Showing posts with label TORONTO. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TORONTO. Show all posts

Saturday, 13 June 2026

  



On paper, it is simple enough: the world’s biggest football tournament arrives in Canada, shared across three nations, promising accessibility, global unity, and civic pride. In practice, it increasingly resembles something rather different — a carefully tiered system of access in which the experience of “being there” depends less on passion for the game than on one’s willingness to absorb what can only be described as escalating financial astonishment.

Let us begin with the official structure, because it is here that the story starts to fracture.

When FIFA first opened ticket sales, it introduced a tiered pricing system that already placed the event far outside the reach of the casual supporter. Category 4 tickets — the supposed entry point — were priced at roughly $1,300 CAD. Category 3, 2, and 1 climbed steadily from there, with most mid-tier seats falling somewhere between $1,500 and $2,500 CAD, while premium Category 1 seats reached approximately $3,000 CAD.

Even at this stage, the language of “global accessibility” began to feel slightly strained.

But the structure did not stop there.

FIFA later introduced a new classification — almost as an afterthought, though with rather significant consequences — called “Front Category 1.” These were positioned as the best seats in the stadium: front-row, prime sightlines, the kind of vantage point one would assume had already been included in the highest tier. They were not. Instead, they were priced at at least double Category 1, meaning $6,000 CAD and upward for a single match.

At this point, one begins to suspect that “category” is no longer a description of seating, but of social permission.

Then comes the matter of allocation. Fans were not always buying specific seats, but rather zones within stadiums — broad regions in which their eventual position would be determined later. In theory, this is efficient. In practice, it produces a peculiar kind of post-purchase anxiety: paying premium prices only to discover that one’s “Category 1” experience might involve corners, obstructions, or placements far removed from the imagined prestige of the purchase.

And then, almost inevitably, came revision.

After initial sales, FIFA began releasing additional “last-minute” ticket batches across all 104 matches, including fixtures that had previously been described as nearing capacity. This included high-profile games and so-called “flagship” matches, undermining the earlier sense that availability was genuinely scarce.

This is where the language becomes interesting. “Last-minute release” sounds like responsiveness. “Additional inventory” sounds like logistics. But to many fans, it felt like something closer to retroactive supply adjustment — an attempt to reconcile pricing ambition with actual demand.

The reaction, predictably, was not enthusiasm.

Supporters who had already purchased tickets in earlier rounds expressed frustration at what they saw as shifting rules. Some had paid top-tier prices under the assumption of scarcity, only to see new waves of tickets appear later. Others pointed out that if seats were still being released at scale, earlier pricing may have been calibrated more toward projection than reality.

The criticism was sharpened further by FIFA’s adoption of dynamic pricing, a system in which costs fluctuate based on demand. In principle, this mirrors airlines or concerts. In practice, it introduces volatility into what many still consider a civic or cultural event. Prices rise, shift, and segment in ways that make the final cost of attendance less predictable than ever.

The resale market completes the picture.

Tickets that originally cost $1,300 CAD in Category 4 have appeared on secondary platforms for significantly more. Mid-tier tickets in the $1,600–$2,000 CAD range have become common starting points for resale listings. Category 1 seats, originally around $3,000 CAD, have reportedly been listed for as much as $62,000 CAD in extreme cases.

At this point, we are no longer discussing pricing. We are discussing altitude.

All of this sits beneath the administrative umbrella of FIFA and its president, Gianni Infantino, who has overseen an expanded tournament structure featuring 48 teams and three host nations. The intention, at least rhetorically, is inclusion: more nations, more matches, more access. Yet the lived experience of ticket acquisition suggests a different reality — one in which expansion has been accompanied not by democratization, but by segmentation.

And so we return to Toronto.

What does it mean to host a “global game” in a city where ordinary fans increasingly find themselves priced out at the point of entry? What does it mean to speak of civic pride when attendance is stratified into financial tiers that escalate from the expensive to the prohibitive?

There is, of course, a technical defense available. Markets respond to demand. Premium experiences cost premium money. Not every seat can be cheap. All of this is true in a narrow sense, and irrelevant in a larger one.

Because the underlying question is not whether tickets cost money. It is whether the structure of pricing still bears any meaningful relationship to the idea of a shared public event.

If football is becoming a hierarchy of access codes, dynamic pricing curves, and post hoc ticket releases, then what is being staged is no longer simply a tournament. It is a filtering mechanism. A system that determines not just who watches, but who is meant to.

And Toronto, for all its openness and self-image as a welcoming global city, becomes in this arrangement not a home for the world game, but a showroom for its segmentation.

One is left, finally, with a rather uncomfortable thought: that the most universal sport in the world is being reorganized into something rather less universal in practice — an experience still spoken of in the language of the public, but increasingly delivered in the logic of exclusivity.

Or, to put it less gently, the game remains global.

It is just no longer clear that the seats are.

Friday, 5 June 2026

Anjulie: Fame in the Shadows of the Feed

 




Anjulie: Fame in the Shadows of the Feed

Anjulie is famous, but not in the way you’re used to. Not algorithm-famous, not trending-on-TikTok famous. She's from the strange in-between: too visible to be underground, too independent to be fully pop. She writes the songs that blow up without her name attached, then posts a sketch of a barefoot girl holding a flower on Instagram instead of a thirst trap. She’s the kind of artist you’ve heard a hundred times but never Googled.

That’s not an accident.

She came up through MySpace—before “followers” had metrics and before going viral was a business model. Back then, she made her own flyers and burned her own CDs. A self-taught engineer, visual artist, and songwriter, she was gaming the attention economy before the term existed. Her breakout single Boom slipped onto The Vampire Diaries and Melrose Place, not because she had a team pushing her, but because her music pulsed with something real in a time of lip gloss and dance beats.

Later, Brand New Bitch—a platinum-certified, Juno-nominated track—rode club speakers and feminist rage to anthem status, even as Anjulie herself stepped back from the spotlight. She didn’t chase fame; she licensed it. She lent her voice, her pen, her sonic fingerprint to the avatars of bigger pop stars: Nicki Minaj, Icona Pop, Kelly Clarkson. Their faces, her hooks. They danced in the foreground. She ghosted in the background.

There’s something uncanny about Anjulie’s brand of presence. She posts animations she draws herself. She designs entire visual worlds for her singles. On socials, she’s an auteur, not an influencer—more zine than billboard. Even her Juno win for “You and I” barely made a ripple compared to the noise of lesser artists who simply play the algorithm better.

In another timeline, Anjulie would be a household name. In this one, she’s a whisper in the feed—a genius hiding in plain sight, too thoughtful for the churn, too visceral to vanish completely.

She just dropped a new album, Loveless Metropolis, with little fanfare. No dance challenge. No drama. Just music. She’s still out here—writing, animating, posting—and somehow, still refusing to be content.



2026,fame,FANDOM,FILM,music,POP STARS,psychohistory,Propaganda,TORONTO,TRENDS,unique,youtube,ZENO,

Tuesday, 2 June 2026

CITIZEN CANADA FIELD REPORT ๐Ÿ“ธ "ANIME NORTH 2026: HIGH COSPLAY PRESSURE SYSTEM"

 





CITIZEN CANADA FIELD REPORT ๐Ÿ“ธ
"ANIME NORTH 2026: HIGH COSPLAY PRESSURE SYSTEM"

๐Ÿ—ž️ You no attend convention. Convention attend you.

Parking full.
Hotels full.
Hallways full.

Energy somehow still increasing.

Not a gathering. Not a trend.

More like a temporary city built from imagination, craftsmanship, caffeine, and shared obsessions.


INSIDE THIS PAGE:

๐ŸŽญ "Cosplay Civilization." — Thousands of hours of work transformed into a few unforgettable days. Sewing, armor building, makeup, engineering, performance.

๐Ÿ“ธ "Camera Density Event." — Every corridor becomes a studio. Every staircase becomes a photoshoot.

๐Ÿ›️ "Vendor Hall Economics." — The rare example of people being genuinely excited to spend money.

๐ŸŽฎ "Fandom Infrastructure." — Panels, artists, games, meetups, concerts, and communities operating like a small city.

๐ŸŒธ "Temporary Utopia." — People from different backgrounds finding common language through stories, characters, and shared interests.

๐Ÿ“บ "Greatguyaaa Signal." — The internet often rewards outrage. Anime North rewards enthusiasm. One weekend dedicated to liking things openly.

๐Ÿง  "Scholx Layer." — Conventions are cultural snapshots. What people cosplay, discuss, buy, and photograph becomes a record of the spirit of the age.




Funny thing:

People still ask why conventions matter.

Then 35,000 people voluntarily leave their homes, travel across provinces, spend months preparing costumes, and stand in line just to share something they love.

Not escape.

Not avoidance.

Participation.

That's the real signal.


๐Ÿ“ธ Field notes from #GreatguyTV

#AnimeNorth #AnimeNorth2026 #Cosplay #Toronto #AnimeConvention #CosplayPhotography #GreatguyTV #Greatguyaaa #CitizenCanada #Scholx #Photography #Fandom #CreatorCulture #Community #TorontoEvents

Subscribe, endure, and engage if you dare to witness more curated curiosities from the algorithmic abyss.

Keywords: Anime North, Toronto convention, cosplay culture, fandom community, convention photography, creator culture, cultural observations, GreatguyTV

#cane #DigitalDetritus #AnimeNorth #CosplayPhotography #CulturalWeather #CitizenCanada




https://pop-the-cherry-say-i.blogspot.com/2026/06/citizen-canada-field-report-anime-north.html

https://pop-the-cherry-say-i.blogspot.com/2026/06/citizen-canada-field-report-anime-north.html


Wednesday, 6 May 2026

COKE DRINK OF THE GODS


COKE DRINK OF THE GODS


There are evenings when one wants a small ceremony without admitting it—a table wiped but not polished, a plate that is warm in the hands, and a drink that arrives cold enough to persuade the tongue to begin again. I have known such evenings with wine, and with water drawn from a good well, and, not least, with Coca-Cola, which—despite its commonness—has a curious gift for making a meal feel chosen. I do not mean that it is noble. I mean that it is useful in the way a well-made key is useful: it opens something that might otherwise stay shut. One learns this first with a hamburger, eaten perhaps too quickly, standing or half-sitting, when hunger has already begun to argue. 


The meat is hot and obliging; the bread, a little sweet; the whole of it a soft insistence. Then the drink—sharp, faintly bitter beneath its sugar, and restless with its bubbles—passes over the tongue and undoes the heaviness just enough that the next bite is not a continuation but a beginning. It is a small mercy, but I have come to respect small mercies. 


 With pizza—especially the kind that glistens in a way that would shame a more delicate dish—there is a different sort of conversation. Oil gathers; cheese persuades; the palate, if left alone, grows dull and agreeable. Here the drink behaves almost impertinently. It interrupts. It lifts the film of richness, pricks the tongue, and leaves behind a trace of bitterness so that the sweetness does not become childish. One is brought back to attention, which is, after all, the beginning of appetite.


 Fried chicken asks for something else again. It is proud of its crust, which shatters if you are lucky, and shelters a tenderness that feels earned. The drink does not compete with this; it keeps the stage clear. A sip between bites carries away the oil that would otherwise quiet the crackle, and the sugar, modestly handled, flatters the browned edges where the heat has done its best work. I have eaten such a pairing at a kitchen table with a window open, and found it as sufficient as any feast. There are foods that are almost too simple to discuss—French fries, for instance, which are salt and heat and a kind of childish joy. Yet even here, the pairing reveals a pattern worth keeping. Salt brightens sweetness; sweetness rounds salt; and a little acid prevents both from becoming tiresome. It is not a grand theory, only a small truth, but small truths are the ones we use most often. 



 Barbecue, with its smoke and its sauces that cannot decide whether to be sharp or kind, seems at first to resist a sweet companion. And yet, taken together, the effect is not excess but depth. The drink’s acidity finds the seams of fat and opens them; its faint bitterness steadies the sugar already present; and what might have been cloying becomes, instead, a longer story. I have watched people argue this point and then, without noticing, finish both their plate and their glass.


 Sausages—plain, dependable, sometimes a little monotonous—benefit from a touch of unpredictability. Here the bubbles matter most, not for their liveliness alone but for the way they disturb a sameness that can otherwise settle over the meal. A sip introduces edges where there were none, and the palate wakes, which is a kind of gratitude


. Spice, finally, teaches a harsher lesson. There are meals that burn with intention, and the question is not how to extinguish them but how to remain in their company without surrender. Sugar softens the heat just enough; cold steadies it; the quick prickle of carbonation distracts it; and a thread of acid keeps the tongue honest. One does not escape the fire. One learns its shape. If I sound as though I am making too much of a familiar drink, it is because I have come to believe that familiarity is precisely where our most reliable pleasures hide. The elements are plain enough—sweetness, acid, bitterness, air, and cold—but their arrangement matters. 

Together they perform a small housekeeping of the mouth: they clear, they sharpen, they begin again. I have known people who would rather be told whether something is “good.” I have never found that question very helpful. A better one, and kinder, is to ask what a thing allows us to do. In this case, it allows us to return to our food with a renewed appetite, and, if we are lucky, to notice that we are still hungry in a way that is not only for eating. There is a quiet discipline in choosing such pairings—not to deny oneself, but to make room for attention. And attention, like hunger, is a pleasure that improves with practice. If you were to set the table tonight with this in mind, and place beside your meal a glass that is cold and a little insistent, you might find that the evening lengthens—not in time, but in savor. And that, for most of us, is enough.

Sunday, 3 May 2026

  




FIFA A TORONTO NIGHMARE by Ed Scholz 


On paper, it is simple enough: the world’s biggest football tournament arrives in Canada, shared across three nations, promising accessibility, global unity, and civic pride. In practice, it increasingly resembles something rather different — a carefully tiered system of access in which the experience of “being there” depends less on passion for the game than on one’s willingness to absorb what can only be described as escalating financial astonishment.

Let us begin with the official structure, because it is here that the story starts to fracture.

When FIFA first opened ticket sales, it introduced a tiered pricing system that already placed the event far outside the reach of the casual supporter. Category 4 tickets — the supposed entry point — were priced at roughly $1,300 CAD. Category 3, 2, and 1 climbed steadily from there, with most mid-tier seats falling somewhere between $1,500 and $2,500 CAD, while premium Category 1 seats reached approximately $3,000 CAD.

Even at this stage, the language of “global accessibility” began to feel slightly strained.

But the structure did not stop there.

FIFA later introduced a new classification — almost as an afterthought, though with rather significant consequences — called “Front Category 1.” These were positioned as the best seats in the stadium: front-row, prime sightlines, the kind of vantage point one would assume had already been included in the highest tier. They were not. Instead, they were priced at at least double Category 1, meaning $6,000 CAD and upward for a single match.

At this point, one begins to suspect that “category” is no longer a description of seating, but of social permission.

Then comes the matter of allocation. Fans were not always buying specific seats, but rather zones within stadiums — broad regions in which their eventual position would be determined later. In theory, this is efficient. In practice, it produces a peculiar kind of post-purchase anxiety: paying premium prices only to discover that one’s “Category 1” experience might involve corners, obstructions, or placements far removed from the imagined prestige of the purchase.

And then, almost inevitably, came revision.

After initial sales, FIFA began releasing additional “last-minute” ticket batches across all 104 matches, including fixtures that had previously been described as nearing capacity. This included high-profile games and so-called “flagship” matches, undermining the earlier sense that availability was genuinely scarce.

This is where the language becomes interesting. “Last-minute release” sounds like responsiveness. “Additional inventory” sounds like logistics. But to many fans, it felt like something closer to retroactive supply adjustment — an attempt to reconcile pricing ambition with actual demand.

The reaction, predictably, was not enthusiasm.

Supporters who had already purchased tickets in earlier rounds expressed frustration at what they saw as shifting rules. Some had paid top-tier prices under the assumption of scarcity, only to see new waves of tickets appear later. Others pointed out that if seats were still being released at scale, earlier pricing may have been calibrated more toward projection than reality.

The criticism was sharpened further by FIFA’s adoption of dynamic pricing, a system in which costs fluctuate based on demand. In principle, this mirrors airlines or concerts. In practice, it introduces volatility into what many still consider a civic or cultural event. Prices rise, shift, and segment in ways that make the final cost of attendance less predictable than ever.

The resale market completes the picture.

Tickets that originally cost $1,300 CAD in Category 4 have appeared on secondary platforms for significantly more. Mid-tier tickets in the $1,600–$2,000 CAD range have become common starting points for resale listings. Category 1 seats, originally around $3,000 CAD, have reportedly been listed for as much as $62,000 CAD in extreme cases.

At this point, we are no longer discussing pricing. We are discussing altitude.

All of this sits beneath the administrative umbrella of FIFA and its president, Gianni Infantino, who has overseen an expanded tournament structure featuring 48 teams and three host nations. The intention, at least rhetorically, is inclusion: more nations, more matches, more access. Yet the lived experience of ticket acquisition suggests a different reality — one in which expansion has been accompanied not by democratization, but by segmentation.

And so we return to Toronto.

What does it mean to host a “global game” in a city where ordinary fans increasingly find themselves priced out at the point of entry? What does it mean to speak of civic pride when attendance is stratified into financial tiers that escalate from the expensive to the prohibitive?

There is, of course, a technical defense available. Markets respond to demand. Premium experiences cost premium money. Not every seat can be cheap. All of this is true in a narrow sense, and irrelevant in a larger one.

Because the underlying question is not whether tickets cost money. It is whether the structure of pricing still bears any meaningful relationship to the idea of a shared public event.

If football is becoming a hierarchy of access codes, dynamic pricing curves, and post hoc ticket releases, then what is being staged is no longer simply a tournament. It is a filtering mechanism. A system that determines not just who watches, but who is meant to.

And Toronto, for all its openness and self-image as a welcoming global city, becomes in this arrangement not a home for the world game, but a showroom for its segmentation.

One is left, finally, with a rather uncomfortable thought: that the most universal sport in the world is being reorganized into something rather less universal in practice — an experience still spoken of in the language of the public, but increasingly delivered in the logic of exclusivity.

Or, to put it less gently, the game remains global.

It is just no longer clear that the seats are.

Friday, 20 March 2026

Toronto’s World Cup Gamble: Prestige at the Expense of Residents

 Toronto’s World Cup Gamble: Prestige at the Expense of Residents

To the Editor,

Toronto is being sold the 2026 FIFA World Cup as a boon of civic pride and international prestige. Yet a closer look reveals an event that is almost guaranteed to be economically and socially costly for ordinary residents.

Official city costs have already risen from an initial $50 million CAD to nearly $390 million, and even in the “best-case” scenario — ignoring further overruns — disruption from congestion, transit delays, and distribution bottlenecks will impose a net economic loss of at least $50 million. Gas prices are likely to spike, everyday goods and services will become more expensive, and local businesses will lose revenue due to displaced commerce. Tourism may even decline, as international visitors weigh the inconvenience of a city gridlocked for weeks.

The narrative of prestige conceals the tangible burden placed on residents. The gains are largely symbolic and externalized, benefiting FIFA, multinational sponsors, and a select few businesses. Ordinary Torontonians, meanwhile, pay the hidden costs through lost productivity, higher prices, and the disruption of their daily lives.

Toronto deserves events that enhance civic life without imposing avoidable financial and social stress. The World Cup, as currently planned, is neither an economic boon nor a celebration for the city — it is a gamble in which the house always wins.

Sincerely,
E Schultz
Toronto, ON