Barris moderates plenary at Canadian Association of Journalists

Ted Barris opens the CAJ conference with a plenary on the state of the profession.

To open the annual conference of the Canadian Association of Journalists, on Friday, April 27, 2012, in Toronto, Ted Barris will moderate a plenary session entitled, “News has value on any platform.” A panel of top news executives, including Jennifer McGuire, chief of English News at CBC, and Brodie Fenlon, senior news editor of Huffington Post Canada, will look at “the state of the industry.” Barris moderates the first of many sessions held over the weekend .

When: 9 a.m., Friday, April 27, 2012.

Where: Fairmont Royal York Hotel, Front Street, Toronto.

Contact: Ellin Bessner, CAJ board member, ebessner@gmail.com, Centennial College 416-289-5000 x8826.

Barris returns to speak to Lindsay Legion Vimy dinner

Ted Barris MCs a Toronto Remembrance Day event, 2011.

At last year’s Vimy Dinner, held at Branch 67 of the Royal Canadian Legion in Lindsday, Ted Barris offered a unique telling of the famous WWI battle at Vimy Ridge. This year, back by popular demand, the author of 16 bestselling, non-fiction books addresses the Vimy dinner about the job of getting veterans to do what they pathologically cannot – talk. Based on his bestselling book, “Breaking the Silence: Veterans’ Untold Stories from the Great War to Afghanistan,” Barris offers some insights to a few of the nearly 4,000 interviews he’s done with Canadian veterans.

When: Wednesday, April 4, 2012.

Where: Branch 67, Royal Canadian Legion, Lindsay, Ont.

Contact: Harold Jessup,1st vice-president, harold.jessup@sympatico.ca

Barris brunches with Blunt

“Giles Blunt writes with uncommon grace, style and compassion and he plots like a demon,” says author Jonathan Kellerman.

In another of his regular visits to Blue Heron Books’s “Books and Brunch” series, Ted Barris interviews bestselling author Giles Blunt in front of an audience at Wyndance Golf Club, south of Uxbridge. After spending over 20 years in New York City, Giles Blunt now lives in Toronto. His past work includes writing scripts for television programs such as Law & Order, Street Legal and Night Heat. His novel “Forty Words for Sorrow,” won the British Crime Writers’ Macallan Silver Dagger. “A Delicate Storm,” was the winner of the Arthur Ellis Award for Best Novel and “Blackfly Season” was one of Margaret Cannon’s Best Mysteries of the 2010 Year. Blunt’s “By the Time You Read This,” was a national bestseller; and “No Such Creature” earned a place on the Globe and Mail‘s list of Top Ten Crime Books.

When: 11 a.m. Sunday, March 25, 2012.

Where: Wyndance Golf Club, Hwy 21 west of Coppin’s Corners, Uxbridge, Ontario.

Contact: Shelley Macbeth, proprietor, Blue Heron Books, 905-852-4282, www.blueheronbooks.com

Barris speaks to Canadian Club in Orillia

Ted Barris speaking at the Stephen Leacock Festival.

Ted Barris travels to Orillia on Wednesday, March 14, 2012, to speak to members of the local Canadian Club about the job of getting veterans to speak about their experiences; his talk is based on his bestselling book “Breaking the Silence: Veterans’ Untold Stories from the Great War to Afghanistan.”

When: 2:00 p.m., Wednesday, March 14, 2012.

Where: St. Paul’s United Church, 62 Peter Street North, Orillia, Ontario.

Contact: Carolyn Cassells, 705-456-9630, bigbirds@rogers.com

No life like it

Canadian troops in Afghanistan had to deal with the climate, the combat and the loss. Photo by Stefano Rellandini.

I had a chance encounter with a member of the Wounded Warriors the other night. I had just completed a presentation about the battle at Vimy Ridge at the Whitby Public Library. On our way out of the library, he gave me an update on plans the group has to take about 30 younger Canadian vets on a bicycle tour of Normandy later this spring. (By the way, they’re doing it entirely on private donations. No government funding.) He recounted a recent exchange between his group and a Veterans Affairs Canada committee reviewing the needs Canada’s latest vets – those returning from Afghanistan. He was encouraging greater support for vets with post-traumatic stress disorder.

“Give them time,” the VAC rep apparently said. “They’ll get over it.”

(more…)

Difference, but not death

Theodore Kontozoglus, my grandfather, doing what he would have considered man’s work on our the family farm in 1967.

It happened after dinner one night, many years ago. At the time, I think I was in my teens. My grandfather, who only spent part of the year visiting us, got up from the dining room table and invited my father and me into another room for a chat. He felt it was time for one of those man-to-man moments exclusive of the women – his wife (my grandmother), my mother and my sister. I promised I would be along shortly, but then added something that caught him off guard.

“I’m going to help clean up the dirty dishes first,” I said.

He gave the dishes and the table a condescending gesture with the back of his hand. Then he scolded me. “No. No,” he said. “That’s women’s work.”

(more…)

Where do baby boomers come from?

As apparently improbable as Truman defeating Dewey in the 1948 U.S. presidential race, was the realization that 80 million children would be born between 1946 and 1964.

It was the month that the longest serving Prime Minister – not just in Canada, but across the British Commonwealth – Mackenzie King retired after 21 years of service. The Communists officially took over East Berlin; the Wall soon followed. Democrat Harry Truman confounded the political pundits by defeating Republican Thomas E. Dewey and became president of the United States. For the first time TV cameras captured a production (of “Othello”) on the Metropolitan Opera stage in New York.

Oh yes, and sometime during November 1948, I was conceived.

(more…)

Why is it news?

With all that celebrity around, it's possible nobody noticed the football game that took place in Indianapolis.

I don’t know which was worse: the hype over last weekend’s so-called sporting match in Indianapolis, the anticipation over the new 30-second commercials (reportedly costing US$3.6 million each for the airtime), or the guessing about what Madonna would do during her half-time show at the Super Bowl. The newspapers, magazines and TV commentators were all atwitter all week.

“Would she employ her thin veneer English accent?” one asked.

“Would she be naked?” hoped another.

My answer was a resounding: “Who cares?”

(more…)

The royal image

Queen Elizabeth II in open car during 1959 Royal Tour (notice kids with cameras).

Buried away in a dusty, old photo album somewhere, a photograph I took with my Kodak Brownie “Holiday Flash” camera sits mounted in those black, triangular photo corners. There might actually be two or three photos in that series. But the best of them – if you look very closely at the snapshot – shows a long limousine carrying an apparently important person who is waving in the middle of the picture. The only sound I remember – above the nearly deafening cheering around me as I framed the shot – was my mother entreating me.

“Take it now, Ted,” she said. “There she is!” (more…)

Maybe Chaucer was right

Geoffrey Chaucer wrote "let sleeping dogs lie" in the 17th century with implications for 21st century politicians.

When my younger sister and I were growing up, our Greek-born American grandparents visited our home once a year. They came from the U.S. to stay during warm Canadian summer months. While visiting, my grandfather generally tolerated anything my sister and I did or said, with a few exceptions. We could never swear in front of him. We were never to call wrestling a “fixed” sport. And under no circumstances were we to criticize the U.S. president – in those years Richard Nixon – or the U.S. Vice-President (of Greek origin), Spiro Agnew.

“Let sleeping dogs lie,” my mother would warn us. By that, she meant that unless we really wanted to face my grandfather’s wrath, we should just avoid any discussion of Nixon’s near impeachment and Agnew’s resignation over tax evasion.

(more…)