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Peak Week July 1 – 6

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Eats

If you’re looking for some good BBQ this summer, look no further. Buck Stop recently opened up in the West End on Denman St., and it promises to satisfy all your smoky meat cravings. The “classic barbecue and small plate saloon” prepares everything in house and sources their ingredients locally. The interior is lined with dark wooden bars and tables, and feels very much like you’ve just stepped into the south. Try their pulled pork, served on a portuguese bun with house-made pickles, or test out their hush puppies, a dish consisting of fried cornbread, cheddar fritter and honey butter. Yum.

Beats

One part style, one part movement: Vancouver Cycle Chic is hosting their second annual Cycle Chic Social on July 5, a night of fashion, lifestyle, art, food, and music. The evening is a celebration of the cycle culture in Vancouver, combining a love for bikes, fashion, and the lifestyle surrounding it. The evening will feature a fashion show, local DJs Chapel Sound, City of Glass, #findpeter and BIKES, as well as food trucks, dance floors, and an art installation by Colin Caulfield. There’s plenty to keep anyone satisfied and entertained, plus there will be prizes and giveaways all night. Check out vancouvercyclechic.ca for details.

Theats

The Indian Summer Festival returns this week, running July 4 to 13. The festival features music, literature, film, business, politics, and food, bridging the cultural gap between Vancouver and the Indian subcontinent. This year’s highlights include musical group Rajasthan Josh, with a blend of percussion and strings for traditional renditions as well as collaborative pieces with some well-known Vancouver artists. The Lit and Sound Cabaret features music from Mohamed Assani, Rup Sidhu and Curtis Andrews, and words by Jillian Christmas, Jeet Thayil, Zaccheus Jackson and Anoushka Ratnarajah.

Elites

The Chinatown Experiment, a storefront that hosts pop-up shops for Vancouver entrepreneurs and artists, will be hosting the Laser Cutter Cafe now until August 6. What is a laser cutter cafe, you ask? A laser cutter is a computer controlled laser that cuts and etches precise patterns into many different materials; the cafe part means they will also be offering you tea while they teach you how to use a laser cutter. These tools have been used to make postcards, games, jewelry, and nearly anything else you can imagine. Check out lasercuttercafe.com for more details and pricing.

Treats

A couple of the folks behind McLeod Books have come together to form The Paper Hound, a newly opened used bookstore on Pender. Owned by Kim Koch and Rod Clarke, the bookstore deals mainly in used and rare books, with a selection of new titles from local publishers like Arsenal Pulp Press. The charming shop has wood floors, brick walls, and racks of old bookmarks, postcards and letters, along with the impressive collection of literature. It’s certainly a nice and welcome addition to a city that is used to removing culture rather than fostering it.

Jay Arner and the self

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I first came across Jay Arner’s music through last summer’s excellent Bad Friend / Black Horse 7 inch record. The cover featured Arner off to the side of a symmetrical group shot featuring a look-alike wearing a collared shirt and two Gibson-SG-wielding female guitarists. For his new record, Jay Arner is front and centre, but he’s still staring off into space. It’s part of an emotional whiteout brought about by bad parties, underemployment, and existential burnout.

When not playing in bands, Jay Arner has recorded an impressive array of albums at Burnaby’s Hive Studios, and on his own with mobile gear. For this record, Arner played and recorded all of the instruments that appear on the album.

Released on Vancouver’s own Mint Records, Arner’s debut full-length follows the thread of label-mates The New Pornographers’ Hive-recorded early work, and the bedroom pop produced by decades of Brian Wilson acolytes.

The addition of synthesizers give the work a bit of an 80s New Order touch, but the album still feels like a kaleidoscopic journey through pop history uninterrupted by any one element. I met with Arner at his South Granville apartment to discuss the record.

 

The Peak: I really liked the cover for this record. What can you tell me about it?

Jay Arner: [laughs] Well we’ve got a very consistent band aesthetic right now [between the 7” and the full length]. We’ll probably ruin it sooner or later. I went to my label, Mint, last week when they finally got the records in, and it was a little terrifying.

 

The Peak: It seems like that kind of “big face” thing is something you saw more on records from the 70s when there wasn’t a whole lot of press or anything, so you didn’t even know what they looked like.

J: James Taylor.

 

The Peak: Yeah, exactly.

J: Well I kind of thought: what else are you going to put on the cover of a record called Jay Arner? I just went with that one idea and kept it very consistent thematically. If I’m the only person on the record, I’m gonna also be on the physical record.

 

The Peak: Who took the photos?

J: My friend Michelle. She’s a food photographer normally. I think I was acting a little bit like food, and maybe that’s why it worked.

 

The Peak: So here we are on South Granville, which you wrote a song about.

J: Yup. I was kind of homeless and housesitting at a couple of different places. This is actually one of the places I was housesitting at, and Dave [Prowse, of Japandroids]’s place was the other. I lived at Dave’s for a while when he was on tour. So that song is kind of a few different things compressed. I did “get off the bus at the wrong stop,” but that was near Dave’s place. But here I did, yes, look for laundry change. True story.

 

The Peak: You mentioned at your Music Waste show that some “crazy internet people,” Fred and Sharon, were going to make your next video for “Out to Lunch”.

J: Yeah, they’re like a retired or semi-retired couple and they make videos. I think they’re from Kelowna. Shena at Mint Records [Arner’s publicist] knows them, because she’s from around there and they run a bakery or something. They just make these insane videos with computer animation. They’re just really unintentionally grotesque.

I don’t know what technology they’re using, but it looks like computer animation from 1989, and the people in them are really distorted in almost grotesque ways. It’s kind of like outsider art or something but it’s really cool. Shena’s dream has been to get one of her bands to work with Fred and Sharon, and we were the first people to say yes. They’re pretty amazing.

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The Peak: Does the music you’re creating at all aspire to be pop?

J: I like making stuff sound really fucked up. I’ve always felt like the better a song is, the more it can stand up to just sounding like a mess. My early inspirations were all the lo-fi bands. They had awesome songs, and it doesn’t even occur to you that it sounds like shit!

I really liked the idea of catchy pop songs that were really abrasive, and the idea of making people listen to stuff that’s really abrasive and having them not even notice it because you have a strong song. I guess I try and make stuff sound not as pop, but the songs are inherently pop songs.

 

The Peak: What other kind of music inspires you?

J: I listen to a lot of David Bowie. He’s probably my all-time favourite artist, especially his late 70s stuff. I’m actually reading a biography of him right now. It’s crazy. Going from Ziggy Stardust to Station to Station and Low happened within 5 years. I guess he had a massive drug problem too.

Prog rock is becoming a bit of an inspiration as well. King Crimson, and stuff like that. Just like really pompous prog rock. All the mellotron stuff: so good, man.

 

The Peak: Would all the prog rock ever inspire you to transform into a synth wizard?

J: My girlfriend and I have been getting into this guy named Kebu. He’s like this nerd from Europe, and he does the prog-rock keyboard thing. He makes ridiculous music. It’s very entertaining, though. The music is very average, but it’s just hilarious because of the amount of work he puts into it.

It’s also just nice to listen to all the keyboards. He’s so into it, but his audience is empty chairs. He’s got quite the synth collection. It’s like the culmination to all the Youtube synthesizer videos. I wanted to try and infiltrate that culture.

I had this acid house persona all planned out, but I don’t have a TB-303 [gurgly Roland bass synthesizer] so I can’t really do it. I was going to be called Udonna which is a combination of udon noodles and Madonna. But when Kebu exists though, why try? He’s got me beat.

Paula Deen denies being racist: “Some of my best recipes are fried chicken!”

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Celebrity chef Paula Deen, who has recently found herself in some controversy after alleged racist behaviour against African-Americans, has come out denying all allegations.

Deen said that she couldn’t be racist as she could name several ‘black dishes’ that she had cooked, some of which she counted amongst her favorite recipes.

Included in her list of foods she loved to make were ‘fried chicken, chitlins, cornbread, black-eyed peas, hushpuppies, okra, watermelon chicken, watermelon ice-cream and watermelon fried chicken.’

“I can’t be racist, I make all the food that those people like! They eat unhealthy shit, right?” Deen said, probably hurting her case more than anything.

Critics pan Kanye West’s new baby

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Kanye West dropped his first ever child over a week ago just a day before releasing his sixth solo studio album, and although Yeezus has fared well with critics, North West has received less than stellar reviews.

USA Today gave the baby two out of four stars, while Rolling Stones shelled out three out of 10 and Entertainment Weekly gave the little girl a “C-” based solely on her ‘faux-clever first name.’

Although West was disappointed by the response, he’s vowed not to listen to the haters and will reportedly still choose to love his daughter.

University Briefs

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UBC ignores residents in population count

UBC has decided to not include students who live on campus in a population count of the university to be passed on to Metro Vancouver. The decision was made for the university’s Regional Context Statement, a document meant to outline how UBC’s and Metro Vancouver’s development plans are in sync.

Associate VP Campus and Community Planning Nancy Knight defended the decision, saying that the university is not including the students in their populations projections because the city doesn’t require them to, and calling the statement a “technical exercise.” Kiran Mahal, Alma Mater Society VP academic, pointed out that excluding students from the population count could affect planning for emergencies.

With files from The Ubyssey

 

U of M bans Israeli Apartheid group

The University of Manitoba Students’ Union (UMSU) has voted to officially remove student group status from campus group Students Against Israeli Apartheid (SAIA). The ban comes from a motion tabled this past April to “remove [SAIA’s] student group status, and ban it from operating in UMSU spaces, citing that the group and its campus events, such as Israeli Apartheid Week, make self-identified Zionist students “fear for their safety” while on campus.

The motion was highly contested, and passed with a vote of 19-16. Critics claim that banning the group is effectively banning the SAIA’s freedom of speech, but advocates of the ban say that a respectful workplace and student safety is the primary concern that motivated the decision.

With files from The Manitoban

 

MUN students targeted by instant messaging scam

Memorial University students have been warned of a current internet scam in which students’ families are contacted by scammers impersonating members of MUN faculty. The scammers are targeting users of the Chinese-language instant messaging site QQ, where they compromise students accounts and then use their information to contact student’s families and ask for money.

MUN sent out a mass email warning of the scam to students earlier this month, and so far there has only been one confirmed case of a student’s family being defrauded by the scam, with reports of several other attempts.

With files from The Muse

Are you ready to rock, Canada?

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I’m just going to come right out and say that I’m not a very patriotic person. I hate maple syrup, I didn’t participate in the Vancouver Olympics hype of 2010, and I can’t remember the last time I watched a game of hockey.

Yep, you heard me.

With that said, I can look to Canada’s musical legacy and feel a sense of pride. It is true that good Canadian music is much harder to find, because the American and British scenes have the tendency of burying our own in their sheer mass; however, there is definitely Canadian music gold to be found.

Recently inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame is Rush, who, in my opinion, are the best Canadian band. Formed in 1968 and still going strong, they are easily the greatest multi-decade band, period. For the uninitiated, the band hails from the Toronto suburb of Willowdale, and began as a group heavily influenced by the hard rockin’ blues music of Led Zeppelin, Cream, and Deep Purple.

Their first album — eponymously titled, and with original drummer John Rutsey — showcases these hard rockin’ influences. When “Working Man” was first played on the radio in Cleveland, Ohio, phone lines went crazy with callers desperate to know when the newest Led Zeppelin album was going to be released.

However, Rush did not remain this way for long before developing the progressive sound they are best known for today. Combining the old with the new, Rush’s sound incorporates elements of old school prog-like King Crimson and Yes, while adding heavier, more driving grooves to the mixture.

This sound enables them to tackle an array of subject matter: classic literature such as Ayn Rand’s Anthem, the debate over science and free will, the music industry, and Greek mythology are just a few examples of how vast Rush’s content spans. For these reasons, members Geddy Lee, Alex Lifeson, and Neil Peart set a precedent that later acts like Primus and Porcupine Tree would model themselves after.

Rush is touring this summer and will play at Roger’s Arena July 26. I had the privilege of seeing the boys play two years ago, and I can easily say they put older acts to shame (except maybe Paul McCartney and Roger Hodgson, but that’s a whole ‘nother debate). Going on 60, Geddy, Alex, and Neil never stop moving onstage: Geddy high kicks along to “2112,” Alex traverses the stage in time with his guitar, and Neil astounds on a revolving platform, tossing his drumsticks into the air and catching them just in time to continue playing.

Throughout their career, Rush never fell victim to the boozing and drug abuse their contemporaries did, truly showing these guys were born to keep on rocking as Canada’s greatest musical role models.

If grittier, wilder acts is what you’re after though, turn to the late 70s / early 80s of Vancouver. Our fair city was once home to a plethora of punk groups, and these acts illustrate Vancouver’s roots as a protest city. With disco, consumerism, and commercial development plaguing Vancouver, bands such as D.O.A. and The Dishrags went against the grain by shaking up social and musical conventions.

The Dishrags in particular make me proud as a Canadian. You can think of them as Vancouver’s equivalent of The Runaways, because they were an all female punk group with members Jade Blade, Dale Powers, and Scout being only in their teens. They challenged what it meant to be female by playing on male-dominated stages like the one at the now former Smiling Buddha in Vancouver’s east side.

Being in an all female group and performing at punk venues, they were pitted against the verbal and sexual harassment of male patrons. In Bloodied But Unbowed, a documentary directed by Susanne Tabata chronicling Vancouver’s punk history, clips of The Dishrags show the abuse they endured. Despite insults and taunts, they didn’t back down and fought for their music and their words to be heard.

D.O.A. is a much less underground Vancouver punk act, with their influences still present in our city today. They toured consistently around the Vancouver area, eventually opening for bigger acts like Bachman Turner Overdrive (another Canadian group), and attaining influential status in North America’s punk rock scene.

Henry Rollins of Black Flag cites D.O.A.’s influence to his own musical approach, “Joey Shithead [would be] onstage delivering political diatribes to young people in their name, which is important because these things affect them, and even if they’re not paying taxes yet, it means something because it’s the world they’re walking into.”

Joey “Shithead,” the group’s lead singer, is a politician and activist even today, participating in the Occupy Movement and running for the Green Party in the 1996 and 2001 general elections.

For a political, but less hardcore sound, the music of Neil Young never fails to please. Neil Young is an important Canadian figure because he provides a critical lens of our American neighbours. His song “Ohio” — performed with Crosby, Still, Nash & Young — was written in protest to the Kent State University shootings of May 4, 1970.

It was on that day, 500 unarmed students at the university united together in demonstration against president Richard Nixon and the Vietnam War. The Ohio National Guard opened fire, killing four students and permanently paralyzing another. The question of “why did they die?” and the image of “tin soldiers and Nixon coming” are present in the song. There was a backlash to the song, resulting in its banishment from radio playlists.

While Canadian bands have rarely achieved the international status of The Beatles, Led Zeppelin or The Doors, our musical legacy maintains a stronghold in the English language music scene. Canadian musicians have proven to inspire others, and continually challenge the social and political status quo. Bands like Rush and D.O.A. are not what comes to mind when many think of Canada, but it is groups like them that make me smile when I think of what makes me proud to be Canadian.

Awards Rundown: the Jessies 2013

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The theme of community surfaced over and over again in acceptance speeches during the 2013 Jessie Awards, and it was clear that the Vancouver theatre community is a supportive and inspiring group to be a part of. The awards ceremony and party, produced and directed by Vancouver Theatresports, was held on June 24 at the Commodore Ballroom, and the event celebrated the diverse, talented artists that have created works of theatre over the past year while remembering pioneers in the field.

Bard on the Beach’s 60s inspired version of The Merry Wives of Windsor tied with Presentation House Theatre’s Where the Wild Things Are for the most awards, each production earning four Jessies. Merry Wives was the star of the night taking home the Large Theatre awards for Outstanding Production as well as Outstanding Direction (Johnna Wright), Outstanding Costume Design (Drew Facey), and Significant Artistic Achievement (Benjamin Elliott for his musical direction). Gerald King also made Bard proud by winning Outstanding Lighting Design for his work on Macbeth.

Arts Club Theatre Company, also in the Large Theatre category and with by far the most nominations took home a few awards for its production Boeing-Boeing: Nicola Lipman won Outstanding Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role, and Andrew McNee won Outstanding Performance by an Actor in a Lead Role.

Amir Ofek also won for his Outstanding Set Design. Master Class, also by Arts Club, had many nominations, and Gina Chiarelli won Outstanding Performance by an Actress in a Lead Role for her portrayal of Maria Callas. Robert Maloney won Outstanding Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role for his work in Arts Club’s Clybourne Park.

In Small Theatre category Terminus by Pi Theatre was the star, winning for Outstanding Production as well as Outstanding Lighting Design (Alan Brodie) and Outstanding Performance by an Actor in a Lead Role (John Emmet Tracy). Also with multiple nominations, Broken Sex Doll took home Outstanding Costume Design (a great night for Drew Facey) and Outstanding Sound Design or Original composition (Anton Lipovetsky).

The poignant Porc-epic by Theatre la Seizieme, also fared quite well with a few nominations and well-deserved wins for Outstanding Direction (Craig Holzschuh) and Outstanding Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role (France Perras).

Sweeping the Theatre for Young Audiences category was Where the Wild Things Are produced by Presentation House Theatre in association with Manitoba Theatre for Young People. Wild Things won Outstanding Performance (Raes Calvert and Linda Carson), Outstanding Design (Linda Leon), Outstanding Artistic Creation (Kim Seody), and Significant Artistic Achievement for Outstanding Production.

Notable Special Awards of the night include Chealsea Haberlin’s Ray Michael Prize for Most Promising New Director, Jenn Stewart’s Sam Payne Award for Most Promising Newcomer, and wig master Christine Hackman’s John Moffat and Larry Lillo Prize. Hackman explained that she would use her winnings to make a “wig pilgrimage to Stratford.”

Of course the night wouldn’t be complete without the comedic antics of Vancouver Theatresports who infused the evening with hilarious segments such as their description of drink specials including “Bard Sex on the Beach.” We also had a visit from “Rob Ford” who gave a drunken speech while smoking a crack pipe: “You all smoked a joint before the show; I know you actor types!” Another highlight was Gaelan Beatty’s rendition of “Hey Ho” by The Lumineers with his chorus of “I belong with you, in your company, in my dream part.” The event affirmed the sense of community in Vancouver theatre.

Summit pairs creativity with economy

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SFU professors joined a panel of experts at the City of Surrey’s Creative Economy event on Tuesday, June 11, to discuss how our economy would benefit from investment in the creative sector and what can business do for arts and culture.

The panel of experts was joined by Dr. Rowland Lorimer, director of the Master of Publishing program at SFU’s Canadian Centre for Studies in Publishing, and Catherine Murray, a professor in the School of Communication. Additionally, SFU IAT students presented interactive art displays at the event that included a virtual reality piece to help people suffering from chronic pain.

The summit was held in support of the New Surrey Cultural Plan, which was adopted by the Surrey Council last year. The Plan aims at “enhancing urbanization in the city through the development of arts and heritage services.”

According to Councillor Judy Villeneuve, “this plan includes a specific goal to enhance the economy by fostering local artists, preparing a cultural marketing plan, a cultural economic development plan, a cultural tourism plan, and to develop policies that lead into affordable spaces for artistic and heritage endeavours.”

The council hopes that by pursuing this goal, the Plan will “foster, enhance and expand the development of the rich human, cultural and natural resources of the community, resulting in a more competitive economy and one of the nation’s most livable communities.”

Lorimer was invited to participate in the summit because of his work with BCreative 2012, a conference oriented to trying to encourage the provincial government to create policy to further build the creative economy.

“Of all the provinces in Canada, BC spends the least amount on the creative economy,” said Lorimer. “At the time [BCreative 2012 was held], all of the policies were being challenged . . . The province wasn’t really making any positive moves. There are lots of creative initiatives being put into place around the world, and BC isn’t engaging.”

At BCreative 2012, the panel brought statistics that show how the municipalities of BC spend the most amount of money on the creative sector on average across all of Canada, even though BC, on a provincial level,  invests the lowest.

In addition to monetary gains, Lorimer proposes that by investing in the intellectual and creative sector, BC is remaining competitive on an international scale.“It’s incredibly difficult to compete with people in China and Vietnam who get paid a whole lot less than do workers in Canada,” said Lorimer.

He continued, “One of the ways of remaining competitive is to develop the intellectual and creative sector. It does pay off: for every dollar that government invests, there are three effectively that get returned to the government.”

“If you look at all of the creative sector, the cultural industries (innovation and the digital economy, and so on) . . . that’s a really growth area, and what the Europeans — led by the British — have realised and what Ontario and Quebec are also doing is spending on supporting the creative economy, it pays off in spades.”

When asked why our country would choose to shift to this new economic model rather than concentrate on industry and today’s status quo, Lorimer replied that the creative economy is not only the path to revenues; it is also the path to a greener world, in every sense of the word.

“The reason is partly the environment,” said Lorimer. “There’s all kinds of activities, especially mining and forestry, that are environmentally devastating.”

“The eventual return that society gets from [investing in the creative sector] is the same as investing in, say, highways going to mines, but culture and creativity have positive environmental, social, and economic impacts.”

Recent SFU grad ahead of the pack

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On May 25, Helen Crofts, an SFU cross country and track runner, was named the Great Northwest Athletic Conference (GNAC) Female Co-Athlete of the Year, a title shared with Seattle Pacific University’s Ali Worthen, and the GNAC Female Scholar Athlete of the Year. The titles come at the end of her time at SFU, as well as after a host of her wins and records in 2013.

“I was obviously very excited to win the championship,” said Crofts. “It was a great way to finish my collegiate career and it is always nice to see all your hard work pay off.” She was invited to speak at her ceremony during spring convocation about her university experience.

While working towards her bachelor’s degree and running with the SFU track and field team, Crofts also volunteered with the SFU’s Student Athlete Advisory Committee, and coached track and field at Burnaby elementary schools.

Though she divided her time, Crofts’ stats show that those other activities didn’t detract from her athletics. Crofts won many awards and events in the NCAA indoor and outdoor national championships, including finishing in first place in the 800-metre event at 2:05.96, the 400-metre in a meet-record time of 54.46, and the 1500 in 4:26.85. She also came in first in Pueblo, Colorado, for the NCAA Division II 800m running title with a time of 2:08.18.

Earlier in the year, she finished ninth in the Great Northwest Athletic Conference’s USA Track & Field High Performance Distance Classic at Occidental College in Los Angeles, with her time of 2:02.10 breaking a GNAC record, and being this spring’s third fastest time of a collegiate athlete on any level.

Crofts, who majored in biological science, sees the fruits of her hard work at the events. She trains six days a week throughout the year for both cross country and track, and has been a part of the SFU track and field team for the last five years. Crofts said that it is important to her “to be able to represent SFU and Canada in the NCAA and to show just how strong our middle-distance program at SFU is.”

Her Female Co-Athlete of the Year title was awarded to her and Worthen after each athlete received 18 points submitted by the conference’s 10 athletic directors. Her most recent title of Female Scholar-Athlete of the Year requires a cumulative GPA of at least 3.85.

The title makes her eligible for the 2013 Conference Commissioners Scholar-Athlete of the year award, the winner of which will be selected in the summer. Crofts achieved a 4.14 GPA during her academic career, and was awarded the Bill DeVries Award for academics and athletics for having the highest GPA among Clan athletes in 2012-13.

Amongst her accomplishments, she was also named the United States Track and Field and Cross Country Coaches Association West Region Athlete of the Year, and led the Clan’s second-place finish in their 4×400 metre relay with a time of 3:46.04.

In the immediate future, Crofts plans to take a year off of academics, continue training at SFU, and to continue racing. This summer, she will be heading to Russia with Team Canada to compete in the World University Games. After that, she plans to work towards a master’s degree in science, or to attend medical school.

For anyone else pursuing athletic success, Crofts advice is simple: “Be consistent. There isn’t any secret to improvement other than being committed and believing that you will get better.”

Peak Week June 24 – 29

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Eats

Food Cart Fest is back! Starting June 23 and running until September 22, the festival features more than 20 food carts set up each Sunday at West 1st Ave near the Cambie Bridge. A similar festival took placeduring the summer last year in the parking lot of the Waldorf, and proved to be wildly successful, becoming one of the largest food cart festivals in North America. There will also be community markets, live music, DJs, and activities for kids. The festival will run from noon until 6:00 p.m. and it will have a $2 admission. Grab your bike, ride the seawall, and enjoy some of the best street food our city has to offer.

Beats

Looking for something to do on a Tuesday night? Pop into the Colbalt for their weekly Multiball evenings. The evening’s highlights include free pinball and music provided by DJs Justin Gradin and Tyler Fedchuk. There’s no cover, and pints and highballs are only $3! Where else can you stop in for dirt-cheap beer and pinball on a weeknight? Don’t worry, I won’t tell mom.

Theats

Bard on the Beach begins June 26 and runs until September 14. This season features performances of Hamlet, Twelfth Night, Measure for Measure, and Elizabeth Rex. This season is bound to be well-talked about, with its various bold reconfigurations of the Bard’s classics: Hamlet is set in the 21st Century; Twelfth Night takes place in a 1913 European Spa; Measure for Measure is located on the streets of early last-century New Orleans; and Timothy Findley’s critically acclaimed Elizabeth Rex takes the stage once more. Check the schedule at bardonthebeach.org.

Elites

June 29 marks the opening of three new exhibits at the Vancouver Art Gallery: Portraits in Time and Martin Honert, running until October 14, and In Dialogue with Carr Gareth Moore: Allochthonous Window which will be exhibited until October 27. The works in Portraits in Time will present people in a variety of narrative contexts, exploring how individuals work with their environment. Martin Honert’s sculptures are described as “obsessive depictions of ideas connected to collective experience.” Vancouver artist Gareth Moore responds to Emily Carr’s travels to remote locations.

Treats

Looking for some really good salami or other assortments of cured meat? Check out Rainier Provisions for their incredible selection of Moccia Urbani salami, including Spicy Fennel and Fig Toscano, or D-Original Sausage, with their mouthwatering spicy Bierbeisser smoked sausages. Ranier is also working on building an outdoor patio area, so soon you’ll be able to enjoy that Bierbeisser the right way: with a cold beer out in the sun.