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Posts from the ‘Life’ Category

15
Apr

I haven’t written a blog post in almost a year

I should remedy this. Done.

28
Apr

Water ban? Seriously? Come on Ottawa

I’m very upset about the water ban now in effect for Ottawa’s Riverside South, Manotick and Barrhaven communities. Its affect on home owners, businesses and local programs (not to mention job losses) could have all been avoided if the city had corrected the issue back in 2007. Instead. They did nothing and let the water main deteriorate. The result: nothing gets done until 80,000 residents and businesses are affected and only then they “fast track” the project which means we’ll end up paying double to have it fixed faster.

Our city should be embarrassed by how they mishandled providing proper water to its residents. We’re the Nations Capital and as tax payers and residents we deserve better. I encourage everyone to email your councillor and share your thoughts. You have a right to be angry.

A friend of mine, Scott Paterson, had a great idea. Since we can’t use outdoor water to properly clean our Ottawa Green Bins start using it as rain barrel instead. Just cover the open lid with some window screening and your set. I’ll give it a shot. After all, I’m not about to continue using the green bin if I can’t clean it. That’s just gross.

Riverside South residents email Steve Desroches at Steve.Desroches@ottawa.ca
Barrhaven residents email Jan Harder at Jan.Harder@ottawa.ca
Manotick residents email  Scott Moffat at Scott.Moffatt@ottawa.ca

Leave comments. I’d like to hear your thoughts on this.

25
Feb

J&E Grocery, 139 Reynolds Street

J&E Grocery

J&E Grocery was your typical Mom and Pop variety store located in Rochester, NY that specialized in cheap meats and sundries. Turns out it closed in 2001 after 37 years in business likely forced to by increased competition and the proliferation of big-box stores like Walmart.

What I remember most about J&E were their low-budget commercials they ran on local TV featuring the same monotoned guy in a red (sometimes white) butchers apron running down the features of the week. “…and the weekly specials are…”. These specials included things like neck bones, ham hocks and chitlins as well as canned creamed corn. The ending was always the same and in my mind I can’t even say the store name without including the street address. “So come on down to J&E Grocery, 139 Reynolds Street”.

This style of advertising for J&E also extended to other local businesses in that area too. Remember The Great House of Guitars? How about Jim “The Hammer” Shapiro and his unforgettable slogan about suing drunks? Wegmans had a bunch at the time too but I can’t find any of their older ads on YouTube.

There’s just something about these gritty and unpolished ads that speak to me. J&E Grocery and their TV commercials are burned into to the deepest crevices of my brain. I can’t shake them out and I wouldn’t want to. This is the type of marketing you can’t pay for. The store hasn’t been open in 10 years but here I am remembering everything about them 15-20 years later. That’s stickiness!

Google street view shows another grocery store there now called “Price Chopper III”, not to be confused with the Price Chopper that you and I are used to here in Ontario today.

It’s these fun yet obscure facts or memories that have been magically appearing in my mind recently. Am I that close to a mid-life crisis?! All I know is, I’ve never stepped into this little grocery store in Rochester, NY but somehow it’s engrained in my mind. I doubt I’ll ever forget it.

8
Feb

Is the weekly sitcom a thing of the past?

I’ve been having a short discussion with @daly_beauty (her name is Jane!) on Twitter recently about cable TV. She loves it and would never give it up but it’s been about a year since I cut the cord and I haven’t looked back. Here’s why.

Macro RemoteMy life is too busy for TV. On a regular schedule anyway. Sure, I watch the odd Sens game here and there and I can make time for the bigger games like the World Junior Hockey Championships or the Olympics. I just can’t seem to do the same for sitcom watching. I know the show will be there waiting for me on its usual day and at its usual time but I always manage to find other things that need doing at that particular time.

And do you think I remember to program the PVR? Nope.

Over the last few months I’ve been watching more TV shows on DVD or Blue Ray. It started with “The Big Bang Theory, Entourage, then “Mad Men” and most recently I’ve been watching full season’s of Dexter. Sometimes I rent them but they’re usually borrowed from friends.

In the beginning, I didn’t know much about the shows themselves but they all came highly recommended friends. I’ll totally take a recommendation from a friend more highly than just aimlessly searching through the channels on the program guide in the hopes of finding something interesting. That rarely happens.

In Canada, we don’t have any good streaming services like Hulu and the big U.S. networks don’t let us watch videos on their websites. They’re all blocked. Netflix just opened their streaming services here but the selection is very very limited compaired to our friends in the U.S. So, we’re pretty much stuck.

Adding more and more cable channels (even in HD) isn’t going to help. It’s simply not convenient for me. Why? No commercials, I can watch it when I want and can even catch an entire season in just a few days. I can see myself doing alot more of this.

How do you watch your TV? Do you use a PVR? Rent or borrow TV shows? Dare I say it: Download them? Or stick to the tried and true “weekly” model?