this is more of an entertainment update, actually. today i found out that the tragically hip are playing in winnipeg in january and the sadies are opening. i totally want to go. not that i'm a huge hip fan, but i think it would be an awesome show. plus i may be able to swing getting in free.
i mentioned it to elona today and we decided to see how much tickets are on the internet, so i looked up
www.tragicallyhip.com - hilarity ensued.
as an aside, winnipeggers, i emplore you, go see these shows:
XIU XIU • West End Cultural Centre • Oct 30, 8 pm - w/ Cong for Brums, The Dirty Projectors; Tix $12 @ Ticketmaster, WECC
JULIE DOIRON • Collective Cabaret • Nov 5, 8:30 pm - w/ Shotgun & Jaybird, The Wooly Leaves(!!!); Tix $8 @ Into the Music, Music Trader [emphasis added by me]
now i'm checking my e-mail on chris' computer, which has yahoonews or some shit as a homepage, and i read about
this...
WINNIPEG (CBC) - A campaign ad in a bitter Tennessee senate race that took a swipe at Canada has been pulled, though a Republican Party spokesperson said Wednesday the decision had nothing to do with the controversy it had generated on both sides of the border.
The race between Republican Bob Corker and Democrat Harold Ford Jr. is seen as key to helping determine which party takes control of the Senate come Nov. 7. The battle has led to a series of allegations and counterattacks in campaign ads and on political talk shows in the U.S.
Actors in one "man on the street" ad take turns as apologists for Ford's alleged shortcomings in policy and in character, with one expressing the view that Democrats and Canada are both soft on the issue of global security.
"Canada can take care of North Korea," the man in the ad says. "They're not busy."
A Canadian government source told the Canadian Press that ambassador to Washington Michael Wilson had expressed concerns on behalf of the Conservatives to a White House official.
Liberal MP Omar Alghabra took up the issue in question period on Wednesday.
"Is this what Canadians should be expecting as the outcome of cozying up to Mr. Bush by the prime minister and his Conservatives?" said Alghabra.
"I have a question for the prime minister. Will he call his mentor, President Bush, and demand this insulting ad be pulled from the airwaves immediately, and stand up for Canada, but for real this time?"
Canadian officials were not the only ones with objections.
In the same ad, a blonde woman claims she met Ford, an African-American, at a Playboy party and beckons the candidate to "call me."
The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People categorized the ad in a statement as "a powerful innuendo that plays to pre-existing prejudices about African-American men and white women."
Ford has denied ever having been to the Playboy mansion in California, but admits being at a 2005 Super Bowl party in host city Jacksonville, Fla., which was hosted by Playboy and attended by about 3,000 people.
The same ad also alleges that Ford took money from porn movie producers.
'Run its course'
A Republican National Committee official told NBC the ad had been pulled because it had "run its course," just one day after party chairman Ken Mehlman defended the ad and said it would continue to run.
Corker's team had said the ad had been created by a third party, though the candidate said it was "tacky" and "not reflective of the campaign we are running."
Yet another ad, however, takes aim at Ford's pro-choice stance, alleging "[Ford] wants to give the abortion pill to our schoolchildren."
Corker is the one-time mayor of Chattanooga, while Ford is in his fifth term in the U.S. house.
They are competing for the vacant seat previously held by Republican Bill Frist, who is believed to be mulling a run for presidential nominee in 2008.
With files from the Canadian Press
...you can watch the ad
here.
...wierd....i just got a call from scott newman saying i should watch the top story on tonight's ctv evening news. hrmph. i hope he's not planning to do something crazy. or hasn't doen something crazy.