Category: Word Bundles

  • My experience at the Malcolm Todd Concert

    • Found CA$40 tickets at 5:40 PM the day of… OK!
    • Got to Danforth Music Hall at 7:20 PM ish
    • COMPLETELY SKIPPED THE LINE to get in bc I didn’t realize there was a HUGE lineup and I went behind a couple of Asian people so I think the security guard just thought I was with them. my bad.
    • Got inside and lined up for terrible quality merch… please don’t use Hanes. The zip up hoodie was see through…
      • REGRET NOT GETTING THE BASEBALL CAP IT WAS SO
    • Met these two dudes in line who were so nice and they gave me merch advice. Never saw them again.
    • Got center pit area when the floor becomes flat, not bad at all. Plenty of space AT FIRST
    • The opener was a DJ called Sophie Gray? It was like a Top 40 remix I didn’t like it at all.
    • I then waited in place for like 40 minutes until he came on… and it was beautiful.
    • He sounds the same live which is always amazing. Stage presence was also pretty good and he was very beautiful.
    • WHAT WAS NOT BEAUTIFUL WAS THE DAMN CROWD. Never in my life have I ever seen such a terrible crowd. None of these people wanted personal space it was BAD. Lots of cuties there though if u wanted a new man / woman
      • The girl in front of me FILMED THE ENTIRE CONCERT. I MEAN THE WHOLE CONCERT. Didn’t even take a break AND SINCE I HAD A FRONT ROW VIEW OF THE SCREEN SHE DIDN’T EVEN RECORD IT WELL. LIKE SHE WOULD DROP HER ARM EIGHTY TIMES AND THE VIDEO WOULD BE LOPSIDED. WHAT WAS THE POINT!
        • ALSO, I WAS RIGHT AT HER CAMERA LEVEL AND SINCE WE WERE BASICALLY TOUCHING EACH OTHER (MY HAND GOT TANGLED IN HER HAIR EVERY MINUTE UNTIL I STEPPED BACK LIKE 10 TIMES) IM 100% SURE MY SINGING IS FEATURED IN EVERY SINGLE ONE OF THOSE CLIPS.
        • ALSO SHE KEPT PUSHING BACK INTO ME!!! USE UR WORDS GIRL
        • She also would not let go of her friend, which is understandable in a tight crowd. However, her arm was jutting out to take more space GIRL LET GO
        • Everyone behind me was super short, and so was everyone in front of me. This means that I got a good view, but I also saw a lot of cameras. Kinda crazy
    • My personal goals for this concert were to not BUY merch (failed), and not record more than two videos (failed), but I know next concert I won’t buy merch so it’s okay!
    • Songs I wanted to hear:
      • Make Me a Better Man (✅)
      • Who’s the Fool (✅)
      • Doll (✅)
      • Lying (✅)
      • Walk to Class (✅)
      • Concrete (✅)
      • Cheer Me On (✅)
      • Earrings (✅)
      • Roommates (✅)
      • On My Shoulder (❌)
      • Thailand (❌)
      • RODRICK RULES (❌)
      • Rockstar Boyfriend (❌)
      • HOT IN NEW YORK!! (❌)
    • Overall LOVED MALCOLM TODD UR THE BEST, did not even remotely like the crowd except for the two people in the beginning. I have never really cared about concert etiquette until this concert, I do want to say this concert made me so aware about HOW bad people can be.
      • Also, please play more SWEET BOY it’s so lyrically beautiful and I love all of the songs on there
    Friend of girl’s point and shoot (she actually filmed like parts of it and held it up correctly the entire time so no issues

  • Peking into the Past: What I learned on a walk through Chinatown

    Every year, on a weekend in May, a plethora of random people walking down your local sidewalk can be seen in hundreds of cities across the world. Jane’s Walks (named after Jane Jacobs) are free walks around neighborhoods, where neighborhood historians (or just randos) highlight neighborhood culture, societal issues, and opportunities for civic action.

    This year, I finally attended my first Jane’s Walk – An East Chinatown Tour: Exploring Secret Tales of Migration, Culture, and Community Resilience. Led by a lovely girl named Kaitlyn and a team from the Toronto Chinatown Land Trust, and School of Cities (UofT), it was a really insightful introduction to a place few Chinese – Canadians acknowledge – East Chinatown.

    An introduction to Broadview & Gerrard

    A sunny day in East Chinatown in April 2025

    Note: All of this information comes from my interpretation of the Jane’s Walk and previous personal knowledge, and as a result references are not provided. A list of links to learn more about East Chinatown is located in the index.

    Tucked away east of Downtown Toronto lies Chinatown’s much smaller, more traditional Chinatown, the aptly named East Chinatown. Centered around the intersection of Broadview & Gerrard, the community is a T-shaped microcosm of Chinese grocers, restaurants, hair salons, and many elderly Chinese people who call this area home.

    Broadview Avenue, East Chinatown, Toronto

    The community first began to sprout in the early 1970’s, with the displacement of Toronto’s original Chinatown (now Toronto City Hall) leading to the creation of two distinct Chinatowns, West Chinatown (what we typically associate with Chinatown today), and East Chinatown.

    The community’s heyday took place in the 70’s and 80’s, and eventually slowed down when a new wave of Chinese immigrants moved to the more affluent suburbs of Scarborough, Markham, and Richmond Hill. By the end of the 90’s, the majority of Chinese, including a large surge of wealthy Hongkongers escaping the Handover of Hong Kong to China, had established a stable community in the suburbs, reducing the number of people who needed to come down to Chinatown for Chinese services.

    Community life in East Chinatown, Toronto

    Today, East Chinatown has shrunk significantly, although a strong base of Chinese-owned businesses continue to thrive along Gerrard. The community remains as a bastion of cultural spirit in East Toronto – continuing to build on the neighborhood’s Chinese spirit to reflect on the community’s multicultural population.

    Stories of East Chinatown

    When I first joined the walk, I was expecting to be paraded around East Chinatown and shown the sights of a neighborhood gone derelict. What was highlighted instead, were a collection of stories, jokes, and gossip about the community’s spirit, all in the lens of Kaitlyn’s grandma, who owned Dunhuang Books 敦煌書店 (one of Toronto’s first Chinese bookstores).

    Learning about her family’s story of resilience, with East Chinatown’s characters in tow was a delightful and enterprising story of the power of a community. Like a gaggle of sheep, all 200 of us (unofficial numbers provided by one of the Jane’s Walk staff) wandered around East Chinatown and learned about various stories including

    • The controversy around the Sun Yat-sen statue in Riverdale Park and why the Chinese community built another one in West Chinatown (TLDR: it’s ugly and he’s short?)
    • Broadview Library and how it became the first library in Toronto to provide Chinese language literature
    • Toronto’s controversial Paifang 牌坊, welcoming visitors to a internationally recognized parking lot
    • The Seven Wonders of the World Scavenger Hunt (have you found all seven murals scattered throughout the neighborhood?)
    • The story of Dunhuang Books, and how it became a literature hub for Chinese living abroad (who mostly agreed with the Communist viewpoint)
    • East Chinatown and how it managed not to look like a cartoonish Chinatown (which I love by the way, San Francisco Chinatown!)
    • Charlie’s Meat and the rumors that he shared more meat than socially acceptable…

    Weaved along all of these stories, I really began to sense a soul embedded into East Chinatown. My knowledge on this area, while shallow, was embedded in its role it played in the past, and not the continuing role it plays into the future of this area of Toronto.

    A faded out Lotto sign marks the last remnants of Dunhuang Books in East Chinatown, Toronto.

    Today, East Chinatown continues to play a role in the community of East Toronto, with Chinese grocers serving multicultural communities, and serving as the home to multiple small Asian-Canadian businesses that have revitalized the area’s youthful spirit (Oji Seichi, Issho Bakery). Kaitlyn provided a local perspective on the energy that multiple cultures shaped in East Chinatown – a perspective difficult to grasp from the cover of a webpage.

    Being Your Neighborhood Advocate

    What I ultimately found great about Jane’s Walks though, is how important it is to foster local knowledge to improve your own community. Our places are woven with stories of people past who have contributed in their own way to make each neighborhood what it is.

    As someone who lives in a neighborhood, you have the ability to work to shape the impact of your place. Local change is important because it impacts people directly where they live, work, shop and play. I appreciated this walk for what it did to East Chinatown – created a story of resilience, and cemented a role for itself in today’s Toronto. If you have the ability to see how your own story can impact your neighborhood, this is a gift that you can use to spur civic action and inspire change.

    Short Sun Yat-sen – a controversial statue amongst Toronto’s Chinese community.

    Perhaps it was ultimately shortsighted to mourn East Chinatown’s role in Toronto’s Chinese history, and instead choose to welcome it as a spirit of the community it continues to shape today. If you’ve never been to East Chinatown, I truly welcome you to explore it – check out Que Ling, or enjoy the sights of the Toronto Skyline at Riverdale Park.

    Learning more about East Chinatown