Category Archives: Main Page

CBC 690 AM radio reaches 1000 letters to support its application move to FM

Yesterday was the deadline… CBC Radio 690 AM had put its big guns special projects Sheila Peacock and programs director Joan Andersen to the task to drum up 1000 letters of support for its application to move to FM.  For the past  two weeks, CBC Radio One has not only been asking its listeners to write letters to CRTC, but also personally phone calling and e-mailing its “friends in the community.”

I was contacted by Sheila Peacock and wrote:

CBC
Radio is and important part of Vancouver's arts and political
community.  The move to FM will greatly enhance how it can serve the
Metro Vancouver community.  When CBC radio was locked out – it was a
terrible blow to the local arts community, and stopped the
dissemination of information for many small organizations who could not
otherwise reach the broad audience that CBC AM reaches.

To
further enhance and develop the benefit of Canadian culture, we need a
stronger CBC.  We need to provide our national public radio with the
best reach possible to ensure the best use of our tax dollars and to
fulfill it's mandate – especially “be made available throughout Canada
by the most appropriate and efficient means and as resources become
available for the purpose, and reflect the multicultural and
multiracial nature of Canada.

No other radio station is able to
specifically transcend the multicultural hodgepodge of isolated
language groups into an effective post-multicultural and
interculturally inclusive community in the way that CBC 690 Radio does
and can do. 

As Todd Wong, creator of Gung Haggis Fat Choy:
Toddish McWong's Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner, we are an
example of that new and developing Canadian culture that recognizes 1)
our Canadian heritage 2) our ancestral heritage and 3) the unique
fusion as we combine, evolve and create.

Through CBC AM radio –
we have shared our vision and activities not only locally in Vancouver
on shows such as Early Edition, BC Almanac, North By Northwest and On
the Coast, but also nationally through shows like Sounds Like Canada,
Richardson's Round Up, and Freestyle.

It is therefore imperative that CBC 690 AM be allowed access to FM radio.

Todd Wong

Sheila wrote back today:

Thanks Todd – this is fantastic!  We exceeded our 1000 letter goal – thank you so much for all your support!
 
cheers, Sheila

Gung Haggis Fat Choy media attention is heating up: Vancouver Sun today



No longer considered a cultural fusion hybrid event…
Food critic Mia Stainsby calls us tri-brid!

A list of really cool Burns Dinners and special food events came out in the January 23 Vancouver Sun today.  We accompany articles about a $1200 one ounce tasting from a 1795 bottle of cognac, and a $95 Burns Dinner at Boneta Restaurant….  pretty nice company for our little 10 course Chinese dinner with a “Vancouver special – deep-fried haggis wun tun”- Check it out:

ON THE BURNER – by Mia Stainsby
http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/news/arts/story.html?id=360efbd6-f817-4340-a770-f53c6e9bbcca

Gung
Haggis Fat Choy: This Scottish-Chinese-Canadian tri-brid event
celebrates its 10th year on Jan. 27 at Floata Restaurant. A 10-course
Chinese banquet includes a Vancouver special, deep-fried haggis wun
tun, as well as music (Blackthorn, a Celtic band; bagpipes ) and poetry
(poet laureate George McWhirter), and a sneak preview of the play, The
Quickie by playwright Grace Chin. The evening starts at 5:30 with a
reception and appetizers, with dinner at 6 p.m. Tickets are $64.50 for
adults; $54 for students; $43.50 for children 13 and under. Order
tickets at 604-631-2872.

Today was a busy Gung Haggis Day….

I took some table reservations, confirmed other seating arrangments, found out when Shaw TV's “The Express” will run tomorrow on Jan 24, and Robbie Burns Day on Jan 25th. 

Bagpiper Joe McDonald and I discussed a new arrangement for our rap version of Gung HAGGIS RAP Choy, for when we perform for CBC Newsworld on Friday.

I met up with a major distributor of fine spirits, for sponsorship an donations for our event.  I can't tell you anything now… but I have promised surprises for our 10th Anniversary.

I picked up 50 haggis (or is the plural haggisses or haggi?), from Peter Black & Sons – my favorite haggis maker, at Park Royal South.  Delivered them to Floata Restaurant in Vancouver Chinatown… and worked on some more arrangements for the big event!

Down the street at the Radha Yoga Centre, writer Alexis Kienlen held the Vancouver launch of her poetry book “She Dreams in Red.”  It was nice to Alexis who has been writing and editing in Grande Prairie AB.  She is a past literary editor for Ricepaper Magazine, and on her way to participate in the Canadian Cooperative Association's upcoming Study Mission to the Philippines where she will be responsible for documenting the trip, and writing stories for various Canadian media outlets.

FREE fun-raiser for Vancouver Asian Canadian Theatre

We like Vancouver Asian Canadian Theatre… Tom Chin has been a past co-host for Gung Haggis Fat Choy.  VACT created Asian Comedy Night, and Sex in Vancouver.  VACT specializes in being funny and creating fun.  Hope you can attend their January 26th event.  Check it out:


T’s FiRst-evEr Fund-raisEr is now a FREE FUN-raiser!

Gung Hay Fat Choy! Year of the Rat good fortune comes early to VACT – and you.

With tremendous support from our friends at ExplorASIAN, VACT is thrilled to announce that admission to this weekend’s incredible VACT Fundraiser event is now FREE*!

The Rat signals new beginnings so this is a great way to introduce VACT to your FRiEnds, old and nEw, and your family. Come to the Norman Rothstein Theatre on Saturday January 26 at 7:30 PM to jumpstart 2008 with us with an evening of guaranteed good laffs!

* However, we do suggest a donation at the door if you can… We’re always very appreciative of your support and we prove it with every show we produce!

WHAT?     VACT’S FUN-RAISER
WHEN?    Saturday, January 26, 2008, @ 7:30pm
WHERE?    Norman Rothstein Theatre, 950 West 41st Avenue (at Oak), Van.

HOW MUCH?    FREE! Or with a suggested donation $10
WHO?     Funny Man, Tom Chin
                Beautiful and Talented Actor, Olivia Cheng
                Standup Comedian, Jeffery Yu
                Elvis Tribute Artist, Aaron Elvis Wong
                Sketch Comedy Groups:
                5-Spice Girls
                Lick the Wax Tadpole
                SFUU MAN CHU
                The Yangtzers
                Caricature Artist, Geoffery Wong

WHY?        To See a FREE show and party with VACT performers, volunteers to help raise funds for VACT’s 2008 season! Here’s your chance to find out what VACT is all about!

Hurry! This event is free – and tickets are first-come-first-served at the door. So come early to avoid disappointment.

But you can reserve a seat by signing up for our free newsletter of VACT events – one name and working email address per ticket. Email your info to FUNraiser@vact.ca

All reserved tickets are held up to 7:15 PM, after which, they will be released to the public at the door.  For more information, visit www.vact.ca

Gung Haggis Fat Choy with Sukhi Ghuman on Shaw TV's The Express


Watch The Express on Shaw TV today and Friday – for Gung Haggis Fat Choy interview with Todd Wong and Michelle Carlisle!

Sukhi Ghuman did a really nice story with the Gung Haggis Fat Choy gang for Shaw TV's The Express – “that brings an in-depth look at the fascinating
people, events, recreation and attractions from Greater Vancouver.”

TIME CORRECTION!

Watch Shaw

Thursday January 24 – Robbie Burns Day Eve
at 6pm, 6:30pm, 10:30pm, 12am

Friday January 25 – Robbie Burns Day
at 10am, 11am, 11:30am, 2pm, 3pm

She brought cameraman Zac Radcliffe and they both sat down with us to enjoy the haggis wun tun, shrimp balls and other tasty dinner courses as we taste-tested our 2008 menu.  They also met some of our featured guest performers such as: poet George McWhirter, Blackthorn flute singer/vocalist Michelle Carlisle, film maker Ann Marie Fleming and media columnist Catherine Barr.

Sukhi is absolutely cute as a button and could inspire us to create a Lion-headed, kilt-wearing, bangra dancing entry for the Vancouver International Bangra Competition – for which she is Media correspendent.

Sukhi writes:

Hi Todd,
 
Zac and I had a wonderful evening being a part of your rehearsal
dinner. Thank you for inviting us. The story will air tonight at 6pm
8pm, 10pm 12am and Friday at 10am, 11am 2pm, and 3pm.
 
Thank you,
Sukhi Ghuman
Reporter Shaw TV

Gung Haggis Fat Choy taste-testing rehearsal a success at Floata!


Everybody said the food was really good! 

Poet George McWhirter was amazed. Media columnist Catherine Barr was in awe! Film maker Ann Marie Fleming had smiles on her face! Blackthorn flautist Michelle Carlisle loved it!

We went to Floata to test-taste the 2008 Gung Haggis Fat Choy menu.  We started with a deep-fried haggis/shrimp wun tun, shrimp-filled haw-gow, haggis/pork su-mei, and vegetarian spring rolls… that was our appetizer.

Sukhi Ghuman arrived with her cameraman Zak to shoot an interview and help taste-test some food for an upcoming episode of The Express on Shaw TV.  “The Express is a lifestyle magazine program that brings you an in-depth look at the fascinating
people, events, recreation and attractions from Greater Vancouver and the Fraser Valley.”  Sukhi asked me about the origins of Gung Haggis Fat Choy, and how I came to create this cultural fusion event that blends Chinese and Scottish traditions.

“It's bringing about recognizing the pioneer histories of the Scottish-Canadians and Chinese-Canadians of BC, while recognizing that despite the racism of history, these peoples have met, dated, fallen in love and produced babies.  It's also about overcoming the racism of the head tax, the discrimination, and recognizing the future of Canada when people are Eurasian or Hapa-Canadian.  This is our world now.  This is our Canada… and it involves being inclusive of our different and diverse cultural heritages.”

We sat down at the table with our 10 guests including George and Angela McWhirter – Vancouver Poet Laureate, Charlie Cho – our stage manager, Catherine Barr – media columnist, Leanne Riding – ACWW co-president and Gung Haggis dragon boat paddler, Carl Schmidt – our sound tech, Ann Marie Fleming – film maker, Michelle Carlisle and her son – Blackthorn flute player, and Deb Martin – my girlfriend and veteran of 5 Gung Haggis dinners, the Gung Haggis CBC TV special, and 5 years of the Gung Haggis dragon boat team.

The Hot & Sour soup came next.  Sukhi is vegetarian, so I pointed out that the vegetarian spring rolls are tasty, and if she eats fish – then the shrimp-filled haw-gow dumplings are one of my favorite dim sum foods.  Buddhists feast is another of our tasty vegetarian dishes and is a traditional Chinese New Year dish.

“Haggis really is offal stuff,” to the laughter of the Scots-Canadians at our table, as I explained what haggis is made of.  “It's made from the organs of a sheep – the heart, liver and mixed with oatmeal. You have to remember that a lot of the Scottish crofters were poor after battle of Culloden and the Scottish uprisings against the English.  The oatmeal helped the sheep go farther on the dinner table.  It's not unlike a lot of Chinese food, where you use every bit of everything. I have eaten trip – sheep's stomach lining… and ox tail in Chinese cooking.  So when the Chinese people don't eat up the haggis at our dinner, it's because of the oatmeal,” I said to much laughter.

Catherine Barr, who says she is first generation Scottish-Canadian because her parents literally came off the boat many years ago, reminded us that hot dogs are much worse than haggis because they are made from pork renderings…. the ears and other parts of the animal. 

We trust Catherine to know these things, because she grew up very steeped in Scottish culture.  I first got to know about her, because her father was the president of the Burns Club of Vancouver back in 2003.  My friendship with William Barr grew, and he invited me to Burns Club meetings, and I invited him to our Gung Haggis Fat Choy World Poetry Night, and he invited me to Burns Club Robbie Burns dinners based on the Tarbolton Bachelor Club.  Catherine is going to introduce us to a Burns Supper tradition we have been remiss in replicating – the Toast to the Lassies.  Throughout our taste-testing dinner, she got to know the history of the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner, and how it pokes fun at Scots-Canadians and Chinese-Canadians, while celebrating its traditions, achievements and peoples.  She knows we can be wacky, quirky, reverent, irrelevant, and full of fun.  Catherine is going to plan something special for us.

Soon the haggis arrived, and Zak the cameraman made the waiter bring it to the table a couple of times, so he could get some great shots.  I picked up a lettuce leaf, slathered it with hoi-sin bbq plum sauce, added some haggis, then some lettuce wrap filling of diced vegetables and crunchy noodles…. folded the lettuce over… bit into it… and mugged for the camera… I had to repeat for a different angle.

We also ate Mongolian Beef, Shrimp balls, and e-fu long life noodles.  All of the food was very very tasty.  Michelle Carlisle and I brought out her flute and my accordion, and we improvised a duet of Loch Lomand, and Auld Lang Syne for the camera.  Sukhi also did a short interview with Michelle, about her involvement with Gung Haggis Fat Choy and her band Blackthorn. 

One of the highlights of the evening was a poem George McWhirter read for us.  He especially wrote a poem embracing Scottish and Chinese cultures, and about our Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner.  I can't tell you anything more… but he really pokes fun at Scottish, Irish, Chinese and Canadian customs… and he snuck my name into it!!!

George and his wife Angela really LOVED our Gung Haggis Fat Choy taste-testing dinner… and are amazed that there are going to be up towards 400 people attending!

Toddish McWong appearances for Robbie Burns week – January 23rd to Jan 28th


Where is Toddish McWong and his kilt?  Lots of events popping up in Vancouver and in the media.

The following events feature Todd Wong, Gung Haggis Fat Choy, or are associated.

Special event
January 23
Alexis Kienlen, author reading at Radha Yoga Centre

728 Main St
7-9pm
Alexis is one of our favorite Hapa authors.  She was a featured author for our Gung Haggis Fat Choy World Poetry night at the Vancouver Public Library in 2006.  She has also helped volunteer at past Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinners.
FREE EVENT


January 24th SFU Gung Haggis Fat Choy Festival
SFU Recreation Department
11:30 – 1:30 Convecation Mall
SFU Burnaby Campus
(Todd Wong MC and dragon cart race commentator)
This is the event inspired by the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner and poetry nights, where we fuse what we think is Scottish or Chinese culture and come up with something uniquely and wackily Canadian like Dragon Cart Racing…. or Human Curling…
FREE EVENT


Jan 24th Vancouver Chinatown Lions Club – Burns Dinner

(Todd Wong giving Immortal Address)
This dinner has been going on for 47 odd years.  This was the first dinner that served haggis with sweet and sour sauce at the old Bamboo Restaurant in Vancouver Chinatown.
address TBA


January 25th
8:30am??  The Bro Jake Show on Rock 101
with Vancouver city councilor Raymond Louie… aka “Raymond McLouie”



CBC NEWSWORLD

Joe McDonald and Toddish McWong

perform Gung HAGGIS RAP Choy – rap version of Robbie Burns immortal poem “Address to a Haggis”
airing live at 1:00pm PST for 6pm NewFoundLand

January 27th
Gung Haggis Fat Choy: Toddish McWong's Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner

5:30-9:30pm
Floata Restaurant
#400 – 180 Keefer St
The 10th Anniversary of the quirky and unique but contemporarily Canadian fusion dinner.
Featuring celtic band Blackthorn, poet George McWhirter, Bagpiper Joe McDonald and his band Brave Waves, playwright Grace Chin… and lots of surprises, raffle prizes, singalongs, and fun fun fun!  This is the dinner that started it all… inspiring a CBC Vancouver television performance special, a multicultural festival at SFU, and a poetry night at the Vancouver Public Library.
Tickets available www.ticketstonight.ca
NEW order by phone 604-631-2872


Jan 28th Gung Haggis Fat Choy World Poetry Event

7pm Vancouver Public Library
Alice Mackay Room
Featuring Vancouver poet laureate George McWhirter and Governor Generals Award for Poetry winner Fred Wah, with other contemporary Scottish-Canadian and Chinese-Canadian poets.  And Todd Wong's accordion, Joe McDonald's bagpipe and Rebecca Blair's celtic harp.
FREE EVENT


Feb 24th Gung Haggis Fat Choy Seattle.

The 2nd annual dinner – benefit for Pacific North West Junior Pipe Band
More details to come…

2008 Gung Haggis Fat Choy menu announced: now with Mongolian Beef to celebrate Year of the Rat


2008
Menu for Gung Haggis Fat Choy™:
Toddish McWong's Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner

– Anticipating the Year of the Rat!

What:     Gung Haggis Fat Choy™ Dinner
When:    January 27, 2008 – Sunday
Time:     Reception 5:30 pm – with Dim Sum appetizers
                Dinner 6:00 pm
Tickets:  $64.50 adult, $54.00 student, $43.50 children 13 & under
Purchase online www.ticketstonight.ca
NEW # ORDER BY PHONE:
604-631-2872

Additional $2.50 per ticket for phone orders


Call Gung Haggis Fat Choy Productions at 604-987-7124 by January 21 to reserve a table for 10 for $600

Our
selections are not a real “traditional” Chinese New Year dinner menu –
but a blending of favorites, and brand new fusion-fare.  It is created
to help introduce “real Chinese banquet fare” to Scottish-Canadians and
to help make “haggis” safe for Chinese-Canadians.  And if you are
Ukranian-Italian-Japanese-First Nations… that's alright too!


Here is the menu for 2008, subject to change at my whimsy and the kitchen's demands:

Haggis Dim Sum Appetizer buffet
This will be available upon people's arrival soon after the reception starts after 5:30pm
The restaurant will have the bar open for 5:30pm
We have moved the dinner location to the South side of the restaurant so we can use the BIG bar.



1a –  Deep fried Haggis Wun Tun
Haggis
Wun Tun was first created in September 2003 when I walked into New Town
Restaurant in Chinatown with a Haggis from Peter Black's and asked them
to make won tons for me to take to the CBC Radio reception to welcome
Shelagh Rogers and “Sounds Like Canada” to Vancouver.  She said that “the haggis wun tun and special plum sauce goes together like Bogart and Bacall.” It's been a
favorite ever since. 

We ask the restaurant to mix the haggis with
water chestnuts to make it crunchy – yum yum!  Even the Scottish Studies coordinator from Simon Fraser University, Harry McGrath, has said it is “surprisingly good!”

1b   Haggis Su-Mei (Pork Dumplings)
Pork Dumplings (Su-Mei) are classic
cantonese dim sum, and we are adding haggis for great taste!  Somehow the haggis and the pork seem to go very well!

1c Haw-Gow (Shrimp Dumplings)
non-haggis dim sum… one of my favorites!  tasty morsels of shrimp wrapped in rice noodle wrapping.

1d  Vegetarian Spring Rolls
Because we knew there would be people who wouldn't want Haggis or meat their Vegetarian spring rolls.

2 – Hot & Sour Soup
Always
a favorite for everybody – and vegetarian to boot!  Warms up the
innards on a cold January night.  I am sure Burns would approve.


3 – Ginger Dungeness Crab
The
West Coast equivalent to Nova Scotia Lobster and better tasting too!
Flavoured with Ginger, it's always been one of my favorites.  The best
way to eat crab is to have somebody else crack it and de-shell it for
you.  If your husband, wife, boyfriend or girlfriend won't do this –
invite somebody else.

4 – Buddhist's Feast
A traditional New Year dish – with rice vermicelli noodles and lots of vegetables and lotus root.  All the good things that every vegetarian loves.  The Chinese calendar is based on the 12 animals that came when Buddha called.  Feb 7th starts a new 12 year cycle that begins with the Year of the Rat – the first animal to see Buddha.  I was born in the Year of the Rat.



5  – Haggis
You
can't have a Robbie Burns Supper without Haggis… We serve the best
haggis that I have found.  It comes from the Highlands of West
Vancouver… or rather the Lowlands of West Vancouver's Park Royal,
from Peter Black & Sons. 
Peter's
haggis is like a nice liver pate.  It is not too oaty, and it has many
nice spices.  Try it with sweet & sour sauce.  But the Plum sauce
is best. 


6  Lettuce Wrap
We
serve a vegetarian lettuce wrap.  We had so many vegetarians who
lamented that they couldn't eat the duck or the pork or the beef
lettuce wrap… so now it is a vegetarian lettuce wrap.  Very tasty. 


We
encourage people to combine Haggis with the lettuce wrap…. Take a
large spoonful of haggis, plunk it on a lettuce leaf, add the
vegetarian filling, smother it with Hoi-Sin Chinese plum sauce, and
it's great.  People really like it.  Before we invented the haggis
lettuce wrap, there was always plenty of haggis left over.  But now…
everybody eats it up.  We blame it on the lettuce wrap.


7 – Mongolian Beef
At one time the Mongolian empire was the largest contiguous empire in human history reaching  into what is now Modern Poland by 1279.  That's almost 90% of the distance from Beijing to Edinburgh!  Mongolian beef is one of the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team's favorite Tuesday night dishes after a hard paddle practice.

8 – Deep Fried Shrimp balls with fruit salad.
It's traditional to have a fish dish because the Chinese word for fish sounds like the Chinese word for money… But we are substituting this wonderful Floata Restaurant specialty.  The shrimpballs are lightly
deep-fried to a nice light crunch.  The salad is melons with a
mayonaise sauce… very much Hong Kong style.  While, not one of the
Chinese-Canadian dishes that I grew up with, but the Chinese members on
our Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team really like it, and they
assure me that it is a traditional style food dish for Chinese New Year.

9 –  Special Long Life E-Fu Noodles
Long noodles signify long life – a very important part of traditional Chinese New Year greetings.  I really like the E-Fu noodles.  They are lighter than regular Chow Mein noodles – very heavenly.  Another traditional belief is that the Kitchen God goes to heaven, to report on the family.  Maybe this is why the e-fu noodles are so special!

10 – Dessert 
The return of Mango Pudding.  My girlfriend was happy to see this back on the menu after years of traditional Chinese New Year pastries.   One of the top selling gelato ice creams at Casa Gelato is Death by Mango.  We will definitely NOT have blood pudding – Go ye to a
Scottish resturant for that stuff


Hope you enjoyed these delicious descriptions…

Each
year we are challenged by the logistics of serving 350 to 450 people at
the same time, in coordination with a fantastic musical and literary
show.  Every year we try to improve on the presentation and the
execution of our event, while making it fresh with adjustments to both
the menu and the performance schedule.


So….
reception starts promptly at 5:30pm.and the dim sum appetizers will be
available because we know people will be hungry.  The restaurant assures us that the bar will be open at 5:30pm and we have moved the event to the south side of the restaurant to utilize the large bar, and to be closer to the kitchen.


And
of course… the entire program and menu is subject to change.  We do
our best to create a fabulous meal and evening of entertainment.  And
the best way is to be sensitive to the audience, the performers, spontaneous to great ideas, and
meeting any challenges that come our way.




I look forward to sharing the surprises and joys of Gung Haggis Fat Choy™ 2008 with you!

Toddish

Help CBC Radio Vancouver move to the FM Dial!

Gung Haggis Fat Choy LOVES CBC Radio….

We would love to tell everybody to follow the instructions below and help CBC Radio One move from 690AM to the FM Dial.

Why does Gung Haggis Fat Choy love CBC Radio?

CBC Radio hosts Margaret Gallagher, Sheila Rogers and Priya Ramu have helped to co-host past Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinners.

Back in 2002, Bill Richardson interviewed Toddish McWong about Gung Haggis Fat Choy Robbie Burns Dinner.  In 2004, Sheila Rogers interviewed Todd.  Margaret Gallagher has also interviewed Todd for her 690 to Go slot on the Early Edition.

CBC Radio has also run stories about the Save Joy Kogawa House campaign in 2005 and 2006. 

Many of our friends have had spots on CBC Radio including Adrienne Wong, Charles Demers, Henry Yu, Joy Kogawa, Jennifer Sookfong Lee, Paul Yee, Qiu Xia He and Silk Road Music, Brandy Lien Worrall, the Chinese Canadian War veterans, Larry Wong, Jim Wong-Chu, etc etc etc…
 
We LOVE CBC Radio….  please help.


CBC Vancouver has
the unique opportunity to move Radio One from the AM dial to the FM
dial in the Greater Vancouver area, therefore vastly improving the
sound quality and coverage of our Radio One service!

 

Our
application to the CRTC has been approved for public hearings and we
have just two weeks to show enormous support from listeners in the
Lower Mainland in order to convince the CRTC to give us the FM signal.

 

Why move to FM?  There are two main reasons.  

 

1. 
AM reception is very poor in many parts of the Lower Mainland,
including the heart of the city in the West End.  CBC did a survey of
Radio One listeners in Vancouver that told us that almost 40% of
respondents experienced poor reception either at home, at work or in
their cars.  Making the move to FM is the only way to ensure that all
of the people of Vancouver are able to receive Radio One's unique and
distinctive service.

 

2. 
Tuning to the AM dial is in decline and has been for years.  Four out
of ten Vancouver radio listeners do not listen to the AM dial at all. 
Making the move to FM is an investment in CBC Radio One's future.  It's
about being relevant and staying connected to everyone living in Metro
Vancouver.

 

How can you help?

 

By
sending your written support by email, fax or mail to the CRTC by
January 23, 2008.  The message doesn't have to be long, but it
does have to be individually written.  The CRTC dismisses the “cut and
paste” copying of form letters.  A few sentences explaining why you
value Radio One's programming and how you would like it to be on the FM
dial so you can hear it consistently wherever you are in Metro
Vancouver is all that's required. 

 


To email your support:
 

Go directly to the form on the CRTC website at http://support.crtc.gc.ca/rapidscin/default.aspx?lang=en and click on the button #2007-18.
Then, check the box beside #200714239 (in the list, this is the second CBC application) and go to the bottom of the page and select Next
Follow the instructions to complete your letter of support.
And please remember to also send a copy to CBC of your e-mail at REGULATORYAFFAIRS@CBC.CA

 


We also have a Facebook page which you can link your own Facebook page to if you'd like, at http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=8429916755 

 

In
order to be successful, we will require hundreds of letters of support,
so please pass this information on to everyone you know who values
public broadcasting in Greater Vancouver.  Again, the deadline is less
than two weeks away – January 23, 2008.

 

We have been trying to get Radio One moved to FM in Vancouver for ten years, and now a dial position has become available.  This is a very rare and unique opportunity long overdue so we welcome your support!  If you have any questions, please let me know.

 

Sheila

 

Sheila Peacock

Specials Producer

CBC Radio

604-662-6095

Adrienne Wong playing “My Name is Rachel Corrie” about the peace activist killed by a bulldozer while defending a Palestine house


Rachel Corrie

My Name is Rachel Corrie
Havana Theatre
Push Festival
January 25 – February 9, 2008

Rachel
Corrie was 23 years old when she was crushed to death by an Israeli
army bulldozer on March 16, 2003. She was working with others trying to
protect the home of a Palestinian pharmacist from demolition in Rafah,
Gaza Strip, Palestine. “My Name is Rachel Corrie” is a powerful

Sometimes we can be pulled so strongly into doing things by our passions.  Rachel Corrie was driven by passion to stand in front of Palestinian homes on the Gaza Strip, being threatened by Israeli bulldozers.  As an U.S. citizen from Olympia WA, she felt it was her duty to protest the actions of the U.S. government.  Unfortunately Rachel was killed by a bulldozer, but called a martyr by Palestine leader Arafat.

Adrienne Wong is playing Rachel Corrie in the Push Festival's “My Name is Rachel Corrie.” Wong was also similarly driven by her passion to play the young activist.  Read the article: Hour.ca – Stage – My Name Is Rachel Corrie to learn about Wong's unusual audition for the role.

My Name is Rachel Corrie, is a play composed from Corrie's journals and e-mails from Gaza, written by British actor Alan Rickman. I've checked the blogosphere, and it looks like a real interesting play with controversial themes.  Was Corrie being used for Palestinian propaganda?  Did the bulldozer driver not see her? Why is it important to to destroy Palestinian homes on the Gaza Strip?

The initial 2005 opening in London, directed by Rickman at the Royal Court Theatre in London, England won the Theatregoers' Choice Awards for Best Director
and Best New Play, as well as Best Solo Performance for actress Megan Dodds.  It was subsequently scheduled to open in New York City at New York Theatre Workshop
in March 2006. But due to fear of reactions from Jewish groups, the play was “postponed indefinitely.”

What will Vancouver's Jewish community say about My Name is Rachel Corrie?  What will White audiences and critics say about an Asian actor playing a blonde American character?  Hopefully, they will all say that both the actor and the play are full of passion.  Adrienne is actually Eurasian or Hapa-Canadian, as her mother is French Canadian.  Wong already has many ethnic “roles” on her resume.  Ethnicity shouldn't be a quality for casting, but sometimes it is.

Adrienne is a committed actor involved on many levels in Vancouver theatrical community.  A few years ago she was writer in residence at the Firehall Arts Centre, and I have seen her in lead roles in Golden Child and Gold Mountain Guest.  She has also been a past co-host for the 2004 Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner event.

Banana Boys back again at the Firehall Arts Centre

Banana Boys
Firehall Arts Centre

January 17 – February 9 , 2008


Last year Firehall Arts Centre brought back Urine Town the following year, after a smash initial run.  This year, they have brought back Banana Boys.  I saw the play last year and found it a hysterical, fast-paced, action-packed with both ideas and physical comedy.

Some of our female dragon boat team members said “Hey what about the Banana Girls?”  This play hits the nerves about Asian-Canadian identity.  What is it like to be considered a banana? Yellow on the outside but White on the inside.  No doubt many Canadian-born Asian Canadians are considered more and more banana with each passing generation, as they lose their mother tongue language, and traditional customs. 

But can you lose something you never really had? Often times this 5th generation Chinese-Canadian bristles at being asked “Where are you from?” 

On the other hand, the Asian traditionalists and new immigrants have often asked me “Are you Chinese?  You look Chinese… You should speak Chinese!”

This play addresses all these issues… the push and pull of living between cultures, while trying to establish your own identity.

This Leon Aureus play is based on the original book by Terry Woo.  Terry came to Vancouver last year for the rehearsals and the opening night performance, and was really pleased with the Firehall's production.  No wonder the play sold out its final nights and has been brought back for 2008.