HicksBiz Blog
While the city has been all a-buzz about Northland Park’s Vision 2020 that was released on Wednesday, an existential question has not been asked.
Why does the City of Edmonton still need Northlands Park?
In any emotion-free analysis, the most cost-effective way forward is to reduce Northlands’ operations down to its EXPO Convention Centre and K-Days, then shut down/sell off everything else.
The case is cruel, given the not-for-profit Northlands willingly brought itself to the sacrificial alter for the greater good of Edmonton.
Northlands gave up all hockey-related Rexall Place profits to the Oilers to keep the team in town back in the ‘90s.
It has now accepted the closure of Rexall Place, sending all those concert profits over to the equally subsidized Rogers Place.
Talk about signing your own death warrant.
But for all the quality-of-life and greater-good arguments within the well-reasoned Vision 2020, there’s huge risk.
To survive, Northlands is likely to forever suck furious ...
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Alice Through The Looking Glass
Citadel Theatre, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
Feb. 27 to March 20, 2016
Adapted for the stage by James Reaney, from the Lewis Carroll classic.
Tickets
Review by GRAHAM HICKS, Hicksbiz.com
To truly enjoy the Citadel’s frothy, Cirque de Soleil-like production of Alice Through the Looking-Glass, look not for underlying philosophy, ideology or theology. Relax, sit back, and simply enjoy the theatrical feast laid before your very eyes.
This is a production of non-stop delightful moments, showing off the ability of professional theatre to create illusion at its very finest. It’s about costume and colour, superb team-work and great comedy – mostly of the physical variety. When this stage adaptation of Lewis Carroll’s classic tones down to serious, or at least explanatory, it stumbles and goes cold as was the case in Act. 1.
Once Alice (Ellie Heath) has popped through the looking glass into her dream world (or is it the Red Kin ...
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Wizard of Oz
Jubilee Auditorium, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
Tuesday, Feb. 23 – Sunday, Feb. 28, 2016
8 p.m.
Sat. matinee, 2 p.m.
Sun. matinee, 1 p.m., evening 6:30 p.m.
Tickets $45 to $145, (plus 25% extra in facility charges and service fees)
REVIEW BY GRAHAM HICKS - Hicksbiz.com
How beguiling, to see another generation of young children entranced by the story of Dorothy and Toto and the land of Oz.
It’s been going on since Frank Baum wrote the original “American fairy tale” in 1900, through Broadway productions, silent movies, then into the stratosphere with the classic 1939 movie with the young Judy Garland – using brand-new colour technology – as Dorothy, and the movie’s subsequent re-spooling year after year on that revolutionary new social medium of the 1950s known as television.
The Wizard of Oz, being performed at the Northern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium through Sunday, Feb. 28, is the latest wrinkle in the re-telling of this ...
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Cured Wine Bar
2307 Ellwood Dr. SW (off 91 Street, south of Henday Drive)
780-756-3722
www.curedwinebar.com
Food - 4 of 5 Suns
Ambience - 4 of 5 Suns
Service - 4 of 5 Suns
Mon. to Thurs. 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., 4 p.m. to 10 p.m.
Fri. 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., 4 p.m. to 11 p.m.
Sat. 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., 4 p.m. to 11 p.m.
Sun. 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., 4 p.m. to 10 p.m.
Dinner for two excluding drinks and tip: Basic, $32; loaded, $50
What’s the point, I’ve always wondered, of ordering charcuterie - cold-cuts and cheese served on a wooden cutting board – at a restaurant?
Go to the Italian Centre, buy deli meats and cheeses and make a charcuterie at home for a third of the price!
Then I heard about Cured Wine Bar on the South Side, so far south as to be closer to the International Airport than to downtown.
Charcuterie is the entire focus of the restaurant, along with small plates, deserts, and mostly Okanagan wines by the bottle and glass. On Cured’s Enomatic wine prese ...
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You have to forgive realtors.
They are relentlessly optimistic.
The economy is dropping like a rock. A great time to buy!
The economy is sizzling red-hot. A great time to sell!
I was impressed with the reasonably objective research and conclusions of Edmonton realtor (and ex-accountant) Kathy Schmidt, in her monthly The Schmidt Report.
The sky is not falling, she argues, not in Edmonton’s housing market.
It has crashed down in Fort McMurray, it’s falling in Calgary, but here, we’re just a little overcast.
Median house prices are down – about 3% — in most of Metropolitan Edmonton, a median price of about $340,000 compared to $350,000 at this time last year.
(“Median” excludes the very top and very bottom ends of the housing market. At the top end, Edmonton houses listed at $600,000 or more are down more than 3%.)
But the market, Schmidt says, is busy. More homes (houses and condos) were sold last month than were sold in January a year ago. Th ...
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Workshop Eatery
Mosaic Centre, 2003 91 St. SW (corner 91 Street SW and Savaryn Drive SW)
780-705-2205
theworkshopeatery.com
Mon. to Wed. 7:30 a.m. to 10 p.m.
Thurs. to Fri. 7:30 a.m. to 11 p.m.
Sat. 10 a.m. to 11 p.m.
Sun. 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Food: 4.5 of 5 Suns
Ambience: 4.5 of 5 Suns
Service: 4 of 5 Suns
Dinner for two excluding drinks and tip: Basic, $50; loaded, $90
This is not your normal Weekly Dish restaurant review.
Knowing I am a hobby cook, Sun editor Phil Rivers had suggested Chef Paul (Sun food writer Paul Shufelt) and I should review each other’s food in side-by-side columns.
The idea evolved into a fund-raiser, a two-part package presented in the 2015 annual ATCO Edmonton Sun Christmas Charity Auction.
A few weeks ago, highest bidder Jody Fraser and his family, Chef Paul and his wife Kristine arrived at my home for dinner. Paul didn’t step foot in the kitchen. He served as table host, and, with input from Jody, Janice, Jo ...
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Finally, through a company created to save the planet AND make money, I actually understand what “carbon credits” are all about.
Airdrie-based Carbon Credit Solutions (CCS) Inc. partners up with folks (mostly farmers) who can create Alberta government-approved carbon credits. It assists in “making” these carbon credits, then buys and sells them, hopefully for a profit.
Making a profit can’t be that difficult, not when the monetary value of these Alberta carbon credits should jump by 50% in a year’s time.
That’s when the Notley government says it will raise the levy, basically a tax on excess carbon emission, from $20 to $30 a tonne on companies pushing too much CO2 up their smokestacks. (A tonne of CO2 is roughly the amount of CO2 an average coal-burning power plant sends up its smokestack every hour.)
Companies either pay the levy, or they can purchase carbon credits from companies like CCS to offset excess CO2 emissions. The market value of a carbon cred ...
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Million Thai Restaurant
Food: 3.5 of 5 Suns
Ambience: 2.5 of 5 Suns
Service: 4 of 5 Suns
11 a.m. to 2 p.m., 4 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Closed Tuesdays
millionthaiedmonton.com
Dinner for two excluding drinks and tip: Basic, $25; loaded, $40
I’d love to write that Million Thai Restaurant is one of those hidden gems where great ethnic food is to be had in a dimly-lit diner with deteriorating Halloween-orange Naugahyde back-rests.
Alas, in Million Thai’s case, the gem in the rough is only half true. Two of the main dishes were beautiful, fragrant, fresh and delicious. But of other two, one was passable and one not properly prepared.
As a hole-in-the-wall prospect, Million Thai was tantalizing. It’s in Beverly at the east end of 118th Avenue, in a mildly dilapidated strip mall (parking out front) with a physiotherapy clinic on one side and a convenience store on the other. In short, the kind of area you expect to find a hidden gem.
The kitchen, next to the restaurant, has i ...
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Under Premier Rachel Notley’s Climate Leadership Plan, by government decree, all coal-burning power plants in Alberta are to be shut down by 2030, with the goal of replacing 50% to 75% of that power with renewable energy.
Meanwhile, the provincial demand for electricity will grow from 14,500 megawatts (MW) today, to 17,500 MW by 2030.
This is the triumph of ideology over evidence-based science. This illogical, ill-conceived government decree will result in wasting billions of dollars with no net environmental gain.
Today in Alberta, there are 18 major coal-burning power generation units. Four are close to the end of their useful lives and will close within two years.
Of the 14 still operating, six will still have plenty of juice left come 2030.
The case for coal: coal is the cheapest, most reliable source of electricity in Alberta, crucial in keeping Alberta’s industry competitive. In 2015, it provided 43% of the province’s power.
Environmentally, thanks to technological in ...
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Alberta Hotel Bar + Grill
9802 Jasper Ave
780-760-0062
albertahotelbarkitchen.com
Mon. to Thurs. 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., 5 p.m. to midnight
Fri. 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., 5 p.m. to 1 a.m.
Sat. 5 p.m. to 1 a.m.
Sunday closed
Food: 4 of 5 Suns
Ambience: 4 of 5 Suns
Service: 4.5 of 5 Suns
Dinner for two excluding drinks and tip: Basic, $60; loaded, $80
I was worried, but I ought not to have been.
Worried that the Alberta Hotel Bar + Kitchen, burdened with expectation, could not win for want of trying.
A few years ago, across Jasper Avenue from the Shaw Conference Centre, architect/developer Gene Dub replicated the once-fine Alberta Hotel, torn down in its declining years to make way for that pink palace known as Canada Place.
On the main floor, architect Dub re-created the early 20th century ambiance of the original Alberta Hotel bar and restaurant. The Hardware Grill’s Larry Stewart leased the premise and soon opened Tavern 1903 with magnificent food and ambience.
Somet ...
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