Best wishes to @RobertFife. A great journalist who was always kind to the comedian trying to cover events. What a legacy. Can’t wait to read whatever comes next.
Book Review: Sorry, Not Sorry by Mark Critch
A very timely and funny book about Canada, its culture, history, and the current relationship with the United States.
Highly recommend!
Just one day after ending "The Late Show" on CBS, Stephen Colbert returned to TV — to host a public access show with rocker Jack White in Monroe, Michigan.
Appearances by Jeff Daniels, Eminem and Steve Buscemi.
“From Day One, I knew how I wanted the show to end. It ends like the book, after high school, so this was always the plan. To get to the finish line and to get to walk away the way you want to is rare," says Mark Critch about end of @SonOfACritchTVsaltwire.com/newfoundland-la…
“From Day One, I knew how I wanted the show to end. It ends like the book, after high school, so this was always the plan. To get to the finish line and to get to walk away the way you want to is rare," says Mark Critch about end of @SonOfACritchTVsaltwire.com/newfoundland-la…
We’ve started filming Season 5 of Son of a Critch.
We’re heading back to 1992 - the year I graduated high school - so you can expect all the awkwardness and growing pains that come with it.
And since it’s the last year of high school, it will also be our final chapter. Growing up is hard to do - but it sure is fun to watch.
We hope you’ll join us this fall as we go back to school one last time on CBC and CBC Gem.
Class dismissed,
Mark Critch
Pierre Poilievre on his Joe Rogan podcast appearance: "Joe's a great guy ... I presented him with a big maple leaf on his kettlebell, which you'll see every time he works out."
Aloy O'Brien, who died in 2008, taught himself Irish using Buntús Cainte books and with the help of his grandmother. He taught Irish at Memorial University and many of his former students continue to host meetings to keep the language alive.
🧵6/7
ALT Black and white newspaper clipping with the headline Teaching Irish in Canada. The article text describes an elderly bachelor farmer in Newfoundland who became a teacher of the Irish language. Beneath the text is a group photograph showing several men and women arranged in two rows, some standing and others seated. The people wear formal or semi-formal clothing such as suits, ties, sweaters, and blouses, and face the camera in a posed class portrait. The image appears printed on aged newsprint with visible grain and wear.