Friday 24 February 2012

PICTURE SPECIAL: Toronto Motor Show

Anybody who knows me knows that I'm mad keen on cars. Really into carburetors and gaskets and whatnot. I'm what Jeremy Clarkson would call a "proper petrolhead... on acid". So it was only fitting that I was present at the 2012 Toronto Motor Show, where ladies look at Minis and men decide which pick-up got the best mileage: the 31mpg Ford F150 or the 49.89kpg Buick Somethingorother.

I must have sat in at least eight different cars, my particular favourites being the most economic and realistic: the Fiat 500, the Mazda3 and the Nissan Leaf. I also happened to notice Toyota launching the IQ under their budget Scion brand, whereupon some weirdo filmed me getting in and out of the back just to "see how it was done". I should have made the bugger delete the footage: there wasn't a release form in sight... All pictures enlarge with a click!

BMW Concept. Glass tube thing is a 3D HUD


A view of the afternoon

Woodpecker: what a refreshing change!

The Triumph side-exhibit: huzzah!



Minimalism: en vogue

Some kind of Acura, possibly?

Asked to take it for a spin but was told: "No professionals"



I said: "I'm not a professional"


Yes, it's an Acura. And these photos aren't in order.

The 2013 Passat CC. Possibly the worst car I've ever seen.

A Dodge Ram (aren't they two different manufacturers?)

Soft top Fiat + Japanese tourists = photo



Whatever this was, you weren't allowed near it

Low-slung Beetle

Just off the top of my head, this is a 2013 Nissan GT-R

And that was that; my vehicular interest taken care of for another year or so. The rest of the day involved a five-dollar footlong, a gormless hour or so in front of UFC and a hair-raising drive (i.e. me behind the wheel) to the closest bar with a pool table - the exotically-named and African-themed Safari! Sadly, there are no photographs. To tide you over, here's the ad for the aforementioned footlong: an ad that, thanks to its extraordinary key change, has been stuck in my head since I got here (it's a sort of half-step to a minor chord, you see, which is not what you expect of a jingle). Enjoy!


Sunday 12 February 2012

Defeat From The Jaws Of Victory

Twin towns and sister cities are two of many terms used to describe the cooperative agreements between towns, cities, and even counties in geographically and politically distinct areas to promote cultural and commercial ties. Obviously. Everybody know that.

Thanks to the gorgeous Coast Road sign next to the Wills Building railway bridge, I know off by heart that North Tyneside's twins include Halluin, Monchengladbach, some place in Denmark, another place in Senegal, and a few other places too. Newcastle's seven twins include Newcastle, Australia (imaginative) and Atlanta, Georgia, while Toronto's city siblings include Milan, Kiev, Frankfurt, Warsaw and Chicago.

The cities of Newcastle and Toronto, though not twinned officially, share a number of parallels. Both, for example, are world class metropolises shot through with rich heritage, breathtaking natural vistas (Wallsend Burn et al) and diverse, friendly, handsome populations. But more than this, Toronto and Newcastle share a curse: a giant, region-defining sports team that is at once its supporters' virtue and vice.

The Maple Leafs are the NHL's biggest and most valuable franchise, weighing in with a market value of more than $500m. They are one of the Original Six and, behind the Montreal Canadiens, one of the most successful teams in hockey history. Their fans are loyal to the point of blindness, games routinely selling out - despite steep ticket prices - while other franchises struggle. They are also utterly useless: they've haven't reached the playoffs since 2006, and their last Stanley Cup was brought home in 1967 (what Pierre Berton called "the last good year", and the last hockey season with just six competing teams).




Newcastle United, like it or not, are giants of the English game. Few teams have a history as illustrious, or a stadium as stunning. Like the Leafs, they haven't won a major trophy since the 60s (though the 2006 Intertoto Cup and the 2010 Championship title are technically silverware). Like the Leafs, they have their detractors; mardy regional neighbours and capital-based hacks alike, embittered by envy. Like the Leafs, they command the total devotion of their large, noisy and passionate fans. Like the Leafs, they are by far and away the greatest team the world has ever seen. Allegedly.

It is symmetry that came to a head yesterday as Newcastle crumbled to a 5-0 shellacking at Spurs and the Leafs went down 5-0 to the hated Canadiens on the same evening they honoured their all-time top scorer Mats Sundin. Cue shared, trans-Atlantic exasperations as the two sides forsook the momentum of surprisingly good seasons to date; the Leafs looking good for post-season, Newcastle still sitting as high as sixth despite comically-inept rivals Sunderland inviting Arsenal to town for a gentle run-around and three easy points (Sunderland recently signed Bridge, but what they'd really like is an airport. Or a cathedral).

And so the beat goes on: the Leafs flatter to deceive, and are more than likely to be on the wrong end of a playoff whitewash having cruelly raised the expectations of their long-suffering fans; Newcastle United, looking down the business end of the season, will ultimately run out of steam before owner Mike Ashley strips the team of its assets in a Summer Sale Spectacular. But in a funny way it wouldn't matter if they never lifted a trophy again: the Leafs and Newcastle United are the lovable losers that define their cities. After all, anybody can support glory, but it's not the winning that counts. Not really. Not if you think about it. To paraphrase Kipling: "If you can meet with triumph and disaster, and treat those two imposters just the same; then you are a Mag/Leaf, my son... Unlucky."


Wednesday 8 February 2012

Canada's National Game

Such a grand time was had by all that I almost forgot it ever happened: a few weeks ago we went to the Air Canada Centre to take in a prime exhibition of Canada's national sport: lacrosse (yes, lacrosse).

Tickets, you see, were a mere $15 - the same price as a large beer, as it turned out - so we decided to treat ourselves to 60 minutes (or however long a game is) of hard-hitting, hi-octane lacrossing action: imagine ice hockey with all the padding but none of the ice and you're pretty much there. As a bonus, Toronto Rock - the current champions, obviously - were facing their hated nemeses, the Rochester Knighthawks (though for most of the night I was jeering the "Rochester Phantoms", whoever they are).

Some observations:
  • The half-time mini-game between two little league lacrosse sides was most entertaining; Premier League sides should take note (or at the very least bring back the crossbar challenge at SJP).
  • Lacrosse is so far the only sport I've attended where music is playing throughout. We arrived late and thought the teams were running around for a warm-up while LMFAO blasted over the arena PA... until somebody scored and the crowd cheered. It was fairly surreal.
  • $10 for a beer at the Rogers Centre (baseball) is a kick in the teeth, but the ACC ups the stakes: $15.40.
  • Though the game ended something like 11-10 to Toronto, I was unable to catch a score/goal/point/basket on camera. Curious.
  • The ACC must be a spectacular sight when the Leafs are playing (and winning). Unfortunately, hockey tickets appear to run to twelvety-hundred dollars or more.

The score when we arrived, delayed by pub business

Above: the Leafs' fading Stanley Cup calibre (last win: 1967)

Clearly something exciting has just happened

Don't know if I've mentioned it already, but fifteen dollars

So overall I'd give the experience eight Rochester Phantoms out of five: it was jolly nice to sit in the nosebleeds and take in some jock-on-jock action while the DJ dropped snippets of our favourite pop combos. In fact, it was an awful lot like a Friday night in Blu Bambu (minus the radgies, WKD and post-club punch-up).

And while I'm at it, another couple of photos I completely forgot I had taken...

A 750ml can of Molson. I thought this would look funnier.

Surely it's the voting public, not the contestants, confronting their fears...

Thursday 2 February 2012

Airbrushing Tutorial: How To Rectify God's Oversights (And Hone Your Skillz)

I have long had Adobe Photoshop listed as one of my areas of expertise, but I've never been able to satisfactorily elaborate for the purposes of job applications: my CV oughtn't be home to phrases like "grafted my friends' heads onto the Trainspotting poster for their respective birthdays", "moved somebody's eyes closer together for a laugh" or "took a nice photo, drained the background of colour and used it as a wedding present".

And while such a catalogue of doctored hilarities do indicate what an outstanding colleague I would be - an asset to any organisation, I'm sure you'll agree - they also show up a lack of versatility. Sure, I can crop, resize, cut and paste with the best of them, but would my labours make it to the cover of, say, Vanity Fair? Not unless they ran a feature on the world's most lol-worthy mock-ups of a beaver's head on a man's body.

I decided it was time to take it to the next level: airbrushing. Using a recent image of myself - and bravely ignoring suggestions that such a perfect specimen simply cannot be improved (or, to paraphrase, "You can't polish a turd") - I set about tweaking God's handiwork from plain, everyday, run-of-the-mill gorgeous to revelation-inducing, heart-stopping, ethereal beauty.

(And can you believe there's no such word as "pristeener"? Amazing)

Using, reusing and learning techniques best described elsewhere, I first selected the healing tool (icon: cute plaster/band aid) to eliminate infinitesimally insignificant blemishes; an endeavour lasting several long minutes before I even found a place to click. Next I created a duplicate layer, made it a "mask layer" or words to that effect, and applied a Gaussian blur filter. The purpose: to gently erase selected parts of the original image (hairy cheeks, crows feet, eye bags) and leave the blurred one visible instead. After that, it was a case of using the dodge tool to brighten the teeth and eyes to such vibrancy that you'd swear I'd been at the Pedigree Chum.

I am certain that prospective employers would be pleased with any candidate showing such an appetite for self-improvement (skills-wise and cosmetically), but dare I dive further into the lagoon of innovation and set the final image as the new background for my CV?... (No, I daren't)


Original image: moderately stunning

It puts the lotion on the skin

Cowell-esque gnashers

Healthy, backlit eyes say: "I'm bright"

The result: a benevolent dictator's propaganda poster