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Tag: Canada

  • Billion-dollar Barbie: Movie breaks another record for female directors – National | Globalnews.ca

    Billion-dollar Barbie: Movie breaks another record for female directors – National | Globalnews.ca

    Greta Gerwig should be feeling closer to fine these days. In just three weeks in theaters, “Barbie” is set to sail past $1 billion in global ticket sales, breaking a record for female directors that was previously held by Patty Jenkins, who helmed “Wonder Woman.”

    “Barbie,” which Gerwig directed and co-wrote, added another $53 million from 4,178 North American locations this weekend, according to studio estimates on Sunday. The Margot Robbie-led and produced film has been comfortably seated in first place for three weeks and it’s hardly finished yet. Warner Bros. said the film will cross $1 billion before the end of the day.

    In modern box office history, just 53 movies have made over $1 billion, not accounting for inflation, and “Barbie” is now the biggest to be directed by one woman, supplanting “Wonder Woman’s” $821.8-million global total.

    Three movies that were co-directed by women are still ahead of “Barbie,” including “Frozen” ($1.3 billion) and “Frozen 2” ($1.45 billion), both co-directed by Jennifer Lee, and “Captain Marvel” ($1.1 billion), co-directed by Anna Boden. But, “Barbie” has passed “Captain Marvel” domestically with $459.4 million (versus $426.8 million), thereby claiming the North American record for live-action movies directed by women.

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    Click to play video: 'Has ‘Barbenheimer’ marked the return of movie theatres post-pandemic?'


    Has ‘Barbenheimer’ marked the return of movie theatres post-pandemic?


    New competition came this weekend in the form of the animated, PG-rated “Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem” and the Jason Statham shark sequel, “Meg 2: The Trench,” both of which were neck-in-neck with Christopher Nolan’s “Oppenheimer,” also in its third weekend, for the second-place spot.

    “Meg 2” managed to sneak ahead and land in second place. It overcame its abysmal reviews to score a $30 million opening weekend from 3,503 locations. The Warner Bros. release, directed by Ben Wheatley, currently has a 29-per-cent critics’ score on Rotten Tomatoes and a B- CinemaScore from audiences. The thriller was released in 3D, which accounted for 22 per cent of its first weekend business.

    Third place went to “Oppenheimer,” which added $28.7 million from 3,612 locations in North America, bringing its domestic total to $228.6 million. In just three weeks, the J. Robert Oppenheimer biopic starring Cillian Murphy has become the highest grossing R-rated film of the year (ahead of “John Wick Chapter 4”) and the sixth-biggest of the year overall, surpassing “Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania.”

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    “Oppenheimer” also celebrated a landmark, crossing $500 million globally in three weeks. Its worldwide tally is currently $552.9 million, which puts it ahead of “Dunkirk,” which clocked out with $527 million in 2017 and has become Nolan’s fifth-biggest movie ever. It’s now among the four top grossing biographies ever (its company includes “Bohemian Rhapsody,” “The Passion of the Christ” and “American Sniper”) and the biggest World War II movie of all time.

    Paramount’s “Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles” was close behind in fourth place with an estimated $28 million from 3,858 theatres in North America. Since opening on Wednesday, the film, which is riding on excellent reviews and audience scores, has earned $43.1 million.

    &copy 2023 The Associated Press

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  • Canadian West Coast port workers vote yes to ratify a tentative deal. Railroad congestion continues

    Canadian West Coast port workers vote yes to ratify a tentative deal. Railroad congestion continues

    Shipping containers are loaded onto rail cars at the Global Container Terminals Vanterm container terminal on Vancouver Harbour in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

    Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Members of the International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU) of Canada voted to ratify the second tentative agreement with West Coast port ownership, meaning an end to the uncertainty and trade congestion that has gripped the supply chain for weeks since dock workers first decided to strike.

    Rob Ashton, president of the ILWU, said 74.66% of members voted in favor of accepting the terms of the tentative agreement.

    The ILWU Canada and the British Columbia Maritime Employers Association (BCMEA) announced a revised second tentative deal last Sunday, with the agreement brokered by the Canada Industrial Relations Board, after union members rejected an original deal proposal. The country’s industrial relations board directed the union to vote no later than Friday.

    The new deal includes increases in wages, benefits, and training, according to an overnight statement by the BCMEA. No additional specifics were given.

    The original deal proposal which was rejected increased the compounded wage over four years by 19.2%, according to disclosures from the BCMEA, as well as a signing bonus of $1.48 an hour per employee, which tallied to approximately $3,000 per full-time worker. There was also an 18.5% increase in the retirement payout.

    The union argued that worker salaries were unsustainable against rising inflation, but the BCMEA countered that over the past 13 years, longshore wages have risen by 40%, ahead of inflation at 30%. The union said that the use of contract labor for maintenance work was another sticking point in the deal.

    The BCMEA said the ratification would provide “certainty and stability for the future of Canada’s West Coast ports.”

    “The BCMEA recognizes and regrets the profound repercussions this labor disruption has had on the national economy, workers, businesses and ultimately, all Canadians that depend on an efficient and reliable supply chain. All supply chain stakeholders must collaborate now to ensure we do not see disruptions like this ever again.”

    But, after a week of traveling and meeting shipping clients, Paul Brashier, vice president of drayage at ITS Logistics, told CNBC the reliability and reputation of the Canadian ports have created lasting damage.

    “We are happy that the ILWU has finally come to terms and agreed to a new contract,” said Brashier. “Unfortunately, this lack of government intervention and direction has forced cargo owners and shippers in our network to make the decision and permanently move their imports back to the U.S. port of entry on the West Coast.”

    Over the course of the 14-day strike, ocean carriers either pulled up anchor to divert the Canadian ports to stay on schedule and unload at U.S. ports. Some U.S. shippers reconsigned the destination of their containers to the U.S during that time. Other ocean carriers eventually went back to the Canadian ports and waited to unload both Canadian and U.S. freight.

    Canadian Labor Minister Seamus O’Regan tweeted acknowledgment of the supply chain damage the strikes caused and is now calling on federal officials to review how the disruption of this magnitude unfolded so it can be avoided in the future.

    Supply chain delays will last months

    It will take at least two months for the railroads to clear out the pileup of containers as a result of the 14 days of striking by dock workers. At the height of the strike, $12 billion in freight was stranded on the water. Some of that trade was diverted on vessels that called on ports on the U.S. West Coast.

    The Railway Association of Canada originally estimated that it would take three to five days, for every day the strike lasted, for networks and supply chains to recover. When the first strike ended on its 13th day, delays for rail containers were estimated at 39 to 66 days. After an additional day of work stoppage in the on-again, off-again strike, the congestion tally moved up to a range of 42 to 70 days.

    “Delays appear to be bearing out toward the mid-to-upper end of that range,” a Railway Association of Canada spokesperson recently told CNBC via email.

    Changes to vessel routes impact the profitability of railroads, including Canadian Pacific Kansas City and Canadian National Railway, since fewer containers can be unloaded at U.S. ports. This decrease in containers also impacts trucking companies. On the flip side, the extra containers coming into U.S. ports will add to the profitability of U.S. trucking companies and railroads BNSF, a subsidiary of Berkshire Hathaway, and Union Pacific. Over the long term, if Canadian trade is rerouted to the East Coast as a result of West Coast labor strife, that would also benefit Norfolk Southern and CSX.

    In the first two weeks of the strike, the flow of railroad trade from Canada to the U.S. was cut by 82%. Train trade has slowly recovered, with a 6.2% decrease being tabulated for the week ending July 29.

    The supply chain issues have already hit the bottom lines of railroad companies. Canadian Pacific Kansas City railroad’s chief marketing officer John Brooks told analysts on the company’s conference call last week the labor unrest will negatively impact the railroad’s revenue by $80 million. Brooks said the company is working to claw back those losses over the third and fourth quarters.

    Canadian National Railway announced it was running additional trains to help expedite the clearing out of the container congestion.

    The timing of this strike occurred during the peak shipping season, when back-to-school and holiday items are arriving for retailers.

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  • Céline Dion’s sister shares heartbreaking update on singer’s health battle  | Globalnews.ca

    Céline Dion’s sister shares heartbreaking update on singer’s health battle | Globalnews.ca

    Céline Dion‘s sister has revealed a heartbreaking update on the singer’s health as she continues to seek treatment for stiff-person syndrome.

    Speaking with Le Journal de Montréal, Claudette Dion said that another of their sisters, Linda, had moved in with Céline to help with her care.

    The 55-year-old chanteuse first revealed her diagnosis of stiff-person syndrome (SPS) to the public last December, saying the disease does not allow her “to sing the way I’m used to.”

    Since then, she has gone on to cancel the rest of her world tour, which was supposed to take the singer to Europe and the U.K. this fall and next spring.

    “I’m so sorry to disappoint all of you once again,” Dion, 55, said in a May 26 statement. “I’m working really hard to build back my strength, but touring can be very difficult even when you’re 100 per cent.

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    “It’s not fair to you to keep postponing the shows, and even though it breaks my heart, it’s best that we cancel everything now until I’m really ready to be back on stage again. I want you all to know, I’m not giving up… and I can’t wait to see you again!”

    The move came after she postponed her return to her Las Vegas residency in 2021, citing medical issues.

    Claudette has now revealed that the hit-maker is struggling to find any medications that work for her.

    “When I call her and she’s busy, I speak to my sister Linda who lives with her and tells me that she’s working hard. She’s listening to the top researchers in the field of this rare disease as much as possible,” she told Le Journal.

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    “I honestly think that she mostly needs to rest. She always goes above and beyond, she always tries to be the best and top of her game. At one point, your heart and your body are trying to tell you something. It’s important to listen to it.”


    Click to play video: 'What is ‘Stiff-Person Syndrome’?'


    What is ‘Stiff-Person Syndrome’?


    When she revealed her diagnosis with the disease, the singer said at the time that she had been “dealing with problems with [her] health for a long time.”

    The cause of this extremely rare disease is still unknown, according to the Yale Medicine website, “but researchers suspect that it may be the result of an autoimmune reaction where the body attacks nerve cells in the central nervous system that control muscle movement.”

    The name doesn’t do justice to the pain and life-changing symptoms the syndrome causes, Tara Zier, founder of the Stiff Person Syndrome Research Foundation, told The Canadian Press earlier this year.

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    “A lot of people have challenges with mobility. Many have assisted devices for mobility, walkers, wheelchairs. Some people are bedridden,” she said.

    The Stiff Person Syndrome Research Foundation says, “the most common symptoms of SPS are muscle rigidity, stiffness and spasms in the muscles of the trunk including the back and limbs.”


    FILE – Singer Celine Dion performs during her Courage tour in Quebec City on Sept. 18, 2019. Dion has put a halt on all performing after being diagnosed stiff person syndrome.


    Jacques Boissinot / The Canadian Press

    These can be triggered by environmental stimuli, like loud noises, or emotional stress according to Yale Medicine.

    “The muscle spasms can be so severe they cause the person to fall down. The muscles gradually relax after the stimulus is gone,” the Yale Medicine website states.

    While there is no cure for SPS, when doctors treat patients with this condition, Yale Medicine says they focus on managing the symptoms with medications “such as sedatives, muscle relaxants, and steroids.”

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    Claudette told Le Journal that her sister has seen little improvement with her health, but the family is hoping for the best.

    “We can’t find any medicine that works, but having hope is important,” she said.

    &copy 2023 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

    Michelle Butterfield

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  • 8/2: CBS Evening News

    8/2: CBS Evening News

    8/2: CBS Evening News – CBS News


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    Trump scheduled to appear in court Thursday; Justin Trudeau announces he and his wife are separating

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  • Justin Trudeau announces he and his wife are separating

    Justin Trudeau announces he and his wife are separating

    Justin Trudeau announces he and his wife are separating – CBS News


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    Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced on social media that he and his wife, Sophie, are separating after 18 years of marriage.

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  • Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announces separation from wife Sophie

    Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announces separation from wife Sophie

    Canasian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced on social media Wednesday that he and his wife Sophie are separating after 18 years of marriage. 

    “After many meaningful and difficult conversations, we have made the decision to separate,” Trudea wrote on Instagram.

    Justin Trudeau and Sophie Gregoire Trudeau arrive at Westminster Abbey for the Coronation of King Charles III and Queen Camilla.

    Karwai Tang/Getty Images


    His wife Sophie posted a similar message on her account. The couple has three children — 15-year-old Xavier,15, 14-year-old Ella-Grace and 9-year-old Hadrien.  They asked the public to respect their privacy for the “well-being of our children.”

    The couple, who married in 2005, often supported each other in the public sphere.  In May, the pair attended King Charles’s coronation, where they were seen holding hands.

    This is a developing story and will be updated.

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  • Prime Minister Justin Trudeau And Wife Sophie Grégoire Trudeau Separating After 18 Years Of Marriage

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau And Wife Sophie Grégoire Trudeau Separating After 18 Years Of Marriage

    By Corey Atad.

    The Prime Minister of Canada and his wife are separating.

    On Wednesday, Justin Trudeau and Sophie Grégoire Trudeau shocked the world by announcing their split after 18 years of marriage.


    READ MORE:
    Justin Trudeau, John Legend Added To Global Citizen NOW Lineup

    The couple made the announcement in a pair of statements on each of their Instagram accounts.

    Both wrote that “after many meaningful and difficult conversations, we have made the decision to separate.”

    “As always, we remained close family with deep love and respect for each other and for everything we have built and will continue to build,” they added.

    Finally, they said, “For the well-being of our children, we ask that you respect our and their privacy. Thank you.”

    The Trudeaus share three children: 15-year-old Xavier, 14-year-old Ella-Grace and 9-year-old Hadrien.

    The Prime Minister’s Office also released a statement confirming that the couple have “signed a legal separation agreement.”

    “They have worked to ensure that all legal and ethical steps with regards to their decision to separate have been taken, and will continue to do so moving forward,” Trudeau’s office added.

    The PM’s office also noted, “They remain a close family and Sophie and the Prime Minister are focused on raising their kids in a safe, loving and collaborative environment. Both parents will be a constant presence in their children’s lives and Canadians can expect to often see the family together. The family will be together on vacation, beginning next week.”


    READ MORE:
    Justin Trudeau Urges Taylor Swift To Add Canada ‘Eras Tour’ Dates Amid Fan Outrage: ‘Don’t Make It Another Cruel Summer’

    Trudeau and Grégoire first met as children growing up in Montreal, where Grégoire was a classmate and friend of the future PM’s youngest brother, Michel.

    They eventually reconnected as adults, in 2003, when Grégoire, who had become a television personality in Quebec, was given the job as Trudeau’s co-host for a charity ball.

    Months afterward, they began dating, and in October 2004 they became engaged.

    The couple tied the knot on May 28, 2005 at Montreal’s Sainte-Madeleine d’Outremont Church.

    Trudeau was elected as a Liberal member of Parliament in 2008, going on to become party leader and assuming the office of Prime Minister on November 4, 2015.

    Corey Atad

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  • Justin Trudeau blasts Facebook for blocking news as Canada’s wildfires rage | CNN Business

    Justin Trudeau blasts Facebook for blocking news as Canada’s wildfires rage | CNN Business



    CNN
     — 

    Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau blasted Facebook for “putting corporate profits ahead of people’s safety” as the social media platform continues to block news content while wildfires rage in Canada’s Northwest Territories and British Columbia.

    “It is so inconceivable that a company like Facebook is choosing to put corporate profits ahead of ensuring that local news organizations can get up-to-date information to Canadians, and reach them where Canadians spend a lot of their time; online, on social media, on Facebook,” Trudeau said during a news conference Monday.

    Some 60,000 people across the Northwest Territories and British Columbia have been placed under evacuation orders since this weekend, according to the most recent numbers from Canadian officials. Also on Monday, Trudeau described the devastation wrought by the wildfires as “apocalyptic” and praised Canadians for stepping up to support evacuees.

    Earlier this month, Facebook’s parent-company Meta began to block news links from Facebook and Instagram in Canada, in response to recently-passed legislation in the country that requires tech companies to negotiate payments to news organizations for hosting their content.

    A Meta spokesperson told CNN in a statement on Monday that Canadians “continue to use our technologies in large numbers to connect with their communities and access reputable information, including content from official government agencies, emergency services and non-governmental organizations.”

    The new legislation in Canada “forces us to end access to news content in order to comply with the legislation but we remain focused on making our technologies available,” the statement added, pointing to Meta’s Safety Check tool, which the company said more than 45,000 people had used as of Friday to mark themselves as safe.

    The Meta spokesperson added that 300,000 people have visited the Yellowknife and Kelowna Crisis Response pages on Facebook.

    The Canadian legislation, known as Bill C-18 or the Online News Act, was given final approval in June. It aims to support the sustainability of news organizations by regulating “digital news intermediaries with a view to enhancing fairness in the Canadian digital news marketplace.”

    Meta has previously stated, via a company blogpost, that the legislation “misrepresents the value news outlets receive when choosing to use our platforms.” The ongoing controversy in Canada comes amid a global debate over the relationship between news organizations and social media companies about the value of news content, and who gets to benefit from it.

    During his remarks Monday, Trudeau said Facebook’s move to block news content is “bad for democracy” in the long run. “But right now, in an emergency situation, where up-to-date local information is more important than ever, Facebook’s putting corporate profits ahead of people’s safety,” Trudeau said.

    CNN’s Brian Fung contributed to this report.

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  • Extroverts More Likely to Resist Vaccines, Study Shows

    Extroverts More Likely to Resist Vaccines, Study Shows

    Newswise — EL PASO, Texas (Aug. 2, 2023) – Which types of personalities were more hesitant about COVID-19 vaccination during the pandemic’s peak? Extroverts — according to a new study on more than 40,000 Canadians.

    “We expected that people who were especially high in extroversion would be more likely to get the vaccine,” said Melissa Baker, Ph.D., lead author and assistant professor at The University of Texas at El Paso. “We figured those people would want to get back out in the world and socialize, right? It’s actually the opposite.”

    The findings, published in the journal Frontiers in Psychology, can help with future public health messaging and vaccination campaigns, according to the team of scientists, based at UTEP and the University of Toronto. It also offers a unique perspective in vaccine hesitancy research, a field that has largely focused on political affiliation.

    “We wanted to look at vaccine hesitancy a different way,” said Baker who is a member of the Department of Political Science and Public Administration. “Of course, politics can help explain some of it, but there are personal differences between people, too — and that led us to this personality aspect.”

    The study is based on surveys of more than 40,000 Canadian adults, taken between November 2020 and July 2021. Online questions evaluated each participant’s personality, based on a model known as “big five,” which gauges an individual’s openness, conscientiousness, extraversion, agreeableness and emotional stability. 

    Additional questions probed how respondents felt about vaccination. One question, for example, asked, “When a COVID-19 vaccine becomes available, will you be vaccinated?” As the vaccine rollout began, questions were altered to reflect their availability.

    Most of the team’s hypotheses were supported. For instance, people who were more open and agreeable were more likely to get the vaccine.

    “Those are the kind of people who are open to new things, new information and just like to go with the flow,” Baker said. “We also expected that for people with high conscientious because they are detail-oriented and big planners.”

    On the other hand, those with low emotional stability — or those who experience extreme emotions — were less likely to be vaccinated. And extroverts, to their surprise, were 18 percent more likely to refuse the vaccine.

    While the pandemic is over, the team said the findings could help with future public health messaging strategies for vaccination from various diseases, not just COVID-19.

    Baker explained, “If we know you need to reach a certain type of personality, we can think about the message that will actually reach and persuade that person.

    ###

     About The University of Texas at El Paso 

    The University of Texas at El Paso is America’s leading Hispanic-serving University. Located at the westernmost tip of Texas, where three states and two countries converge along the Rio Grande, 84% of our 24,000 students are Hispanic, and half are the first in their families to go to college. UTEP offers 169 bachelor’s, master’s, and doctoral degree programs at the only open-access, top-tier research university in America.

    University of Texas at El Paso

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  • Meta takes steps to end news access in Canada over law on paying publishers

    Meta takes steps to end news access in Canada over law on paying publishers

    A new law forces platforms like Google and Meta to negotiate commercial deals with Canadian news firms for content.

    Meta Platforms has begun the process to end access to news on Facebook and Instagram for all users in Canada, it said on Tuesday, in response to a legislation requiring internet giants to pay news publishers.

    The Online News Act, passed by the Canadian parliament, would force platforms like Google parent Alphabet and Meta to negotiate commercial deals with Canadian news publishers for their content.

    “News outlets voluntarily share content on Facebook and Instagram to expand their audiences and help their bottom line,” Rachel Curran, Meta’s head of public policy in Canada, said. “In contrast, we know the people using our platforms don’t come to us for news.”

    The office of Canadian Heritage Minister Pascale St-Onge, who is in charge of the government’s dealings with Meta, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    In a campaign against the law, which is part of a broader global trend to make tech firms pay for news, both Meta and Google said in June they would block access to news on their platforms in the country.

    Canada’s legislation is similar to a ground-breaking law that Australia passed in 2021 and had triggered threats from Google and Facebook to curtail their services.

    Both companies eventually struck deals with Australian media firms after amendments to the legislation were offered.

    But on the Canadian law, Google has argued that it is broader than those enacted in Australia and Europe as it puts a price on news story links displayed in search results and can apply to outlets that do not produce news.

    Meta had said links to news articles make up less than 3 percent of the content on its users’ feeds and argued that news lacked economic value.

    Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau had said in May that such an argument was flawed and “dangerous to our democracy, to our economy”.

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  • Dock workers at key Canadian ports reject labor deal, creating further trade uncertainty

    Dock workers at key Canadian ports reject labor deal, creating further trade uncertainty

    Shipping containers are loaded onto rail cars at the Global Container Terminals Vanterm container terminal on Vancouver Harbour in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

    Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Overseas trade entering North America through key ports on Canada’s West Coast faces more uncertainty after dock workers rejected a tentative labor deal late Friday.

    The flow of trade destined for U.S. chemical companies, retailers, and manufacturers is delayed at least two months as a result of 14 days of strikes.

    Rob Ashton, president of the International Longshoremen and Warehouse Union of Canada, has called on the dock workers’ employers to come back to negotiating table and reach a deal that works for both the union and industry.

    The British Columbia Maritime Employers Association did not respond to the union’s request to go back to the negotiating table. BCMEA said they are disappointed that ILWU Canada rejected the four-year tentative agreement. The employers association said it is waiting for the Canadian government to provide direction on next steps.

    Canada’s Labor Minister Seamus O’Regan said he has directed the country’s industrial relations board to determine whether the union’s rejection of the tentative agreement eliminated the possibility of a negotiated resolution.

    If the board does determine this to be the case, O’Reagan has directed the board to either impose a new collective agreement or impose binding arbitration. If binding arbitration is decided, the union is not allowed to strike.

    “Our economy cannot face further disruption from this dispute,” O’Regan said.

    The proposed deal which was voted down by the union was presented to both sides by the senior federal mediator. The BCMEA released the terms of the deal in its announcement. This is not the first time the BCMEA has released the deal.

    The four-year package increased the compounded wage over four years by 19.2%. A signing bonus of $1.48 an hour per employee which tallied to approximately $3,000 per full-time worker was included. Also in the deal was an 18.5% increase in retirement payout.

    In a pushback against the union’s argument of having a salary sustainable against rising inflation, the BCMEA said, “Over the course of the past 13 years, longshore wages have risen by 40%, ahead of inflation at 30%.”

    U.S. trade impact

    The timing of this strike adds unnecessary hurdles to peak season when holiday items are arriving for retailers. At the height of the strike, $12 billion in freight was stranded on the water. Some of that trade was diverted on vessels that called on ports on the U.S. West Coast.

    “Our clients are facing about a two-month delay in the delivery of their product,” said Paul Brashier, vice president of drayage at ITS Logistics. “The vessel was delayed by several weeks and now the rail-bound containers sit at the Ports of Vancouver and Prince Rupert.”

    Steve Lamar, CEO of the American Apparel and Footwear Association, said his group estimated that the first strike would cause an average of 6 to 8 weeks of supply chain disruption before conditions return to normal. AAFA had called on the Canadian government to step in during the first strike.

    For the third week in a row, rail traffic from Canada into the U.S. is down following the on-again, off-again western Canadian ports strike. The first two weeks of the labor strike prevented over 80% of rail trade from entering the United States. The U.S. saw another 12% decrease in trade this week.

    Immediate impact on railroad earnings

    The strike is also hitting the bottom lines of railroad companies. The labor unrest will negatively impact Canadian Pacific Kansas City railroad’s revenue by $80 million, Chief Marketing Officer John Brooks told analysts on a conference call Thursday. Brooks said the company is working to claw back those losses over the remainder of the third and fourth quarter.

    Canadian National Railway railroad announced they were running additional trains to help expedite the clearing out of the container congestion.

    The Railway Association of Canada originally estimated that it would take three to five days for every day the strike lasted for networks and supply chains to recover. When the first strike ended on its thirteenth day, delays for rail containers were estimated at 39 to 66 days. Adding another day with the on-again, off-again strike last week brings the congestion removal tally up to 42 to 70 days.

    “Delays appear to be bearing out toward the mid-to-upper end of that range,” a Railway Association of Canada spokesperson wrote in an email to CNBC.

    Eric Byer, CEO of the National Association of Chemical Distributors, said that hundreds of chemicals that arrive through West Coast Canadian ports are needed to complete U.S. manufacturing of products.

    “There are millions of dollars of chemicals stranded on the water. We have members waiting for chemicals to be unloaded in Vancouver and then railed down to Chicago,” Byer said.

    That includes chemicals like sulfuric acid, which is used in drain cleaning products like Drano; phosphates used in laundry detergent; and acetone, which is used in the nail industry as well as a solvent that breaks down grease and wax.

    Sodium fluoride, found in toothpaste, and sodium bicarbonate, also known as baking soda, also come through the West Coast ports of Canada. Additional chemicals transported through the Canadian ports go into food, power drinks, cleaning, water purification, and personal care products.

    The on-again, off-again strike has left logistics managers and the world of trade in turmoil as they attempt to assess the situation and make decisions on ocean and rail transport during peak shipping season.

    Alan Baer, CEO of trucking company OL USA, said global supply chains are complex and cannot be simply turned on and off like a light switch.

    Historical cargo volumes show how trade moving via the the U.S. West Coast eroded due to fears about cargo being stuck and or diverted due to labor tensions over the past year, Baer said. Many shippers diverted business to East Coast ports, he said.

    “Once changed, not everyone will simply return,” Baer added.

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  • Nearly 3 years after surviving sword attack, Quebec City musician heads to New York  | Globalnews.ca

    Nearly 3 years after surviving sword attack, Quebec City musician heads to New York | Globalnews.ca

    Even as he packs his bags, Quebec’s Rémy Bélanger de Beauport, can hardly believe he’ll be living in New York City less than a week from now.

    “It’s funny. I’m almost shy to say this, but this is going to be my first time in New York City,” he said. “I’m going to the place where the music I’m into is happening.”

    Bélanger de Beauport, who describes himself as a free improv cellist, was selected for the Conseil des arts et des lettres du Québec’s five-month residency in SoHo. The program is open to artists from all disciplines, from visual arts to music and literature, but only those with more than 10 years of experience are eligible to apply.

    “I had never applied before, but last year I thought ‘Here’s a promise to myself: I’m applying for the first time for the studio in New York and I’ll be applying for the next 10 years if I have to, but I’m going to go there eventually,’” he said. “And I got it on the first try.”

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    The grant provides a select artist with a furnished apartment in New York, with the goal of fully immersing them in the city’s art scene. It first came to be in 1981 and dozens of local artists have taken part in the residency since.

    “It’s an honour. I was selected on the basis of my work, by my peers, by the CALQ,” Bélanger de Beauport said. “But also it’s great to go to New York and have an apartment to myself and to just think about my art, but in a new place, in a new way.”

    CALQ estimates it receives between 30 to 40 applications per studio per year and only two artists are selected, each getting a half-year stay.

    It’s quite the turnaround since not long ago, Bélanger de Beauport was forced to put his music career on hold. He was one of seven people stabbed during a random sword attack in Quebec City’s historic district on Halloween night 2020. Two people died of their injuries.

    “I like that when we talk about my music now, the focus is really on the music and not on (the attack),” he said. “But of course, it’s a part of me, and it’s a part of my experience, and a lot of people probably know me just because of that.”


    Click to play video: 'Musician injured in Quebec City sword attack speaks out from hospital'


    Musician injured in Quebec City sword attack speaks out from hospital


    He went through nearly two years of intensive physiotherapy and ergotherapy after the attack.

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    “Anything I was gaining, was a true gain. … In November 2020, I couldn’t stand up, so the moment I could stand up was such a gain for my musical life because now I could play standing up … I couldn’t use my fingers for a while, then I could use them,” he explained. “I’m not thinking about what I could do before and I can’t do now. I try not to go in that direction.”

    Bélanger de Beauport has had to make some minor changes to the way he plays, but he says he doesn’t see much of a difference in his music.

    “My music has always been about the body and breathing and exploring the limits of the body, and so in that way, my trajectory as an artist has not changed,” he said. “It’s just the limits of my body are different. The fingers don’t feel the same … the shoulders are kind of different.”

    The cellist hopes to use his upcoming residency as an opportunity to forge new connections, but also to continue his many ongoing projects, including a vinyl album and four compositions.

    “I want to see the best players, I want to hear the best music and hopefully, of course, I’ll be influenced by the music I hear there,” Bélanger de Beauport said. “And also it’s such a mystery to me how people get to live there, cause it’s getting super expensive.”

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    Bélanger de Beauport will live and work in New York until the end of December, after which he hopes to continue his work with the Ensemble de musique improvisée de Québec.

    Franca G. Mignacca

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  • Smoke from hundreds of Canadian wildfires blankets northern US cities with air pollution | CNN

    Smoke from hundreds of Canadian wildfires blankets northern US cities with air pollution | CNN



    CNN
     — 

    Smoke from more than 1,000 wildfires burning across Canada has wafted over the northern US, bringing poor air quality and pollution that threaten residents’ health to northern US cities including Chicago, Illinois, and Minneapolis, Minnesota.

    Chicago, Minneapolis and Detroit, Michigan, are now among at least three major US cities that are ranked in the top 20 most polluted cities in the world, according to global pollution tracker IQAir.

    The smoke has drifted over the Great Lakes region, in particular, as about 1,090 active fires blaze throughout Canada, more than 670 of which are considered “out of control,” according to the Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre. That’s up from more than 880 fires there last week.

    The bulk of the country’s wildfires are burning in British Columbia, where more than 460 fires are ongoing, the agency reports.

    In the US, the National Weather Service (NWS) has issued air quality alerts for millions of people across Michigan and parts of Minnesota, Wisconsin, Illinois and Indiana.

    The blanket of hazy skies follows a belt of Canadian wildfire smoke which stretched across the US last week, triggering air quality alerts for more than a dozen states from Montana to Vermont, with some smoke reaching as far South as Alabama.

    The smoke is expected to shift eastward through the Great Lakes region through Tuesday and disperse by Wednesday – just as the upper Midwest is forecast to see some of its hottest temperatures so far this year. Minneapolis could reach 100° and Chicago will be in the upper 90s.

    The EPA in Illinois has declared an “Air Pollution Action Day” through Tuesday due to the “persistent” wildfire smoke causing elevated air pollution in the region. Similar advisories have been declares in Michigan and Wisconsin.

    The city is recommending that those with chronic respiratory issues limit their activities outdoors and is advising against strenuous activity for children, teens, seniors, people with heart or lung disease, and pregnant people.

    “All Chicagoans may also consider wearing masks, limiting their outdoor exposure, moving activities indoors, running air purifiers, and closing windows,” the city said in a release Monday.

    Wildfire smoke is packed with tiny pollutants – known as particulate matter – that can infiltrate the lungs and blood stream if inhaled. Particulate matter can commonly cause difficulty breathing and eye and throat irritation, but has also been linked to more serious long-term health issues such as lung cancer, according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

    The US is likely to see the downwind effects of Canada’s prolonged wildfires as the country continues to experience its worst fire season on record.

    Almost 29 million acres of Canadian land have been scorched so far this year, according to the national fire center. Smoke from the blazes this summer have so far touched the American South and traveled across the Atlantic and into Europe.

    The crisis has elicited a flood of international support, as fire and emergency response personnel have deployed to the country from nations including the US, Australia and Brazil. At least two Canadian firefighters have died while battling the flames.

    Hard-hit British Columbia will receive federal assistance from the Canadian Armed Forces, Public Safety Canada announced last week.

    Hundreds of British Columbia’s fires have been ignited by lightning strikes from thunderstorms, according to the British Columbia Wildfire Service. Some of those thunderstorms were “dry,” producing insufficient amounts of rain to help quench any fires – a dangerous prospect in a province experiencing severe drought.

    As the human-driven climate crisis intensifies, scientists expect wildfire seasons will increase in severity, especially as droughts and heat become more common and more severe across the world.

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  • Two killed, two missing after violent flooding in eastern Canada

    Two killed, two missing after violent flooding in eastern Canada

    Floods in Nova Scotia bring new difficulties to a country struggling with ongoing wildfires and extreme weather.

    Two people who went missing amid a series of floods in eastern Canada are presumed dead, according to authorities in Nova Scotia.

    Tim Houston, the premier of the Atlantic-facing province, confirmed the deaths on Monday after weekend storms brought heavy rainfall and rising waters to the region of Halifax, the province’s largest city.

    “I extend my deepest sympathies to the families and friends of the two people who passed away following floods,” Houston said in a statement.

    The floods take their toll as Canada grapples with a period of extreme weather, including a record-breaking fire season that continues to burn across the country.

    The storms in Nova Scotia started on Friday, swamping parts of the maritime province with more than 25cm (10 inches) of rainfall in one day, the amount it typically receives in about three months.

    A total of four people, including two children, went missing over the weekend when two separate vehicles were inundated by flood waters.

    On Monday, Canadian police confirmed they had recovered the body of a 52-year-old man from Windsor, who was reported missing when his car became submerged.

    They also found what they believe to be the remains of another missing person on the shore of a tidal area in a neighbouring county.

    “I spoke with @TimHoustonNS today,” Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said in a Twitter post on Saturday.

    “We discussed the way Nova Scotians are always there for one another, the current flooding situation, and the federal assistance being provided — and I let him know that our government stands ready to provide additional assistance as needed.”

    Provincial officials have also reported damage to infrastructure, including six bridges destroyed and 19 damaged. About 50 roads were also affected and repair efforts have been delayed in areas where there are still floodwaters.

    Railroads connecting to the port of Halifax, the fourth largest in Canada, were also damaged.

    Emergency responders continue to search for missing people.

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  • Record-Breaking Downpours Along Canada’s Atlantic Coast Flood Nova Scotia

    Record-Breaking Downpours Along Canada’s Atlantic Coast Flood Nova Scotia

    HALIFAX, Nova Scotia (AP) — An unusually long procession of intense thunderstorms dumped record amounts of rain across a wide swath of Canada’s Atlantic-coast province of Nova Scotia over the past two days, causing flash flooding, road washouts and power outages.

    Torrential downpours started on Friday afternoon across the Halifax region, dumping more than 200 millimeters of rain in some areas. The port city typically receives about 90-100 mm of rain during an average July.

    Based on radar estimates and unofficial observations, Environment Canada said on Saturday that some areas may have received more than 300 mm in 24 hours. Radar maps show the heaviest rainfall extending along the province’s southwestern shore to a point north of Halifax.

    Widespread flooding has also been reported in Lunenberg County, which is west of the Halifax region.

    On Friday night, water levels rose so fast in the Bedford area that volunteers with Halifax Search and Rescue were using small boats to rescue people from inundated homes.

    In the Hammonds Plains area, northwest of the city, flooding washed out driveways and the shoulders of many roads.

    That’s the same area where where 151 homes and businesses were destroyed by a wildfire that started on May 28, forcing evacuations that affected 16,000 residents. And for much of the past week, the Halifax area has been sweltering under an immobile dome of humidity — a rare event so close to the coast.

    It was only last fall that post-tropical storm Fiona descended on the Atlantic region, killing three people, flattening scores of homes and knocking out power to more than 600,000 homes and businesses. Fiona was the most costly weather event in the region’s history, causing more than 800 million Canadian dollars ($604 million) in insured damage.

    “It’s pretty obvious that the climate is changing — from Fiona last year to the wildfires in the spring and now flooding in the summer,” Halifax Mayor Mike Savage said.

    “We’re getting storms that used to be considered one-in-50-year events … pretty regularly,” he added.

    While the official statistics have yet to be recorded, it’s believed the Halifax region has not seen this level of rainfall since Aug. 16, 1971, when hurricane Beth made landfall near the eastern tip of mainland Nova Scotia and then roared over Cape Breton. At that time, almost 250 mm of rain fell on the Halifax area, causing widespread flooding and damage.

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  • Filming Christmas in July? How Hollywood strikes hit holiday movie-making here – National | Globalnews.ca

    Filming Christmas in July? How Hollywood strikes hit holiday movie-making here – National | Globalnews.ca

    It’s a classic holiday film tale: small towns, snowflakes and star-crossed lovers.

    But this year’s queue of beloved holiday movies may be considerably smaller due to the worldwide shut-down of productions caused by current Hollywood writers’ and actors’ strikes.

    Glitch SPFX is an Ottawa-based special effects company responsible for simulating most of the artificial snow in holiday films produced in the province in the last five years — the majority of those films for American studios and networks.

    Now, Glitch SPFX founder Ben Belanger said the company is completely out of work.

    “It went from us working on literally three films at the same time in June … and then it was the writers’ strike that seemed like it was going to be nice and short.”

    “But now with the actors’ strike jumping on top of that, it makes things a little more uncertain,” Belanger told Global News in an interview, referring to the Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Television and Radio Artists (SAG-AFTRA) and Writers Guild of America (WGA) strikes.

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    Click to play video: 'Canadian impact of the SAG/AFTRA strike'


    Canadian impact of the SAG/AFTRA strike


    Glitch has been in business for 10 years, but Belanger said the last five have been especially lucrative due to deals with American networks such as the Hallmark Channel, known for pumping out some of the most talked about holiday films each year.

    Many of those films have been produced in Canada, with small-town locations in Ontario and British Columbia as well as the nation’s capital Ottawa flourishing with business the past few years.

    But due to the strikes this year, the number of holiday films produced in Canada for Hallmark and similar networks will be greatly reduced, experts say — not because of the crews, but actors.

    1Development Entertainment Services is an Ottawa-based production company with a focus on holiday, made-for-TV movies. Like Glitch, almost all of the studio’s projects are in collaboration with American unions and networks due to having a larger market and audience size.

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    Founder of 1Development, Shane Boucher, said it’s a big deal for networks to have at least one American star in a holiday film. That’s why many companies will likely choose to wait out the actors’ strike instead of working on new projects with an entirely Canadian cast.

    “The SAG requirement is usually pretty high. There’s either a level of a Hallmark-known star … that’s going to help drive the viewership, or it’s just an American star that has a really high social media presence. Normally they’re higher than some of your top-level Canadians just because of the reach and the audience.”

    Canadian studios will typically opt to hire domestic crews for tax credit purposes, which is more cost-effective.


    Picketers carry signs outside Netflix studios on Thursday in Los Angeles. The strike by actors comes more than two months after screenwriters began striking in their bid to get better pay and working conditions.


    AP Photo/Chris Pizzello

    Boucher said 1Development will not be one of the companies waiting out the strike and will work with networks to develop their own intellectual property (IP) in the meantime.

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    “We’re usually busy servicing production, so that’s kind of the silver lining. It gives us an opportunity,” he said.

    Boucher said his goal has always been to grow the film industry in Ottawa since joining 20 years ago. Since work with American unions and networks is currently off the board, he’ll be focusing on smaller projects to fill the gaps.

    “My job over the next few weeks to a month is to … work on getting some sort of projects so that we can keep everybody working … regardless of where it comes from.”

    ACTRA Toronto executive director Alistair Hepburn said there is a small chance that some holiday film productions will be able to secure an American actor.

    SAG-AFTRA is working on an agreement in which independent producers — those not affiliated with the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers (AMPTP) — will be able to engage the services of a SAG member through a waiver system for the duration of the strike.

    “That may be something that we see maybe even more of because they will be filling that gap,” Hepburn said in an interview with Global News.

    Hepburn noted that even if Canadian productions are able to hire SAG-AFTRA actors, those projects cannot be distributed by AMPTP companies, such as Netflix or Disney. Instead, independent producers can sell their project’s wares to unaffiliated networks like Hallmark.

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    “That is a very clear direction from SAG,” he said.


    Click to play video: '‘We are the victims here’: SAG-AFTRA president says as Hollywood actors go on strike'


    ‘We are the victims here’: SAG-AFTRA president says as Hollywood actors go on strike


    Belanger said that he’s fortunate to feel financially secure enough during Glitch’s uncertainty, but that he worries about many of his employees.

    “I’m more worried about the guys whose pay cheques I sign. The guys that work for me are looking for whatever other income they can get right now.”

    Belanger said that what his company is currently experiencing is similar to the strain felt in the industry due to the COVID-19 pandemic, which also saw an industry-wide shut-down. A number of Glitch employees left at the time to supplement their income elsewhere, and not all returned.

    However, Belanger said many of his staff are enjoying having a break. Though the holidays are still some time away, the summer season is typically the busiest for filming.

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    “It’s a bit of an abnormality. They don’t seem to be too worried about it, but we also don’t know when we’re coming back,” he said.

    SAG-AFTRA is entering its second week of striking. Hepburn said that he doesn’t know how long the strikes will go on and that doesn’t see a resolution coming soon.

    “This is going to have an impact for months, absolutely months,” Hepburn said. “On not just performance, but the entire industry as a whole.”

    &copy 2023 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

    Naomi Barghiel

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  • Nigerian Goalkeeper Notches Epic Game-Saver At The Women’s World Cup

    Nigerian Goalkeeper Notches Epic Game-Saver At The Women’s World Cup

    Nigeria goalkeeper Chiamaka Nnadozie on Friday made the save of the Women’s World Cup so far ― and it could stand up for quite a while. (Watch the video below.)

    Nnadozie denied Canadian great Christine Sinclair on a penalty kick in the 50th minute, diving left to block the attempt and then slapping the ball away as Sinclair rushed the net for a second chance.

    The spectacular play preserved a 0-0 tie in Melbourne, Australia, that might feel more like a victory for Nigeria. The squad is ranked 40th in the world and Canada, the defending Olympic champion, is ranked 7th.

    But on this occasion she couldn’t convert. She sat on the turf and slumped her head between her knees in disbelief.

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  • Why the Hollywood strike is already ‘a big deal’ for Canada’s film industry – National | Globalnews.ca

    Why the Hollywood strike is already ‘a big deal’ for Canada’s film industry – National | Globalnews.ca

    The strain of Hollywood’s actors’ and writers’ strikes is being felt in productions all around the world, and film industry insiders say Canada is far from exempt.

    Due to long-established industry ties to American unions and networks, most film and television productions in Canada have come to a screeching halt. Alistair Hepburn, executive director of ACTRA Toronto, says productions began slowing down in spring when rumours of the Writers Guild of America (WGA) strike began.

    “Some shows that were scheduled to come (to Canada) never even started. With this now, adding our siblings at SAG-AFTRA to the picket lines, we will absolutely see an impact,” Hepburn said to Global News in an interview, referring to the Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Television and Radio Artists.

    “There won’t be new shows recorded over the summer in time for a fall premiere.”

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    Summer is typically the film industry’s most lucrative season across the board, he said, but this year will be “relatively slow.”

    A lot of Canadian productions work with American studios and SAG-AFTRA actors, but just under half of the work done in provinces like Ontario is domestic, which includes shows like Murdoch Mysteries and Run the Burbs.

    “It’s all of those shows that are filmed here using Canadian talent, Canadian writers, Canadian directors, Canadian crews to do the work. Those shows continue,” Hepburn explained.


    Click to play video: 'Impact of Hollywood strike on Canada’s film industry'


    Impact of Hollywood strike on Canada’s film industry


    SAG-AFTRA is also working on an agreement where independent Canadian producers – not affiliated with the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers (AMPTP) – will be able to engage the services of a SAG member through a waiver system for the duration of the strike.

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    Independent Canadian producers will have access to actors who are dual card holders as well, meaning they have both a SAG-AFTRA and ACTRA membership.

    “We’ve been in constant contact with our colleagues at SAG-AFTRA and they are assuring us that they’re not looking to do harm to our industry,” Hepburn said.

    Hepburn says he doesn’t know how long the strikes will go on and doesn’t see a resolution coming soon.

    “This is going to have an impact for months, absolutely months on not just performance, but the entire industry as a whole.”

    Hepburn emphasized that it’s not just performers that will be affected by the production drought. Directors, technicians, caterers and Mom-and-Pop hardware stores will feel the strain too.

    “In Ontario, it’s 35,000 full-time equivalent jobs in the film industry. The trickle-down effect is real,” Hepburn said.

    Shane Boucher, who is the founder of an Ottawa-based studio called 1Development Entertainment Services, says this is the first July in the industry where he hasn’t worked.

    “It’s really an industry-wide shutdown. It’s a big deal,” Boucher said in an interview with Global News.

    1Development is a service company, meaning they service other parent companies or networks. Almost all of the TV movies the company works with are American.

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    Click to play video: 'Implications of Hollywood strikes on Canadian Film Industry'


    Implications of Hollywood strikes on Canadian Film Industry


    Boucher says business started as usual at the start of the year with approximately 16 productions lined up. When rumours of the WGA strike started, Boucher found himself scrambling to finish as many films as possible by June. Now, he doesn’t have any projects in production.

    Many productions gained buzz when it was announced they were set to film in Canada this summer, including the first season of Cruel Intentions, filmed in Toronto.

    Stefan Steen, a producer on the show by Amazon, says production has stopped until the strike ends.

    “It’s completely devastating to the local film industry. Everyone currently filming U.S. productions has had to stop and all local crews are immediately out of work. Most get one week’s additional pay but that’s it,” Steen said in an email to Global News.

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    Click to play video: '‘We are the victims here’: SAG-AFTRA president says as Hollywood actors go on strike'


    ‘We are the victims here’: SAG-AFTRA president says as Hollywood actors go on strike


    Creative B.C., a program in British Columbia that supports the provinces’ creative sector, said in a statement on their website that they are “watching the situation closely” and “respect the process and all parties.”

    “In our role as the economic development organization for motion picture in B.C., together with our local industry partners, we are concerned for the workforce, companies, industry, and people,” the group said.

    “The industry is evolving rapidly, business models have changed, and addressing these changes is part of a necessary industry business cycle.”

    Hepburn says anyone who wants to support the strike can vote with their wallets.

    “It’s time to cancel your streaming account. That’s ultimately what is going to force the hand here. It’s going to be about financial hardships on the AMPTP companies,” he said.

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    “There needs to be action taken by the public.”

    Hepburn also says he hopes other countries will show solidarity in what performers are fighting for.

    “SAG’s fight is everybody’s fight,” he said. “It’s a righteous fight on behalf of performers worldwide.”

    &copy 2023 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

    Naomi Barghiel

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  • Canadian cinemas preparing for fallout of Hollywood strikes  – National | Globalnews.ca

    Canadian cinemas preparing for fallout of Hollywood strikes  – National | Globalnews.ca

    Canadian movie theatre owners say they’re nervously watching for developments in dual Hollywood strikes and plan to show more classics, cult favourites and live events if the labour disruptions stretch on.

    The owners are expecting striking stars represented by the Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Television and Radio Artists, and talent backed by the Writers Guild of America, to be on the picket lines for months as they seek better wages and protections from artificial intelligence.

    The strikes, which immediately stopped the production and promotion of films and television shows, stand to slow down the flow of content as studios and distributors run out of movies completed before the strike to release.

    “I am absolutely petrified about it,” said Jeff Knoll, chief executive of Film.ca Cinemas, an Oakville, Ont. theatre.

    “We barely survived the pandemic…and we are quite nervous about what the future is going to hold with all that’s going on in Hollywood right now.”

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    This week alone, Knoll’s theatre has scheduled screenings of “Mission: Impossible _ Dead Reckoning Part One” and “Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny,” along with the hotly-anticipated “Barbie” and “Oppenheimer.”

    Knoll, however, fears that flow of Hollywood fare moviegoers have waited months, if not years, to see could ease up soon.

    “There’s no question that if the strike drags out, (studios) are going to have to either start spreading out their content or simply postponing it until a point in the future when they anticipate the strike will be over,” he said.


    Click to play video: 'Hollywood’s actors’ strike being felt in Montreal’s film industry'


    Hollywood’s actors’ strike being felt in Montreal’s film industry


    Even if they don’t switch up their release schedules, Knoll thinks theatres will be hit hard by a lack of promotion around films.

    The strikes are preventing stars from walking red carpets, participating in press junkets and interviews and taping new marketing materials.

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    The cast of “Oppenheimer,” for example, walked out of their premiere in solidarity with striking workers last week, while Disney sent Mickey and Minnie Mouse, Maleficent and Cruella de Vil down the “Haunted Mansion” red carpet in lieu of stars Tiffany Haddish, Danny DeVito and Rosario Dawson over the weekend.

    Knoll also suspects “Mission: Impossible _ Dead Reckoning Part One” had a rough ride at the box office because of the strikes.

    “It didn’t perform the way it was supposed to perform over the weekend and it could very well be because there wasn’t as much publicity with the stars, particularly Tom Cruise, leading up to opening day.”

    If films do slow down, Knoll said he will toy with bringing in more Canadian fare and movies from parts of the globe not as impacted by the strike. Bollywood films and screenings of hits like “Harry Potter” could also factor into Film.ca’s schedule.


    Click to play video: 'Implications of Hollywood strikes on Canadian Film Industry'


    Implications of Hollywood strikes on Canadian Film Industry


    Corinne Lea, the chief executive of the Rio Theatre in Vancouver, also plans to get crafty with programming, but said it’s nothing new for indie theatres.

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    Before the strikes, the Rio had to wait between three and six months to screen some films Cineplex, the country’s biggest cinema chain, had for months.

    As a result, the Rio often screened new films months after they were released and relied on a rotation of previously released fare, burlesque and drag shows and Canadian hits.

    Its July calendar shows “Star Wars” screenings, a “Grease” singalong and Jean-Luc Godard’s 1965 New Wave drama “Pierrot le Fou.” Hundreds of people show up to its classic screenings of hits like “the Rocky Horror Picture Show,” Lea added.

    “We’re used to not being able to get current content,” she said.

    “This strike is going to hurt Cineplex actually more than it’ll hurt us because all the theatres that actually rely on current content are the ones that are going to have a problem. But because we’ve been denied access to it for so long, we’ve become these like creative shape shifters.”“


    Click to play video: 'Hollywood strike hits local workers and economy in Toronto'


    Hollywood strike hits local workers and economy in Toronto


    In May, when the 11,5000 film and television writers represented by the Writers Guild of America walked off the job, Cineplex chief executive Ellis Jacob didn’t expect the strike to have a material impact on its business.

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    Network TV and streamers, whose content is completed shortly before it is released, tend to feel the brunt of such strikes, not theatres, he reasoned.

    “I always say to people yes, it will impact us, but it’ll take a long time to impact us,” Jacob later told The Canadian Press in an interview.

    “We’re talking three years from now because a lot of the movies are already in process of being produced.”

    In an email, a Cineplex spokesperson said, “Like everyone in the industry, we hope that SAG-AFTRA and the WGA can come to a quick resolution with the AMPTP.”

    As for Knoll and Lea, they are anxiously awaiting any new developments in the strike.

    “It’s definitely one that we’re all keeping an eye on,” Lea said.

    “I think everyone is nervous.”

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  • A Canadian teen allegedly carved his name into an 8th-century Japanese temple

    A Canadian teen allegedly carved his name into an 8th-century Japanese temple

    Tourist apologizes for Colosseum name carving


    Tourist who carved name into Rome Colosseum apologizes

    00:42

    A 17-year-old suspect was questioned by Japanese authorities after he allegedly carved his name into an 8th-century Japanese temple earlier this month, news agency Kyodo reports. The Canadian teen allegedly wrote his name, Julian, on Toshodaiji Temple, a UNESCO World Heritage site in Nara.

    A Japanese tourist told staff at the temple they saw the teen carving his name into a pillar of the Golden Hall, which is a national treasure, police say. 

    The teen allegedly used his fingernail to carve a 4-centimeter “J” in the wood, as well as “Julian,” which stretched 10 cm.

    Police questioned the teen on suspicion of violating the cultural properties protection law. 

    screen-shot-2023-07-17-at-9-52-12-am.png
    The teen allegedly used his fingernail to carve a 4-centimeter “J” in the wood as well as “Julian,” which stretched 10 cm.

    Nara Prefectural Police vi Kyodo


    “We are worried that the same thing could happen again. Even though it may have been done without malice, it is still regrettable and sad,” one of the monks at the temple said, Kyodo reports. 

    Several historic monuments of ancient Nara are still standing in the city and Toshodaiji Temple is one of five Buddhist temples at the site, according to UNESCO. 

    Several of the buildings were vandalized in 2015, according to Kyodo.  

    Toshodai-ji Temple - Toshodaiji was founded by Ganjin - a
     Toshodaiji was founded by Ganjin – a Chinese priest invited to Japan by the emperor to train priests and teach Buddhism. Ganjin’s influence in propagating Buddhism in Japan was monumental, and his arrival and teaching at Toshodaiji was important in this process. 

    John S Lander/LightRocket via Getty Images


    Last month, a tourist from the U.K. was caught on camera carving his fiance’s name into the Colosseum, a 2,000-year-old amphitheater and one of the most famous tourist attractions in Rome. 

    The man allegedly used keys to carve “Ivan + Haley 23,” Italian news outlet ANSA reported. The tourist, who faces a fine of up to $16,000, later apologized and his lawyer says he hopes for a plea bargain to avoid going to jail. 

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