Showing Tag: "toronto" (Show all posts)

Story Behind the 1967 "Hockey Night In Canada" Animated Opening

Posted by Jeff WIlson on Saturday, October 18, 2014, In : Canadian Film, Animation & Advertising 

When I wrote about animation and hockey in an earlier blog, I had yet to find out about one of my favourite and least known about, perhaps even the least cared about, if not most mysterious hockey animation of all time.

It was the opening of CBC-TV's "Hockey Night In Canada" for at least one season and it featured a "Field Of Dreams-like" sequence of stylized hockey players soaring on and off camera, around and about one another other on a multi-plane ice surface. The player's heads were blac...


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You Can Take The Boy Outta Cookstown, but...

Posted by Jeff WIlson on Thursday, June 21, 2012, In : Canadian Comics 


RURAL ROUTE - Walter Ball (Toronto Star Weekly)

Walter Ball was born to a farming family near Cookstown, Ontario in 1911 and grew up with designs of becoming a Electrical Engineer upon reaching adulthood, but fate chose a different path entirely for him. Newspapers & magazines were the most accessible media in the day and Walter's dreams were swept up in ads for mail-order drawing lessons. Often, the first lesson was sent free, costing just a postage stamp on the letter of request for the less...
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Depression-busting is our business...

Posted by Jeff WIlson on Wednesday, September 28, 2011, In : Canadian Comics 
With the world economy tumbling around us, we couldn't blame one for being mindful of a time when our ancestors faced these challenges in the 1930s, the deepest days of the Canadian depression.

There seems not much specific about where the present crisis may take us, nor has it reached a point where anyone has given it a name, but the warning signs of depression are clear. We hear about it in the news internationally. However, the rubber test is when things are affected locally. More real esta...
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Do You Want Frise With That?

Posted by Jeff WIlson on Saturday, April 23, 2011, In : Canadian Comics 
     Jimmy Frise was a living, breathing phenomenon. Once as close as it was possible to be a living legend in the world of Canadian publishing. A genuine character. A twinkling star that shone so bright, one could even catch a glimmer of his light, in a sullen, self-absorbed pubescent daze.
     It was probably the winter of 1971. A 13 year-old kid from the farm rides shotgun into town with his mom to get away from his perceived dreary rural existence. She shops for groceries and clothing, wh...
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