All posts by Raymond Tomlin

About Raymond Tomlin

Raymond Tomlin is a veteran journalist and educator who has written frequently on the political realm — municipal, provincial and federal — as well as on cinema, mainstream popular culture, the arts, and technology.

Vision Vancouver Welcomes Kirk LaPointe to Decision 2014

Vision Vancouver

Vancouver City Councillor Heather Deal, writing on behalf of her colleagues in Vision Vancouver, late yesterday afternoon posted an e-mail to the many thousands of folks who subscribe to our municipal ‘majority party’ government’s subscription e-mail blast ‘reach out’ facility.
In an e-mail titled ‘A clear choice‘, Ms. Deal stakes out Vision Vancouver’s position on a key issue of differentiation between Vision, and lead opposition party, the Non-Partisan Association.
The argument is clear and reasoned, and presents to the voting public a stark policy difference between the two, what now seems to be, old-line municipal electoral parties.

Today, the NPA announced that Kirk LaPointe is their candidate for Mayor. On behalf of all of us on the Vision Team, we want to welcome him to the race. Anyone who puts their name forward to seek elected office deserves our respect, and we look forward to the campaign ahead.

Our campaign is going to be about ideas for how we can move Vancouver forward. The need to build the Broadway Subway to improve transit and grow our economy. To keep moving towards becoming the greenest city in the world. Building new affordable housing, so people of all incomes can live and work in Vancouver.

That’s what our campaign is going to be about. And it’s going to show the contrast between what we offer, and the choice voters have with the NPA.

Mr. LaPointe has obviously spent a lot of time considering whether or not to run. He looked long and hard at the NPA, their positions and their policies, and liked what he saw.

In his launch today, he refused to stand up against Kinder Morgan’s massive expansion of oil tankers in our waters. We believe that’s the wrong direction for Vancouver - both for our economy and for our environment. There’s too much at risk.

This summer, when you’re out biking the seawall, running at Spanish Banks, or having a picnic at Crab Park, think to yourself: is a massive expansion of oil tankers in our local waters the direction we want Vancouver to go?

That’s just one of the many choices voters will face when they cast their ballot in November’s election.

With the NPA announcing their Mayoral candidate, we can expect the campaign to start to heat up. And throughout the next four months, we’ll be offering our positive agenda to help move Vancouver forward.

Thanks,

Heather Deal

Vision Vancouver
http://www.votevision.ca/

Now, we don’t know who actually composed the e-mail — we fully accept that the sentiments expressed in the blast reflect Ms. Deal’s position on the issues raised, but recognize that the compositional job is generally turned over to a member of the communications staff — but whoever composed the e-mail has crafted one of the best written ‘press releases’ we’ve read this electoral season, as warm and evocative in its prose as anything we’ve read this year, the e-mail inviting the reader to consider, if just for a moment, just what is at stake in the 2014 Vancouver civic election.
Congratulations to Vision Vancouver for adopting a circumspect, politic, resonant, prudent and engaging tone for the upcoming electoral campaign.

Decision 2014: Meet Vancouver’s Next Mayor, Kirk LaPointe

Meet Kirk LaPointe, the next Mayor of Vancouver, and current NPA mayoralty candidate

Father, husband, raconteur, journalist, editor, nobody’s fool, not beholden to special interests (read: developers, or Joel Solomon / the Tides Foundation / Hollyhock), a man of wit and intelligence who is possessed of warmth, charm and élan, a man of the people who grew up in a single family household that experienced desperate straits of poverty and want, a person who entered the profession of journalism because, as he told VanRamblings just prior to his campaign commencement address on Monday morning, “without journalism, I would never have been provided the window on the world that was afforded me. I have been fortunate in my life. The time has now come to give back, to help make the lives of families and children in our city better, to give back to the people of Vancouver.”
In 2014, Kirk LaPointe has re-fashioned the NPA as the Naturally Progressive Association (or, perhaps, as he suggested, the No Preferred Advantage municipal party — this a comment on the blaringly obvious marital tryst that Vision Vancouver has formed with developers in our city — the NPA, Vancouver’s municipal party seeking office that is on your side).
VanRamblings recommends that you watch and listen to the full commencement speech Mr. LaPointe gave to those assembled at Jack Poole Plaza yesterday morning, in order that you might gain some early insight into just what kind of man has come forward to seek the Mayor’s chair, “in 2014, in 2018, and beyond” he suggested to VanRamblings, and others.
Prior to meeting for the formal, 10am campaign kick-off announcement, just west of the Trade and Convention Centre, Mr. LaPointe met with selected media for an informal Monday morning breakfast ‘briefing’, and had the following to say on the issues facing our city, & why it is he has chosen to come forward to offer his name in candidacy for the Mayor’s chair …


An edited version of the Kirk LaPointe, NPA Mayoral candidate, media briefing | July 14, 2014

Media present at the introductory interview / media briefing, which took place at Kafka’s Coffee & Tea, on Main and East Broadway, from 8:15 a.m. til 9:05 a.m., on Monday morning, July 14, 2014, included: the Globe and Mail’s / Vancouver Magazine’s Frances Bula; Vancouver Sun civic affairs reporter, Jeff Lee; Mike Howell, 12th and Cambie columnist, Vancouver Courier; Emily Jackson, civic affairs reporter, MetroNews; Raymond Tomlin, VanRamblings civic affairs blog; Bob Mackin, civic affairs freelance journalist.

Decision 2014: Another Shiny Nail in the Vision Vancouver Coffin

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Trish Kelly | Vision ‘get over yourselves’ Vancouver should re-instate Trish as their candidate

Update: Read both of …

Vision Park Board Candidate Trish Kelly Withdraws From the Race

Demand That Trish Kelly Be Reinstated to Vision’s PB Slate

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Since becoming apprised of the existence of the potentially explosive video above, VanRamblings has conducted an internal debate with ourselves as to the morality and appropriateness of releasing the video to the wider public.

Finally, we asked ourselves, “If the Toronto Star were to be provided with a copy of a potentially controversial video of a top vote-getting candidate for civic office, would The Star act as a gatekeeper of such ‘news’, and forego the public interest in keeping the video to themselves, and therefore out of the public debate?” The answer was clear: in the interests of openness and transparency, and in the public interest, The Star would run with the video.

Trish Kelly is Vision Vancouver’s lead candidate for Park Board, this autumn.

We agree with a (male) correspondent to whom we provided the video …

“The video is funny and she acts well. It’s clearly a kind of performance piece. I’m not sure what it has to do with her as a Park Board candidate, but I like her spirit. Is it meant to question her suitability?”

The above said — thoughtful comments made by a filmmaker, as it happens — the early response of a number of our distaff associates to whom we supplied the video proved to be at variance and more pointed …

“Omigawd, this is too much information. That is very embarrassing and I consider myself a pretty liberal person from the 60s. What on earth is this girl thinking recording something like this and then running for Park Board? Yikes. God help us if this is the best that Vision has to offer!”

Combine the overwhelmingly negative response of women to the rumours of Mayor Gregor Robertson’s purported infidelity — while the response of most men is to simply yawn, and say ‘So what” — and one would have to think, going forward, that Vision Vancouver looks to be in trouble in respect of the crucial women’s vote in the upcoming civic election campaign.

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As an educator, we have taught all Grades K thru 12, in both the public and private school systems, and have taught at college and university, as well. In addition, in the 1980s and 90s, as part of a consultancy, we worked with wealthy immigrant families — mostly from Hong Kong, China and Indonesia — a feature of which was providing assistance to the children in the family, in helping them to adjust to their new (always private) schools.

The parents of the children with whom VanRamblings worked, although loving and very supportive of their children, were ultra-conservative in their approach to any one of a number of social issues, not the least of which was sex education — which, for them, even extended as far as to how their children were allowed to dress, when not in their school uniforms.

A few of the children had problems both adjusting and gaining friends, not least because of (even by the children’s own estimation) the ‘nerdy clothing‘ their parents forced them to wear. On one occasion, we asked our daughter to intervene, taking her over to speak with the mother of one particularly brilliant young lad (who was enrolled in Harvard in the summer time, although he was only in Grade 8!) — after some negotiation, the mother ended up turning over her credit card, and within two hours our daughter returned with a new — appropriate for his age and circumstance — wardrobe for the boy. Within the week, the boy had gained new friends, felt noticeably more comfortable in and out of school, and all was well.

VanRamblings expects that, in large measure, Trish Kelly’s “becoming comfortable with the thought of, and acting on, seeking pleasure from your own body” video above is directed at the many thousands of young women (and perhaps men, too) who find themselves enrolled at university, somewhat unmoored, who are attempting as best they are able to construct a sense of identity that is separate and apart from their parents. Part of establishing identity is coming to terms with one’s own sexuality.

As such, Trish Kelly’s sex positive video provides a humorous and entertaining introduction to a topic not often talked about in polite company, and even more rarely broached in the families of the young people to whom the video would appear to be directed. We are fully supportive of the intent of the video and, in particular, Ms. Kelly’s role in producing and starring in the entirely necessary and educational video.

Make no mistake, VanRamblings is not an adherent of the new puritanism. Neither will we engage in the misogynist, slut-shaming, anti-woman conduct that is, woefully, so prevalent today — which conduct just pisses us off. We release the video today in order that the video not find itself inserted as part of a future “dirty tricks” campaign directed at Ms. Kelly — say in late October or early November, when the release of the video might have maximum damaging effect on Ms. Kelly’s nascent candidacy for Park Board.

In the coming weeks and months, VanRamblings will offer reasoned argument as to why Ms. Kelly and her New Voices, One Vision slate of Vision Vancouver Park Board candidates are unfit for office — that unfitness arising from the decision taken by each slate member to run as a candidate for Vision Vancouver, and the fact that the Vision Vancouver Park Board over the course of the past six years has proved to be the worst Park Board in the whole of the 126-year history of the Vancouver Park Board.

Such criticism would be separate and apart from — which is to say, have nothing to do with — the existence of the video. VanRamblings is entirely supportive of Ms. Kelly’s candidacy, as a community activist, but not as a member of a Vision Vancouver Park Board slate that would, in office, seek to continue the desecration of our parks and community centres.

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All of the above said, we wonder at a Vision Vancouver campaign team who would allow such a potentially explosive video to enter the public realm, and become what is certain to be a key element in the conversation surrounding Ms. Kelly’s appropriateness for elected office — all bereft of any explanation or contextual statement, or explicit statement of support for her candidacy.

The Vision Vancouver campaign team was obligated to develop a narrative that would turn criticism of the video into positives for both the campaign, and for Ms. Kelly’s nascent candidacy. Perhaps the video as art. Surely they must have known that the video would come to light, particularly when it is freely available on the waywardwest.tv YouTube channel.

Is the Vision campaign team in such disarray (key longtime strategists on the campaign have reportedly left) that no one bothered to vet Ms. Kelly, identifying potentially damaging material related to the candidate’s emergent run for Park Board — really, is this just another example of the low regard in which Vision holds its Park Board candidates and Commissioners, who time and again are hung out to dry by the party?

In any campaign for elected office, the campaign team takes on a role of in loco parentis. The campaign team is supposed to protect the interests of its candidates, save them harmless from the slings and arrows of poor misfortune, attacks from the opposition, and any and all information of a damaging nature that might leak out during the course of a campaign.

Thus far, the Vision campaign is conducting itself admirably — as word leaks out about character issues surrounding the Mayor, and now with Ms. Kelly’s video entering the public sphere (without any hint of context, or information supportive of the candidate) — admirable, one supposes, if they were working for the opposition. No wonder the opposition parties are doing all they can to remain mute, while staying the hell out of the way of the looming train wreck that is Vision Vancouver’s 2014 campaign for office.

Life Itself: A Cinematic In Memoriam to Roger Ebert

Life Itself, now playing on 4 evenings only — July 13, 14, 15, 17, at 7pm — at the Rio Theatre


The most popular film reviewer of his time, who became the first journalist to win a Pulitzer Prize for movie criticism and, on his long-running TV programme, wielded cinema’s most influential thumb, following a lengthy and debilitating illness, Roger Ebert died on April 4, 2013. He was 70.
Based on Mr. Ebert’s own memoir, titled Life Itself, as is the Steve James documentary now playing in Vancouver in exclusive engagement at the Rio Theatre, James’ film tracks the life of Roger Ebert — who, as we say above, was the most famous and affectionately regarded of American movie critics, a Pulitzer Prize-winning reviewer for The Chicago Sun-Times who, in company with Gene Siskel, improbably became a globally known television star, and whose encroaching mortality made him appreciate life all the more — Life Itself is this summer’s must-see, award-winning documentary.
Don’t take just our word for such assertion. Have a look at these reviews:
Owen Gleiberman, Entertainment Weekly
Life Itself, a deeply enthralling documentary about the late film critic who changed film criticism, Roger Ebert was such a compelling writer, thinker, talker, and human being, it didn’t matter whether you agreed with him — he had a way of putting things that was pithy and practical and philosophical all at the same time. Over the last few years, when Ebert struggled, heroically, against the cancer of the jaw that resulted in his drastic facial surgery and the loss of his voice, his life became more public than ever, largely because Ebert chose to make it public (on his blog, and in his memoir).
Steve James, the documentary master who made Hoop Dreams, uses Ebert’s final months as a prism to put the pieces of Ebert’s life together — the sweater-wearing, thumb-wielding TV icon who turned his weekly on-air battles with Gene Siskel into a take-no-prisoners conversation that defined what criticism was for a new generation — all that and more is explored in James’ extraordinary, wondrously fascinating and implacable cinematic vision of film criticism’s most dazzlingly brilliant and insatiable writer.
Geoffrey O’Brien, New York Times
Life Itself, Steve James’s (Hoop Dreams) documentary on the life of Roger Ebert, is in many ways like a wake at which intimate acquaintances warmly recall their departed friend in all his aspects, foibles and quirks along with his talents and triumphs. Deep currents of love and sorrow flow under the succession of often funny recollections of a busy life. But it is a wake where the departed is still present.
This is not only a film about Roger Ebert but also a film very much with and by Roger Ebert, who refused to be laid low by the medical catastrophes of his last years. A friend describes him as having been, early on, “not just the chief character and star of the movie that was his life, he was also the director.” Life Itself is indeed broadly shaped by Ebert’s own interpretation of his life and clearly marked by his sense of what kind of film it should be.
In the film, Ebert’s words are joined by those of many others: filmmaker friends like Martin Scorsese and Werner Herzog, and old acquaintances whose deep fondness is apparent but who don’t gloss over his complications and confusions, from his outwardly rowdy days hanging out at O’Rourke’s in Chicago (he stopped drinking in the late ’70s) to the defensive petulance sometimes provoked by Siskel during their on-air critical brawls. (“He is a nice guy,” one friend smilingly comments, “but he’s not that nice.) There is a rich aura of journalistic camaraderie and Chicago solidarity. When The Washington Post’s editors tried to lure him away with a big-money offer, Ebert told them, “I’m not gonna learn new streets.”
Life Itself is a work of deftness and delicacy, by turns a film about illness and death, about writing, about cinema and, finally, and very movingly a film about love. In Life Itself, we are at last unavoidably caught up face to face with the absence that even the liveliest of wakes must finally acknowledge.