Wednesday, February 18, 2026

Al "Wailin" Walker

My next door neighbour's son was featured on Global TV on Sunday night.  Here is his biography from his website:

Al “Wailin” Walker is a Canadian blues master and the lead guitarist, singer, songwriter and band leader of the Wailin' Walker Band. Walker’s stunning electric guitar solos and commanding vocals have forged a formidable brand of Rockin’Rhythm and Blues that have kept dance floors packed and albums on top of the blues charts for over five decades.

The first recording of Wailin' Walker was with his band The Houserockers in 1978. Since then,  six outstanding self-produced blues recordings have been released: The Devil Made Me Play It, Buzzsaw Boogie, Crazy at Night, No Regrets and All Fired Up. The Devil Made Me Play It, released under Double Trouble Records (Amsterdam), climbed to the top of the blues charts in the Netherlands, Spain and Australia. No Regrets and All Fired Up have topped the blues charts in the USA and Canada. The newest album Blues Lightnin’ was released in September 2025 and was instantly the #1 blues album in Canada. 

Walker has played with and been personally mentored by Buddy Guy, Pee Wee Crayton and Otis Rush and has shared the stage with Johnny Winter, George Thorogood and Stevie Ray Vaughan to name a few.

Noteworthy Accomplishments
Songwriter for Long John Baldry and Powder Blues 
Portland Blues Festival (1992)
Moulin Blues Festival (1996)
Honorable mention on Jr. Watson's album Long Overdue 
House Band at the Commodore Ballroom - 78 shows
Jerry Doucette Band (Toured 2006 - 2018)
#2 Roots Music Report (2014 - 2015)
#1 Roots Music Report (2024-2025)

Here is his interview on Global TV:

https://globalnews.ca/video/11669212/vancouver-musicians-well-earned-recognition/

Tuesday, February 17, 2026

Michael Buble

Noah was just three years old when he was diagnosed with cancer—an instant that shattered his world and his family’s.  In 2016, Michael BublĂ© was at the height of his career. He was adored by millions, selling out arenas across the globe and filling them with joy. But in a single moment, the bright lights of stardom went dark.

For Michael, the applause meant nothing compared to the silence of a hospital room. Alongside his wife, Luisana Lopilato, he stepped away from the world, trading the stage for a bedside chair.

He later shared that the room felt as though it was spinning.  Overnight, his identity shifted from world‑renowned performer to a father fighting for his child’s life.

Noah had been diagnosed with hepatoblastoma, a rare and aggressive pediatric liver cancer. The diagnosis plunged the family into a world of clinical milestones, medical terminology, and grueling procedures.

Beyond the treatments themselves, the true weight of the journey was the emotional toll. Michael described the experience as a “descent into hell,” one that forced him to question everything he once believed mattered.

To give Noah the best chance of survival, the family moved to Los Angeles, where he began a multi‑stage treatment plan.

The first phase was four months of chemotherapy. Because liver tumors in children are often large and difficult to operate on, the goal was to shrink the mass enough to make surgery possible.  During this time, Michael’s sister‑in‑law called Noah a “warrior,” admiring how bravely he endured the harsh side effects.

Once the tumor had shrunk, Noah underwent a high‑risk surgery. Michael later explained that the surgeons aimed for “clean margins,” meaning they needed to remove the entire tumor along with some surrounding healthy tissue to ensure no cancer cells remained.

To reduce the chance of recurrence, Noah then received radiotherapy—a final safeguard targeting any lingering traces of the disease.

Throughout this period, the family lived in a constant state of “fear and hope,” waiting for biopsy results and scan updates. During those long months in the hospital, Michael didn’t just lose his desire to perform; he feared he might never feel the joy required to sing again.

But witnessing Noah’s resilience changed everything. His son’s courage became a new source of inspiration, proof that even the smallest heart can hold the strength of a lion.

In early 2017, after months of treatment and uncertainty, the family received the news they had prayed for: Noah’s treatment had been successful.

He was in remission.

They eventually returned home to Argentina to begin the long emotional healing process. Today, Noah is a thriving young boy, but the experience left a permanent mark on his father.  Michael often says that those years in the hospital transformed him. Music still matters deeply to him, but his children are his true center.  Even in the darkest moments, he watched his son show a bravery far beyond his years.  That strength reshaped Michael’s life, and when he finally returned to music, it wasn’t just a comeback—it was a celebration of survival.

“He was braver than anyone I’ve ever met,” Michael recalled, still in awe of his little boy.  When he stepped back into the spotlight, he wasn’t the same man who had left it. The ordeal had stripped away the superficial layers of fame, leaving behind a profound gratitude for the simple, irreplaceable gift of family.

Today, when he sings, there is a new depth in his voice—a raw, soulful resonance shaped by a journey through fire. He emerged with a truth that guides him still: the world’s praise is fleeting, but love is what carries us home.

“Fame fades,” he said. “But love—love is what saves you.”

Monday, February 16, 2026

Love Story - John F Kennedy Jr. & Carolyn Bessette

 

FX and Hulu have teamed up to bring one of America’s most intriguing modern love stories to the screen: the relationship between John F. Kennedy Jr. and Carolyn Bessette.  The series opens during John’s long relationship with Daryl Hannah, offering a glimpse into their five years together before his life took a dramatic turn.

At the same time, we meet Carolyn in her pre‑Kennedy world—working at Calvin Klein, carving out a place for herself in the glossy, high‑pressure fashion scene of the 1990s.  A fiercely independent woman devoted to her adopted city and her career, she rose quickly thanks to her impeccable eye, ambition, and unmistakable presence.

When John and Carolyn finally cross paths, the chemistry is immediate.  He’s drawn to her intelligence, her quiet strength, and that effortless charm that made her unforgettable long before the tabloids ever learned her name.  While their relationship would eventually thrust her into overwhelming fame, the series does a beautiful job honouring the vibrant, full life she built before becoming a Kennedy.

Naomi Watts delivers a standout performance as Jacqueline Kennedy—elegant, layered, and compelling.

I’ve watched the first three episodes so far, and I’m hooked.  New episodes air Thursday nights on FX. If you don’t have FX through your cable package, Hulu is offering a one‑month free trial, which makes it easy to dive into this beautifully crafted series.  It’s absolutely worth the watch.

Sunday, February 15, 2026

The Billionaire, the bridge and the lesson Canada will never forget


Every so often, a story comes along that perfectly captures the difference between private interest and public good. The saga of the Gordie Howe International Bridge is one of those stories.

For decades, the Ambassador Bridge—one of the busiest border crossings in North America—has been privately owned by the Moroun family, a billionaire dynasty known for guarding their monopoly with iron fists and endless legal battles.  When Canada announced plans to build a new publicly owned bridge just a mile down the river, the reaction was predictable: outrage, lawsuits, political pressure, and every tactic money could buy.

He fought it.
He sued Canada.
He tried to block permits.
He even dragged the matter through U.S. courts.

But Canada didn’t flinch.

Canada built the bridge.
Canada paid for the bridge.

And in a gesture of goodwill and partnership, Canada even gave half ownership to the State of Michigan.

Now the bridge is complete—standing tall, modern, and ready to serve the millions of people and billions of dollars in trade that flow between our two nations.

And yet, here we are.

The billionaire has made one last desperate plea, this time at the White House, hoping the only sympathetic ear he could find might stop the bridge from opening.  A $6‑billion piece of infrastructure—built to strengthen two nations—is suddenly caught in the crossfire of one man’s fear of competition.

Canada now faces more threats, more tantrums, and more attempts to delay what is inevitable.

But let’s be clear:  The Gordie Howe Bridge will open.

Trying to stop it now is like trying to stop Niagara Falls.  The momentum is too great, the need too obvious, and the public interest too strong.  When the bridge finally opens—and it will—it will stand as more than steel and concrete.  It will be a reminder that no individual, no matter how wealthy or powerful, should ever be allowed to divide communities, economies, or nations for personal gain.

The Gordie Howe Bridge will connect us.
It will strengthen us.
And it will remind us that progress cannot be held hostage by a billionaire’s tears.






Saturday, February 14, 2026

The Coat Library

I don’t check homework first. I check their fingertips. Blue means the heat is off. Purple means they walked.

"Mrs. Reed, are we staying inside for recess?"

Jayden didn't look at me when he asked. He was staring at his sneakers, vibrating. Not shivering—vibrating.

He was wearing a windbreaker. The kind you buy at a dollar store for a drizzly day in April. But this wasn’t April. It was November in the Midwest, and the wind outside was stripping the paint off the siding.

"No indoor recess today, bud," I said, and I watched his shoulders collapse.

I teach first grade. My contract says I teach reading, phonics, and basic addition. Reality says I’m a social worker, a nurse, and a warm body in a cold system.

By Halloween, my six-year-olds knew the price of gas. They knew that "inflation" is the reason mom cries in the kitchen when she thinks everyone is asleep. They knew why they were wearing their big brother’s coat, even if the sleeves hung down to their knees.

But Jayden didn’t even have a brother’s coat.

He sat on his hands during circle time. He told me he wasn't hungry at lunch because his hands were "too tired" to hold the sandwich.

That was it. That was the line.

I didn't go home at 3:00 PM. I drove to the local thrift shop. I had $40 in my wallet that was supposed to go toward my own car insurance. I spent every dime.

I didn't buy school supplies. I bought coats. A puffy blue one. A red one with a heavy hood. A camo print one that looked brand new.

The next morning, I dragged a clothing rack from the lost-and-found into the back of my classroom. I hung the coats up. I placed a bin of $1 stretchy gloves underneath.

I taped a sign above it. I didn't write "Charity Bin." In this country, even a six-year-old knows the shame of needing a handout. Pride is the first thing we teach them, and it’s the hardest thing to break.

So I wrote: THE COAT LIBRARY.

Rules:

Borrow what you need.

Return it when you’re warm.

No library card required.

For two days, the rack sat there. Untouched.

The kids eyed it like it was a trap. They’ve been taught that nothing is free. They know there’s always a catch, a form to fill out, or a list they have to be on.

Then the temperature dropped to single digits.

Jayden broke the seal. During independent reading, he walked over. He looked at me. I pretended to be busy grading papers. He grabbed the blue puffer. He put it on.

He sat back down, and for the first time in a week, he stopped vibrating.

By Friday, the Coat Library was empty.

A girl who usually spent recess huddled by the brick wall was running tag in the red hood. Two boys were taking turns wearing the camo jacket—one wore it out, the other wore it back in.

"Rock, paper, scissors for the hood," I heard them whisper. They were negotiating warmth like it was currency.

Then came the moment that gutted me.

We got a new student, Mia. Her family had just moved from a warmer state, fleeing high rents. She came in wearing a denim jacket over a t-shirt. Her lips were almost white.

She stood in front of the empty rack. There was one coat left—a purple parker I’d brought in from my own attic.

She reached for it, then pulled her hand back. She looked at Jayden.

"I don't have a card," she whispered. "My mom says we can't sign up for anything else. We don't have the papers."

She thought warmth was a subscription she couldn't afford. She thought she needed to qualify to not freeze.

I knelt down. "Mia, look at me."

She froze, terrified she was in trouble.

"The Coat Library isn't like other libraries," I said, my voice shaking just a little. "You don't need papers. You don't need money. You just need to be cold."

She put the coat on. She buried her face in the collar and just breathed.

I thought that was the end of it. But kindness is the only thing more contagious than the flu in a first-grade classroom.

The following Monday, I unlocked my door and tripped over a bag.

It was a black garbage bag, smelling of fabric softener. Inside were five winter coats. Good ones. Brands I can’t afford.

There was a note scribbled on the back of a utility bill envelope: “My son said the library was low on stock. We don’t have much, but we have extras. - A Mom.”

By Wednesday, the janitor had wheeled in a second rack.

"Found it in the basement," he winked. "Figured you're expanding."

By Friday, we had boots. We had snow pants. We had a box of hand warmers dropped off by the guys from the auto shop down the street.

The Mayor’s office called yesterday. They heard about the "Coat Teacher." They wanted to come down, take a picture, maybe give me a certificate. They wanted to show how the "community is resilient."

I told them no.

I told them we were busy learning compound words.

I didn't tell them the truth: That I don't want a certificate. I want my students’ parents to be able to afford heat. I want a world where a six-year-old doesn't have to borrow a coat to survive recess.

But until that world exists, Room 104 will stay open.

Yesterday, I watched Jayden help Mia zip up her coat.

"It's a library," he told her seriously. "That means we share."

We are living in a time where everyone is shouting. We argue about policies, and budgets, and whose fault it is that everything costs so much. We scream at strangers on the internet while our neighbors quietly freeze.

But in my classroom, it’s simple.

If you are cold, you get a coat.

No forms. No judgment. No politics.

Just warmth.

Thursday, February 12, 2026

Tumbler Ridge

 

When tragedy struck Tumbler Ridge, the RCMP responded with extraordinary courage. Officers arrived on scene just two minutes after receiving the call — an almost unimaginable response time in a rural community. As they approached, they were met with gunfire. Their rapid, fearless intervention clearly disrupted the shooter and prevented an even greater loss of life. These officers are true heroes, and their actions deserve our deepest gratitude.

That night, as we watched BBC International News — our usual evening ritual — the very first story was the Tumbler Ridge shooting. The coverage lasted a full ten minutes. Hearing world leaders such as King Charles, Keir Starmer, Emmanuel Macron, the Prime Minister of India, and many others offer condolences to Canada was profoundly moving. In moments like this, global compassion reminds us that even in our darkest hours, we are not alone.

My heart is with the people of Tumbler Ridge and with every victim and family affected by this terrible tragedy. I pray for healing, strength, and comfort for all who are grieving.

Wednesday, February 11, 2026

Automatic tipping on cruise ships?

We are told the automatic tips are given to every crew member.  I like the way it was, you gave your waiter, assistant waiter and room steward a cash tip.  You handed them an envelope and shook their hand with a well deserved thank you for your great service.  Those days are gone.  Now your credit card is automatically charged.  You can always leave them an additional tip if you want.

I just read this disturbing article from ABC News Australia:

The national maritime safety regulator is investigating a major cruise line following allegations workers are being forced to live in overcrowded conditions below deck with no safe free drinking water, earning as little as $2.50 an hour.

The Maritime Union of Australia (MUA) said it received reports from a whistleblower working onboard the Carnival Encounter cruise ship which docked in Darwin on Monday morning, prompting investigators from the Australian Maritime Safety Authority (AMSA) to board the ship.

In a statement, the AMSA confirmed it was looking into claims related to workers' welfare onboard the ship.

MUA Sydney branch organiser Shane Reside said over the past six months, the union had received hundreds of complaints about the international cruise line from workers, describing "horrifying" conditions, including galley stewards working in the kitchen being paid as little as $2.50 an hour.

"They're paid as little as $600 a month and sometimes required to work in excess of 10 hours a day for in excess of 30 consecutive days," he said.

"I don't think that any holiday is worth workers facing the kinds of exploitation that we've seen on these vessels."

Mr Reside said he attempted to board the vessel in Sydney in December to investigate the allegations, but was refused access.

He said the whistleblower, who asked to remain anonymous as they feared losing their job, also reported workers were being made to live in very crowded living conditions, leading to the fast spread of skin diseases, and that crew members were being required to work while suffering from serious illnesses.

The AMU has also received reports the only free water available to workers is potentially harmful, despite the Maritime Labour Convention requiring clean water onboard ships to be free of charge.

"The passengers and the officers on board get drinking water provided for free, but the crew are required to either drink the very poor-quality drinking water in the tanks or they have to pay for their bottled water," Mr Reside said.

"Seventy cents a bottle doesn't sound like an enormous imposition by Australian standards, but if you're only earning $2.50 an hour, then 70 cents for a bottle of water is actually a significant imposition."

The Carnival Encounter is one of three Carnival Cruise Line vessels operating in Australia. The MUA claims the company uses loopholes to employ foreign crew members excluded from Australian employment laws.

Mr Reside said based on the information that had been provided, the union believed such conditions were "endemic across the Carnival Cruise fleet".

MUA NT branch secretary Andy Burford said Carnival was bringing in workers from some of the world's poorest economies while "generating billions of dollars in profit worldwide".

"This is exactly what happens when you allow foreign-owned and -controlled companies to sail the Australian coast, using Australian ports, carrying Australian passengers paying Australian fares, but who are completely immune from Australian law," he said.

In a statement, an AMSA spokesperson said the agency investigated claims and complaints of seafarer health and safety issues in line with the Maritime Labour Convention, the Navigation Act 2012 and relevant Marine Orders, and would take action if breaches of the convention were found.

"The Australian Maritime Safety Authority takes the welfare of crew on board ships very seriously," the spokesperson said.

In a statement, the Carnival Cruise Line said it had "nothing to hide".

"AMSA routinely conducts robust inspections as part of its responsibility to ensure strict adherence with international crew welfare requirements," the statement said.

"We respect this process, and we hold our shipboard team members in the highest regard.

"We welcome AMSA's oversight as an important assurance mechanism for our crew and our operations."



Al "Wailin" Walker

My next door neighbour's son was featured on Global TV on Sunday night.  Here is his biography from his website: Al “Wailin” Walker is a...