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Showing posts with label fun. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fun. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

still up there

Some of the Olympic signs are still up there.
FRIDAY wohooo is time for the Paralympics!! Let's go!!!

Thursday, March 4, 2010

Ridiculous Olympic scandal!

I couldn't agree more...


A scandal of minuscule proportions

Posted Monday, March 1, 2010 8:24 PM ET
By Roy MacGregor, The Globe and Mail
It was their Olympic Moment - and, in an accidental way, mine.
Never for a moment of any kind - Olympic or professional - did I think of it as a story other than a charming and endearing tale. Perhaps I should resign in disgrace from the profession of journalism.
As it happened, I was one of the very few actual witnesses to the postgame, on-ice celebration by the Canadian women's hockey team last Thursday. You will know it as the "booze and cigars" scandal that shook the Canadian Olympic moment to the very core.
The women had defended their gold medal wonderfully with a sparkling 2-0 victory over archrival United States. They had leapt upon their brilliant goaltender Shannon Szabados with a fervour that suggested, for a moment, that she would become the Lucky Loonie under the ice that the men would play last Sunday for their gold.
They had screamed and screeched and hugged each other and burst into tears and, in a lovely gesture, had paraded about the ice with their Canadian flags and saluted a delirious crowd. Some actually shook and shivered as their medals were placed over their necks and the flag and anthem raised to the roof.
That, I thought, was the story, and had been happily reworking it with quotes later in the day, when the packed arena had long since emptied.
The ice had just been resurfaced. It glistened invitingly. The ice-surfacing machine was still out when the first unmistakable scrape of a skate blade on ice floated up into the press area where few of us were still working.
I looked down and smiled to see that the gold-medal winners had still not taken off their uniforms or skates, still had not had enough of their special moment.
Several came skating out, the ice resurfacer cheering them as he saw what they were doing, even though it meant he would have to do his work all over again.
Two of the women - Meaghan Mikkelson and Rebecca Johnston - moved to the far end and began making circles in the ice like figure skaters, unaware that from where those of watching stood, their freshly cut circles were very close to forming the Olympic symbol. How serendipitous.
Several more players came out. They had cameras. One was carrying a bottle of champagne. Others had beer. One had an unlighted cigar. Another cigar appeared and a lighter. Soon, the almost-forgotten smell of cigar smoke floated into the press area.
The former captain of the Canadian women's team, Cassie Campbell Pascal, was still there, packing up from her broadcasting job, and the players called her down. She congratulated them and, wisely, left them to their special moment.
As everyone should have.
The resurfacer asked if he could have his photograph taken with them and they were delighted to accommodate, forming an impromptu team photo at centre ice with the ice machine as backdrop. He let them try the machine.
All, presumably, had driver's licences.
Two of them skated to a quiet part of the rink, lay on their backs, lifted their legs high in the air and shook their skates like little children playing in the snow.
I do not know if I have seen anything so sweet and so very, very, very Canadian.
It never occurred to me that I would write about this except, perhaps, to show that there is something special to being on an Olympic team that goes far beyond any games or medals.
But someone must have thought it was scandalous.
Women smoking cigars? Women drinking champagne and beer? Didn't they just win an Olympic gold medal. And aren't they a hockey team?
But then someone looking for a peg found a peg - the woman with the beer was not only the one who had scored both Canadian goals but was ... wait ... wait ... 18 years old! And what's the drinking age in British Columbia?
Why it's ... 19.
Stop the Games. Call out the police. Charges. Disgrace. Take away their medals.
To me, there is only one thing equal to the embarrassment of a wire service deciding this was a news story of issue rather than an anecdote of great charm.
And that is that some people actually took it seriously. 
Hockey Canada felt obliged to apologize for the women's behaviour. The International Olympic Committee even vowed to get to the bottom of this scandalous allegation of an 18-year-old Olympic gold medalist holding a beer - suggesting perhaps the beer in hand wasn't an official sponsor, who knows?
What Hockey Canada should have done, rather than apologize to women who had already been insulted that same day by the president of the IOC calling the future of their game into doubt, was offer a single response that might not exactly be in keeping with Canada's image of a people so polite they apologize as often as other people blink.
A raised middle finger.
ROY MACGREGOR
The Globe and Mail


Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Vancouver 2010 Podium #11


Vancouver 2010 Podium #11
Originally uploaded by ton-up kid
Credits to this guys, James Lee and Leo Obstbaum, amazing job designing the Podium for the 2010, clap clap clap, love it! Im sure so did the world!!!!

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

the medals...

.. this is the Silver Medal...

Sunday, February 28, 2010

the end...


Thanks world, has been fantastic!!!...

Going for Gold...with Red MIttens!!!!

Even Harry Jerome got his mittens, and its running for  Gold!!!!...a funny detail all sculptures around Stanley park got theirs :O) GO CANADA GO!!...

Thursday, February 25, 2010

Go Canada Go!!!!

few more days of craziness....still looking for Gold, tomorrow big day for hockey and Canada!!!!!

Monday, February 22, 2010

Electric Blue Vectorial Elevation


Using 20 large robotic searchlights around English Bay, the canopy of the Vancouver sky is transformed by the local audience or individuals worldwide who design their own patterns via a website . Their light sculptures are visible from a distance of 15 kilometres and the pattern changes roughly every 8 seconds.

Thursday, February 18, 2010

Ice quality...

Ensuring that the ice conditions at the Vancouver 2010 Olympic Winter Games are the best and most consistent possible for each athlete takes a great deal of hard work by a myriad of individuals, from members of the relevant International Federations to teams of experts from the Vancouver Organising Committee (VANOC) and the International Olympic Committee (IOC).

Monday, February 15, 2010

Olympic light show


Light show on Sunset beach, West end Vancouver...top left corner Cypress mountain lights, were Canada's 1st Gold medal on National soil was won by Alexander Bilodeau.

Saturday, February 13, 2010

Olympic ziplinning



if you want to have fun during the Olympics, just head downtown...and if you are patience, just wait 2 hrs if not 3 and get on this 3 seconds fun free zil line ride across robson square...I just watched...to cold too rainy...Im getting old ...

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Friday, October 16, 2009

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Meetup groups...


Thanksgiving day we give thanks for the meet up groups taking us all out in the sun...:O)
Picnic time on the Grey Rock up on Deep cove look out

All images are coyrighted to Barbara Rahal