Toronto Mike'd: The Official Toronto Mike Podcast - December 2023 Memorial Episode: Toronto Mike'd #1402
Episode Date: December 31, 2023In this 1402nd episode of Toronto Mike'd, Mike pays tribute to those we lost in December 2023. Toronto Mike'd is proudly brought to you by Great Lakes Brewery, Palma Pasta, Ridley Funeral Home, Elec...tronic Products Recycling Association, Raymond James Canada and Moneris. If you would like to support the show, we do have partner opportunities available. Please email Toronto Mike at mike@torontomike.com
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are dead or never dead to us until we have forgotten them.
As always, I open this episode with that quote from George Eliot, because I believe it.
By remembering those who have passed,
we give them life.
Let's remember those we lost in December 2023.
This memorial episode of Toronto Mic'd
is brought to you, as always,
by Ridley Funeral Home.
Pillars of this community since 1921. Oh, yeah. Giving her all I am.
And reaching out and loving her.
And you know she can feel it.
Oh, yeah.
You know she doesn't have to try.
Going on forever.
Oh, yeah.
Knowing that's the reason why.
She said tonight is a wonderful time To fall in love
Oh yeah, tonight is a wonderful time
To fall in love
Let's fall in love
When an FOTM passes away,
and luckily there's been very few who have left us,
I like to open these episodes
by talking about that friend of Toronto Mike.
On December 3rd,
we learned that Miles Goodwin,
lead vocalist, guitarist, and principal songwriter of the rock band April Wine, passed away in Halifax.
Miles Goodwin made his Toronto-made debut in May 2021.
It's episode 845 if you're looking for it.
It's episode 845 if you're looking for it.
We chatted about April Wine,
them getting snubbed by the Junos,
Miles going solo,
and what he was up to at that point.
Here's a little of how that conversation sounded.
The awards are very particular things, and they don't really typically mean much.
I mean, there's sometimes, of course, if you win an Oscar, your career takes off.
Sometimes it doesn't either, but it's a great launching thing for your career.
And winning a Grammy is also, it can mean a lot to your
career or it could be nothing it really depends on the artist the talent and the people with them
good luck and the rest of it juno is kind of like that i mean it was so many it is for there was a
period of time and i don't want to knock the junos but for a time it was a joke uh and you know and
what happened and i'm quite honest about this,
and I'm sure what I'm saying,
there was a period of time where someone won a Juno
and was never heard of again.
And it happened time and time again.
So it was like, oh, God, don't let me win a Juno.
That'll be the end of my career.
That was a running joke.
I mean, I remember one time we lost to a duo called uh miles and lenny um
we never heard from them again and there were a lot of artists there was a string there
a number of years and of course and if that wasn't happening then ann mary won everything
you know she'd have a dump and she'd win a juno. But, you know, and of course the rush, you know,
and not saying that those two artists and others don't deserve it,
but it was just a given, you know.
If Anne-Marie's in the mix and she wins,
because she was wonderful and she still is wonderful
and rushed it, incredible and so forth.
And so either like the same people won all the time
or, and there was a period of time for several years where if you won,
it was a kiss of death.
But people have tried to figure out why in the world,
because we would be nominated for Album of the Year,
Group of the Year, Song of the Year, Graphics.
You're like the Susan Lucci of the Junos.
Yeah, it was crazy.
And let's not fool ourselves.
It was politics, too.
It really helps, and it did. I can't say that's not fool ourselves. It was politics too.
It really helps.
I can't say that's the same anymore.
It really helped to be in Toronto.
I know there are people in groups in Toronto
that get exceptional
coverage
because they're there.
They're playing touch football.
They're playing on the hockey team with all the radio people and you know i mean it really is uh i know
how it is and and abril wine was always a very private band out of quebec out of montreal um
we didn't socialize i mean i've been a running joke for years i'm very very private i don't you
know i don't i don't leave home after dark unless I'm paid. It's a combination of a whole
bunch of things. There was also a very big misunderstanding between Walt Grealis and the band
one time when somebody wrote something on a fishbowl. It was an old quote from
something on a fishbowl. It was an old quote from, what's his name, I can't remember now,
don't drink the water, fish, leap in it, you know, that old thing. And W.C. Fields said it.
And anyway, somebody did that and blamed April Wine. Of course, it wasn't true at all. And Walt Grealish got really, you know who Walt Grealish is?
Help me out.
Okay, he started the whole thing.
So anyway, he got really, really upset.
And we were kind of, I would say we were blackballed for at least two or three years.
So that didn't help things and no matter how we we tried to straighten out the the the uh the you know the fact that the real fact that it wasn't us at all was somebody else and
it was just uh just really too bad it happened at all uh but reflecting poorly on the band is is is
it wasn't very uh wasn't appropriate because it had nothing to do with the group and then if i
have uh my i wrote my memoirs in, I forget what year, 2017,
I think it was, around there, called Just Between You and Me.
Yes.
And this is discussed, and it's very, very clear
that we had nothing to do with that actual event.
But I think we paid the price with the Juno Committee
for at least a few years.
Well, thankfully, on April 18, 2010, you did finally get inducted into the Canadian Music
Hall of Fame.
So what did that mean to you?
What is that?
Well, I mean, really, you know, I've got to be really honest with you here.
You know, again, my feeling towards Juno, about awards in particular, if you really,
awards in particular, if you really believe in them too much, I don't think it's a good thing.
I don't think if you're nominated and you lose, you should be really all that disappointed. I mean, of course, a bit. Yeah, I get it. Or if you want to win, you shouldn't be too big a deal.
Don't go extreme either way on these things because the fact that your flavor of the month
or something
happened, that you win an award
that particular year,
it's so much more important
to have
longevity,
to be respected by your peers
and your fans.
So when I finally got to Juneau, it was like, well, in my mind,
it was about bloody time.
And really, for me, it was validation for the fans.
I mean, how do the fans feel?
They've supported us.
We broke so many records over the years.
We're the first group to go platinum.
We're the first group to go platinum.
We have so many firsts in our career, but we were ignored. And the fans got to say after
a while, geez, did I believe in this band when I shouldn't have? Are they really not that good?
Are they not worthy? And I used to feel really bad for the fans as a matter of fact when we won
when we were um presented with this uh lifetime achievement or whatever it's called um
you know i i said to the juno committee caris i said you know i want to
i want it presented by two people and i said one of them has to be a fan
and they said oh that's never been done yet we can't have that and i said well i don't want it presented by two people. And I said, one of them has to be a fan.
And they said, oh, that's never been done yet. We can't have that. And I said, well, I don't want it then. I said, no, I said, I want two people to present this. I said, I want a fan.
And I have another person I have in mind, and that's my good friend for a long time, Barry Grace.
Barry Grace, Barry Stock from Three Days Grace.
And he was a friend of mine.
He worked with April Wine as a roadie for a long time, but he went out with Three Days Grace.
They've sold millions of records.
They're doing fantastic, and they still are.
And he's a dear friend, so I said I'd like Barry Stock and a fellow named Dave Cameron to present it.
And I had a battle, a fight back and forth.
And I said, this is about the fans.
Why would you not allow a fan to be part of the presentation?
And eventually they said, okay.
Now, he was at the time working for the military.
He was working on planes and so forth in the Air Force Division of Armed Forces
for Canada. And he's a big, big, big April Wine fan and a wonderful guy. He's still a
good friend of mine and he runs our website, by the way. And I said, well, I said, Dave,
I said, you know, you have to come in uniform. And he said, Miles, they won't let me wear the uniform.
And I said, that's crazy.
I said, think of the goodwill.
To you to come out there as the Armed Forces
and a rocker and a fan of April Wine,
how wonderful that would be for a PR
for the Armed Forces of Canada.
And he said, yeah, but they won't allow it.
I said, okay, well, then you come on without the uniform.
So he did.
And then, you know, he told me a few months later
that they told him that somebody there at the base said
that they had made a big mistake
and they wish they had allowed him to go on with the
uniform. It would have been a good thing.
Of course, it was too late.
There's so much red tape.
Nobody wanted to take the responsibility
of saying, yeah, sure, let him wear his uniform.
They're so terrified of losing
their jobs
or whatever it is that just keeps them in the box, thinking inside the box, if you know what I mean.
But at the end of the day, all I can say is I'm very proud of getting this special Juno.
I'm proud for them.
I'm happy for the fans.
Very happy for the fans, most of all.
Happy for the fans.
Very happy for the fans, most of all.
And also, it's nice for my family and my friends to see, yeah, you know,
Miles, Dad, April Wine, got this recognition, finally.
So, at the end of the day, it's all a good thing.
The day after we learned Miles Goodwin had passed away,
Ken Reed from Sportsnet dropped by to make his Toronto Mike debut. Ken Reed, who is my age,
is from the Maritimes, and I knew he was a big April Wine fan. Of course, we spent a good deal of time off the top, talking about the late, great Miles Goodwin. All right.
She is.
Ken, I know you were a big fan, as was I.
We lost Miles Goodwin yesterday at the age of 75.
Fellow Maritimer.
I'm sorry for your loss.
I feel like the Maritimes are in mourning this morning.
I think all Canada is, man.
Yeah, it's funny.
I just played this song for my boys this morning on the way back from the hockey rink.
My oldest had Trouts for his school team
and the youngest tagged along.
And my youngest said, I know this song.
And he sure does.
Yeah, my brother called me yesterday afternoon
and he gave me the news. my brother called me yesterday afternoon,
and he gave me the news, and I kind of was just, what?
And I kind of didn't believe it,
and, you know, we're in such a race to be the first on Twitter and all that,
and I said, I'm going to wait, because I don't want to believe it, and then it gradually came out.
I think it was Eric Alper.
Well, Eric Alper is, I know this, because I've had Miles Goodwin on the show.
Yeah.
And I booked that through Eric.
Eric was Miles' publicist.
Yeah.
So once Eric put out the news,
you knew it was,
well, Eric's not going to put it out
unless he was sure anyways.
But yeah, he literally is,
he was on the payroll.
He knows.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So I mean,
I've done an event the last couple of years.
I've done an event the last several years, Summerside Boys the last several years somerset boys and girls club we do it at mill river in prince everett island and
miles has been there the last couple years and he's he's he's everything you'd want him to be
he's just a great guy he's he's cool he listens and uh i was like i saw him this summer he looked
great you know and then things happened so quickly
yeah and you know he was he was really enjoying i guess i'll call it retirement nova scotia he
was doing songwriter circles he was still writing and man as uh it was just a massive bummer and i
think canada i think canadians took april granted. Like, whenever there's an awesome song on classic rock radio,
and you're like, oh, who is that?
I love that song.
It's April Wine.
Guaranteed.
Sneaky deep catalog.
Sneaky deep.
One of the easily top five rock bands in Canadian history for me.
And I'd put Miles up there with any songwriter this country's ever produced.
The first time I introduced him on stage in PEI,
I'm like, you know, England has John and Paul
as great writers, and we have Miles Goodwin, man.
The guy can write a hook, he can write a song.
I mean, just listen to this, it's awesome.
He's nailing it.
No, I mean, I just re-listened to,
this was only a couple years ago
I had Miles Goodwin on the show.
He gave me over an hour.
Like, I bet literally, and what,
so like a couple of the early big radio hits,
not the first one,
but the second,
the big one and the third were covers.
Right.
So I think there was a little bit of like,
Oh,
like,
and I don't think many Canadians even understood at the time that,
Oh,
it could have been a lady was a cover.
And when you hear it now,
I don't think of it as a cover at all.
Yeah.
And Miles,
usually he sings that in PEI too.
He would sing it, which was awesome.
The crowd would just be rocking.
Like, when you're at a golf tournament in Prince Edward Island
and Miles Goodwin's on stage playing
and Ricky and Randy from Trailer Park Boys are in the crowd with you
and we're all jamming along.
Yeah.
It's truly magical.
But, yeah, Miles is, he was a gift.
It was a gift from Waverly, Nova Scotia to the world.
And, you know, a guy who just made his way to Montreal and, you know,
ends up writing a tune like this and so many other great ones.
It was awesome.
And in my basement, there's, you got some stuff on your wall here.
I have a, you know, that classic April Wine's Greatest Hits album.
It's kind of that blue, light blue background.
There's five of the guys in the front.
Yes.
So my wife
walked down the aisle
to, I'm on fire
for you baby,
so Miles signed
the album for you.
I'll say to Mrs. Reed,
Ken's still on fire
for you baby,
Miles Goodwin.
So that's how
cool Miles is.
I'm not done
talking about Miles
yet, Ken.
You didn't know
this was 90 minutes about Miles Goodwin. That's cool with me, man. No problem. Talk about Miles yet, Ken. You didn't know this was 90 Minutes about Miles Goodwin.
That's cool with me, man.
No problem.
Talk about Miles all day.
A little French in this song, too, eh?
Just between you and me
Baby, I know our love will be
Just between you and me
Always I know how love will be
Just between you and me
Wow.
Okay, you know, this is the first Canadian band ever to be played on MTV.
Yeah. Yeah. Like that's because people forget when MTV started, it was like a rock station, right?
They wouldn't even play R&B and stuff like that.
Well, I think the first black artist might have been Prince, I think.
Yeah, Michael Jackson. Had a tough time getting on there.
Prince, I think. Yeah, Michael Jackson. I had a tough time getting on there.
And it's cool, too, because
I mean, there's a
great, on YouTube, there's a great April
Wine concert, I want to say from Idaho.
They got this rink packed. There's about
9,000 people there.
And when you see April Wine
and you see all these classic old bands
with the exception of Kiss
and Motley Crue, there's no back and tracks,
man. They were playing.
They were the real deal.
And Miles was legit.
He was the real deal.
He did it because he loved it.
You know, a true artist, still writing.
I know he said his greatest honor was getting that Canadian Writers Hall of Fame.
I mean, he was a writer.
He was beautiful.
And his recent solo material was really kind of soul-searching and deep.
He had this great angel jam that I, again,
so we're now episode 1,382,
but if you go into the Toronto Mike feed,
one back, so 1,381,
is a tribute to Miles Goodwin
and his own words talking about the origin of the band,
going solo.
But one of the interesting things, Ken,
and you kind of alluded to it, but one of the interesting things ken you
kind of alluded to it but an underappreciated underrated band because i asked him about that
because did you know miles goodwin and april wine never won like i'm not talking about like
career retrospective honorary junos but they never won a juno they were nominated i think 11 times
and never won one and i just asked him and he kind of opened up, and I'm going to share this at the end
of the month in the Ridley Funeral Home Memorial episode,
but he, and you can hear it
on the episode 1381.
But he says,
so it's a maritime band that moves
to Montreal, and they're Montreal
based. And he said there was a huge
bias with the Junos for Toronto
based bands, and because he said
these guys, like Triumph and Rush, these guys were all
like, you know, out with the
writers and the media
and hobnobbing with them and at
parties with them and golfing with them and
playing hockey with them, and he said
that he took it as a slight because they were
based in Montreal from Maritime.
I would say all awards
are, it's just the opinions of others about
someone, so don't worry about awards. I mean, man, like, I always say all awards are just the opinions of others about someone. So don't worry about awards.
I mean, man, like, I always say, like, I remember when Miles got a lifetime achievement at the East Coast Music Awards.
I want to say it was around 2002.
And all these artists played a medley of April Wine's hits.
And my brother and I just sat there in amazement going, what?
That one, too? That one, too?azement going, what, that one too?
Yeah.
That one too?
That one too?
That one too?
And that's kind of really when I got into April Wine
was based off that.
I always heard them as kids, but I didn't know it was them.
But then I knew it was them.
And I'm like, these guys are deep, man.
They write so much great stuff.
You're right.
And even when they weren't writing the songs,
and we talked about the Hot Chocolate cover,
Could Have Been a Lady, which was a big hit even in the states that was a hit but the other song i always heard on like
q107 classic rock and it would come on and i would dig it and i'm like who the hell is this
bad side of the moon yeah which is i had no idea you know whose whose song is that is an elton john
that's elton john yeah so there's these covers that they kind of made their own right and all
these originals right because they you didn't think Elton John ever for that song, right?
I sure don't know it as an Elton John song, no.
Okay, question came in for you, Ken.
Yeah.
From Rob Del Mundo.
Oh, hey, Rob.
Rob wants to know, what is your favorite April Wine song?
So I guess that answer like this.
When people ask me who my favorite band is
or what my favorite type of
music is i can never answer because i think it changes on my mood and where i'm at on a certain
day and i would say the same thing about my favorite april wine song but if and i hate to
just pick the obvious one it's like when people ask me what my favorite hockey card is i say it's
my wayne gretzky rookie card i gotta go with roller man because it's just it's just rocking and it's just it's got everything a good rock and roll song should
have it's got the multiple guitar layers it's it's got a killer bass line and miles vocals
every time i'm in the shower and i try to hit that bye bye at the end it does not work so
it's got everything a song can have and and i'm on fire for you, baby, right? Because it reminds me of Mrs. Reed.
Beautiful.
Beautiful.
Miles does not sing on this song, but this is a jam.
I never, I really honestly would hear it.
I know.
And I would hear it all the time on the radio.
And I never really knew it was April Wine.
I feel like until I had Miles on and I started doing my homework,
I'm like, oh, that's an April Wine song?
It was an unbelievable tidal wave of like, oh, my God.
Can I predict it?
Can I go? Yeah, you say my God. Can I predict it?
Yeah, you say it and then I'll pick it. How about I'll just go this.
No, no, no, no, no, no.
Bingo.
Oh, what a night.
Jim Clanch, the bassist on lead vocal.
Yeah.
We'll get a taste of it and then we'll... Come on, come on, come on, come on, baby. Come on if you want it to be.
Ooh, tonight.
Everything will be all right.
Come on, come on, love me tonight.
And I'll be yours till the sun comes up.
I love it, man.
Yeah. Little Beatles.
That's how Miles shared the vocals right there.
Yeah, a little bit.
Yeah, a little harmony.
And I always say modern day April Wine is Sloan
because Sloan writes so many great tunes
and Sloan is massively underappreciated in this country.
And I got a buddy, Kevin, my buddy Kevin Hilliard,
he used to be being Grace Babies,
and he sells merch at Sloan's shows.
And I remember one time Murph broke his collarbone,
so Kev had to play bass.
And he's a big April Wine guy, loves Sloan too.
And to me, Sloan just writes hit after hit.
You hear it on the radio, and you're like, who is that?
Well, that's Sloan.
Same with April Wine, man.
Two great bands.
I'm glad you brought those two bands up,
because I feel like the Boomers, because you and I are both Gen X.
Yep.
But the Boomers, they get April Wine.
They lived it.
They breathed it.
Yes.
And I will shout out Humble Howard Glassman, who I booked Miles Goodwin on Humble and Fred.
And it was like I booked Paul McCartney.
Howard, it was his first concert.
He grew up in Moose Jaw.
Wow. Huge April Wine fan.
And that was right,
he's right in that
key boomer demo.
And I would say Sloan
is to Gen X
as April Wine is to boomers.
I would not engage
in a debate with you on that.
I would agree with you on that.
The other thing about
April Wine too,
they made such an impression
on Canada because
they literally played
everywhere all the time. There's people tweeting at me and I didn't know this. April Wine too. They made such an impression on Canada because they literally played everywhere
all the time. There's people
tweeting at me and I didn't know this. They played
my high school dance. And I should note
that my high school prom was played by
Sandbox. Yeah and
Bubbles from you mentioned Trailer Park Boys
earlier. Yeah Mike was one
of the guitarists and they were known as Sandbox
Legacy then. So shout out
to the boys.
Good dudes, man.
And Paul Murray, the lead singer,
who I always say was on the cover of Nova Scotia Teen Beat magazine four years in a row,
he's Ann Murray's nephew.
So lovely guy.
Troy Shanks on the drum.
And if you ever need ENT advice,
Jason Archibald, who wrote Curious,
is an ENT guy over in Brampton.
So he's close by.
who wrote Curious, is an ENT guy over in Kev who's watching on the live stream.
Hello to Canada Kev.
But we lost, Robert, we lost Chad Allen.
What can you remind us about Chad Allen?
I think there's a little confusion with the younger set
about how, I thought this was Backman and Cummings
and when did they enter the fray?
How is it Chad Allen's group?
What's going on with the Guess Who's origin?
Well, Chad Allen
is the original lead vocalist.
You know, they started it in the early
60s and
Chad played rhythm guitar
and lead vocals. So you also
had Bob Ashley
who's a friend of mine playing that hammering piano
that you hear there.
Randy Bachman, Jim Cale,
and Gary Peterson. And they had
a whole bunch of hits and
a couple of albums before
Bob Ashley left.
And they got a new young
teenage punk on keyboards,
Burton Cummings.
So for a while, Chad Allen was still
the lead vocalist.
And he had Burton on keyboards. Okay, so how
does Chad get squeezed out of the Guess Who?
They start playing a
little bit of a heavier sound.
Once Burton was on board
he did start singing a few songs
live. So they would do like an Animals
cover and stuff like that that Burton
had a bit more of a gritty voice. He could
kind of really sink his teeth into. And I chad just kind of knew the writing was on
the wall he didn't want to tour as much and he was a little bit more of a reserved personality
so he ended up leaving after the third album
yeah did you ever have a chance to see chad play live? I didn't. And unfortunately, when I started writing the book,
he had just suffered a stroke.
So I didn't push for an interview with him.
I wanted to give him plenty of time to recover.
And he never really fully recovered.
I mean, he was doing better for a while.
By that point, the book was out.
And so, yeah, recently he did finally pass away,
which is pretty sad for Canadian music.
That song that you just played was a number one hit in this country,
and it hit a number 22 in the States,
which at the time Canada didn't have a lot of international chart success.
That's when it all begins for the Guess Who?
That's a cover of a British rock song, right?
It's really where it all begins
for pop and rock music in this country.
Wow.
That voice you heard
belongs to FOTM Robert Lawson,
who dropped by on December 14th
for episode 1392 of Toronto Mic'd.
He was infamously fact-checking the Randy Backman episode of Toronto Mic'd. He was infamously fact-checking
the Randy Backman episode of Toronto Mic'd,
which had recorded a couple of months
prior.
Robert Lawson is somewhat of a guess-who
expert,
making him the ideal person to
chat with about
the sad loss
of Chad Allen.
Chad Allen was the founding member
and original lead singer of the Guess Who?
We lost him on November 21st at the age of 80. Get your tambourine back
Show me your talk guitar solo If I have to run I'm not running out on you
If I have to shake
The little sand out of my shoes
Running from the Lord
Oh, they'll put me inside
Baby, won't you let me have a little time to hide
Baby, won't you let me have a little time to hide?
I've been holding on since the good Lord was waiting.
And the day I die, I'll still be running, baby.
Running from the times when I would lay me down and cry.
Oh, baby, won't you let me have a little time to hide?
Oh, baby, won't you let me have a little time to hide? You're listening to Time to Hide by Paul McCartney and Wings,
a song written by Denny Lane.
Denny Lane has the distinction of being a founding member of both the Moody Blues and Wings.
Denny passed away in Florida on December 5th at the age of 79. Boy, the way Glenn Miller played
Songs that made the hit parade
Guys like us, we had it made
Those were the days
And you knew where you were then
Girls were girls and men were men
Mister, we could use a man like Herman Hoover again.
Didn't need no welfare states.
Everybody pulled his weight.
Gee, our old loss sound ran great.
Those were the days.
Those were the days.
All in the Family is the greatest sitcom of all time, right?
I mean, I can't imagine a better sitcom.
It aired on CBS for nine seasons.
I caught it in syndication.
So smart, so funny, so thought-provoking. Fun fact, Maud is a spinoff of All in the Family. Some consider Good Times a spinoff of Maud. The most successful spinoff
of All in the Family was The Jeffersons. This entire universe, the creation of Norman Lear,
This entire universe, the creation of Norman Lear, Toronto Mic'd. Norman Lear died on December 5th
at his home in Los Angeles
at the age of 101.
Well done, Norman.
Thank you.
Thank you very much, ladies and gentlemen.
Our guests for tonight are the committee,
Dionne, Jennifer Warren.
Right.
Really a great new singer.
And a special guest star, Donovan.
Thank you. a great new singer, and a special guest star, Donovan.
Tommy also has a special guest, too,
and he'd like to introduce him right now.
That's right, I have a beetle.
Yeah, but it's not the kind of beetle you would expect it to be.
It's the kind of beetle that you, I think you hoped it would be.
Ladies and gentlemen, Hey Jude and
revolution we thought I mean I both thought that hey Jude was the best
presentation that we've ever seen in the Beatles and we're glad it was yes
You met my brother Dick.
This is Tommy, and this is my brother Dick.
Hi, Dick.
Enjoyed your work.
You look different in person.
Yeah, so do you.
It's all the makeup.
Too much makeup.
Do you have something important?
Something very important to say on American television. You know, a lot of times we don't have the opportunity to say anything important
because it's American television television every time you say something
they try to say something important
cue the lines well whether you can say it or not keep trying to say it that's what's important
yeah it's very important. Just a minute.
Okay. Cue the clap
now.
The Smothers
brothers were Tommy and
Dick Smothers.
When I was growing up, they seemed to be
everywhere. Tommy had the signature line, they seemed to be everywhere.
Tommy had the signature line,
Mom always liked you best.
As you heard in that clip,
the Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour would have on interesting guests,
and that was George Harrison making an appearance.
But as they alluded to in that short clip,
the Smothers Brothers did not shy away from getting political on their program.
And that led to CBS firing them in 1969.
Closer to home, Tommy Smothers was at
the live recording of John Lennon's
Give Peace a Chance in Montreal in 1969. He was playing acoustic guitar
with John. Heck, he got a shout out in the lyrics. If you see the documentary film Imagine John Lennon,
you'll see Tommy Smothers in room 1742 at the Queen Elizabeth Hotel in Montreal during John Lennon and Yoko Ono's
bed-in on June 1st, 1969. Tom Smothers died of lung cancer at his home in California
on December 26th at the age of 86. Is there a more underappreciated show
than Homicide, Life on the Street?
I don't even know where I'd find it streaming today. But no Homicide, Life on the Street. I don't even know where I'd find it streaming today.
But no Homicide Life on the Street.
No The Wire.
With all due respect
to John Munch,
the best character
in Homicide Life on the Street
was Frank Pembleton,
played by Andre Brouwer. Brouwer was fantastic in this role. I know many people listening know him far better from Brooklyn Nine-Nine,
but if I knew where to find Homicide Life on the Street, I'd send you there to check it out.
Homicide Life on the Street, I'd send you there to check it out. Andre Brower died from lung cancer on December 11th, having only been diagnosed a few months ago. He was only 61 years old.
By the way, another character on Homicide Life on the Street is Meldrick Lewis, played by Clark Johnson.
Clark Johnson, brother of FOTM Molly Johnson, was also in The Wire.
But in 2008, Clark Johnson starred in Nurse, Fighter, Boy,
written and directed by Charles Officer.
It premiered at TIFF.
It earned 10 Genie
nominations. It won
the Audience Choice Award
at the Mannheim Heidelberg
Film Festival and Sarasota
Film Festival. It was a big
deal and it launched a great
career for Charles Officer
who died here in Toronto
on December 1st at the age of 48. Sitting here eating my heart out, waiting
Waiting for some lover to come
Talked about a thousand numbers lately
Almost rang the phone off the wall
Looking for some hot stuff, baby, tonight I want some hot stuff, baby, this evening
Gotta have some hot stuff, gotta have some love tonight
Hot stuff
I need hot stuff.
I want some hot stuff.
I need hot stuff.
Hot Stuff by the Queen of Disco, Donna Summer,
was one of the many jams used effectively in the full Monty.
If you enjoyed the full Monty,
you likely enjoyed the performance of Tom Wilkinson.
Tom's been in everything.
Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind,
the best exotic Marigold Hotel.
He's got dozens and dozens of credits for movies you've seen,
but he might be best known for starring in In the Bedroom
and his supporting role in Michael Clayton.
Tom Wilkinson died suddenly at his home on December 30th at the age of 75. Celebrate one of the most romantic movies of all time.
What would you say if I told you I think I'm in love with you?
Love Story.
You're a preppy millionaire and I'm smart and cool.
If you marry her now, I'll not give you the time of day.
Nominated for seven Academy Awards, including Best Picture.
Jenny, I'm sorry.
Love means never having to say you're sorry.
Love Story. Own it now on Blu-ray and digital.
Love means never having to say you're sorry.
I dropped that line on the reg. Ryan O'Neill got his start in an ABC soap opera called
Peyton Place. That trailer, of course, was for Love Story, which is really what I know Ryan O'Neill
best from. It got him nominated for an Academy Award for Best Actor and a Golden Globe for Best Actor. He was in Barry
Lyndon, Paper Moon, What's Up Doc, A Bridge Too Far, The Driver. He was in a relationship with
Farrah Fawcett from 1979 to 1997. His daughter, Tatum O'Neill, is the youngest person ever to win an Academy Award. She won it for
Paper Moon, which, as I mentioned, co-starred her dad. Ryan O'Neill died on December 8th at the age of 82. Thank you. I was watching a lot of NCAA basketball
when Eric Montross was starring
for the University of North Carolina Tar Heels.
I was a big Michigan Wolverine fan,
particularly when the Fab Five were starting, and I watched Michigan lose to UNC in that 1993 title game.
In 2001, Eric Montross and Jerome Junkyard Dog Williams were traded to the Raptors for Cornell David, Tyrone Corbin, and Corliss Williamson.
There's a trade for you. Montross retired as a Toronto Raptor due to a foot injury,
and sadly, he was diagnosed with cancer and died on December 17th at the very young age of 52.
Do the Titans have a miracle left in them
in what has been a magical season to this point?
If they do, they need it now.
Christie kicks it high and short.
Going to be fielded by Lorenzo Neal at the 25.
Pitches it back to Wycheck.
He throws it across the field to Dyson.
He's got something.
He's got something. He's got something. He's got something.
He's got it.
He's got it.
He's got it.
Touchdown, Titans.
There are no flags on the field.
It's a miracle.
Tennessee has pulled a miracle.
As long as I'll live, I'll never forget the Music City Miracle Game.
I was wearing my Buffalo Bills
Doug Flutie jersey,
and I was at Mark Carey's place near
Yonge and Eglinton. We were watching
the game with a bunch of his buds.
I was royally ticked off
at Wade Phillips because
he played Rob Johnson
instead of Doug Flutie.
All Doug Flutie did was win that season.
But Johnson got the start.
I did not like Rob Johnson.
Still, it looked like the Buffalo Bills were going to win.
And at that time, the Bills were my team.
You just heard the play.
Steve Christie kicks a high and short kick fielded by Lorenzo Neal.
Neal hands the ball to Frank Wycheck,
and then Wycheck throws the ball across the field to Kevin Dyson.
It was a lateral pass.
It was legal.
Dyson ran 75 yards into the end zone for the go-ahead touchdown.
I've seen the replay a hundred times. I still don't believe it.
That was the day that the Bills stopped being my team.
Did I mention it was January 8, 2000?
Frank Wycheck would play 11 seasons for Washington and the Titans.
play 11 seasons for Washington and the Titans.
On December 9th, he died at the age of 52 after falling and hitting his head
at his home in Chattanooga.
To the O'Connor family, my wife Jill and I send our love on behalf of a truly grateful nation for her service.
I'm humbled to be asked to speak today.
To the members of the clergy, the Chief Justice, Justice of the Supreme Court, past and present,
members of the bench and bar, members of the Congress, distinguished guests, and fellow
Americans. More than 40 years ago, on a Wednesday in September 1981, the Senate Judiciary Committee came to order.
I was the ranking member of that committee, and the day's business was momentous.
The nomination of Sandra Day O'Connor to become the first woman in American history to serve as a Supreme Court
justice on the United States Supreme Court.
Announcing her nomination earlier that summer, President Reagan described her as, and I quote,
a person for all seasons.
And it was a person for all seasons who we saw at that hearing and the Americans
and the world would see through her extraordinary service as a justice and I might add as a
citizen.
Gracious and wise, civil and principled, Sandra Day O'Connor, the daughter of the American West,
was a pioneer in her own right, breaking down the barriers in legal and political worlds
and the nation's consciousness. To her, the Supreme Court was bedrock, the bedrock of America. It was the vital,
the vital line of defense for the values and the vision of our republic,
devoted not to pursuit of power for power's sake, but to make real the promise of America.
the promise of America. The American promise that holds that we're all created equal and deserve to be treated equally throughout our lives. The high court, she said in her opening
statement, and I quote, is a body to which all Americans look for the ultimate protection of their rights. It is the United States Supreme Court that we all turn
when we seek that which we want most from our government,
equal justice under law, end of quote.
Equal justice under law is the noblest aspiration of humankind and the aspiration of Sandra
Day O'Connor, one that she pursued her whole life.
The last justice to have held elective office, she was especially conscious of the law's
real impact on people's lives.
real impact on people's lives. One need not agree with all our decisions in order to recognize that our principles were deeply held and of the highest order, and that our desire for civility
was genuine. And our trust in the capacity of human institutions
to make life better
is what this world was abiding.
And how she embodied such attributes
under such pressure and scrutiny
helped empower generations of women
in every part of American life, including the court itself,
helping to open doors, secure freedoms, and prove that a woman can not only do anything a man can do,
but many times do it a heck of a lot better. Excuse my language, Father.
better. Excuse my language, Father. Beyond the bench, Justice O'Connor valued the civic life of the nation, in our schools, in our community centers, in families, and in our friendships.
Yes, America is the land of rugged individualists, inventors, and entrepreneurs.
But she knew no person is an island.
In the fabric of our nation, we're all inextricably linked.
And for the America to thrive, America must see themselves
not as enemies but as partners in the great work
of deciding our collective destiny.
That's the essence of our national experience, the sacred cause of democracy she devoted
her life to, one that we must continue.
one that we must continue. I'll close with how she closed her opening statement on that September day 42 years ago. She spoke about the power of family.
Family being the hope of the world, the strength of community,
the relationship between ourselves and generations as follow.
To her sons, Scott, Brian, and Jay, how she admired your intellect.
And you may recall that hearing your sense of adventure.
We all saw on that day and all those years after how much she loved your dad, a brilliant lawyer who always, always supported her.
And how hard all these years have been to watch a disease that robbed them both and all of you of so very much.
But I hope, I hope you hold on to what is never truly lost.
The love both of them had for you.
The love you had for them, the love they shared so freely, and the love you returned with equal
devotion. What a gift. What a gift. And I hope you find comfort in another profound consequence
of her service, the countless families that she helped
by speaking so openly about your family's experiences.
It matters.
In that opening statement on that day in September,
she mentioned how your parents got married in December.
Here we gather today,
a day before it would have been
their 71st wedding anniversary.
I know the anniversaries and the birthdays,
the moments big and small will be hard without them.
But as the saying goes,
memory is the power to gather roses in winter.
I hope you find the strength in knowing that your mom and dad are together again this December,
gathering roses in winter once again as great Americans,
both great Americans for all seasons.
May God bless Sandra Day O'Connor,
an American pioneer.
Sandra Day O'Connor,
the first woman to serve as a U.S. Supreme Court Justice,
passed away on December 1st in Phoenix, Arizona, at the age of 93.
When my father Harry started the company,
he would keep handwritten cards about each of his customers.
Long before big data, these were his way of ensuring that he knew his customers better than anyone.
He'd keep track of their measurements, brands, or styles they liked.
Anything he thought would help serve them better.
Sixty years later, that commitment to customer service still endures.
Today, our clothing advisors use the latest technology to keep up with much the same kinds of details Harry would,
to provide you with the best service.
Harry Rosen founded Harry Rosen Inc., the Canadian retail chain of 17 luxury men's clothing stores,
in 1954. That first store, by the way, was a 500 square foot store in Cabbage Town.
He opened with $500 that he borrowed. Harry Rosen was 92. This has been the Ridley Funeral Home
Memorial episode of Toronto Mic'd for the month of December 2023. If you lost someone you love in December,
my sincere condolences.
Peace and love to all.
I'm Toronto Mike. අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි Thank you.