unimaginative2
Senior Member
It seems like the Globe and Mail readership is not much different from the Sun.
That's what horrifies me. I can't even begin to imagine in my darkest nightmares what a Sun message board would be like.
It seems like the Globe and Mail readership is not much different from the Sun.
If indeed it is at the film studios, then it won't be on the waterfront. It will, in fact, be in the middle of nowhere (South division), closer to a gas-fired power plant than anything else.
It's called art. The site is very cutting-edge, 80's throwback. The man is a trend-setter. I am sure the site was designed to look EXACTLY that way. Have you seen his paintings?
you guys should read the comments on the globe and mail article. It only goes to show how most Canadians don't ever want to take risks and would be happier having thousands of crap ripoff condos like french quarter around the city.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/serv...31.walsop0801/CommentStory/Entertainment/home
Somehow, a lot of those commenting characters seem more like *older* pessimistic gloomy anti social men. Y'know, cranks. Colonel Blimp types. The same-old same-old letter-writers, gone cyber.well the internet is mostly dominated by young pessimistic gloomy anti social men.
J L from Toronto, Canada writes: This teletubby thing is UGLY! There are way too many modern buildings in the city. We do not need a giant teletubby! We need more landmark buildings designed in classic forms of architecture that not only look beautiful but connect the past with the present. They connect future generations with past generations and give people a sense of place - a sense of home. We also need more historical statues that remind us of great Canadians and evoke emotion. When you fill a city with giant thimbles and blobs and weird structures that are trendy that is a recipe for disaster. These trendy objects age terribly and appear mismatched along side one another. Classic never goes out of style and a great city should be built with long term planning.
chris jenkins from Free The West, Canada writes: It's not the buildings that makes Toronto ugly, it's the people. This wasn't true thirty years ago.