Toronto

WARNING: Video links contain explicit language Mayor Rob Ford returned to late-night TV last night as the crack-video scandal continued to draw attention south of the border. Both Jimmy Kimmel and The Daily Show ...
WARNING: Video links contain explicit language Mayor Rob Ford returned to late-night TV last night as the crack-video scandal continued to draw attention south of the border. Both Jimmy Kimmel and The Daily Show ’s Jon Stewart discussed the controversy at the tops of their shows. Related: · Ignoring this crisis won’t make it disappear: DiManno · Ducking the questions is no way to lead: James · More on the Ford scandal Stewart told his audience about some of the remarkable moments in the Toronto mayor’s career . “… [He] has become very popular in Toronto for his love of sports and his warm relations with the press,” Stewart said. “Yes, the camera just absolutely loves this mayor,” he continued, cutting to a clip of Ford walking into a TV camera during a scrum last month. “You have to wonder, is this dude on crack?” Stewart said. On Jimmy Kimmel Live, Kimmel “interviewed” Ford , played by Jim O’Heir (Jerry on sitcom Parks and Recreation ), who donned an over-the-top Canadian accent in both Kimmel’s version of the video and the interview, which featured a moose waving a Canadian flag. Ford last appeared on Jimmy Kimmel Live last month after his face-to-camera crash . Jay Leno also mentioned Ford on Monday’s Tonight Show , joking that if the allegations are true, he’d still be qualified to be the mayor of Washington, D.C.
33 minutes ago
Train fares used to be almost as standard as train schedules, with predictable discounts for booking a month or a week in advance or on a weekday.Lately train fares look a whole lot different, with VIA Rail offering $127 last-minute retu...
Train fares used to be almost as standard as train schedules, with predictable discounts for booking a month or a week in advance or on a weekday.Lately train fares look a whole lot different, with VIA Rail offering $127 last-minute return fares between Montreal and Toronto, taxes in.That’s cheaper than half-price fares on Porter Airlines, which sometimes runs $200 return fares, taxes included, between the two cities.The cheapest VIA fare between Montreal and Ottawa is $29 one way, $33.34 with taxes.That’s because VIA has ripped a page from the airline handbook when it comes to setting fares. Now they’re handled like airline ticket sales – some tickets go high, some tickets go low, depending on the month, the day, even the hour of travel.“We decided we wanted to develop a revenue-management team and follow the airline model. We put a team together of people experienced in that area, some from the airline industry,” said Steve Del Bosco, chief marketing and sales officer for VIA Rail Canada.He said customers have accepted the change well.“The airline style of pricing is I think, pretty much understood in the public and it’s expected.”The system is called revenue management, and hotels, car rental agencies and airlines have been using it for years.It means doing everything to get as many people on a trip as possible, at the highest fare the market will bear in each fare category.Revenue management computer software optimizes pricing itineraries every day, crunching historical booking data and current market conditions to respond quickly to shifts in market conditions and maximize returns.The system was implemented at VIA last June, helping drive an increase in ridership of 10.4 per cent in the Montreal-Ottawa-Toronto triangle in the last quarter of 2012, compared to a year earlier, according to the Crown Corporation’s annual report.“It helps us push people to trains where we know we have room, and have people pay more for trains we know are in high demand,” said Del Bosco.The new system allowed VIA to eliminate advance purchase requirements for discount fares and launch a new economy fare to attract more customers who may have otherwise have travelled by car.The railway has also benefitted from making schedule adjustments across networks, reducing the number of trains in markets where ridership was low, and reallocating resources to markets where demand is high and growing.It’s added free Wi-Fi for all passengers and simplified Web booking. It’s ramped up its social media campaign – offering free cross-Canada tours to people who Tweet about the contest.The revenue management system has also helped boost ridership and revenues on some of the more expensive routes, popular with Canadian and foreign tourists.The new system allows VIA to offer promotions of 50 per cent off, and occasionally, 75 per cent off.“We manage the inventory so we don’t discount every single seat. Last time we looked, 20 per cent were sold at a discount. Our average fares have been maintained very well,” said Lynn Lefebvre, product manager for VIA long-haul services.In 2012, 112,000 passengers took The Canadian, compared to 109,000 in 2011; and 106,000 in 2010.Competition through the Rockies comes from the privately owned Rocky Mountaineer train travel service, which runs rail tour packages in Western Canada that start at $900 per person for two days.“My feeling is that any way that VIA can increase ridership and maximize revenue is great, so I’m open to flexible fares,” said Jason Shron, president of Rapido Trains Inc., Canada’s largest model train company and a board member of the Toronto Railway Historical Association.Shron often travels by train with his family.“I want them to succeed. Under 800 kilometres, it’s the most environmentally sound way of transporting large groups of people.
about 1 hour ago
DEAR AMY: My daughter, 40, was married to a man who was mentally abusive. He estranged her from her brother and friends and tried to end her relationship with her father and me.
DEAR AMY: My daughter, 40, was married to a man who was mentally abusive. He estranged her from her brother and friends and tried to end her relationship with her father and me.
about 1 hour ago
When Robert Mondavi broke away from his family to start his own winery in the Napa Valley, he made himself at home in one of the region’s historic vineyards. Located in Oakville, California, the To Kalon Vineyard was regarded as one of N...
When Robert Mondavi broke away from his family to start his own winery in the Napa Valley, he made himself at home in one of the region’s historic vineyards. Located in Oakville, California, the To Kalon Vineyard was regarded as one of Napa’s finest almost from the start, when pioneer Hamilton Walker Crabb planted it in 1868.
about 1 hour ago
Mint green is the new black. Fresh off the spring runways, and coupled with reams of coral, this sparkling, delicate colour is gracing everything from pumps to purses, swimwear to nail wear, slinky tops to swishy skirts — mint green rules.
Mint green is the new black. Fresh off the spring runways, and coupled with reams of coral, this sparkling, delicate colour is gracing everything from pumps to purses, swimwear to nail wear, slinky tops to swishy skirts — mint green rules.
about 1 hour ago
Vancouver-based Aritzia has yanked some of its clothing tags that drew angry complaints from offended customers and disability groups.
Vancouver-based Aritzia has yanked some of its clothing tags that drew angry complaints from offended customers and disability groups.
about 1 hour ago
I was just getting back into the playoff swing of things and looking forward to taking in a Marlies game at the Ricoh, hopefully… Then the Marlies gave up three goals with under ten to go in Game 6 last night and lost out to the Gr...
I was just getting back into the playoff swing of things and looking forward to taking in a Marlies game at the Ricoh, hopefully… Then the Marlies gave up three goals with under ten to go in Game 6 last night and lost out to the Grand Rapids Griffins. Meanwhile, the Bruins are walking over [more…]
about 1 hour ago
Will Smith's enterprising son Jaden regrets his 2012 skateboarding video venture - because he gave critics the ammunition they needed to attack him for his fashion and rap choices.
Will Smith's enterprising son Jaden regrets his 2012 skateboarding video venture - because he gave critics the ammunition they needed to attack him for his fashion and rap choices.
about 2 hours ago
An annotated edition of 'Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone' has become the most expensive J.K. ROWLING book ever sold after raising $227,421 at auction.
An annotated edition of 'Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone' has become the most expensive J.K. ROWLING book ever sold after raising $227,421 at auction.
about 2 hours ago
“I live near Montreal.”Thanks to Mayor Rob Ford, I’m considering lying when people ask me where I live, the way people from Cleveland say they’re from Moore, Okla., because even with the tornado damage, Moore ...
“I live near Montreal.”Thanks to Mayor Rob Ford, I’m considering lying when people ask me where I live, the way people from Cleveland say they’re from Moore, Okla., because even with the tornado damage, Moore would manage to notice its Sowell serial killers and Castro dungeoneers.The Star’s rolling thunder story of a crack video isn’t a day that will live in infamy, it’s more of a bunch of weeks. What if there’s worse to come?Just before voting day on Oct. 25, 2010, I warned readers that voting for Ford was like agreeing to a one-night stand while under the influence. Ford voters were irate. Are they happy now? I’m not happy to have been proved right, I’m horrified.“This is the only thing I know about Toronto,” one American commenter said Monday, and my blood froze. Margaret Atwood, New-York-without-the-stuff, friendly multiculturalism, Janet Carding’s ROM, all this is to be lost because of a mayor who veers between Sad and Angry, between Lashing Out Emotionally and Just Plain Lashing Out — you know the type — but never ventures near Smart.As I type this, Ford’s brother Doug is clipping his nails in council. That I need to specify “fingernails” is how low we have sunk. He could put someone’s eye out.There have been 42 low points in Ford’s mayoralty, as detailed by the Star, from sexist and racist slurs, to drunken arguments in public, to a chaotic home life, to repeated court hearings on alleged financial wrongdoing, to, oh dozens more, a relentless sordid drip.I’m worried that unless he resigns, he’s going to punch a baby in the face or run himself over. I’m waiting for spontaneous Ford combustion, right there on the sidewalk.Ford had a brother in arms Tuesday. Prime Minister Stephen Harper faced the nation and wouldn’t mention the words Nigel, Duffy or Wallin, or even the number 90,000. Ford had many more words to avoid but the Harper-Ford stance was the same. Toddlers think that if they close their eyes, you can’t see them.Harper and Ford closed their eyes on Tuesday but journalists milled around (you can do this on Twitter) in shock. Don Draper’s advice from Mad Men — “This never happened. It will shock you how much this never happened” — does not apply in politics.Voters are different from journalists. They observe politics, they don’t live and breathe it. Busy voters get a glimpse of shamelessness bordering on theft and it stays with them. They don’t move on to the next thing. They sense they’re being treated with contempt and do a slow burn.I have slid into sympathy for Ford many times — partly because he is so overweight that I fear he will die in front of us and partly because he occasionally seems affable, a male quality I enjoy — and been disappointed, sometimes within minutes. I cannot forgive his physical threats against Daniel Dale, a journalist whose prose and moral character I admire.On the notorious video, Star journalists Robyn Doolittle and Kevin Donovan heard Ford say this as he appeared to drug himself with his sinister companions: “Everyone expects me to be right-wing, I’m supposed to be this great . . .” And then he lost his train of thought.What was he planning to say?End this sentence aloud: “I’m supposed to be this great. . . “White hope.”“ Big pillock.”“Pathetic omni-shambles.”“Melting shelf of bad habits.”Or perhaps a genuine version of those awful labels people use as I.D. on their Twitter feed. “Dad. Husband. Lecher. Mayor. Football coach. Foodie. Magnet-hound. Hopeless at all seven.”Or just write: Rob Ford: Quandary incarnate. A desperate futile we’re-done-here. A Mt. Edith Cavell of disappointment. A mind so thick that it makes light rays go ben
about 2 hours ago