Seven VPs gone at Bell Media as virus, cord-cutters hit firm
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Bell Media has fired seven vice-presidents as the pandemic slashes advertising and cord-cutting by households preferring streaming continues unabated. Revenue was down 16 percent in 2020. The firm is now expected to push harder on behalf of its own streaming service Crave among other strategies. High-ranking executives Mike Cosentino, president of content and programming, and Tracey Pearce, president of distribution and pay, are leaving the company. Other departures include Corrie Coe, senior vice-president of original programming; Nanci MacLean, vice-president of Bell Media Studios; Mark Finney, vice-president of strategic sales; and Paul Solymos, vice-president of content sales and distribution. Kevin Goldstein, vice-president of regulatory affairs, has also been let go. Bell Media is the owner of the CTV Network. Google News search
Trump tells mob to go home as world fears for US republic
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In what appears to be a constitutional crisis unseen since the US civil war, mobs supporting the continuation of the Trump presidency have vandalized the Capitol building and forced members of the government to hide in their offices. Late Wednesday, Trump issued an appeal to his supporters to go home. Congress later confirmed Joe Biden as president. Trump maintains he defeated Biden and won the election. There is widespread bipartisan opposition to this belief. The ten living former secretaries of defense representing both Republican and Democratic governments have published a letter telling Trump to stand down. They warned military officers that their allegiance was to the constitution, not the president. Vice President Pence has said that his only constitutional option is to approve the Electoral College decision to make Biden president. A republic, if you can keep it.
“Chipping” at Mt. Pleasant stop may cause noise, vibration
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Metrolinx has announced that as early as Wednesday crews at Mt Pleasant Station will resume the final excavation and chipping works at the Main Entrance site. This work is expected to take place from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. for approximately one week. During this time, nearby properties may experience noise and vibration. Noise and vibration can be expected as well as truck entry and egress from the Main Entrance site on the northwest corner of Mt. Pleasant and Eglinton. No changes to the current traffic configuration and pedestrian routes are expected as a result of this work. Chipping is described elsewhere as the process of removing hard or dried material such as rock or concrete from a surface.
Blaze in home renovation on Mortimer gets Sabina up early
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Residents near Mortimer and Woodycrest Aves were up early when a two-alarm fire broke out in a home under renovation. The tweet with pictures (below) from Breakfast Television producer Sabina Hooper was sent at (ugh) 3 a.m. Maybe just in time to go to work.
@BTtoronto Fire crews responding overnight to a 2-alarm blaze on Woodycrest Avenue in the Mortimer Ave. & Pape N. area. The building is a house under renovation. Damage appears to be in the roof and the top floor. No injuries & crews have cleared. pic.twitter.com/rusKUqi83R
— Sabina Hooper (@Sabina_Foo) January 6, 2021
Fire (residential) [East York]Mortimer Avenue
b/w Lane East Pape North Mortimer / Woodycrest Avenue
Dispatched: 06/01/21 @ 00:51 EST
[Stn: 322] Aerial-322 Aerial-324 DistChief-32 Pumper-313 Pumper-323 Rescue-224 Squad-313
General Area:— Toronto Fire South (@tofireS) January 6, 2021
Risky low-road Bayview ext. gets new detour signs at Moore
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The City has installed large electric signs at the corner of Bayview Ave. and Moore Ave. to tell drivers when the risky flood-prone Bayview extension is impassable. Shawn Dartsch, Supervisor of Traffic Operations confirmed the purpose of the large oblong signs which face north, west and east. The signs are destined to sit in darkness for most of the time but they should help everyone avoid problems when flash flooding occurs.
Tanya Roberts dies after earlier false death announcement
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Tanya Roberts, known for roles in “That ‘70s Show,” “Charlie’s Angels” and the James Bond franchise, has died at age 65 after collapsing at her home on Christmas Eve. The actress and model died Monday night at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, her longtime representative, Mike Pingel, confirmed “with a heavy heart” Tuesday afternoon to The Times. According to Pingel, the cause of death was a urinary tract infection, which spread to Roberts‘ kidney, gallbladder, liver and finally her bloodstream. Over the weekend, the actress was reported dead but then reported alive.
WestJet selling planes to Amazon to ship cargo
Amazon has announced the purchase of 11 Boeing 767-300 aircraft including four secured from Calgary-based WestJet. According to the online retailer, the aircraft were purchased from WestJet in March 2020 and will join the Amazon Air fleet this year after the completion of passenger to cargo conversion. Amazon says the other seven planes were purchased from Delta Air Lines.
12,638 diamonds in this ring
It was made by a jeweller in India and is called The Marigold: The Ring of Prosperity.
Battle of January soldiers looking for a plateau in new cases
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The Ministry of Health has counted 3,128 new cases on Tuesday for the 24-hour period ending at midnight. It’s a slight drop from the 3,270 cases confirmed the day before. This is the fourth time in the past six days that cases have topped 3,000 but the rise in cases may have paused. The Battle of January is in full tilt. Ontario conducted nearly 35,200 tests in the previous day, which is short of its goal of 50,000 tests per day. The testing backlog stands at 39,805.
Ontario is reporting 3,128 cases of #COVID19 and nearly 35,200 tests completed. Locally, there are 778 new cases in Toronto, 614 in Peel, 213 in York Region, 172 in Durham, 151 in Middlesex-London and 151 in Hamilton.
— Christine Elliott (@celliottability) January 5, 2021
https://twitter.com/mlindesay/status/1326558302193524740
More pop-up testing is available for those in the Mount Dennis area this month:
🗓️ Jan 5
🗓️ Jan 12
🗓️ Jan 19
🗓️ Jan 26🔗 Find more info on COVID-19 testing here: https://t.co/7CHj85tPTr pic.twitter.com/CcjdQIQEpt
— John Tory (@JohnTory) January 5, 2021
This is long overdue: Health authorities to start naming specific #Toronto workplaces with significant COVID-19 outbreaks https://t.co/TKHIGd51jn
— The Left Chapter (@theleftchapter) January 5, 2021
May Georgia’s playground delight kids, keep memories new
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Councillor Robinson has announced the opening of the new playground at Trace Manes Park. A photo of the recently finished happy-place for kids shows it just before the snow arrived. The renewal of the playground was accomplished with the inspiration and drive of Georgia’s mother, Jillian, and the generous efforts of friends in Leaside and beyond. The old playground was a favorite place for Georgia, 7. May the new one delight children and keep the memory of Georgia fresh.
Trucker hurt, Allen bridge at Hwy 401 inspected for damage
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The cleanup was proceeding Tuesday after a terrible rear-end collision between trucks that left one truck driver fighting for his life. It was a complicated sequence explained by 680 News reporter Carl Hantske.
Update – Clean up and repairs ongoing after serious transport truck crash #Hwy401 at Allen Rd https://t.co/t3VaY1eAWP
— OPP Highway Safety Division (@OPP_HSD) January 5, 2021
Major Collison investigation #Hwy401. 2 commercial transport trucks involved. Critical injures. Highway closed from 401eb express lanes east of highway 400 to Allen rd. Clean up underway. ^td pic.twitter.com/BYIXaaTJPn
— OPP Highway Safety Division (@OPP_HSD) January 5, 2021
Peugeot deal, totally great cop and is Point Roberts for sale?
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Shareholders in France have voted to merge the maker of Peugeot and Citroen cars with the US Fiat/Chrysler firm. Will we soon see fancy Peugeots on Bayview Ave? Then, say hello to a New England cop named Matthew Lima. He’s the kind of guy who digs around in his own pocket to buy groceries for a bereft family of shoplifters. Below that, Point Roberts, Washington falls below the 49 parallel but many of its citizens would like to live in Canada. Finally, some good news stories from 2020 from the CBC. Yes, there were some.
Assange dodges US justice over “precarious mental health”
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A British judge has found that Julian Assange deserved to be extradited to the US for his Wikileaks crime but that he is so mentally unstable that she dedicated to keep him the UK. In a mixed ruling for Assange and his supporters, District Judge Vanessa Baraitser rejected defence arguments that the 49-year-old Australian faces a politically motivated American prosecution that rides roughshod over free-speech protections. But she said Assange’s precarious mental health would likely deteriorate further under the conditions of “near total isolation” he would face in a U.S. prison. CNA
