Toronto Mike'd: The Official Toronto Mike Podcast - Rob Salem: Toronto Mike'd Podcast Episode 1489
Episode Date: May 14, 2024In this 1489th episode of Toronto Mike'd, Mike chats with Rob Salem who spent 40 years writing about entertainment in The Toronto Star. He also played the minister who married Snake and Spike on Deg...rassi! And did I mention he snorted coke with Mel Gibson? Toronto Mike'd is proudly brought to you by Great Lakes Brewery, Palma Pasta, Ridley Funeral Home, The Advantaged Investor podcast from Raymond James Canada, The Yes, We Are Open podcast from Moneris, The Toronto Maple Leafs Baseball Team and RecycleMyElectronics.ca. 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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Welcome to episode 1489 of Toronto Mic'd. Proudly brought to you by Great Lakes Brewery.
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Season 6 of Yes We Are Open, an award-winning
Meneris podcast hosted by FOTML Grego and Ridley Funeral Home,
pillars of the community since 1921. Today, making his
Toronto mic debut is Rob Salem. Welcome, Rob.
Hello. Hello. Hello.
Good to see you.
Good to be seen.
Look, you know, I did meet you.
I met you at a David Kynes Hollywood Suite event. Oh, the breakfast. Good to be seen. Love, you know, I did meet you. I met you at a David Kines Hollywood Suite event.
Oh, the breakfast.
The breakfast, yeah.
I can't remember who introduced us,
but somebody introduced me to you,
and I was like, I gotta get Rob on Toronto Miked,
and here you are.
And here I am.
And how are you feeling today?
To be quite honest, I'm a little hungover.
What happened last night?
Can we talk about that?
Well, yeah, I've been teaching at Humber
and they've suspended the program as of yesterday.
So I'm actually technically retired,
although I'm doing some auditioning acting stuff,
but I'm actually technically now officially retired.
I was at the Star for 40 years.
Wow.
And I've been teaching for the last 18.
And now I'm a man of leisure.
Now I am a burden upon society.
Okay.
So let me understand this.
So school's out for summer.
So this was just the end of the semester.
Yeah.
They're just not starting again next year.
Oh, so you were told like your services are no longer required.
Basically.
Yeah.
They said suspended, but that's for future consideration.
But I'm not.
Why is that?
Give us a little more detail.
You know why it is?
I'll tell you exactly why it is.
Low enrollment, and it's because we've
been denied most of the international students that
really made up the bulk of the program.
And that brought it along with its own problems in terms of, because it's a writing program. So, and that brought it along with its own problems
in terms of, because it's a writing program, so.
Well, interesting.
So is this, I mean, part of my ignorance,
but is this like a new rule or law?
Yeah, new law, new law, limiting the number
of international students that can.
What's the rationale behind that?
Like what's the method to that madness?
I'm not entirely sure.
I guess, obviously, to keep things open for Canadian locals.
Yeah, but I don't know that there were international
students to the exclusion of Toronto students,
but yeah, it's just a general immigration issue.
And I'm sure there are very good reasons for it.
But are you kind of, is any part of you happy that you've been forced to actually retire?
That sounds like a pretty good-
Well, no.
I mean, it's slipping all the way and this is very near where the school is.
Yeah, so it was the Humber College South Campus by the lakeshore.
Yeah.
So I won't miss that.
Although next year I was going to be all all online again as I was during COVID.
But yeah, I'll miss it, I'll miss it.
It's really great to be able to take this arcane knowledge
that I've assembled over these last 15 years,
useless for just about anything other than criticism
and teaching others.
You know, it is useful for podcasts though.
Yes, that's true.
Now we're meeting, you know, we met each other briefly
at the Hollywood Suite event.
Yeah.
But now we'll, you know, spend some real time together.
And again, I was just realizing though,
you'd have to schlep your way down to the lake shore again
to pop over now.
It was sort of nostalgic,
given that this all came down yesterday.
And anyway, that's a long way of explaining why I'm hung over, to pop over now. It was sort of nostalgic given that this all came down yesterday.
And anyway, that's a long way of explaining why I'm hungover because we had a few cocktails
to toast the
What is your drink of choice?
Bloody Caesar.
Bloody Caesar.
Okay.
Or bourbon.
Do you ever drink a beer?
Or no, you're a
I know I do.
I have been known to drink beer.
Okay.
I would love to send you home today with some fresh craft beer from Great Lakes Brewery. That would be lovely. So that's going home
with you. You got some lagers, some Canuck Pale Ale, very popular. And that
actually might be just the thing for the hangover. Little hair of the puppy. Hair of the
dog that bit you. I think there's a song about that. Okay, so also just while I'm
giving you your your drink and grub here and we're gonna get to know you, I gotta know
what was going on at the star. I'd love to hear I mean, I love
we're gonna find more details on the class at Humber College is
it TV history?
It's I'm teaching TV history. It's the program was TV writing
and producing. So it was basically a showrunner's course.
So my job was to acquaint them with 50 years of television,
amazing from I love Lucy to the sopranos, and just show them Roadrunner's course. So my job was to acquaint them with 50 years of television. Amazing.
From I Love Lucy to The Sopranos and just show them stuff and then have them criticize
it and analyze it.
I love it. Can you just teach me this course? Like what would it cost for me to hire you
as my personal tutor? I wish, I mean, I don't remember classes like this, but I did take
a pop culture class at U of T, which was pretty fun.
I did an essay on Babe Ruth, for goodness sake,
so that was pretty cool.
But TV history, that sounds amazing.
Oh, it is so much fun, and it's great.
This is the part that I'll miss,
watching the light go on in their eyes.
Because, for example, this is a group of students,
they're all post grads, so they're in the mid-20s.
Most of them have never seen I Love Lucy.
And that was the template for every situation comedy
that followed, or at least multi-camera situation comedy,
to this day.
And I'll get, occasionally, I will get emails from students
after the course saying, oh, you turned me on to this,
and I'm now watching Colombo obsessively,
or I'm now watching this.
So that's exciting, that's fun.
Let me just hazard a guess
as I got a couple of kids, one, I have four kids,
but there's the two older kids, I kind of look at them
and their behavior versus mine, where when I was growing up,
I'm a Gen Xer, like we watched what was on the TV
at the time in front of it, right?
Like what was on, that's right.
So I love Lucy, I saw a lot of I love Lucy.
I saw a lot of stuff because it was what was on
and you watched it.
But meanwhile, my kids are, everything they watch is,
they purposefully select it and watch it on demand.
So there's, I can't imagine they would just voluntarily say,
let me try this black and white thing
from before my dad was born.
Yeah, no, and it's, well, the whole paradigm has shifted
much the same way that it did when HBO first
started doing like Sex and the City and The Sopranos.
And prior to that had been only like pay-per-view boxing and movies.
And Dream On, which I quite enjoyed.
And Dream On, which was great.
In high school, yeah.
That was a great show.
That was the first sitcom to use insanity.
It was not, it was very popular in my high school because it was like a funny show with boobs. Yeah it was like perfect yeah. Yeah
anyway so HBO changed the paradigm and suddenly they became the boutique source
for yeah for all the really good television TV better than TV and then
now the streamers have come along and upset the Apple cart again but the big
change in the paradigm is this
being able to watch what you want when you want. And I found it hard to make that adjustment
myself because I still record things when they air to watch later.
But I don't actually want something. I don't think I can remember the last time I watched
live television.
Other than sports, because I still am guilty of tuning in to watch, you know,
leave playoff games and live sports.
So sports has to be live for me.
But other than that, I'm gonna just think on this.
I don't remember the last time either,
unless it was like the Oscars,
but even that we pause it when it starts
and then we get the kids to bed
and then we sort of catch up and skip commercials and stuff.
So it's sort of live, but maybe Oscars,
maybe something like if I was watching the Grammys
or something like that, but television, television?
Hmm.
No.
Long time ago.
Yeah. Long time ago.
And the other thing is,
and it's gonna be hard to make the separation.
I would watch all the new stuff
just to keep up on it with the students.
Right.
I don't have to do that anymore.
But I still watch like a lot of television.
So may I ask, like, I'm gonna pick a show
that my daughter turned me on to,
and I actually really like, so I've been digging it.
But Euphoria, for example.
Which I have not watched.
So okay, I was gonna ask you if this is the kind of,
you know, you gotta, what the kids are watching.
Yeah, I should have watched it and meant to watch it.
But the thing is, there's just too much stuff.
If I was a TV critic now,
and I haven't done it for like 10 years,
but if I was a TV critic now, I couldn't cover it.
There's just too much.
You know what, we're gonna talk about all,
so I was like, I think I was mid-sentence
giving you a lasagna there, and then we got sidetracked.
That's gonna happen, Rob.
I love it when that happens, actually.
But I do have a lasagna for you
It's in my freezer right now. It's courtesy of Palma pasta
They're in Mississauga and Oakville delicious Italian food. So you're taking that home with you
It'll go nicely with that will be wonderful. And I'm a big Italy fan. We
Up until this year we went every kind every year for the last 20 years
Lucky guy love Italy any particular part of Italy?
Tuscany.
Oh yeah, you know what?
Lucky man.
A little village called Anghiari.
It's just, it's the 12th century walled village
on the side of a mountain.
See, they figured it out.
Like that's the lifestyle.
That's exactly it.
They know what life is about and they live it.
It's wonderful.
Listen, let's go, man.
Let's go and we'll write it off by recording podcasts there.
And speaking of hangovers,
you don't really get a hangover from the wine
because there's no cell fights in it.
Look, pro tip.
Love it.
Delicious food, great wine.
You're all set here.
Now, I do want to let the listenership know,
and you Rob, that TMLX 15, that's the 15th Toronto
Mike listener experience, is happening at Great Lakes Brewery, the Southern, you'd have
to schlep, I like this word schlep, like you said the word schlep, right?
Like I'm using it like now all the time, like it's my word.
You got to schlep your way to Southern Etobicoke.
It's down the street from the Costco.
So the street's called Queen Elizabeth Boulevard, number 30 to be precise, near Royal York. Royal York, say that quickly.
Royal York.
Royal York. I find it tough to come out of the Royal into the York, but I have trouble
with some basic words, Rob. But basically everybody is invited June 27 from 6 to 9 PM
and Palma Pasta will feed you. Great Lakes will buy you your first beer
and you'll just hang with great FOTMs.
We're gonna have a good time.
So everyone's invited, including you, Rob.
June 27th, 6 p.m.
Sounds like fun.
Come on out, man, come on out.
All right, well, we'll give you more gifts
later in the program, but maybe bring us back.
Like when did you realize you could get a gig?
Like this sounds like my dream gig,
entertainment critic and columnist
and editor at the Toronto Star well it's interesting actually and they
used to run an ad in the paper promoting the column saying yes he gets paid to
watch TV and no there are no openings I started out I was an actor not in a
stand-up comic and not particularly good at either of those things but like like what? Like Danger Bay? What were you in? Little Hobo? What's going on?
Actually, I got more acting work once I started writing for The Star, but I was
on a Degrassi. I've actually acted with Drake. Oh, The Next Generation? Yeah.
Okay. What did you play on that show? I was the priest in Married Spike and Snake.
Honestly, that's a... The Jewish Honestly, that's a fun fact.
They're called rabbis, right?
Yes, but in this case, it was a minister.
Oh, it's a minister.
Okay.
But it was weird because it was an actual minister's like from an actual clovier to
religious people.
It was a real minister's cassock.
So just so I don't pass this by here.
So of course I was the OG Degrassi viewer.
I never missed that.
That might be the last time I had to be in front of my TV.
I think it was Monday nights at eight or something like that,
but loved my Degrassi.
But Snake of course, who's one of the zit remedy members.
Okay. One third of the zit remedy.
Snake marries Spike who had that baby with Shane. Okay. One third of the Zitromy snake marries Spike who had that baby with Shane,
right? Shane, uh, sadly drug addled. Uh, I think, uh, he took two, I don't know what
happened to him, cocaine or LSD. I can't remember now, but he had a drug problem and he got,
I think he thought he could fly. I'm trying to remember if I'm conflating my stories,
but bottom line is Andy will correct me later. She's the biggest Degrassi fan. I know she's
listening right now, but you're the person who married Snake.
I married Snake and Spike.
Spike, which is amazing.
You're a part of Canadian TV history.
Absolutely, and you know what?
I still get checks.
Really?
Yes, I still get residual checks.
Last one was like 45 bucks, which is huge for residual checks.
It's like that Seinfeld episode
when Jerry keeps getting the checks
from that Japanese ad he was in.
Yeah.
Whatever it was.
That's funny.
But it's always, I framed the first one and I've cashed everyone since.
So yeah, might as well cash that Degrassi money.
So is that your, that's your biggest role to date?
Um, well-
No shame in that game.
I was in a couple of movies, Revenge of the Radioactive Reporter.
I did not play the
I haven't seen that one yet. Is it good? No one's seen that one and it's a good thing and put it this way
I did it under a pseudonym Mel Asbore, which is my name backwards. Oh, yes, it is
Well done and I did like Lost Girl. I
Whatever shows have I done? I've done a lot of biographies,
like Canadian biographies, like Candy,
and some of the Mr. Dress Up movie.
Oh, where you play yourself talking about the show.
Of course, you're like the talking head.
Anyone who's really interested in this,
I do have an IMDB page.
Well, people are gonna be interested.
I'm friendly with, went to my high school,
many years before me, I just wanna point out, we become very good buds is bill brio. Oh bill
I'm doing radio with bill tonight actually what radio?
See I UT news talk news talk 1010 with bill brio tonight. Okay, that's wild bill brio
Yeah, good buds plays hockey with my good friend Joe Cini.
Lovely, lovely man, known him for years.
So do you guys, is it when they're making,
I don't know, a documentary about something
like Mr. Dress Up and they need somebody to speak to it,
do they decide, am I gonna go Brio
or am I gonna go Salem?
He actually, when I left the star,
he took over most of my gigs,
because I was like news channel,
and I had fairly regular gigs
on a lot of different news shows.
And as soon as I was no longer the official TV critic,
that all dried up fairly quickly.
That's why it's so nice to do something like this.
And Bill took over those, so more power to him.
And Bill's got a website.
Of course, b TV. Yeah.
Brio.tv or something like that. And I do, we'll say,
I produced the humble and Fred show and I booked Bill Brio once a month to pop
on humble and Fred and tell them what they should be watching.
Yeah. He's so enthusiastic, Bill. And it's such a sweet man.
And he collects these 16 millimeter films.
He's got, and he does these regular TV on film nights where he shows stuff.
Cause a lot of this TV stuff was circulated to the stations on 16. No, wow. Wow. Okay, so
Brillo if you're listening your ears are burning. This is why Rob and I are chatting about you here, but back to Rob Salem
So, okay, so you were an occasional actor
I was that was my
Goal was but what is the stand-? You were at like yuk yuk's and stuff?
Yeah, I was taking second city workshops being taught by none other than John Candy and Joe
Flaherty. Whoa.
Both sadly left us but John was the one who suggested I go into stand up, which I think
was just his way of saying you don't work well with others. And I did I did stand up for a while.
I was very mediocre. Met my wife though. Oh that's good.
Yeah. So is this this is a Mark Breslin's Yucky Yucks and like I'm
wondering can you name check any of the other comics you picked? Would John Wynne be one of them?
Howie Mandel started the same night I did. Jim Carrey who I actually wrote for
at one point. That's a big name should dropped in there. I noticed on your list of guests Ralph
Ben-Murky he was a comic then. Yeah yeah. A lot of guys. He was hosting a lot of
those shows as I recall. Like so John Wing is he one of the guys? Yeah John
Wing was there when I was there. And I'm trying to think Larry Horowitz? Larry
Horowitz he was he was the master he was like they just the he did the same exact
set every time, but
it was always flawless. So you couldn't fault him because it was a great set.
All right. Now I got to ask you about the most comics who were on that scene. Their
favorite comic was Mike McDonald.
Oh, Mike was brilliant. Mike was just brilliant. Yeah. I didn't really know him that well personally,
because I was still very low-escalon comic.
I would go on after midnight.
I'm wondering if Larry Fedorik was on the scene
at that time.
Yeah.
Okay, Larry Fedorik, who I produced his podcast
later that same life, so it's a small world there.
He went into radio, so you went into newspaper,
he went into radio.
I went into newspaper, yeah. So I got a job in order to support
my stand-up comedy career,
which then paid even less than it does now.
Which is difficult.
Yeah, and again, I was not that good.
So I could have gotten better if I'd have,
I'd like to think that I could have.
You don't have any recordings of a set you ever did.
I do, and I've been afraid to play them.
Because I want to share it with the world. I do have a recording of a set. Because we and no one I do and I've been afraid to play them because I want to share it. I do have a recording of a set because we're going to do tangents
and because you mentioned John Candy and Joe Flaherty, which are pretty awesome teachers
to have. Oh, you're at SCTV. That's wild. They were both real mentors to me. So six
years ago yesterday, I believe six years ago yesterday, there was an SCTV reunion. John,
of course, not there already passed, but Joe was there. And this was by, I've talked to many people, including, who have I talked to?
Dave Thomas and many people like that who were at the event.
I was at the event.
So by all accounts, this was a good three hours, right?
Yes, it was astounding.
Yeah. So I'm hearing it went well.
And this is six years ago.
This was all recorded. Martin Scorsese was directing this. Jimmy Kimmel was astounding. Yeah. So I'm hearing it went well and this is six years ago. This was all recorded.
Martin Scorsese was directing this.
Jimmy Kimmel was hosting it.
Do you have any insight into why this will likely never see the light of day?
What happened?
Do you know?
I think Scorsese got busy with other stuff.
Remember there's a whole...
The Irishman?
Yeah.
Well, yeah.
And also the pandemic came and that put everything on hold. And
it's just, it's languishing. It's the last I heard was that there is actually a possibility
one day it will get made. But, but the longer you wait, the less likely this becomes like
already we've lost, you know, Joe Flaherty, for example. So when this comes out, it is,
I mean, it's going to be time stamped now. Yeah, well, except, and I learned there's also teaching and teaching showing the students,
which was another thing I did as an actor, by the way, I was an extra on SCTV.
Do you remember the skit?
Skits, many skits, Bob Lope Desert Classic, the Alki Stereopolis Pool Tournament, Sid
Dithers, Johnny LaRue. Oh my goodness. Classics. Okay. Yeah. So what were you
saying there? You learned something? So I, the last I heard was that it might happen. But where
did you hear that? Well Joe and I don't think he had any real knowledge. See Dave Thomas doesn't
think it's going to happen. I've had a couple of long chats happen I've talked to him about it, too. Yeah. No, I honestly I don't think it's gonna happen
I think that footage may get released someday. Is it gonna be like get back where I'll be like 80 years old
Yeah, yeah, we'll have to get Peter Jackson to put it together
It'll be like in the far-off future
one of the best things about this thing was they had a crane, a camera crane, and
it had Johnny LaRue written on the side of it, which if people who watch the show will
remember he was always after the crane shot.
Right. You know what? I'm like, I'm getting angry again, because six years is a long time
for this footage to just languish on. So I don't know in some crate somewhere. And it
sounds like the event went well. And I mean, you got Rick Moranis out for this, right?
That was a big deal because as far as I know, Ian Thomas had a
benefit for his son who was badly injured in an accident.
And Rick, of course, came out to that and reunited with Dave Thomas.
And you got your Bob and Doug McKenzie, but I don't believe other than some
radio ads for beer, but other than these radio ads for beer. Yeah, but other than these radio ads for beer
Which were directed by an effort Ian by the way, but other than that, I don't think I think Larry McInnes directed those
I don't believe there's any
Rick Moranis SC TV anything that's happened in quite a while. So the fact he was there should make that footage rather valuable
I would think he hasn't really done anything other than raise his family and record a country album. Oh really? So left field. Out of nowhere. Out of nowhere he did a
country album. Beyonce's doing it, Rick Moranis is doing it. Michael O'Donoghue did a country,
at least a country song I don't know about it. Wow okay I'm learning a lot. So you have no,
you think you might see the light of day at one day but we don't know anything. Because
Martin Scorsese ever on the public record said anything
about the SCTV doc.
No, nothing since he was there obviously. Um, but no, he has
not said anything since.
He doesn't mean busy. Like, yeah, he's busy. He's got the
killers of the flower moon or whatever. Like he's got lots of
stuff going on.
Well, you know, at this point it's an editor's job and he's
got like one of the best editors in the business.
I'll give it to my buddy buddy Stu Stone for goodness sake.
Oh sure.
Anyway I don't know if we'll ever see it. I'd like to tell you being there was just spectacular.
Do you wish now you had, and they probably had strict rules against it,
but you had secretly recorded some footage like so you could just leak that to people?
Yes, yes I wish I had.
If you had known right, if you had only know Martin Scorsese was never going to produce this documentary you would have secretly
recorded video and you would have been very popular for doing that. Yeah, but you
know who knows in some form it could show up I mean you know now with the
multi-platforms and it could it could research. So who owns the footage?
Scorsese own this footage? I'm assuming yes.
I don't know who funded the documentary.
I don't know if it was like for Netflix or something.
I think it was HBO, but I may be wrong on that.
See, I wonder if it was to coincide
with some streaming platform,
maybe Netflix was also going to,
you know, this kind of happened with Kids in the Hall,
right? Yeah.
They made the doc, shout out to FOTM Paul Myers,
they made the documentary. Shout out to FOTM Paul Meyers. They made the documentary
and it coincided with kind of a new season and the old stuff being on Prime. Like there was a
whole so I feel like maybe this doc was tied to some kind of a streaming having all the SCTV stuff
restored or whatever and available on demand. And then something business wise fell through with
that. And then it made it. Yeah, I think it's a kind of a complicated,
they are, some are available on video.
Most SCTV sketches, including by the way,
all the ones that I'm in, are available on YouTube.
I noticed that when Joe Flaherty died,
it's a lot of good stuff.
All right, so take us back to how you end up
at the Toronto Star.
Well, again, I'm doing standup, not making any money,
moved out on my own, dropped out of high school.
I was like 17.
What high school did you go to?
Very many, because I moved around a lot.
But mostly George Vannier.
Okay.
With Maurice LaMarche, the voice of the brain
and Pinky and the Brain.
That's a fun fact.
Yeah, so he and I were best pals.
Anyway, I was on my own, I needed to pay rent.
My father played poker with one of the execs at the Star
and got me a job as a copy boy.
And this was, in fact, I am the last copy boy
to work his way up through the ranks from copy boy
No one else has done it since because I go to J school and you know be like
Have a degree and stuff and I actually worked my way up and just by making myself a total pest
I just hung around the entertainment department. That's the way we used to do it, right?
That's the old school way get into the mail room or something and then you see this in the movies all the time
Okay, it doesn't happen like that anymore.
Well, yeah, and remember this was like the 70s.
So this was like all the president's men era of newspapers and it was a very exciting time.
Well any, like who was at the Toronto Star that you remember when you got there?
Peter Goddard, the late great Peter Goddard who also mentored me.
Clyde Gilmore was the movie critic.
Sid Eilman wrote the gossip column.
Later went on to become the editor.
Who else was there?
Ron Bass came in, movie critic.
Bruce Blackadar.
It was an all-star.
Christy Blatchford used to work there.
In fact, I sat next to her.
Wow.
Before she went to The Sun, she was at the star. Bruce Kirkland, who also at the Sun, was at the Star. It was
William Littler, Regina Mallett. It was the entertainment meetings once a week were like
the Algonquin Roundtable. It was just so stimulating and so interesting and there were such interesting,
eccentric people. And it's an era that, I mean,
they don't really even have an entertainment section anymore.
No, I don't think so,
because Peter Howell does freelance work,
and Ben Rayner is not there anymore.
Shout out to Ben Rayner.
Yeah, he's still doing a few pieces now and then.
Yeah, he works in a record store in East York,
I wanna say, on the Danforth.
I love Ben, I love Ben.
What a good writer. Yeah, me too.
What a good writer.
I'm a big Ben head here too.
Shout out to Ben Rayner. Yeah. And I like Peter How I'm a big, big Ben head here too. Uh, shout out to Ben Rainer.
Yeah.
And, uh, I like Peter Howell too, actually.
Yeah, I like Peter.
Peter actually took, I was a movie critic originally and Peter took over
my job when I went to TV.
These are the fun facts I'm looking for my friend.
Would you say a few more words about Peter Goddard?
Like, uh, sadly never will be on Toronto mic'd, but, uh,
he was incredible.
He was a genius.
Um, he, it was interesting to me because he was the first one
to really befriend me as a young puppet, the star.
And as a teenager, he was the enemy to us,
because he would go to these concerts that we all wanted
to go to or went to, and would be critical,
when appropriate, which was a lot.
And he was the enemy, everybody just hated him with a passion,
and then you meet him, and he is the sweetest,
most lovely man, or was.
It was another interesting, later on,
when I was an editor, I was editing his copy,
which was always an adventure, because he was so brilliant.
He would complete thoughts in one paragraph,
and then start the thought four paragraphs later.
So you had to juggle the whole thing around
to make it make sense.
Like a Tarantino film.
Yeah, yeah, very much.
It was like a jigsaw puzzle.
But just, the other thing that was interesting
to watch him work was when he was trying
to sort of order his thoughts,
he would go to the supply cabinet
and count blank pieces of paper.
Interesting.
It was very interesting.
I should try that.
It seemed to work for him, but that's what I interpret him doing,
because he did it all the time.
Interesting.
But amazing man, just to add, and again, a real mentor.
He had me reviewing rock concerts, which I had no idea how to do,
because how do you criticize a rock concert in a sort of objective, subjective by definition.
And so much is tied to your personal musical taste.
Exactly, subjective by definition.
So it's tough, but I did it.
And he also, I will never forget,
when I was still a copy boy,
the Rolling Stones played the El Macombo.
Right.
And Peter called in and I was,
one of the copy boy jobs was taking copy over the phone. And he called up and said,, you know, one of the copy of which I was was taking copy over the phone.
And he called up and said, why don't you come up?
And I was too new, too young, too timid.
I didn't go.
I missed the Rolling Stones and the Yelma combo.
He regrets you have a few.
That's a big one.
But that's one you can mention.
Yeah, but he actually, I mean,
this young snot-nosed kid at the copy desk,
he actually invited me to come up.
So he was a great guy.
I think Weckerle is still trying to get the Stones
to come back to the Elmo.
So if you have any contacts there.
Yeah.
Speaking of Scorsese, you'll always hear
a good Rolling Stones song in a Scorsese movie.
Okay, soon I wanna talk movies with you.
So you're Copyboy, which is like an entry level thing because of a connect.
It's all who you know, right?
Right.
So yeah, it was who I knew or who my father knew.
And then I sort of weren't my way into doing the listings, the event listings.
So there'd be a calendar and I would.
So I knew all the clubs and knew everybody who was booking everything.
So that was a really good background.
And then eventually I started the man who is now my next door neighbor, Kevin Boland, gave me a gig writing, first story I wrote was about stand-up comedy,
actually. Okay. What was like, what specifically? It was how to be a stand-up comic. And I used
Howie Mandel as the example because he was just burning up right then. And then after that,
I have this really bizarre obsession with Superman.
I collect Superman.
I saw your shoes.
And I've got the shoes on today.
So you and Jerry Seinfeld have this obsession.
Yes, we share it.
Anyway, so I wrote a story when Superman movie came out
in 77, I wrote a story about the history of Superman.
Which involves the Toronto Star, right?
Yes, Jerry Siegel, sorry, Joe Schuster, the artist, was born in Toronto, grew up in Toronto.
At the age of nine, he was a Toronto Star newsboy, right downtown, and he based his
design for Metropolis on the Toronto skyline.
And the Daily Planet was originally the Daily Star star and it was based on the Toronto Star
Love it. What were those little vignettes? We used to watch
Historical moments or what were they called?
Moments in history. Yeah, there's so many either burned my brain. I remember Superman one. Yeah. Yeah
See it all come to full circle here. So but you a you were a Superman fan before you worked at the Toronto Star
Yeah, that was the weird thing
I became a meek mile man reporter for a great Metropolitan newspaper and it didn't know that Superman is well
Maybe by then I did I was I've been a Superman fan since I was a little kid and my mother
Eventually threw away all my comics and it's warped me for the rest of my that's another regret
I'm counting them for you, Rob.
I'll leave here with a good annotated list.
Heritage minutes.
Heritage minutes.
Do you have a favorite heritage minute?
Oh, that one.
Absolutely.
That one for sure.
For you.
I got a well, the one the burnt toast Dr. Penfield is like, I just every time I smell burnt toast,
I'm worried I'm having a stroke, okay?
I think we all do that.
And the explosion in the Halifax Harbor there,
there was the biggest explosion in North American history
and the guy who's doing the Morse code to warn people,
but of course he ends up dying.
Yeah, there's a lot of great, those heritage minutes.
Yes, for a fairly young country,
we've got vast and complex heritage. Laura Secord, not just a lot of great of those heritage minutes. Yes, for a fairly young country, we've got vast and complex.
Laura Secord, we're not just a chocolate woman.
Nothing no, not just for chocolates, but Laura Secord warning the the Brits
that the Americans were planning that surprise attack.
That's a heritage minute.
OK, lots of great ones there.
OK, so I'm keeping track of these jobs.
So you're doing listings.
So you're a copy boy.
Now you're doing listings.
I'm doing listings and I'm told by the editor at the time, I can't use
verbs. So I go through that period and then Kevin Boland lets me
freelance this piece on comedy and then Superman. And the greatest thing about
writing for a newspaper is it's really basic writing. It's like who, what, why,
when, where,
you've got to, people have to know what's going on.
By the way. Just the facts, ma'am.
Exactly, well, and then you go to the next step
and you actually inject some personality into it.
That's columnist, right?
Yeah, yeah.
But it's the best way to learn to write.
So I was always, of all the classes that I took
in the various high schools I went to,
English was the one that I excelled at.
Yeah, bottom line is you could write.
Yeah, I could put a few words together.
You were a gifted writer.
I was a voracious reader when I was a kid.
Right.
Even though you didn't have a high school diploma.
No.
You were a gifted writer and the Toronto Star recognized that.
Yeah, well it got to the point eventually that it didn't matter that I was in high
school drama because I'd been there for like, you know, 30, 40 years.
Right.
It's like, there's a certain amount of credibility that comes with that. I mean, they didn't fire you, so you must be good.
So, what's your first real writing job, like full-time writing job? Like, entertainment critic?
Yeah, it was entertainment. Again, I made a pest of myself. I hung around the entertainment department.
Mostly I remember because I really, I was jealous of all the freebies that they got.
Yeah. You know, just like, like when I was a kid, I would go to a place called Cinebooks,
and I would go buy press kits for movies, because they had movie posters and press kits and stuff.
And then I went on to have this job where my desk was piled four feet high with them,
and I was throwing them out by the armful. But so I was always had that interest.
So remind me what calendar year do you become a copy boy at the Tronstar?
77.
77.
Okay, so I'm just doing the math.
So the Christopher Reeve Superman came out also 77 come out at that time, right?
That's the first one, right?
Yeah.
Okay.
I made the jump fairly quickly.
Yeah. So it I made the jump fairly quickly. Yeah. So,
but it was a process. I mean, so I started doing the listings, no verbs.
Then eventually they let me write more and more and more.
And then God had really got a hold of me and got me doing concerts because there
were so many concerts to cover.
What an amazing life you've led. You realize how blessed you are that this happened to you.
We, we, Rita and I, Rita Zekes is my wife.
Of course.
Another columnist.
Yeah, who should be a Toronto, an FOTM like you.
Like I grew up in a Toronto star household,
so I was reading all of you.
Yeah, but Rita and I,
I forget the point I was gonna make.
Basically how blessed you are.
Oh, right, yes.
Rita and I discuss that all the time
because we started- I'm keeping track here.
We started to reminisce about just the people that we've met and the stuff that
we've got to do. And it's, it's such a rarefied privileged place to be a
journalist, particularly an entertainment journalist.
But you're an entertainment journalist with Canada's largest newspaper.
Yeah. And it's, you get access to everything. I've met all of my heroes.
Um, I really, who are these heroes?
John Cleaves, uh, Bob Newhart, William Shatner.
All three still with us. Look, no shouts out to Ridley Funeral Home.
Yeah, I co-wrote for William Shatner. They made him editor for a day and I
ghost wrote his column. Okay. I got to introduce him at Massey Hall, so it was two huge
milestones. I got to refer to Bill Shatner as Bill in front of an audience, and I got to go on the
stage at Massey Hall.
Amazing.
Two times.
Again, you're right.
I had to buy best expenses.
So you're covering the entertainment critic and columnist and editor at the Toronto Star,
Canada's largest newspaper in an era when newspapers mattered.
Yeah, especially the Star.
Yeah, especially the Star.
Largest circulation in the, still the largest circulation in the country,
but that's the shrinking pie.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So what year do you retire from the Toronto Star?
2000, well, 10 years ago, 10, 11 years ago.
And again, I got to say it was not my idea.
Well, this is the, on Toronto Mike, We ask if you got the tap on the shoulder.
Well, they're very devious about it.
They transferred me.
They transferred me to the city desk
because they needed me there.
They said, yeah, it was not.
And I tried to get stories into the
A section and they just wouldn't take
any my assignments
I basically it was I mean, I can't say this officially
Why can't you if they were squeezing me out as they did most people who?
I think you can say that like you I you can say that you were squeezed out in your opinion
You were squeezed out. That's what's the difference. They weren't yeah. Yeah, they were encouraging me to leave
And I had because I was so such a workaholic, I had like six months
vacation time owed. So I took that, I took half a year off. Okay. And then came back
to the city desk, couldn't get anything in the paper, eventually just I was
beating a dead horse. And they were starting to de-nacker the Entertainment
Department at that point. So there were people leaving willy-nilly and shortly thereafter they left the building.
Were you barely severed? Yes, I got a good deal. That's everything at the end of the day. I got
a good deal and I continue to get good pension. So I'll cancel this phone call I'm making to
my lawyer, Lauren Honnickman. We don't need it. Lauren Honnickman. I know Lauren. Say hi for me.
Shout out to Lauren Honnickman. I have right now Say hi for me. Shout out to Lauren Honickman.
I have right now, you'll love this,
I think you'll love this,
that there's a legal issue with my dear friend,
Peter Gross.
Oh yes, Peter.
Who I, we'll get back to this when I give you this book,
but I spent quite a bit of time with Peter on Sunday.
But he was here last week actually
for an episode of Toronto Mic'd and more,
which people can hear.
I had to, I got in trouble for this episode. Hopefully I won't get in trouble for the episode I'm recording right now. But I
actually like, it's very rare in the Toronto Mike. This is almost episode 1500 and I can tell you,
I only once had to kind of go in and edit something. And that was because Ed Keenan of the
Toronto star started sharing what happened in court with the Rob Ford crack video.
And then after the recording, he looks at me like he saw a ghost and Ed says,
there's a publication ban.
And I said, yeah, like I don't care.
Like, I just don't care.
He's like, no, you have to anyways, we took it out just because I like Ed Keenan
and I didn't want anyone to get in big trouble here.
But then I had to with this Peter Gross and we'll
get back to where I'm going with Peter Gross, but
uh, we had content in this episode that was
illegal, which sounds exciting, but it's true.
And I had to censor it.
So there you go.
But Peter Gross, who I spent time Sunday, I'll
type that in a minute, but he, uh, is getting some,
a pro bono help from, uh, his his city TV buddy Lauren Honigman. Yeah
We're helping each other out here Bob. You're now in FOTM. Okay, glad to hear so did you enjoy the
City TV era the Moses I did and I hung a lot. Well, actually I ended up working for Tom television
Driving classics. I was a host on driving classics
Which is a station that could not exist today
because it was just so politically incorrect.
But yeah, I hung out.
Six years you did that.
Yeah, I did that for six years.
And I hung out with those people,
I mean that was the scene then.
I spent most of my time on Queen Street West.
299.
Which was happening then.
Steve Anthony was like my best pal.
Well still is. That man's been over a few times, I love that guy. Yeah Anthony was like my best pal. Well, still is.
That man's been over a few times.
I love that guy.
Yeah, he's a sweet man.
He drinks, speaking of sweet, he drinks,
gotta get it right, he drinks coffee.
The coffee he brought in had six sweeteners in it.
And he says, in the middle of the episode, he says,
and I said, like, that's ridiculous.
He goes, try it.
I took one sip.
Oh my God, six sweeteners. Like,
and I drink my coffee black, but even back before I did, I couldn't do a full sweetener. Like it
has to be like a one third of a sweetener or whatever for my coffee. But, uh, yeah, you know,
I guess, and like I said, David's better than doing Coke, like cocaine, not Coca-Cola, but, uh,
how is, uh, Steve, did he move back to Toronto? He's actually in Calgary
right now visiting his sister. But yes he did move back to Toronto. He was in Prince Edward County
for a while. And he's back. Yeah he had a B&B for a while. Yeah I remember this. But now he's back
but he's currently in Calgary. Okay I dig that guy. In fact he came up recently because
the program director at CFNY who put Humble and Fred together talked about, Steve Anthony
was the morning show.
So between Pete and Geets and Humble and Fred there was a period of time when it was Steve
Anthony on CFNY.
Yep.
The song, The Boy in the Box, the Cory, what's his name?
Cory Hart.
Cory Hart's song.
That was about Steve.
Yeah, it was at Showm FM.
Showm FM, yeah.
Yeah, that's one of the great stories.
Okay, so who else at City TV were you buddies with? Um, well, gosh, just about the whole space crew. Um, Mark
Askwith, who was the producer there. Um, so all those people, all the driving people,
um, who else? Well, you know, just the whole gang, I mean, who's there? Who was there?
It's a campaign on the spot here. You didn't know this was City TV cast
Yeah, Mark Daly and the voice Marilyn
Dennis hold on you said Mark Daly which means I'm now obligated to play this
I'll do the following program contains adult themes nudity in coarse language viewer and parental discretion is advised
Oh, that just warms me all over another Another lovely man, you're bringing up all these people
who I absolutely adore and Mark was certainly one of them.
By the way, there's a picture of Brian Linehan
to my right here.
Someone else I adored.
Okay, well tell me about these people.
I sadly can't get those people on Toronto Mic'd.
Brian, Brian, well you can't get Brian
because he's dead but.
Or Mark.
But he, I remember he was during the days of SCTV
and he and I were on our way to a movie junket.
He used to do all the junkets too.
And he was talking about Marty doing
his Brock Leinahan character.
Of course.
And it really upset him.
Like he was crying while he was telling me about it.
Like, do people really see me that way?
And I'm going, it's a compliment, Brian.
It's good.
It's like Barbara Wawa on SNL.
And later, Marty says he was totally fine with it.
But it was just an interesting chink in his armor
because Brian was always, he was the man.
I mean, he was the guy that everybody deferred to.
He got all the good interviews and the research was insane.
Yeah, pre-Wikipedia.
Yeah, he was Wikipedia.
Absolutely, absolutely, he was astounding. He was astounding.
And Mark Daly, I hear nothing but good things about Mark Daly.
Mark Daly was a lovely man. I wrote a play, a musical, based on the brain that wouldn't
die. But there was a part for a newscaster in it and I did a reading and Mark was going
to do it and then he got ill, notically ill but not the cancer yeah no the cancer but um Gord martino
ended up doing it Gord martino also an FOTM so got him yeah and
morskowski too I had an Morskowski and Gord did not get along you might know
this as an insider yeah actually wait a, wait a minute. I did know this. I did know this later on. Well, she said that Gord only talked to her when the red light was on.
So things were a little frosty there.
And it's interesting that her fiance is a gentleman who's behind the Festival of Beer
that happens at C&E at the Banshell.
And he was here for an episode of Between Two Fermentors, which is the Great
Lakes Brewery podcast. So I spent some time with him recently. And I said, you know, Anne
Ruskowski delivers good podcasts. There's a woman who delivers the real talk. I loved
my convos with Anne, but I'm loving this so much. Okay. So we will do tangents now and
then. But since we talked about the SCTV talk doc being shelved, I'm going to ask
you if you were at the Toronto premiere of the 299 Queen Street West documentary. No, because I
was busy promoting Mr. Dress Up at the time. Which was great. And you know, the much music thing,
lightning in a bottle. I don't know how many people are interested today, really.
It's me and a couple others.
And we're all going to get together in June 27.
Those who live through it, yeah.
But we're a dying breed, literally.
Well, no, but okay, so speaking just for myself, you know, when I start to fall in love with
music as like a, you know, a 12 year old or whatever, and then basically that period of
time through, I would say like 19, like there's that seven core years. That's like
when music is the most important thing in your life. And for that period of time, I
really had three sources for music. Okay. I had what they played on CFNY 102.1. I had
what they played on much music. And then I had what I owned or borrowed from buddies who said hey man
You got to check this out. This is really good. You'd like this like those were like the three places and
That that means much music is very important to a guy my age
Yeah, well, and you know the other thing is the music videos themselves
Here's and here's the much music. Yeah, that's like from David Kines
But David Kines is somebody else I know from back then.
And Jay Switzer, oh the late great Jay Switzer, I love Jay Switzer.
What a wonderful guy. Anyway, the music itself, because it had such an influence on the pop culture at large,
the pacing of a music video sort of came out of advertising,
but the pacing of a music video and the attention span of the viewer has shrunk and ever since then,
but that and the techniques of music video
were adopted by film and then by television.
Like David Fincher for example.
Yeah, yeah, the actual creators
went on to become major creators.
So it was a hugely, I'm not discounting it
as a hugely influential thing.
And it was, I mean, they were the hip people in town.
If they were at an event, you knew it was a hip event.
But this is an interesting thing, Moses, who else?
Moses confessed to me once that when they were early
starting up, and it was like, you know,
that'll be city TV everywhere.
So in order to be everywhere,
they actually had one wooden camera.
Wasn't real, but it had all the logos and stuff on it.
And they would take that to events just to have a presence at the events,
which is so smart.
Which is so, so Moses there.
I think so Moses, so Moses.
Now just, I have to know if my buddy, Ed Conroy from retro Ontario knows that fun
fact because I know Ed, you know, all of the same people.
I know it.
Now that I realize Ed was at the same event that breakfast. Maybe he introduced us.
Maybe he introduced us.
He's working on a Electric Circus documentary.
Wow.
By the way, I will have to fix that in post.
I don't know if that's public or not,
but he's working with Joel Goldberg,
who is one of the founders of Electric Circus
on what was originally City TV, I believe.
And this is a weird thing, and this what was originally City TV, I believe.
And this is a weird thing,
and this is part of their problem, I think,
is that, not a problem,
but it's a thing that you wouldn't have anticipated
back in the day.
But of course, Chum City owns City TV and Much Music,
and there's a lot of back and forth.
It's all coming out at 299 Queen Street,
the same damn company.
But at some point, as you know,
City TV becomes a Rogers property,
and Much Music becomes a Bell property. So now when you're doing something regarding electric circus,
you've got to like the two cable giants that are sort of there.
I don't know.
Not prone to collaborate. Put it that way.
Only on like M L S E.
And how's that going for them? Oh, the Raptors won in 2019. So, you know, like, you know, yay for the Raptors here.
Are you a sports fan at all?
Not in the least.
So no interest in baseball?
None.
Although, another good story.
Yeah.
I was doing, I ran a film festival, the Bee Festival.
Okay.
Well, it was around the time of the first-
Co-film and video festival.
Yeah, co-film, that was the second-
Oh, that's that one, it was the Toronto Bee Festival. It was the oh that's that was Toronto Bee Festival anyway we're doing I did my homework
like line of hand yeah wow and so we're showing is this is when the Blue Jays
won the World Series for the first time at the time was 92 we're showing this
German necrophiliac movie this art film favorite genre art film with real
corpses it was just, it was
a bad thing. But we're showing that and basically the audience is like
heroin addict college students and all dressed in black. So the game is going on
at the same time and I'm running up to the front of the theater and just
quietly but writing on a piece of paper on the wall what the score is and of
course nobody there could care less. Yeah, otherwise they wouldn't be there.
And the moment, I will never forget this,
I was up in the booth, and there's a climactic scene
literally in the movie is this guy stabbing himself
in the stomach while he's masturbating.
And while this image is on the screen,
I'm looking on the monitor, the projectionists
back when they had those, it's got a little TV going and the winning run. Oh my god. Hey, it's synchronized
It's synchronized and then I go out and I stand on top of the marquee and it's on Bloor Street
It was at the Bloor Cinema. Yeah, which is now hot dogs and watching this parade of humanity
Look like Mardi Gras right?
It was the most surreal evening of my entire life and I've had many. That sounds surreal and that way it's synced up sounds like when they say,
okay, when the lion roars in Wizard of Oz, dark side of the moon.
Yeah, exactly.
What a night. Okay, so you don't give a shit about baseball, but you might be interested in
Toronto history.
Yeah, that aspect of it.
Here, I'm working my way to just hopefully this doesn't end up in the recycling bin
because there's a book I'm giving you
on the history of Toronto-made beliefs, baseball, not hockey.
They play at Christie Pitts.
I actually recorded live from Christie Pitts
on Sunday, the home opener.
It was an amazing time.
Quickly gonna shout out people
that I talked to on Toronto Mic'd.
This was episode 1487.
I got a shout out and these names won't mean much to you, but you know them.
Wendell Clark.
Yeah, I know that name.
You had to know that name.
He's actually right here too.
So Brian line, I hand Wendell Clark, Stu Stone, the great ones are here.
Maestro, fresh West, George and under the giants on this guy here.
Okay.
Doug Flutie is over there.
Okay.
Under the Giants on this guy here. Okay, Doug Flutie's over there.
Okay, so Wendell Clark, Rick Vive,
Rick Emmett from Triumph, are you a Triumph guy?
Yeah, I'm Mike E. Levine, he's a good friend of mine.
I'm all choked up here.
I gotta get Mike on the program, actually.
Yeah, he'd be a good guest.
Who else, quickly shout out here.
Let's see, Mark Hebbscher, Steve Paken, Peter Gross, Stephen Brunt. We started things off
with Stephen Brunt. He was amazing. Rod Black, the owner, Keith Stein was on the microphone.
We had Cam Gordon and MF and that's MF making her Toronto mic debut. If you know what MF stands for,
you're in the know. But a lot of these amazing people I saw Blair
Packham there but I didn't get him on the mic but anyway that was recorded so go listen to episode
two before this and you'll hear all those people chatting me up at Christie Pitts an amazing day
for baseball about 2 000 people there it was unbelievable and I will be back at Christie
Pitts recording live at a 2 p.m.
game.
This is Sunday, June 2nd.
So stick that in your calendar and come by.
It's free.
It's Christie Pitts.
There's no ticket.
You just come on by and enjoy some high caliber baseball, great atmosphere, get a hot dog,
get a beer and maybe chat me up.
Rob, you should do that too.
Yeah.
Well, I am often taken for a baseball fan because my friend Howie, my great friend Howie,
gave me a New York Yankees leather jacket
and I wear it proudly without any idea
who's on the Yankees.
Well, George Costanza worked for the Yankees.
Yeah, that much I remember, yeah.
And that was Larry David's voice, by the way.
George Stimber, yes. It's didn't, once a curb debuted and I loved
curb. Then I realized, yep, George Steinbrenner is Larry David and it all, it all connected
here. Yeah. Yankees actually are tribal of our Toronto Blue Jays, but, uh, people should
come out and check out the Toronto Maple Leafs baseball.
I've had people yell at me, uh, by, or one guy yelled at me driving by,
go back to New York.
You know, I noticed the Yankee cap
has become a fashion symbol,
and you'll see a lot of people kind of donning it
as their wardrobe, with no allegiance to the team at all.
Yeah, well that's me.
That's me with my jacket.
Oh, I gotta tie up a loose end here,
because I mentioned the 299 Queen Street West documentary.
So I saw it debuted at Roy Thompson Hall
like last September, I think.
You know, Eric M, Michael Williams,
a lot of interesting people involved.
Steve Anthony was there, a lot of cool cats.
But it was promoted to stream on Crave
and they promoted it and they said it would be available
this day, which was like a Friday, I think. And it never did drop on Crave.
This is now a few months ago and there's a, I did some digging.
Apparently there was a issue with licensing the music that you hear in the
299 Queen street West.
You think they would have covered that? Well, the guy who directed it,
Sean Menard is an FOTM. He's been over to tell me about the doc.
And I haven't been able to get it like a comment from him on this,
but it is interesting that this thing
has never actually streamed anywhere.
And I think some other Gen Xers who have fond memories
of much might enjoy just seeing it.
I just, I take it you have no idea anything
about the 299 Queen Street West documentary.
Yeah, well, it's, you know, it's,
I forget where I was going.
It's okay, you don't have any.
You know what, you never know.
You got Rob Salem in the basement. You got to ask him all those questions you have about's okay, you don't have any. You know what? You never know.
You got Rob Salem in the basement.
You got to ask him all those questions you have about to be, you know, you know, I did
have something very cogent to say, but it's gone.
It's gone.
Well, whenever it comes back, just spit it out here.
Okay.
So highlights.
You spent, you said you spent 40 years at the Toronto Star and then you got the tap
on the shoulder and they severed you fairly but it all came to an end
Maybe you weren't done, but they were done with you
Yeah, and and and and I'm sort of in a weird way now that I've had some time to lick my wounds
Yeah, I'm sort of grateful just in this. I mean I miss it but but
I'm I couldn't cover television today too much, right? This is too much much, right? There's just too much.
I agree.
There's just too much.
It would take at least three people.
I struggle with the paradox of choice.
Like I actually, personally, there's too much.
We subscribe to Crave and my wife has Disney Plus
because my youngest is addicted to Simpsons
and which I quite like too.
But then we have a Prime because she gets deliveries
and it came with some prime other,
it get bundled up with, so there's all this stuff
and I find it very overwhelming.
Like there are certain shows I actually like
and I look forward to, I watched the final season
of Curb Your Enthusiasm, I'll see the next season
of Euphoria, like there's certain shows I'm into,
but I'm drowning in this content
and I end up watching like nothing.
So what do you personally enjoy
that's an active television show?
Well, again, my whole perspective has shifted
because I'm not trying to sort of stay on top of everything
now for the first time in my life.
But Ripley, as an example, Ripley is just,
it's like walking in, it's shot in black and white,
and it's like walking into an art gallery photo show.
It is so beautifully shot based on the talent of-
The talent of Mr. Ripley, which was great.
And Andrew Scott, who is an incredible actor, stars in it.
This the guy from Fleabag, the priest?
The hot priest from Fleabag.
I watched a movie recently where he starred in.
That was fantastic too.
Yeah.
He's good.
I can't remember the name of that movie.
It was a gay movie.
Yes, yes, yes.
London, I think.
Yeah, it was, yes, exactly.
Oh, and it's very surreal, that movie.
And I quite, what's real, what's not one of those bad boys.
And I dug it.
So shout out to that movie, whatever it's called.
Yeah, and Ripley is just, again, gorgeously shot and beautifully acted and just a piece of art
What else am I watching?
Try to think new shows. Well, we started watching just because we loved her all of us strangers
I believe is the name that's what it is a terrible title, right? Yeah, that's a terrible
I sometimes I see I go that's a terrible title like Ripley's a good title
Yeah. That's a terrible title.
Sometimes I see it, I go, that's a terrible title.
Like Ripley is a good title.
Fleabag is a good title.
All of us strangers is a terrible title.
Yeah.
It doesn't tell you anything.
Just, and it won't stick to you.
It doesn't tell you anything.
It won't stick to you.
They should just call it strangers.
Yeah.
Okay.
I might remember that.
Okay.
Sorry.
Oh, I would say, the show that I'm both disappointed in and watching, it's Elspeth.
This is a character
played by Kerry Preston, who was on The Good Wife and then The Good Fight, which were both
brilliant shows. And now they've given her her own show and it's sort of an iffy premise,
but she's wonderful and the character is wonderful. And it's Robert and Michelle King, who produced
the previous two series.
Okay, but you're underwhelmed by it. I mean, it's the premise is a little thin, but it's getting better.
But she's just so wonderful and so appealing and such a great character.
We're watching Hacks.
I watched that with my mom, like that's
the show because my mom doesn't have Crave and we save hacks for her.
She's like you call it the Joan Rivers show.
But of course, it's only loosely based
But it's brilliant gene smart is the goddess
Watch Rita watches a lot of British procedurals, of course one Australian procedural
Lucy Lawless's show. She's a friend of mine really Really? Xena? Yeah. The warrior princess?
She was just in town.
So what, she comes over for dinner?
You meet her for coffee?
We went out to a matinee of gentlemen prefer blondes
at the Fox Theater.
Okay, something current, okay.
It was wonderful.
Not bad.
But how did you become friends with her?
Just met her on the junkets or something?
20 years ago, yeah.
Well, actually I did.
When Xena was over, I wrote a cover story
for Star Week magazine that was basically
an open love letter to Lucy Lawless.
I'd never met her.
And I find out after the fact that her people
made sure she got it and she had read it.
So I was totally humiliated.
You communicated with her through Star Week. Yeah and then she was in town shooting a Tarzan series and I was working on the Gilda's
Club Gala, it's always something and I got her and Eric McCormick, who who also met on the job, to sing in this show. And she did a bare naked lady song.
Which song?
I don't remember because she had no time to rehearse because they wouldn't let her offset
so she actually went up and screwed it up.
Oh!
I felt so bad. But, but this is to her credit. They were giving, they were doing plastic
casts of all these celebrity guests' hands.
Glad you said hands.
I was ready for whatever Jimi Hendrix got, the penis caster.
Well, this is close because Lucy offered to do her boobs and did.
Okay.
It was my job to stand outside the bathroom and make sure nobody went in while Lucy was
plastering her boobs.
So she's just so much fun.
I think that and the Degrassi,
Marion Snake and the Spiker,
your two claims have been there.
Anyway, but Lucy was here with the documentary.
She's directed a documentary on Margaret Moth,
a CNN camera woman.
Interesting.
That's really good.
And so I think that's her new phase.
But she does have a show called My Life is Murder.
It's on Acorn TV.
Okay, that's Australian. That's an Australian procedural, okay
So we're bouncing around a little bit because I realize you mentioned Star Week and I wondered if you could tell me a little
Bit about the late Jim Baudin Jim Baudin. That's another one. He was we called him the Phantom
Used to he was the only one he because there was a trip to LA twice a year for the TV critics convention that I ended up taking over,
but Jim used to go, and he was the only person
who would ever come back from LA paler than when he left.
And he was always lurking around the office late at night.
He was a prolific gossip,
loved to tell stories about other people,
and was a huge champion of Canadian television.
And to the point where I wrongly,
and I shouldn't have,
but I tended to overlook Canadian television
unless it was something that was like really good.
But Bodden covered all those other struggling shows that I,
there just wasn't the room to cover them in my column,
but he took up the slack there and covered all the
Canadian stuff
Do you think Canadian television is getting better?
Yes, well, I think Schitt's Creek was the real
Deciding factor or that's not the word I was looking for but
Schitt's Creek is to me the perfect Canadian show because it first of all it makes use of our greatest natural resource
Which is a comedic talent, right?
and they don't have to go to the states to do it and it's
It's is a rural show which
Look at corner gas. I mean shows like that
They tend to be sort of they're both a microcosm of the real world so you can deal with those issues plus
It's like what how silly these small town people are but on on top of all of that, it was an exportable show.
It was a sellable show internationally.
And when it hit, first hit a cable station in the States,
then it hit Netflix and went,
but no one's ever done this before.
They won every single comedy Emmy.
Unbelievable, right?
Who would have saw that coming? If we go back in time when,
uh, well, and you name your crappy Canadian sitcom of the day or whatever.
Uh, geez. Yeah. And then all of a sudden, and that's the two,
it helps that the stars of the show, the two stars were famous to Americans.
Yeah. Yes. So you know, it was in that thing as I recall. I loved Get a Life.
Yeah, I did too. I did too. I loved his sensibility, although that one movie he did was horrible.
But Cabin Boy.
Yeah, no, no, no.
Cabin Boy.
Yeah, Cabin Boy was OK.
There was another one he did.
That was so bad.
I don't remember it.
I just remember David Letterman had the cameo in Cabin Boy.
Yeah.
Want to buy a monkey?
Yeah, something like that. But Chicks Creek is the
high mark right there and to shoot for that a show that's finding on its own
merits and exportable to the world because we're a small market.
That's the problem. Unless we can sell to the states or internationally, it's
not a viable commercial proposition. Well, I just read the canceled or did not renew,
I don't know the proper semantics on this one,
but Runnin' the Burbs, which was not a spin-off,
but had an actor who was in Kim's Convenience.
Another show that didn't get a proper send-off,
they got robbed of a proper finale
because the creator of the characters
Mr. Inns, I can't remember his first name right now, but basically pulled the plugs and surprised surprised the
The see the CBC that happened so much and it's always about something other than the actual show and who's watching it
But CBC is notoriously bad at promoting its own stuff
I CBC is notoriously bad at promoting its own stuff. I mean, there are shows like,
the last time there was such this confluence
of great comedy talent was Michael Tuesdays and Thursdays,
which was Bob Martin,
who's gone on to become like a Broadway writer.
Okay.
I don't even know the show.
Exactly, because it didn't get any promotion.
Don McKellar was involved.
I know Don McKellar, sure.
He's got a new series, The Sympathizer.
Okay.
So that's...
The big Canadian comedy I'm aware of, not watching,
I don't know what that says about me,
but I hear good things is Son of a Critch.
Yes, I hear good things about that too,
and I also have not watched it.
We don't support our own, Rob.
We're part of the problem here.
We never have, and the fact that I wasn't covering
more Canadian material when I was a critic is is not a mark of distinction
by any stretch. It's
it's an it's a
Short-sightedness on my part. I mean again if there was a show that I thought was worthy of being championed like Michael Tuesday and Thursdays or
Kyle Mockery had a show with his wife called getting along famously and they were at that
SCTV documentary filming. Yeah, yeah they were there.
I asked them if it was good and they said it was great.
Yes, yeah.
And again, two absolutely lovely, wonderful people, but I really championed their show.
It was an interesting experiment CBC did where they commissioned a whole bunch of pilots
and aired them all and the ones that got the best ratings
People like a reality show. Yeah. Yeah or project green light, right, which is a reality show, but um
But I thought that was a really good way to plumb the vast resources we have and
Colin and Deb show didn't go that long, but it's too. But they're lovely people. They are absolutely lovely people.
Sweethearts.
All right, let me give you a break here and I will let the listenership know about a couple
of podcasts that they should subscribe to.
And you get a gift here too, Rob.
You're getting so much swag.
It was worth the schlep, okay?
I love this.
I love this.
There is a wireless speaker there.
In fact, should I go up and get you, You can have either a beer or a glass of water.
I can do either.
No, I'm good.
You're good.
Okay.
There's a wireless speaker here from Monaris.
There's a QR code there that will help you subscribe to the advantage to invest.
No, actually.
Oh my goodness, Mike, that QR code will help you subscribe to yes, we are open.
And I learned that the latest episode has dropped. Al Grego hosts
this thing. It's an award-winning podcast. He talks to small business owners and gets their
great stories to inspire you. And he shares them on this podcast from Minaris. But he was in Alberta.
But now this episode is actually Niagara Falls. Okay. I can bike to Niagara Falls. I can't bike
to Alberta, but he goes down to Niagara Falls. He visits Andrew Virgilito.
He's the owner of Italian Ice Cream, a business his parents started 47 years ago.
And he chats with Al Grego about it over some delicious espresso and gelato.
And you can check out that story on Yes, We Are Open.
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And last but not least, actually, this is penultimate,
so there is a measuring tape for you that green.
I noticed that's from Ridley Funeral Home.
What do they measure?
I'm afraid.
What would you like to measure with that?
It's yours now.
What you do with it is your business.
I don't need to know all the details.
What's a fun fact is that, and I know you're not a baseball fan,
but if you make your way to Christie Pits to see a Toronto Maple Leafs game this summer,
and everybody should, it's great time,
you will see that the official funeral home
of Toronto Maple Leafs baseball is Ridley Funeral Home.
That's a fact.
Like, okay, I run a funeral home.
I'm thinking, what am I gonna sponsor?
What works?
Baseball, absolutely.
Well, you never know.
It's an exciting new era for the Toronto Maple Leafs baseball team.
And Brad Jones from Ridley funeral home is a great FOTM himself.
And then now last but not least, recycle my electronics.ca.
If you, Rob have a drawer at home, maybe you got old cables, old
electronics, boxes and boxes.
Don't throw it in the garbage because the chemicals end up in our landfills.
You go to recycle my electronicsElectronics.ca,
put in your postal code. They'll tell you an accredited depot where you drop that off
and they will properly recycle your electronics. So that's your homework.
What, like, this is a tough question, but you were 40 years at the Toronto Star. Do
you have a couple of highlights? Like maybe these pinch, I can't believe this is happening
pinch me moments. Yeah, Lucy was one because she came to me to the
TV. Critics. Oh, Lucy. Oh, yes. Okay. I see a ball. No, no, no. That was an
unforgettable moment. Um, there was one of my major heroes is Sean Connery and
I had the chance to interview him at a press conference and
it was just it wasn't it didn't satisfy. I finally got a one-on-one chat wasn't one-on-one
it was a round robin so it was me and six other journalists at a table but the movie
was The Rising Sun which he produced there he was a co-producer on right written by Michael
Crichton for him in fact the character's name was John Connor, so it was clearly him. Anyway, there was a lot of complaints about this depiction
of the Japanese business community. So, Connery comes in, it's 8.30 in the morning, I'd been
up all night at a bar with only my friend.
Just like last night.
Yeah, really.
I'm noticing a trend.
I want to say I don't drink that much, but that's not true, I do. Anyway, so I'm noticing a trend. I want to say I don't drink that much, but that's not true, I do.
Anyway, so I'm hungover, like, I'm still drunk and I'm hungover, because we were up all night.
And I walk in, it's 8.30 in the morning,
Sean Connery walks in, if you've ever read
an interview with Sean Connery,
he just eats journalists for breakfast.
He's the crankiest man.
So he walks in and he's clearly in a bad mood.
But he's wearing a short sleeve, like a polo shirt,
sits down at the table,
and I notice he's got tattoos up and down both arms.
And I'm thinking, like, how many times have we seen
this man with his shirt off?
Never seen the tattoos, obviously.
Put makeup on.
Anyway, so, unable to form sentences
at that time of the morning in my condition,
I just sort of pointed and went, tattoo.
And there was a moment of silence where he glared at me
and it felt like five minutes.
It was probably like five seconds.
I was hoping you would do a Sean Connery brogue there.
I was about to.
See, now you've totally ruined the surprise.
Oh, I was waiting, okay.
He finally responds.
You're the standup.
My timing is off.
What seems like minutes go by and then he finally responds
and he says, no, I did not wake up one morning
next to some ugly hooker.
And again, I'm thinking, this could be good response
or bad, he might like me.
And it turns out he just loved me.
And the other six journalists ignored them.
It was just him and me at the table.
Because you were just the right level of disheveled.
Yeah, exactly.
And it's like, well, I got this one on the Merchant Marines and this one's artificial. And, you know, it was like
him and I, and we actually got onto more substantive subjects from there, but that broke the ice. And
that's really the key. If you want to know how to be an interviewer, that's the key. Ask the
unexpected question. Okay. Explain your tattoo that I see on your right arm. It's actually,
it's a whole thing, you know. Okay, he's taking off his shirt everybody. It's
dripping in the basement. Oh, it's a Superman thing. So it's the shield, the belt and the
boot. Okay, very cool. There's a whole Superman on my arm. That's amazing. You know, you and Shaquille
O'Neal, I feel like he's got that. I think Shaq's got that. He's got the Superman symbol amazing okay big
John Bon Jovi I knew about Jerry Seinfeld of course everybody knows about
that but I didn't know about John Bon Jovi I just heard him on Stern I have
borrowed a car Hyundai Palisade to drive to Montreal and I had a serious XM in
this car I don't normally have serious exam but Howard Stern was chatting up
bon John John Bon Jovi almost called Bon John Jovi, whatever
But did you know he got his and I already kind of knew this from another podcast
I listened to but his first ever musical anything was the Star Wars
Christmas album he worked on the Star Wars Christmas album as like a teenager and that's his first like musical credit
Not related to the Star Wars holiday special I hope.
No not related actually.
I showed that to my students every year too.
I did.
Oh yeah, Bea Arthur's in that one.
Bea Arthur, Harvey Korman, it's horrifically awful.
Well they disowned it right?
George Lucas Wood said if he could have one wish it would be to take Slythe Hammer to
all existing copies of that and there are are copies, it's on YouTube.
It's not to get rid of Jar Jar Binks.
He's got that one wish and he's going to let Jar Jar live.
Yeah, Jar Jar is okay, but the holiday special.
Yeah, you can find it on YouTube.
And there's a really good 20-minute cut down that just has the worst parts.
Okay.
If I remember correctly, they're trying to get Chewie back to his home planet
because there's some light festival.
The light festival, yeah.
And there's a scene at the end where Carrie Fisher sings
the theme from Star Wars.
And is clearly, and she has since admitted.
Bill Murray did that on Saturday Night Live.
Yeah, but did not like that.
It was just like the actual song with actual lyrics.
And she has since admitted,
and it's very clear from watching it,
she was high as a kite when she did it.
Wow. Yeah. Keep dropping those fun facts. and it's very clear from watching it she was high as a kite when she did. Wow!
Yeah.
That, keep dropping those fun facts.
But yeah, this is unrelated.
The big song off this album is,
what do you get a Wookie for Christmas when he already owns a comb?
So you can find that on YouTube everybody.
That's the big jam from there.
That has to be a country song.
I think I can sing it for you, but it's better for you.
I don't, but you can pass.
Okay. So we've got Lucy Lawless, we've got Sean Connery.
Yeah, that was good.
And you're still friends with Lucy Lawless, which is wild.
She's wonderful.
Is she the most famous person who will answer your text?
Who's the most famous human on the planet?
Globally famous, not Toronto famous.
Who will actually reply to your text. And don't worry,
I won't make you prove it. No, I, she may be, she may be a big one though. She's, she's famous.
I mean, I, I regularly text with Colin Mockery. He's not exactly well, he's internationally
famous because he was on who's not line is it anyway, which was a big in the state.
He's a good friend. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, most of the SCDV people,
got a big hug from Catherine the last time I ran into her.
The thing is, when you do what I did, it's your whole life.
So it's your social life.
So all of my friends were in the entertainment business.
And it was a valuable lesson and a hard lesson to learn
that once I did not have that power to get them in the paper
A lot of people fell by the wayside. That's when you find out who your real friends are
You can't get them free press. Yeah, and I'm pleased to know that most of the people I really loved out of that group
Are still my friends
So a lot of the phonies dropped away, which is good
Like now you're right if I shut down Toronto mic will Steve Paikin still reply to my texts? Probably not. What is the thing on your neck?
Oh, it's just headphones. Oh, that's earphones. I'm going, is that another Superman thing? I'm trying to
remember. I got to say, what is it? Office Space references the plot from the
third Superman, which is, that the who's the stand up comic?
Richard Pryor. Thank you. Oh my goodness. Yeah, not so good. But I will say young Michael enjoyed it.
Like it was only when I got older and watched it, I realized, oh, that sucks. But I did like it as
a kid. I was pretty young. You have Superman for I was on the junket for that. And it was so bad.
It was the only movie in 40 years nuclear one
What is that? That's the nuclear man? Okay, but in 40 years of journalism
I never went on a junket where the movie or TV show was so bad
They did not show it to us before the interviews that happened on Superman for a quest for peace
Asked for peace. That's right. I will say I prefer Superman 2 to Superman 1. Yes, yes. Although the Donner cut, I've got an autographed copy of that actually.
Richard Donner was originally doing both movies and in fact shot most of the second one while
he was shooting the first one. And then he got canned by Ilya Solkin and they brought
in whoever the hell, Richard Lester?
Someone else.
But there is, they, they actually have done a donor cut of the second movie, which is vastly better than the one that was released.
So Superman one and two were intended to be one movie.
Was that going to be like a seven hour movie? It was always going to be two
movies. Two movies shot at once. Okay. Like they did the back to the future.
Two and three. Yeah. Okay. Okay. Cause in kill bill one and two, of course we're shot.
Yeah.
Same time.
Okay.
Interesting.
Okay.
I love that.
Like we didn't have like this whole, my kids are living in this Marvel universe.
Okay.
When I was growing up, if you wanted a comic book movie, you had, these are your
options, you had this, those Superman movies we're talking about and you had,
Howard the duck.
Yeah.
Oh my God.
That was, I went and saw that at the Directors Guild in LA and it's creating and my
friend, Irick and I were driving back, coming up
with bad puns for my headline. Lucas lays an egg,
Howard's a turkey. I mean, it just, it just
wrote itself.
You could use Ducking Awful if you wanted.
I could have, but it's the Toronto Star. They
would not have gone for that. Best headline that
Rita ever got away with. Rita wrote the best
heads. Best headline you Rita ever got away with. Rita wrote the best heads.
Best headline she got away with, there was a show at the Imperial Room and it was in
a water tank and it was like swimming, dancing, swimming thing in a water tank on the stage
of the Imperial Room, which is like a nightclub.
And Rita's headline for the story was, tanks for the, oh, it was topless.
It was topless. Oh yeah. So Rita's headline was tanks story was, tanks for the, oh, it was topless. It was topless.
Oh yeah.
So Rita's headline was, tanks for the mammaries.
Very good.
Okay.
There's another one she almost got canned over.
It was the film center picnic at the festival
and it was Fran Drescher and Kim Cattrall
and Fran Drescher had her dog tucked under her arm
and Rita's cut line under the photo was three bitches in heat. Oh! It was a hot day. and Kim Kutral and Fran Tresher had her dog tucked under her arm and read his
cut line out of the photo with three bitches and he it was a hot day.
Kim Kutral has never forgiven her. There's a photo of Pierre Elliott Trudeau
taking Kim Kutral to some kind of a some kind of a party or function or
something, maybe Juno's or something like that. Anyways, I've seen that
circulate all right. Kim Kutral, okay, one little thing here. So we because
you did say sex in the city. No, it's sex that circulate. All right. Kim Cattrall. Okay. One little thing here. So we, cause you did say, uh, sex in the city.
No, it's sex and the city. People always screw that up, right?
I always used to screw it up.
So sex and the city is fine. I have a client named, well, her name is Diane Sax.
She's a city counselor and she's launching a new podcast and she,
they're calling it sex Sax in the city is what they're calling it. And I,
I gave them this pedantic like, well,
it actually should be sacks and the city. Cause the show and like this whole thing,
it's like, why do I bother? Like just, just whatever. Okay. But I reason I brought up
sex in the city is cause they rebooted it. And just like that is what it's called. And
I did watch most of it out of curiosity, but they were promoting that Samantha was going
to return for a cameo in the finale of like season two or something and of
Course, there was a falling, you know, the famous falling out Kim Cattrall who plays Samantha to falling out with the other actresses
She's not part of this reboot. So I'm like, oh, I'm curious
Like I was just I'm gonna watch this and see like oh the return of Samantha. So she literally phoned it in it's literally
like
Carrie is holding a phone and you see a phone conversation, like a video
of Kim Cattrall saying, sorry, I can't be there.
They're not even in the same place.
No.
Even if they're in the same city.
She could have, literally, Kim Cattrall could have filmed this on her iPhone and emailed
the file to the producer.
That's the cameo.
Definitely not in the same, don't have to be in the same country.
It was the closest that they could get them together. They do not like each other.
I wonder, I just wonder like, so Kim agreed to do this little video where she says, I
love you, Carrie, good luck or whatever. And nice things like that. Sorry, I can't be there.
Wonder what she gets paid for that.
Probably a whole lot of money. Because it's, it's, it's worth it just for the publicity.
Yeah. Just for idiots like me who hear about the cameo appearance by Kim Cachal and tune
in to see it.
Yeah.
Geez, they got me. Okay, I won't bite again. I won't bite again. I got to say, Rob, this
was amazing. Like, is there a final story that on your way here, you were on the bus
or something and you're like, I would love an opportunity to share this story or anything,
because you've been amazing in your Toronto Mic debut.
Well, I'm honored and thrilled.
The Sean Connery story is pretty much my favorite.
You can't top that.
I can't top that.
Oh, that's a big deal.
That's a big deal here.
There are so many stories.
Oh, there is, well, the punch line
is actually the whole story,
but doing cocaine in the blues can
bathroom with Mel Gibson.
That's a great story.
Yeah.
Well, that's it.
That's basically the whole story.
Well, there's actually more to it.
But the fact so, so you did cocaine because this is I did a lot of cocaine back in the
day.
I was very, very bad.
Well, that's how you became friends with Steve Anthony.
No comment.
Peter Gross tells me he did cocaine in a limo with fashion,
Jeannie Becker. Really? And I was kind of, I was hinting, I had Jeannie Becker on the
show, I was hinting at it and she was not biting. Like she was not going there. So whatever
happened in that limo with Peter Gross that, you know, off the record. But it's, you know,
the City TV 299 Queen and before that it was 99 Queen East, but that's notorious for drugs.
Yeah, it was, it was, it was a heady time.
No, I got, I got, I got quite screwed up on it and it took me years.
But you're clean now?
I am totally clean.
Clean as a whistle.
Good, except for the booze.
Except for the drinking.
And weed.
I smoke a whole lot of weed.
It's better than better than coke man
You know every time I hear about like a oh George Michael dies of a heart attack in his 50s
I'm like, that's the coke. Yeah. No, I know
I saw so many people that I've known of have died friends just not getting their act together John Gallagher still alive
I just want to put that on the public record has spiky
He's in Halifax now. Yeah, he's in Halifax. Post a lot of stuff on Facebook.
He took selfies before people had.
I know he's got selfies with everybody.
Because I used to produce his podcast.
It's called Gallagher and Gross Saved the World.
Rob, you got to listen to this thing.
It's just Peter Gross and John Gallagher sharing stories.
Oh, the two of them are hilarious.
How many women he's bed.
He tells stories about, you know, drugs and Moses.
And it's unbelievable.
You got to listen to Gallagher and Gross Saved the World. You would love it. All right. I will. And then John moved out.
Well, COVID happened and it kind of messed up John. And he ended up moving to Halifax and
everything. But why am I bringing up John Gallagher? Oh yeah. So he's told me, I could ask him,
why are there pictures? Like if OJ dies, I'm going to see a picture of OJ Simpson with John
Gallagher. It's because he had those disposable,
he bought a bunch of those disposable cameras
and he kept them in his glove compartment.
And anytime he was anywhere where anyone famous was,
he got the disposable camera and took a pic
and he's got pics with everybody.
Yeah, one of my great regrets is that I spent a whole day
with and night with William Shatner
and didn't get a picture.
Yeah, I'll take your word for it.
You look like a trustworthy guy.
Would your wife do Toronto Mike'd?
I'm sure she would.
We're going to make that happen.
All right.
I'm going to get on that.
But thanks for doing this.
It was a pleasure.
What a joy.
Don't leave without your lasagna
and we'll take a photo by the Toronto tree.
And again, you're now an FOTM.
You can add that to your bio.
Okay.
Friend of Toronto Mike'd.
Good. I need something.
The bio's getting a little thin now. But are you looking for a gig now yeah I'll tell you see do you need
money I that's private question I know but some people are you know I'm good
and some people are like yeah I gotta keep earning yeah gotta keep earning okay
got to get out there and hustle yeah but I have a very comfortable pension so
that that's right 40 years at the star soabby. And that brings us to the end of our 1489th show.
You can follow me on Twitter and Blue Sky.
I'm all over the place.
I'm at Toronto Mike.
Where's the best place to learn about what's going on with Rob Salem?
Facebook, Instagram.
All the meta properties.
All the meta properties.
Basically, I'm a
meta guy I'm still on but you did coke with Mel Gibson the greatest anti-semite I
know I know you'd be okay on Twitter okay then he was such an asshole
whoo Jodie Foster still likes him though yeah well so does Graham Green another
friend of mine Graham Green Greene likes him.
Well, if Graham Greene liked Greene, I'd have him on Toronto Mic'd.
Much love to all who made this possible.
That's Great Lakes Brewery.
Can't wait to take down a Sunnyside Session IPA later today.
Palma Pasta, taking care of Robbie here.
RecycleMyElectronics.ca. Raymond James Canada, the Toronto Maple Leafs
baseball team, get your butt to Christie Pitts and be sure to be there on June 2nd and hang
out with me. Monaris and Ridley Funeral Home, see you all Friday when my special guest is Jean Champagne.
See you then. Maybe I'm not and maybe I am But who gives a damn?
Because everything is coming up rosy and gray
Yeah, the wind is cold but the smell of snow warms me today
And your smile is fine and it's just like mine and it won't go away
Cause everything is rolling great
Well I've kissed you in France and I've kissed you in Spain
And I've kissed you in places I better not name