Toronto Star
What to watch from Team Canada on Day 11 of the Tokyo Olympics
- Title
- What to watch from Team Canada on Day 11 of the Tokyo Olympics
- Runtime
- 0:50
- Date posted
- 5 years ago
- Description
- Ellie Black (and American Simone Biles) return to the balance beam, two Canadian volleyball teams in action, and more from Team Canada on Day 11 of the Tokyo Olympics.
- Title
- What to watch from Team Canada on Day 10 of the Tokyo Olympics
- Runtime
- 0:50
- Date posted
- 5 years ago
- Description
- A big game for the women's soccer team against the U.S., Canada's beach volleyball team enters the knockout rounds and track and field continues. Here's what to watch from Team Canada at the Olympics tonight.
- Title
- Team Canada learning you win some, you lose some at the Olympics
- Runtime
- 17:22
- Date posted
- 5 years ago
- Description
- On Tokyo Daily, host Brendan Dunlop talks with the Toronto Star’s Dave Feschuk in Tokyo after Andre De Grasse’s bronze medal run in the men’s 100-metre dash.
Feschuk also breaks down what went wrong for Canada’s Erica Wiebe on her attempt to defend her wrestling title and how the Canadian women’s eight rowing team captured magic on the water.
Plus, Dunlop recaps another exciting night at these Olympic Games. Penny Oleksiak becomes Canada’s most decorated Olympian while the women’s basketball team are scoreboard watching to see if their medal hopes last beyond the group stage.
- Title
- Olympic basketball heats up in Tokyo
- Runtime
- 15:02
- Date posted
- 5 years ago
- Description
- On Tokyo Daily, Brendan Dunlop talks Olympic basketball with Doug Smith of the Toronto Star after Team USA's blowout win over the Czech Republic in the men's tournament, and ahead of the Canadian women's final group game versus Spain on Saturday night.
Plus, Canadian women add to Canada's medal tally, while track and field takes the spotlight in Tokyo with Jamaican women sweeping the podium in the 100-metre dash.
- Title
- What to watch from Team Canada on Day 9 of Tokyo Olympics
- Runtime
- 0:40
- Date posted
- 5 years ago
- Description
- Could Andre De Grasse win the 100-metre race? Will the Canadian women keep their hoop dreams alive? Can Penny Oleksiak make history? Here's what to watch on Day 9 of these Olympics.
- Title
- Pitch perfect: Canadian women’s soccer team keeps golden dreams alive
- Runtime
- 16:18
- Date posted
- 5 years ago
- Description
- On Tokyo Daily, Brendan Dunlop recaps Canada's nail biting penalty kick shootout win over Brazil in women's soccer with the Toronto's Star's Laura Armstrong. Canadian women continue to medal at the Tokyo 2020 Olympics with a gold in rowing, while Penny Oleksiak and Rosie MacLennan just miss the podium.
- Title
- What to watch from Team Canada on Day 8 of the Tokyo Olympics
- Runtime
- 0:50
- Date posted
- 5 years ago
- Description
- Andre De Grasse makes Olympic return, Kylie Masse looks to add another swimming medal, and more to watch from Team Canada on Day 8 of the Tokyo Olympics.
- Title
- Four. Day. Work. Week.
- Runtime
- 21:34
- Date posted
- 5 years ago
- Description
- GUEST: Professor Jean-Nicolas Reyt, Assistant Professor of Organizational Behaviour at McGill University
A recent study in Iceland involving thousands of workers has brought back the buzz around a shorter four-day work week. As the pandemic has accelerated the movement to work smarter and not longer, we explore the tantalizing possibilities — and potential problems — with a four-day work week in North America.
- Title
- More medals, more money for Canada's women?
- Runtime
- 19:00
- Date posted
- 5 years ago
- Description
- On Tokyo Daily, Brendan Dunlop chats with the Toronto Star’s Dave Feschuk in Tokyo about the atmosphere of these Olympic Games, the success of Canadian women on the Olympic stage and what that might mean for funding and development going forward. And as track and field gets underway with a COVID scare, there are a few Canadian men looking to get on the podium in Tokyo.
- Title
- The dangerous business of Canada’s dead ships
- Runtime
- 16:29
- Date posted
- 5 years ago
- Description
- Guest: Moira Welsh, investigative reporter for the Star
The case of the MV Miner is a siren call to the question of what happens to “dead ships” that come from Canada and the dire consequences of neglect. Nova Scotians know the story well after the giant vessel full of chemicals and fuel became adrift and ended up in a protected area. It took $20 million and four years to remove. What happens to the rest of Canada’s “dead ships” that face a perilous journey across oceans? A Star investigation explains why a lack of oversight and big money has created an industry of potentially damaging and dangerous derelicts.
- Title
- What to watch from Team Canada on Day 7 of Tokyo Olympics
- Runtime
- 1:00
- Date posted
- 5 years ago
- Description
- Rosie MacLennan begins her quest for triple-gold, Penny Oleksiak has another shot at history and the Canadian women's soccer team enters the knockout stage. Here's what to watch from Team Canada tonight and into the morning.
- Title
- The science behind why you should date your friends (no, really)
- Runtime
- 19:52
- Date posted
- 5 years ago
- Description
- We all saw “Friends,” but what if we told you it was a universal truth? New research shows two-thirds of the friends end up together. Danu Stinson, Associate professor of psychology at the University of Victoria talks about the relationship science around dating and friends.
- Title
- Oleksiak’s Olympic greatness, Biles’ courage and Auger Aliassime’s Tokyo debut with Arash Madani
- Runtime
- 16:12
- Date posted
- 5 years ago
- Description
- On Tokyo Daily, Brendan Dunlop recaps the stories of Day 5 at the Tokyo 2020 Olympics and talks with Sportsnet’s Arash Madani about Penny Oleksiak’s greatness, Simone Biles’ decision to withdraw from competition, Felix Auger Aliassime’s first Games, the story to watch in the sand — Canadian women’s beach volleyball duo Sarah Pavan and Melissa-Humana Paredes — and much more.
- Title
- What to watch from Team Canada on Day 6 of Tokyo Olympics
- Runtime
- 1:00
- Date posted
- 5 years ago
- Description
- Canada will look for more Olympic hardware in the pool, women’s rugby sevens get underway, while Mackenzie Hughes and Corey Conners hit the links in Tokyo.
- Title
- Canadian swimmer Brent Hayden on his ‘wild’ Olympics, Maggie Mac Neil, quiet Tokyo athletes village
- Runtime
- 15:04
- Date posted
- 5 years ago
- Description
- On a new episode of Tokyo Daily, host Brendan Dunlop chats with Canadian Olympic swimmer Brent Hayden in the Olympic Village a day after his men’s 4x100-metre relay team set a national record time and narrowly missed the podium.
Hayden talks about his “wild” journey to his fourth Olympics, his moment of confusion when he ran into Maggie Mac Neil after her Olympic gold, and what its like living in a quiet Olympic village.
Plus, Dunlop runs through what you need to know from Day 4 at these Games.
- Title
- How to do a 360 kickflip
- Runtime
- 0:34
- Date posted
- 5 years ago
- Description
- Canadian skateboarder TJ Rogers explains how to do a 360 kickflip.
- Title
- A breakdown of some popular skateboard tricks you'll see at the Olympics | Tokyo 2021
- Runtime
- 1:45
- Date posted
- 5 years ago
- Description
- https://www.thestar.com/sports/olympics/2021/07/24/the-tokyo-olympics-welcome-skateboardings-wow-factor-but-the-sports-rising-popularity-is-built-on-community.html
- Title
- What is the difference between street and park? | Tokyo Olympics
- Runtime
- 1:30
- Date posted
- 5 years ago
- Description
- https://www.thestar.com/sports/olympics/2021/07/24/the-tokyo-olympics-welcome-skateboardings-wow-factor-but-the-sports-rising-popularity-is-built-on-community.html
- Title
- What COVID reveals about Canada
- Runtime
- 27:19
- Date posted
- 5 years ago
- Description
- Guest: Stephanie Nolen, the 2020-21 Atkinson Fellow in Public Policy
Stephanie Nolen is on “This Matters” to talk about her extensive reporting on the impact of COVID-19 in Canada, where it hit the hardest, who fell through the cracks and what institutions created those vulnerabilities.
Nolen’s Atkinson series “What COVID Reveals” featuring her in-depth reporting is available at thestar.com.
- Title
- Tokyo Olympics Day 5: Penny Oleksiak returns and more to watch from Team Canada
- Runtime
- 0:55
- Date posted
- 5 years ago
- Description
- Rowing duo compete for a medal, Penny Oleksiak jumps back in the pool, Caroline Veyre hopes for Canadian boxing history, and more to watch from Team Canada on Day 5 of the Tokyo Olympics.
- Title
- Opioid crisis: How Toronto’s street drug supply is getting more dangerous
- Runtime
- 18:24
- Date posted
- 5 years ago
- Description
- Guest: Robert Cribb, Toronto Star investigative reporter and director of the Investigative Journalism Bureau at the University of Toronto
The opioid crisis has been raging, with deaths surging in Toronto, climbing 80 per cent from 2019 to 2020. Now, new research shows that this city’s street supply of drugs is growing more toxic, stronger and potentially more deadly with additives that make it harder to bring back people who overdose. Today on “This Matters,” we look at the opioid crisis now and explain how these drugs are more dangerous than ever.
- Title
- Introducing Tokyo Daily, the Summer Olympics podcast from the Toronto Star
- Runtime
- 2:32
- Date posted
- 5 years ago
- Description
- This Matters is happy to share that sports broadcaster and author Brendan Dunlop hosts “Tokyo Daily,” the daily Summer Olympics podcast, also from the Toronto Star. Each day during the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games, Brendan will recap the Canadian headlines and talk about the major stories with Star journalists on location in Japan and at home, ex-Olympians and other experts. Listen to the show every afternoon.
Listen to the trailer here and subscribe wherever you get your podcasts.
- Title
- What to watch from Team Canada on Day 4 of Tokyo Olympics
- Runtime
- 0:50
- Date posted
- 5 years ago
- Description
- Diving duo Meaghan Benfeito and Caeli McKay start their medal pursuit, Canada takes on Mexico for softball bronze and more from Day 4 at the Tokyo Olympics.
- Title
- Diving into a silver Sunday in the pool for Canada at the Olympics | Tokyo Daily
- Runtime
- 14:59
- Date posted
- 5 years ago
- Description
- On this episode of Tokyo Daily host Brendan Dunlop chats with CBC Sports reporter Devin Heroux in Tokyo after a silver Sunday in the pool for Team Canada. Plus the USA Dream Team got off to a nightmarish start against Rudy Gobert’s France.
- Title
- What to watch from Team Canada on Day 3 of Tokyo Olympics
- Runtime
- 0:40
- Date posted
- 5 years ago
- Description
- Penny Oleksiak is back in the pool, pair of Canadians in men’s triathlon, and more coming following an exciting Day 2 at the Olympic Games.
Here’s what to watch from Team Canada and when to watch it on Day 3 of the Tokyo Olympics.
- Title
- Canada beats Chile in women’s soccer as first Olympic medals are won on Day 1 | Tokyo Daily
- Runtime
- 13:59
- Date posted
- 5 years ago
- Description
- Day 1 was as hot as the schedule was heavy. On this episode of Tokyo Daily, host Brendan Dunlop recaps Canada’s 2-1 win over Chile in women’s soccer with Laura Armstrong of the Toronto Star, and the first medals are handed out at the 2020 Olympic Games.
- Title
- What to watch from Team Canada on Day 2 of Tokyo Olympics
- Runtime
- 0:50
- Date posted
- 5 years ago
- Description
- Diving duo Jennifer Abel and Melissa Citrini-Beaulieu and swimmers Kylie Masse and Summer McIntosh hit the pool while Skylar Park launches her quest for Canada’s first Olympic medal in Taekwondo.
- Title
- 'This is a different Olympics.’ Teeing up an unprecedented Summer Games | Tokyo Daily
- Runtime
- 15:17
- Date posted
- 5 years ago
- Description
- On the debut episode of Tokyo Daily, host Brendan Dunlop is joined by Toronto Star columnist Bruce Arthur, who offers his perspective on this unprecedented Olympics from inside the host city. They discuss what the scene is like on Olympic grounds, why the medal results are so unpredictable and which Canadians to watch out for.
- Title
- It’s summer! Let’s get together. Here’s how to do it COVID safe
- Runtime
- 21:52
- Date posted
- 5 years ago
- Description
- Guest: Rebecca Cotter, GTA-based event specialist
It is summer and many of us are gathering again, from inviting friends over for a pool party to getting together for meetings, holidays, festivals and weddings. But there are more considerations than there were before. COVID-19 has redefined how to gather safely and changed our rules of etiquette for everything from handshaking to screening to the inevitable talk with guests about vaccination status. Here’s how to approach a large-scale event or a pool party at home with pandemic protocols in mind.
Rebecca Cotter, GTA-based event specialist
It is summer and many of us are gathering again, from inviting friends over for a pool party to getting together for meetings, holidays, festivals and weddings. But there are more considerations than there were before. COVID-19 has redefined how to gather safely and changed our rules of etiquette for everything from handshaking to screening to the ine...
- Title
- What to watch for Team Canada on Day 1 of the Tokyo Olympics
- Runtime
- 1:10
- Date posted
- 5 years ago
- Description
- Here's what you need to know about Day 1 of the Tokyo 2020 Summer Olympic Games:
-Canada’s first shot at a medal comes in men’s road cycling
-Women’s soccer team is back on the pitch
-Canada (1-1) faces Australia (1-1) in women’s softball
-Melissa Humana-Paredes and Sarah Pavan begin play
- Title
- What you need to know about the fourth wave
- Runtime
- 24:26
- Date posted
- 5 years ago
- Description
- Guest: Colin Furness, an infection control epidemiologist and assistant professor at University of Toronto
There are plenty of positive signs regarding COVID-19 in Canada, with vaccination rates leading the world and case counts coming down, but the fourth wave is on the horizon. There are worrying signs in several countries around the world, with some jurisdictions considering further mask mandates and lockdown. All we know so far is that the fourth wave is going to be different, so an epidemiologist takes us through what it might look like.
- Title
- Canada’s bill to ban conversion therapy may be lost. Here’s why
- Runtime
- 22:16
- Date posted
- 5 years ago
- Description
- Guest: Nicholas Schiavo, founder of No Conversion Canada
There was an important piece of legislation brought to the Senate last month, but with senators now on summer break and the possibility of an election looming, that legislation might be lost. Bill C-6 would ban conversion therapy, a widely discredited practice that claims to change someone’s sexual orientation, gender identity or gender expression. The practice is banned in some jurisdictions, but not Canada-wide. The bill has been called a “historic piece of legislation” and if the bill dies on the order paper because of the roadblock in the Senate, some say it will only lead to more irreparable harm on LGTBQ people.
- Title
- 5 Canadian athletes to watch at Tokyo 2020 Olympics
- Runtime
- 1:58
- Date posted
- 5 years ago
- Description
- The 371 Canadian athletes at the Tokyo 2020 Olympics over the next couple of weeks represent the country’s largest Games contingent in more than three decades.
There will be Olympic veterans and household names, breakout stars on the verge of the limelight, professional athletes and, inevitably, surprise medal-worthy performances by a Canadian you’ve never heard of before.
The Associated Press projects Canada will win 19 medals overall: three gold, seven silver and nine bronze. The team collected 22 medals at Rio 2016, matching the country’s best-ever total at a non-boycotted Games from Atlanta in 1996. The team’s four gold medals that year was Canada’s highest number since notching seven at Barcelona 1992.
Catching every athlete in every event is a big ask, so here are some of the Canadian names to keep an eye on over the next two weeks in Japan.
See the full list of 27 Canadian athletes to watch: Olympicshttps://www.thesta...
- Title
- TSO's Etsuko Kimura and James Wallenberg perform Brahms’s Hungarian Dance No. 5 in G Minor
- Runtime
- 4:44
- Date posted
- 5 years ago
- Description
- TSO Assistant Concertmaster Etzuko Kimura and Violin James Wallenberg live in different parts of the city, but they both know that their neighbourhood restaurants and cafes are trying to cope with the harsh realities of this pandemic. To help, they decided to play their Toronto Star Musical Moment at the Budapest Restaurant on the Danforth at Woodbine.
What better way to salute a great Hungarian restaurant than to play one of the most famous pieces ever written - here’s James’s own arrangement of Brahms’s Hungarian Dance No. 5 in G Minor.
- Title
- Quebec’s Bill 21 from a Canadian Muslim woman's perspective
- Runtime
- 23:23
- Date posted
- 5 years ago
- Description
- Guest: Tanya Sillerman, a lawyer and author from Quebec
The National Council of Canadian Muslims wants the government to show they’re serious about tackling violent and systemic Islamophobia. This week, the council released a list of 60 calls to action to implement policy change at a federal, provincial and local levels. The NCCM is also calling on governments to challenge Bill 21 in Quebec, the law that bans public service workers from wearing of religious symbols. Tanya Sillerman, a lawyer and author from Quebec, explains the impact and implications of this particular law from a Canadian Muslim woman’s perspective.
- Title
- Canada will allow fully vaccinated American citizens, permanent residents to enter country Aug 9
- Runtime
- 0:56
- Date posted
- 5 years ago
- Description
- Fully vaccinated U.S. citizens and permanent residents can enter Canada for non-essential travel beginning Aug. 9, while travellers from other countries can enter beginning Sept. 7, the federal government announced Monday.
Read more: https://www.thestar.com/politics/federal/2021/07/19/canada-will-allow-fully-vaccinated-americans-to-cross-the-border-on-aug-9-other-international-travellers-on-sept-7.html
- Title
- Flights of Fancy: How billionaires are making space tourism blast off
- Runtime
- 16:58
- Date posted
- 5 years ago
- Description
- Guest: John Moores, associate professor and York University Research Chair in Space Exploration
In the future, we may say space tourism really began in July 2021. Following Virgin Galactic’s recent successful suborbital flight, Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin is set to blast off and achieve an even higher orbit. With estimates that space tourism could be worth $5 billion by 2025, both billionaires are not only looking to the stars, but also at an opportunity to make it a lot closer for people who can afford to pay for the incredibly expensive ticket price.
- Title
- How accommodating pets at domestic violence shelters can save lives
- Runtime
- 16:37
- Date posted
- 5 years ago
- Description
- Guest: Hannah Brown, manager of the criminal justice system reform program at Humane Canada
During COVID-19, domestic violence numbers spiked to the point where we began to call it “the shadow pandemic.” Alongside that, data across North America has begun to reveal “the violence link” which means that often cruelty towards the family pet is intertwined with other violence within the home. Hannah Brown, of Humane Canada explains the “violence link”–and why no one in danger should have to choose between their own personal safety and that of a much-loved pets’.
Directory of shelters in Ontario with pet services: http://www.oaith.ca/assets/library/SHELTERS%20and%20PET%20SERVICES%20Oct%202018.pdf
Directory of shelters in Canada and the U.S with pet services: https://safeplaceforpets.org/
- Title
- Are conservatorships toxic? How Britney Spears’ cry for help forced a conversation in America
- Runtime
- 20:43
- Date posted
- 5 years ago
- Description
- Guest: Professor Nina Kohn, law professor at Syracuse University and expert on elder law and conservatorships
Britney Spears is fighting to free herself from a decade-long conservatorship under her father James and yesterday, she might have reached a milestone win when a California court judge agreed to let the pop star choose her own lawyer. Today on “This Matters,” we take a look at exactly how conservatorships work in the U.S. and whether a pop icon’s cry for help has started an important national conversation on the need for reform on conservatorship laws.
- Title
- The bugs that are ticking us off this summer
- Runtime
- 22:00
- Date posted
- 5 years ago
- Description
- Guest: Dr. Andrew Young, assistant professor of systematic entomology at the University of Guelph
The bugs are back. With summer in full bloom and many of us enjoying the great outdoors, it’s a good time to remember that there are plenty of creepy crawly critters out there. Some are really making their presence known. From cicada to tick to caterpillar moth infestations, there are plenty of insects that want to take a bite out of summer. We talk with an expert on why we are seeing some of population spikes and what are the best common sense tips when dealing with these creatures.
- Title
- By classifying workers as contractors, do Uber and Lyft avoid millions in taxes?
- Runtime
- 16:31
- Date posted
- 5 years ago
- Description
- Guest: Ben Spurr, The Star’s transportation reporter
Tax avoidance isn’t tax evasion, but is it fair? A new report from the non-profit Canadians for Tax Fairness says ride-hailing services Uber and Lyft could be avoiding millions of dollars in taxes by classifying their workers as contractors instead of employees. This isn’t illegal, but is it time to take a look at the rules governing corporations’ tax laws? Today’s episode breaks down how the report arrived at such a number, and what it means for workers, riders and even public transportation systems.
- Title
- Headers and Footers | Euro 2020: Italy beats England in shootout to win European Championship
- Runtime
- 14:27
- Date posted
- 5 years ago
- Description
- On Headers and Footers, host Brendan Dunlop recaps a thrilling Euro 2020 final with James Sharman, TV personality and host of The Footy Prime Podcast. Goalkeeper Donnarumma starred for Italy as England's young stars fell victim to the penalty ghosts of Three Lions past.
- Title
- How Toronto is using ‘playbooks’ and vaccines to reopen
- Runtime
- 17:11
- Date posted
- 5 years ago
- Description
- Guest: Jennifer Pagliaro, Toronto city hall reporter for the Star
Toronto continues to reopen alongside the staged plan created by the Ontario government. How we progress and when reopening happens depends on many factors: vaccination rates, case numbers and other public health data. But the City of Toronto is getting ready with a ‘playbook’ plan for businesses, twinned with a renewed push for vaccinations in the city’s marginalized communities. Today’s episode takes a look into the reopening plans in the months ahead, with a sense of when Toronto will become a thriving city again.
- Title
- Headers and Footers | Euro 2020: Preview of Sunday's final between Italy and England
- Runtime
- 16:21
- Date posted
- 5 years ago
- Description
- After a month-long, continental fiesta of football, Euro 2020 is set to come to a close on Sunday. On Headers and Footers, host Brendan Dunlop previews Italy vs. England with the Star's Laura Armstrong.
- Title
- New Sick Kids study reveals the pandemic’s heavy toll on children
- Runtime
- 16:19
- Date posted
- 5 years ago
- Description
- Guest: Nadine Yousif, mental health reporter for the Star
A new report by Sick Kids has revealed worryingly high rates of depression and other mental health issues in kids in the aftermath of the second wave of COVID-19. They did not just bounce back as many experts had predicted earlier. On “This Matters” today, we talk about what’s next as kids prepare to return to school in the fall amid deep concerns from medical health professionals who say going back to the “old normal” might not be enough to undo the harm of pandemic-related disruptions.
If you would like to support the journalism of the Toronto Star, you can subscribe atthestar.com/subscribingmatters.
- Title
- New Sick Kids study reveals the pandemic’s heavy toll on children
- Runtime
- 16:18
- Date posted
- 5 years ago
- Description
- Guest: Nadine Yousif, mental health reporter for the Star
A new report by Sick Kids has revealed worryingly high rates of depression and other mental health issues in kids in the aftermath of the second wave of COVID-19. They did not just bounce back as many experts had predicted earlier. On “This Matters” today, we talk about what’s next as kids prepare to return to school in the fall amid deep concerns from medical health professionals who say going back to the “old normal” might not be enough to undo the harm of pandemic-related disruptions.
If you would like to support the journalism of the Toronto Star, you can subscribe atthestar.com/subscribingmatters.
- Title
- Headers and Footers | Euro 2020: England punches ticket to first final in 55 years
- Runtime
- 16:36
- Date posted
- 5 years ago
- Description
- On Headers and Footers, host Brendan Dunlop recaps a tight semi-final between England and Denmark with American writer Grant Wahl. For the first time since winning the 1966 World Cup, England is off to a major tournament final. The Three Lions are slight favourites to beat Italy on Sunday.
- Title
- A wave of terrifying racist attacks in Alberta sheds light on Canada’s Islamophobia problem
- Runtime
- 16:59
- Date posted
- 5 years ago
- Description
- Guest: Omar Mosleh, Edmonton-based reporter for the Star
A wave of terrifying racist attacks in Alberta has the province on edge. The targets have been Muslim women, most of them Black and wearing a hijab. The Muslim community says Islamophobia and anti-Black racism have always been a problem in the province, and the pandemic might have made it worse. The Star's Edmonton-based reporter Omar Mosleh joins "This Matters" to talk about what's going on in and whether it's a snapshot of Canada's larger Islamophobia problem.
If you would like to support the journalism of the Toronto Star, you can subscribe at thestar.com/subscribingmatters.
- Title
- Extreme heat cooks mussels to death in B.C.
- Runtime
- 0:52
- Date posted
- 5 years ago
- Description
- Chris Harley smelled Kitsilano Beach before he even arrived.
The odour permeating from the British Columbia beach in late June signified one thing — death.
Extreme heat temperatures, rising up to 40 C in Vancouver, had caused sea animals like mussels, clams and snails to cook to their death.
“It’s (like) leaving a car in a hot parking lot,” Harley told the Star, recounting his visit to the beach. “It gets a lot hotter than the air does. So that’s what happens to the shoreline when it’s out in the sun and low tide.”
Read more: https://www.thestar.com/news/canada/2021/07/07/its-so-hot-that-canadas-sea-creatures-are-cooking-to-their-death-in-their-shells.html
- Title
- Headers and Footers | Euro 2020: Italy beats Spain in penalty shootout to reach Euro 2020 final
- Runtime
- 15:43
- Date posted
- 5 years ago
- Description
- On Headers and Footers, host Brendan Dunlop recaps an incredibly entertaining Euro 2020 semifinal with Nicky Bandini, at Wembley Stadium, after Italy defeated Spain in a penalty shootout.

