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PNE reveals summer concert lineup for 2025

PNE reveals summer concert lineup for 2025

CTV News07-05-2025

Adam Duritz and David Immergluck of the band the Counting Crows perform at the Isle of Wight Festival on Friday, June 12, 2015 in Newport, Isle of Wight, England. (Photo by Jim Ross/Invision/AP) (Jim Ross/The Associated Press)

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What's happening on Canada Day?
What's happening on Canada Day?

CTV News

timea day ago

  • CTV News

What's happening on Canada Day?

As Canada Day approaches many communities are preparing to celebrate the day with live music, fireworks and fun. Here are some of the city and municipally sponsored events coming up on July 1. Location: Cowan Park (2958 Greenfield Road) Time: 6 p.m. until 9:30 p.m. Families are invited to Cowan Park on July 1 for an evening full of inflatables, backyard games, food and fireworks. Food trucks will be on site from 6 p.m. until 10 p.m. Meanwhile, Rumble & Friends will be entertaining kids from 6:30 p.m. until 7:15 p.m., followed by alternative country artist Eric Jackson until 7:30 p.m. Headliner Jessie T will be performing from 7:30 p.m. until 9:45 p.m. The night caps off with fireworks at approximately 9:45 p.m. Location: Lions Park Steve Brown Sports Complex (12 Edge Street) Time: 11 a.m. until 10 p.m. The city of Brantford is planning a full day of stage performances, a midway and fireworks. The KidZone Carnival and Midway will open at 11 a.m. Visitors are invited to check out a vendors market, grab some food, and meet Bob the Builder and friends from PAW Patrol. Main stage performers include Jocelyn June & The Bugs, The Dirt Road Travelers, Andrew Irving, Tonewheel, Coty Robinson, and Suzie McNeil & The Chain Reaction. Canadian band The Trews, known for songs like 'So She's Leaving' and 'Highway of Heros', will hit the stage at 8:30 p.m. Fireworks are set to light up the sky at 10 p.m. Location: Riverside Park (49 King St. W.) Time: 7:45 a.m. until 9:45 p.m. Cambridge is getting ready to host what it calls 'the largest Canada Day celebration in Waterloo Region.' The festivities include a fishing derby from 7:45 a.m. until 10 a.m. and an 11 a.m. Canada Day Parade from the corner of King Street and Bishop Street to Eagle Street. The main event at Riverside Park gets underway at noon, featuring live music, an inflatable obstacle course, dunk tank, live wrestling show, hot air balloon rides, vendors and a zip-line ride. A fireworks show will happen at 9:45 p.m. The city is offering a free shuttle service from Cambridge Centre Mall and the Fountain Street Soccer Complex lot. Location: various Time: various Celebrations will be happening at several locations across Centre Wellington. Revelers can start their day at the Elora Volunteer Firefighters Association pancake breakfast from 7 a.m. until 11 a.m. at MacDonald Square. Meanwhile, Big Brothers Big Sisters of CW are hosting a soap box derby at David and Geddes Street in Elora from 8 a.m. until 11 a.m. A parade will march through the street, starting from the Jefferson Elora Community Centre to East Mill Street in Elora at 11 a.m. Donations for the food bank will be collected along the route. If you've worked up an appetite by then, there will be a free hotdog lunch and music by Paul Whitaker at Bissell Park from 12 p.m. until 1 p.m. Then, splash your way over the to the duck race at Bissell Park at 1:30 p.m. Over in Fergus, there will be live music, food trucks, cultural performances and free cake at the Centre Wellington Community Sportsplex at 7 p.m. The night ends with fireworks at 9:30 p.m. Location: Downtown Kitchener Time: 12 p.m. until 11 p.m. Kitchener's Canada Day events have been divided into two parts: the Canada Play kids' zone and a celebration in Carl Zehr Square. The kid's zone will be taking place at the St. Louis-Kitchener Main Campus across from City Hall at 80 Young Street. Families are invited to stop by from noon until 7 p.m. for free fun including rides, games and food. Live music is scheduled for the Canada Day Stage in Carl Zehr Square starting at 4:30 p.m. Performers include Rebekah Stevens, Grace 2 (a Tragically Hip tribute) and Terra Lightfoot. Juno award-winning rock band Sloan hits the stage from 9 p.m. until 10:30 p.m. A pyrotechnics display is set for 10:30 p.m. Guelph Location: Riverside Park (709 Woolwich Street) Time: 3 p.m. until 10 p.m Supercrawl Productions has organized Canada Day celebrations in Guelph. The city put out a request for proposals to find a new organization to host the celebration. Previously, the Rotary Club of Guelph took the lead, but they had to pull out due a lack of financial support and volunteers. This year's free event will be happening at Riverside Park, featuring bouncy castles, music, a beer garden, vendors, a free movie and fireworks. Location: Waterloo Park (100 Westmount Road North) Time: 4 p.m. until 10 p.m. Waterloo is hosting a community picnic on July 1 from 4 p.m. until 10 p.m. at Waterloo Park, near the bandshell. Local musicians will perform throughout the afternoon, while residents are invited to grab something to eat from a food truck and play some giant family-friendly games. An arts market and community organization fair will be happening from 4 p.m. until 9 p.m. A 100-piece LED drone show is expected to take off at 10 p.m.

Amy Hamm: The rabbit rescue that refused to be cancelled for alleged transphobia
Amy Hamm: The rabbit rescue that refused to be cancelled for alleged transphobia

National Post

timea day ago

  • National Post

Amy Hamm: The rabbit rescue that refused to be cancelled for alleged transphobia

It's June: the western world's Holy Month of Pride, and, as such, we must all be on our best behaviour so as not to offend the delicate sensibilities of gender activists — you know, the ones that occupy the latter half of the expanding LGBTQ2S+ acronym. Article content Unfortunately, the United Kingdom's Carrot Cottage Rabbit Rescue somehow missed this memo. The registered charity drew the ire of Irish comedian and transgender rights activist Aidan Comerford this week, following an online attack by anonymous activists whose work caught Comerford's attention. Comerford, whose X bio notes that he 'generally tweets about what transphobia looks like,' astutely observed that the charity was committing the cardinal sin of following unapproved social media accounts on X. Article content The accounts in question, noticed Comerford on June 14, were gender critical — the horror! — and allegedly included one 'recent detransitioner in the USA.' But wait, it gets even more dire. The charity also named a rabbit after comedian Ricky Gervais — that terrible funny man who offended millions with his profane jokes, including about transwomen — and then had the audacity to interact with X founder Elon Musk. Article content Article content One can surely sympathize with Comerford, whose valuable work defending the LGBT community from, umm, a rabbit charity, has landed him the unfortunate nickname ' Watership Clown.' Article content 'There's a registered British rabbit rescue charity, of all things, that is currently marketing itself based on the criticism it is getting for following and courting the support of the anti-trans movement. You do have to wonder about humanity,' Comerford posted to X on Tuesday, once he realized that his smear campaign against the animal rescue workers had stunningly backfired. Article content Carrot Cottage Rabbit Rescue, whose X bio notes that it exists 'for the sole purpose of saving rabbits,' has more than tripled its social media following after Comerford's attempt to ignite an online furor. Donations are flowing, and even J.K. Rowling, the most famous gender-critical woman in the world, got involved. Article content 'We should all chip in to get one of the rabbits named Magdalen Berns. (Comerford's) head would burst open like a microwaved egg,' Rowling posted to X on Monday. Berns is the late, fondly remembered, British woman- and lesbian-rights advocate who died of brain cancer in 2019. Article content A day later, Carrot Cottage Rabbit Rescue named two delightfully cute bunnies 'Joanne' and 'Kathleen,' sparking rumours about their namesakes' identities (J.K. Rowling and Kathleen Stock, two more prominent 'transphobic' women's rights advocates in the U.K.). Will this charity ever stop doing evil? Article content For its actions, attempts have been made to punish the rescue. On June 13, it announced: 'We have just received official correspondence from the charity commission stating that they have received a number of complaints 'ALLEGING' that we are engaging in transphobia, following transphobic accounts and that we are posting antisemitism posts on the social media platform X. It's time to take legal advice as these allegations are false and intended to damage the charity, ultimately putting bunnies at risk. What a sad world we live in.'

Worldwide French music celebration hits high note in Halifax
Worldwide French music celebration hits high note in Halifax

CTV News

time2 days ago

  • CTV News

Worldwide French music celebration hits high note in Halifax

Musicians are pictured performing in the Halifax public gardens as part of Fête de la musique on June 21, 2025 (Vanessa Wright/CTV Atlantic) Haligonians joined a worldwide celebration Saturday when they enjoyed the sights and sounds of this year's Make Music Day event. 'In French, it's called 'Fête de la musique' because it's a French initiative,' says Melanie Koehnemann, the culture and communications officer for Alliance Française. 'It was born in France in the 80s.' Performances took place at two Halifax locations this year, one at Public Gardens, and the other at a Northwood Care retirement facility. Music fan A music fan claps along during a performance at Fête de la musique in Halifax public gardens on June 21, 2025 (Vanessa Wright/CTV Atlantic) Koehnemann says the event has a history of bringing music outside for everyone to celebrate, anywhere. 'The idea is to propose something different, something accessible and free, because there is no cost to this event,' says Koehnemann. The celebration brought together artists of different genres from the francophone community for the public to enjoy. 'The whole idea of this music is to have people sing and perform it outside – amateurs, professionals,' says musician Suzie Quackenbush, who has performed at the event for about ten years. '(I sing) a lot of folk and I will alternate between English and French.' Robert Brushedd – a musician and member of Alliance Française – also took centre stage at public gardens, performing with his guitar. 'What I did play is just stuff that I've been playing in my apartment over the last while, and I had the guitar since 1983,' says Brushedd. Koehnemann says seeing people from different backgrounds of different ages enjoying Fête de la musique is what they strive for all year. Performances at the Halifax public gardens and Northwood Care retirement facility will wrap up Saturday at 7:15 p.m. music festival A crowd watches a performance at Fête de la musique in Halifax public gardens on June 21, 2025 (Vanessa Wright/CTV Atlantic) For more Nova Scotia news, visit our dedicated provincial page

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