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Linda's Journal
Tuesday, March 31, 2026
Monday, March 30, 2026
Goodbye Global TV News
On Saturday night at 6:40 PM four blocks from where we live, there was another gang shooting. We didn't hear the shots but heard about all the police that were in attendance. One person was shot and killed. At 11:00 PM, I put on Global BC News. No reporting of this event hours before.
I've seen the changes in Global News. They replay the 6:00 PM news at 11:00 PM! No new news. If you've seen the news at 6, you've seen it all for the rest of the day.
The traffic helicopter is gone. They pick up clips from Drive BC! Journalists out on the field are fewer. I googled it and this is what I found:
In September 2025, they laid off 45-46 employees, primarily in B.C. and Alberta, including 26 journalists. These cuts, part of a "restructuring" due to falling ad revenues and high debt, follow multiple rounds of layoffs in 2023 and 2024, including the closure of some local stations.
We started watching BBC news at 10 PM or 11 PM. We see what happened overnight in the middle east. The news from the US is not filtered as it is on Fox, CNN, and MS Now. We get our US news from this network. There was a very interesting interview today from some of the Epstein survivors. They will never appear on US TV.
Good-bye Global, we've enjoyed your news for years. Hello City TV, CBC or CTV. We will check them all and see which one we like best. I'm leaning toward Ian Hanomansing as he's a great news anchor.
Sunday, March 29, 2026
Saturday, March 28, 2026
The old days of photography
Selfies. It seems like everywhere you look these days someone is holding their phone up taking a photo of themselves or of the group they’re with. It didn’t used to be like that. It wasn’t a thing to do way back when. Sure, people tried to hold the camera up and guess that the shot was framed properly. It was just a guess. Plus, you had to be carrying a camera with you. That was something you would mainly do if you were on holiday. And you had better be packing extra rolls of film.
It was always a bit of a guessing game, especially if you were sporting a Kodak Brownie Hawkeye. Push the button and hope for the best was all you could do back then. And you couldn’t enjoy the photo right on the spot as you can these days; you had to take the roll to the drug store or camera store and wait for them to develop the film, which in some cases could take a couple of days. And of course, once you got the photos back, you’d discover how many were out of focus, or just a bad shot.Those were the days when nobody was packing a phone that doubles as a camera! Your phone was attached to the wall of your house. Camera and phone were two different animals. Phone and watch was a thing, but only if your name was Dick Tracy!
Foncie started out shooting for other companies but decided to start his own business in 1946 and kept snapping shots until his retirement in 1979. Most of his pictures are those taken on the east side of the 700-block of Granville, and that’s where I remember seeing him on my trips downtown.
The photos were usually a full-length shot of you, or you and your friends just walking down the street. He would try to make eye contact to make sure the person wanted to be photographed. He didn’t need to worry about adjusting the focus; when the subject stepped on a certain spot on the sidewalk, Foncie would snap the shot. Some were candid shots, or if you saw he was aiming at you, you could put on your best smile. Either way, Foncie had captured you, being you!
Foncie was snapping photos on the streets of Vancouver for 45 years. He would work long hours, sometimes into the evenings, six days a week. The business of street photography started to die out in the early to mid-70s as more and more people owned their own cameras, and of course these days, with the camera in your phone, it wouldn’t stand a chance of survival.
Foncie retired and hung up his camera on September 27, 1979. He and his wife Anne, moved to the Okanagan. Foncie passed away in 2003 at the age of 88. His wife, Anne, lived to be 97 and passed away in 2011.
He was so much a part of the old days of Vancouver, and a lot has been written about him and his photos.
Friday, March 27, 2026
Are your affairs in order?
Thursday, March 26, 2026
Ken Kirkby 1940 - 2023
When we lived in Richmond in the early 1970's, Ken Kirkby was our neighbour. His wife was lovely and I remember when she gave birth to her son. After her son was born, Ken left and they divorced. He painted in his living room. His art was incredible. He was a quiet man.
The home was sold and his wife said he moved up north. He was also a fly fisherman and Cec met him a few years after he moved on Peterhope Lake. They were both flyfishing! I've followed his artwork since we knew him. I was sorry to hear he passed away. I thought you would be interested in this Canadian artist!
Ken Kirkby entered the world on September 1, 1940, in the middle of an air raid over London during the Second World War. He later joked that this explosive arrival foreshadowed the intensity and determination he would bring to his art.
Wednesday, March 25, 2026
Happy 100th Fay
Back in the 1980's I worked with Laurie. We've been friends ever since. Laurie's mom was a single mother and at 55 she had terminal cancer. Her best friend Fay was a nurse. Fay quit her job to look after Laurie's mom. Her mom asked Laurie to always look after Fay. She is a lovely single lady with no family in Canada. Laurie has always looked after Fay. She started to get dementia a few years ago and now is living in Dr. Al Hogg Pavilion which is part of Peace Arch Hospital.
Laurie came to visit my brother-in-law while I was visiting and I went over to see Fay at her birthday party. Phil was playing his guitar and singing to the crowd, He had a great voice and sang songs all the people in the facility would remember. Fay sang along with some and actually conducted him with a chocolate bar.
It was a lovely afternoon for a lovely lady! Happy 100th Fay.
She received greetings from the Governor General and King Charles and Queen Camilla. Laurie had them framed and they are putting them up in her room!
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I love researching famous women in history. I knew them all but three. Sacagawea: Sacagawea was a Lemhi Shoshone woman who, at age 1...



