maybe he rejoined the blacklist later on
because he was a real kind of right-winger.
And yeah, one of those names
that maybe people wouldn't have given him a lot of thought
until it turned out that he was struck by two different cars,
like a collision with him in the middle,
but at the same time befitting his legacy.
We all got to go sometime.
Orson Bean dead at 91.
Now, Mr. Bean was 91 years old.
There's no way we could come up with somebody
who lived to be older than that. Last month, we remembered the life of Mr. Peanut,
whose death was announced at age 104,
and I think it turned out to be a little bit of a scam.
Because the whole thing was Mr. Peanut's funeral
would be broadcast during the Super Bowl.
Maybe it was because of Kobe Bryant dying somewhere
while they were doing that promotion.
They want to be too morbid about Mr. Peanut's death.
Whatever it was, Mr. Peanut was,
was what, reincarnated as a baby?
That was part of the promotion during the Super Bowl?
But that was January.
But in February, is it possible somebody lived to be
almost as old as Mr. Peanut?
Is that possible?
Well, I think he had in mind the idea that he could live that long, but we lost Kirk
Douglas at age 103.
Spartacus, a movie that I have never seen.
I feel like I've seen it because it's all over pop culture.
Like, I am Spartacus, but I don't believe I've ever seen it either.
I just think I've seen it.
Well, Stanley Kubrick was a director.
And if you want to be a historian well-versed in the history of cinema.
I guess you got to watch this thing, but I'm not one of those people.
As a result, I don't think I ever saw any movie with Kirk Douglas,
but certainly knew who he was, at the very least, as the father of actor.
What, 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea?
That was him, right?
Or am I getting my guys confused?
I used to get Burt Lancaster mixed up with Kirk Douglas.
Well, they did like their last mainstream movie together.
The two tough guys.
And that was in the, what, late 80s, early 90s,
around the same time.
Because I always remember Burt Lancaster,
he played that great role in Field of Dreams,
a movie I've seen a hundred times.
That's how I remember Burt Lancaster.
But Kirk Douglas, for most of my life,
I just know him as being Michael Douglas' dad,
who used to be a big deal.
Kirk Douglas, soon after he wrote his biography,
The Ragman's Son,
it was a great story about making it in Hollywood
throughout the 20th century.
He ended up in a helicopter crash.
Someone ended up dying, and he survived.
He took on, I guess, a more spiritual side,
reflected in the fact, now that he's died,
that his entire fortune is going to charity.
And I think there was some satisfaction in the headlines
that Michael Douglas, his son,
who is generally perceived in the
show business press as an arrogant
prick, was not going
to get a dime. He's got his own money.
Yeah, did it really matter? He's like worth $300
million. Right. He produced a lot
of hits too. Kirk Douglas, even though
he made it to $103, he didn't burn through his
whole fortune, whatever the numbers were.
$60, $70, $80 million
left behind to a good cause,
a great legacy,
Kirk Douglas dying
at 103,
making it possible for us to
end the Toronto Mic'd
obituary section on a note
that we all can live with.
We went over time, but I'm not editing a word out of this thing,
so it's going to be longer than two and a half hours today.
I just couldn't cut.
I cut out so many deaths as it was, as you know,
but, you know, there's so much content.
But thank you again for making the trek here.
Love the monthly visits from Mark.
12.30, six wise blocks.
Okay, Mike, let's see where we're at at the end of March.
Will I still be working on the 1236 newsletter?
If somebody was listening this long, you better sign up at 1236.ca.
But lots of other adventures in the air.
And I hope we can get together at the end of March and take stock of where we're at,
catch up on other FOTMs,
and one more plug
for FOTM Jay Brody
on the B team
on 102.1 The Edge.
Congrats, Jay.
And that brings us
to the end of our 591st show.
You can follow me on Twitter.
I'm at Toronto Mike.
Mark is at 12361236.
Our friends at Great Lakes Brewery
are at Great Lakes Beer.
Palma Pasta is at Palma Pasta.
Sticker U is at Sticker U.
The Keitner Group are at The Keitner Group.
Banjo Dunk is at Banjo Dunk with a C.
And Ridley Funeral Home are at Ridley FH.
See you all next week.
And your smile is fine and it's just like mine and it won't go away.
Cause everything is rosy and green.
Well you've been under my skin for more than eight years
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