So, fun fact, I was actually introduced to the concept of the ren faire during VEDS… 2011? But I still haven’t been cuz I’m a chicken and won’t go by myself 😂
@calebfromtherealworld28 күн бұрын
Maybe I should clog the ren fair next year…so many ideas and so much time to actually make them now that I’m not on a deadline
@b67y8yАй бұрын
miss brian mcleod
@b67y8yАй бұрын
i was pleased to see them in halifax nova scotia
@marneyjones8061Ай бұрын
Sorry, did they play any songs from Electric Jewels? I just found the playlist disjointed. Just my opinion. I listen to April Wine almost everyday. Electric Jewels has a very strong grasp on my teenage heart!!
@philwatson6659Ай бұрын
I don't know if you know but he also did a couple of songs for a movie called "Streets Of Fire" as an act called Fire Inc. Nowhere Fast and Tonight Is What It Means To Be Young, Then there was Streisands version of "Left In The Dark" and Barry Manilow "Read 'Em And Weep". A singer called Nikki French covered Total Eclipse of the heart. There are a couple of Jim Steinman songs, covers of Making Love Out Of Nothing At All & Two Out Of Three Ain't Bad on Bonnie Tylers Free Spirit album
@amz-ical-77Ай бұрын
Your tour guide's name is Adriane-I know because it's me! I'm so glad you enjoyed the tour!! ☺
@poeslandingАй бұрын
I bought a sonic boom listened to it once and gave it away. It was crap. And I'm a biggest fan!
@PrettyboyAshtunАй бұрын
looking back at him during the “ fat era “ by today’s standards he wasn’t even fat
@calebfromtherealworldАй бұрын
Graham, congrats on another successful VEDS! (and for the record, I love the RuneScape videos (although I wouldn’t blame you for shelving those in the future lol))
@ope_is_meАй бұрын
Well done on VEDSing, Graham! I'm still catching up on videos too, which is kind of nice because it does feel like VEDS is still going. I'm specifically saving your Seattle series for my next day off, because I know they're gonna be a treat :)
@RUmlasАй бұрын
I found the seats in the nosebleeds lacking leg room. We watched the Penguins Kraken last season. A nice arena.
@RUmlasАй бұрын
You checking other ticket vendors? Game time, Vivid, anything except ticketmaster.. You can find some deals. You just got look. Canucks side there they shoot on the krakne twice is "skylight" side.
@RUmlasАй бұрын
We are going Jan 2 to cheer the Canucks on.
@GhostKingFaus20082 ай бұрын
funny, I went to the Titanic exhibit in New York last year and the Titanic has been something I loved since I was 5 years old
@calebfromtherealworld2 ай бұрын
This video has gotten me incredibly excited for hockey season. I need to go see what preds games I can snag tickets to
@ope_is_me2 ай бұрын
I've not seen the Rocker, but I watched School of Rock as a kid and boy did I not think how problematic that situation would be in reality 😅
@unpro042 ай бұрын
Not trying to spoil anybody's fun or anything, but honestly it's bizarre to me how many Titanic-exclusive museums there seem to be, and equally, how many people flock to them. There's at least three in the United States. In Belfast, they've re-modelled the whole of what used to be the Harland & Wolff shipyard on Queen's Island to be entirely Titanic themed, and I'd say about two thirds of Southampton's sea city museum is dedicated to the Titanic exhibition. Titanic was not a unique ship - Of course, there was the near identical Olympic which had debuted the previous summer. Moreover, several other competing lines were each trying to best each other, for example, the Lusitania and Mauretania from the Cunard line, which had been both the largest and fastest liners afloat in 1907, and they took the world by storm. Also, the different walks of life you could find aboard a liner of her type at the time were basically the same: The hard working labourers down in the boiler and engine rooms, the cabin stewards who provide top tier customer service, the poor immigrants seeking new hope in the new world, the middle class who live comfortably, the ultra wealthy who live luxuriously, and the Captain and his officers running the ship. Furthermore, it was a time of almost boundless confidence in which ship builders and owners fully believed that a modern ocean liner was practically impervious to the dangers that had destroyed the wooden hulled sailing ships of the past. No, Titanic wasn't the only ship believed to be unsinkable. Similarly, Titanic wasn't the only ship to only have lifeboats for about 1/3 of her total capacity. In fact, this was the norm throughout the industry. Ocean liners had been getting bigger, faster, flashier, stronger and safer at a steady pace throughout the last century, but from the 1890's onwards, there was an exponential boom of shipbuilding technologies getting better and better. In 1897, the world was star struck by the German liner SS Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse, a ship of 14,000 tons. 10 years later, Lusitania and Mauretania are each 31,000 tons. 5 years after that, Olympic and Titanic are each 46,000 tons. So what makes the Titanic herself, and the disaster, stick so firmly in public consciousness today? The simple answer is that the whole parable of the ship is a perfect cautionary tale of hubris, when people kid themselves that they're too big to fail, leaving them woefully ill-equipped to deal with the situation if and when it does go wrong. The boundless optimism of the entire age was symbolically torn in half and sent to the bottom of the ocean as a result of bad luck and human error, and 1,496 human lives were taken with her as a direct result of those in charge saying it could never happen. It's also such a perfect example of Murphy's law that it should happen to one of the latest and greatest examples of human ingenuity, on the literal first trip away from home. Aboard the ship were two company representatives - Thomas Andrews, chief architect at Harland & Wolff, who valiantly decided to die with his ship like a gentleman. And then there was Bruce Ismay, chairman of Titanic's owners, White Star Line, who was vilified by the press as a coward for getting into a lifeboat, although he acted heroically during the sinking. Titanic took two and a half hours to sink, during most of that time the ship was upright and stable in the water, which allowed for exactly 2,208 dramatic human stories to play out. Stories of heroism, loss, sacrifice, and cowardice. The band played on, the engineers stayed below, the Captain went down with his ship, while his boss escaped with his reputation in tatters. There is also a bunch to be said about classism on the Titanic. While there was no deliberate class prejudice in the evacuation (despite what the movies say), it was the wealthy passengers who were mostly by chance the first to be rescued, while the steerage passengers were left to fend for themselves. When you look at a disaster like the 1914 sinking of the Empress of Ireland, it's almost entirely forgotten by the world at large, despite having a death toll comparable to that of Titanic's, and all the same different classes of people were aboard. The Empress was an absolutely beloved ship on both sides of the Atlantic, and she was just as opulent and class segregated as the Titanic. She was crashed into by a coal carrying ice breaker in the fog, and she rolled onto her side and disappeared within 15 minutes, taking 1,012 people with her. And yet, if you ask the people of the port cities that once loved the Empress, namely Quebec and Liverpool, you'll be returned a blank stare. So why is she forgotten? Precisely because the story of the disaster lacks everything that made Titanic's sinking so poignant - it happened too fast for any evacuation to happen, the ship wasn't exactly the sparkling example of technology on her maiden voyage, and no class of passenger or crew was particularly better off than any other. People died when the Empress of Ireland sank, whereas a society's hopes and dreams died when the Titanic sank. And with that, I've sort of answered my own question. But what troubles me still is how romanticised the disaster has become - and no, I think Rose DeWitt Bukater is a perfectly fine narrative vessel for the purpose of that movie. It's just that, the sinking of the Titanic was a through and through tragedy. It honestly is beyond me how anyone can think they can make a family attraction for all the kids out of a sunken ocean liner that killed over a thousand people, but that's the human race for you. We've invented a romance out of the circumstances of when the ship sank. There have been hundreds of world's largest ships on their maiden voyages, there have been hundreds of shipping disasters, but never at the same time. TL;DR - Titanic is a very juicy story with lots of drama, but I think people today are a little too fond of it.
@glock223572 ай бұрын
Despite how much you enjoy hearing your own voice, no one GsAF if you think people are "a little too fond of it" or not. Your opinion on the matter is as valuable as your opinion on any matter.........it's not.
@unpro042 ай бұрын
@@glock22357 Have a bad day did we? Christ.
@glock223572 ай бұрын
@@unpro04 Just your inane, sophomoric bloviations. That's been the only irritant today.
@ToastyJP2 ай бұрын
Great video. I had no idea that there was a titanic museum in Seattle, I may need to go check it out soon. Looking forward to your upcoming canucks video.
@Drummerjag2 ай бұрын
This is so unbelievable cool. I was in Seattle many years ago, but did not know about this, otherwise I would have tried to convince my family to go visit it.
@GrahamStrang2 ай бұрын
If you ever get a chance to get out to Seattle please let me know!!! If you don't mind an obnoxious tour guide 😂😂
@calebfromtherealworld2 ай бұрын
Seattle is one of my dream destinations and ever since I learned about the underground (from the movie Malignent) I've been fascinated
@swampfizz2 ай бұрын
LEGENDARY
@calebfromtherealworld2 ай бұрын
Checking in with the dogs has been a highlight of this years VEDS
@paulduffy87742 ай бұрын
that guy makes a better door than a window
@calebfromtherealworld2 ай бұрын
To be fair, I don’t think it was hard to annoy David Crosby
@elbosausage2 ай бұрын
I had an unfortunate encounter with Robert Plant. Trust me you missed nothing.
@pcbstl2 ай бұрын
Appreciate the effort.. horrible quality video and sound. Way too much movement.
@ll78682 ай бұрын
The boarded up building used to be a Cineplex Odeon multiplex theatre, 6 screens, not very big though. Across the street next to the Commodore bowling alley was the Famous Players theatre called The Granville 7 aka The Empire. Saw Pretty Woman, Bloodsport, Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure, Pee-Wee's Big Adventure and the Back To The Future trilogy among many other movies on the Granville Mall.
@ll78682 ай бұрын
Yeah, the one next door is the same complex.
@ll78682 ай бұрын
That walkway at the end of the alley between the Orpheum's front and back sections used to have a ladder next to it that got you to the rooftops of that entire block, you could get into the Commodore's back stairwell through a roof hatch, they never had security at the top, just by the back door so it was easy seeing free shows. Only problem was that the ladder was a few stories high and had no guard cage in case you slipped, if you had a fear of heights you were buying tickets.
@ll78682 ай бұрын
Seen quite a few shows at The Commodore, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Overkill, and Suicidal Tendencies with Exodus were a few of the earlier ones back around 1989-1990 although the very first show I saw there was the year I first moved to BC, Nazareth in 1983 with my dad. We were supposed to see Black Sabbath with Quiet Riot a couple weeks later at Pacific Colosseum but Sabbath had to cancel due to Geezer's bronchitis, I never got to see Sabbath live, my one huge regret in life, I was raised on Sabbath throughout the 1970s.
@michaelabba51502 ай бұрын
Sonic Boom is a terrible record
@robgray41882 ай бұрын
Great video
@richardheadly74662 ай бұрын
When you said most KISS fans agreed that Sonic Boom is a good album I have to disagree. I do, however, understand when you said many of us have a connection to what our favorite bands release when we're around that age (12-13). I was very young in the late 70's & my mom bought me a copy of the "I was made for loving you/Hard Times" 45 rpm single. It was a huge hit at the time. I was obviously familiar with KISS but it wasn't until I was 12-13 like you that I really began getting into hard rock/metal & KISS was probably my favorite. I will always have a connection to Asylum for the same reason you have with Sonic Boom. That said, I didn't think too highly of Sonic Boom. When I heard "When Lightning Strikes" I was a little embarrassed. I felt they were blatantly casting Tommy as a fake Ace. It was Ace who electrocuted himself when he touched the railing in Hollywood, Florida. You may be familiar with the story already. Paul & Gene now, in addition to dressing him like Ace & telling him to play in Ace's style, were now having him do a song themed on electricity? I'm not a KISS purist nor am I an Ace Frehley loyalist but that seemed really weak. I don't think Sonic Boom or Monster are bad albums, I have them both, I just never reach for them. I would've preferred Tommy & Eric in their own make up, something that suited them.
@ope_is_me2 ай бұрын
Wild to me that they don’t have a Coco ride yet, but I acknowledge these things take time.
@AlanDraven2 ай бұрын
Good job again on this episode of your KISS series 😊 I've watched all 20+ of them and Iook forward to your next one 🤘
@GrahamStrang2 ай бұрын
Oh awesome! I genuinely wasn't sure if anyone was following along 😂 I'll make sure not to wait a year for another one
@BobSaxon-ou7ww2 ай бұрын
It was a a great concert I was there and it was my birthday treat to me I even dragged one of my oldest childhood buddies with me .
@tessawidenhofer2 ай бұрын
Gosh, I miss the parks- it’s been seven years 😩
@yeahwhatevermike2 ай бұрын
Three minute sound check at beginning of show🤣 glad I seen them in the 80s when they were on top of their game
@calebfromtherealworld2 ай бұрын
Ah man, The Rocker brings up such good memories of watching it with my best friend in between playing Guitar Hero World Tour and Halo Reach
@TokyoNightGirlLofi2 ай бұрын
!!👍💜💜💜💜💜
@ninjyangproductions76962 ай бұрын
For new Musicians who are looking to sell on Discogs, does Discogs provide Vinyl/CD's to sellers or do you have to get Vinyl/CD's yourself?
@bigchefdog2 ай бұрын
So your house is also unceded territories of the quantlen and katzie people? Lmao
@GrahamStrang2 ай бұрын
Literally yes
@bigchefdog2 ай бұрын
@@GrahamStrang i’m native and I couldn’t even imagine this level of glazing lmao
@ll78682 ай бұрын
The brick roads are there on the steeper streets because electric trams used to run up and down, the bricks covered the tracks when the trams were decommissioned, those were newer than the original bricks and stayed when they converted to concrete. Also, I used to live 50 meters that corner, I think, pretty sure that was the alley behind Royal Ave. and 4th Street, my building from 1999-2010 across from City Hall is long gone, there's a nice condo complex there now.
@ll78682 ай бұрын
Yellow Window: In 1934 a riot occurred, hostages were taken, it was pretty violent, but 12 men who were leading it were also captured by guards. They got the paddlin' heard 'round the nation in that office. Seriously, that's how they were dealt with, a spanking with a paddle just like when I got sent to the Principal's office in elementary school. The riot started because the prisoners demanded to be paid for their work, after the riot prisoners were paid 5 cents a day, soon every prison in Canada had salaries for inmates who took on prison jobs. The inmates were supported by their friends & families and seen as heroes, the yellow window is a way of showing that the inmates families remembered them, kinda like the yellow ribbon tied to trees in people's yards signified families who had soldiers overseas in WW 1 & 2.
@ll78682 ай бұрын
My dad said the prisoners called that walk up to the entrance the "Stairway To Hell", a twist on the classic Zeppelin tune.
@ll78682 ай бұрын
My dad spent a couple months in BC Pen before being transferred to Oakalla. Back in the late 1980s when I was about 17 and the place had been closed for a few years a couple friends and I went urban exploring and were going to stay there overnight but someone called the police around 2 am due to our flashlights so we got out before they caught us, well they did catch us, but we'd already left the property. Oakalla was impossible to get into when it shut down but I got to spend some time there myself before it closed so wasn't too eager to go back for a visit.
@ll78682 ай бұрын
The Manitoba Pen mentioned 1:30 in is Stoney Mountain. My dad spent some time there as well. He wasn't a bad guy, he grew weed, lots and lots and lots of weed, he was an advocate of legalization. He lost a couple battles but the war against pot was won due to people like him. Smoking a bowl for all the folks who sacrificed for our freedom to get high. PPP.