Ongoing History Daily: More interesting facts about vinyl, part 2

Here’s a fact about playing vinyl records. Do they sound consistently good all the way through? In other words, does the music sound as good nearer to the outside of the record as it does as the tonearm moves closer to the centre label? No.

The outer grooves move faster under the stylus, meaning it has to wiggle less per rotational inch. That translates into less distortion. But as the tonearm approaches the centre of the record, the available space for grooves is less, creating what’s known as “inner groove distortion”—and there’s not much anyone can do about it, because this is an inherent limitation of vinyl.

It also explains why some acts put what they consider their best songs as tracks one, two or three on the side of an LP. They want them to have the best sonic quality.

© 2026 Corus Radio, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

Ongoing History Daily: More interesting facts about vinyl, part 1

The vinyl revival shows absolutely no sign of going away as LPs continue to outsell CDs and show double-digit growth year after year. Here are a couple of facts you may not know about vinyl.

First, it is a myth that coloured vinyl sounds inferior to plain black vinyl. In fact, black vinyl is actually coloured. Polyvinyl chloride, the material used to make records, is naturally transparent. To make it black, you need to add carbon. Today’s multi-coloured vinyl is made using dyes that don’t hurt anything and, in fact, are up to today’s best standards.

Yes, back in the day, coloured records could sound bad, but that’s when they were considered novelty items and didn’t receive the proper love when it came to mastering and pressing.

More next time.

© 2026 Corus Radio, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

NS Power says billing 'back to normal' after cyberattack, so it's bringing back late fees

Nova Scotia Power says it plans to resume charging late fees this October for the first time since a cyberattack disrupted billing last spring.

About 280,000 customers had their personal data, including financial information and social insurance numbers, breached in the April 2025 ransomware attack.

Chris Lanteigne, Nova Scotia Power’s customer care director, says the utility chose not to charge late fees on outstanding balances because of billing concerns with their smart meter connectivity, which he says the company felt “was the right thing to do.”

“We’ve worked really hard to ensure the billing experience returned to normal,” he said Wednesday.

“Meters were reconnected with the first bills being issued back in December, and over the course of the last four months, we’ve seen normal operations.”

He says late fees will not be charged on balances owing prior to Oct. 1.

Currently, about nine per cent of Nova Scotia Power customers are behind on payments, which is double the amount before the cyberattack.

Lanteigne says the utility is confident their meters are accurate now, but asks anyone who needs help with their bills to reach out.

“It is very important to acknowledge that if customers have been behind on their bills, there is support available,” he said.

“There are options to help them and we encourage them to call us because they can maintain an interest-free approach with that outstanding balance with up 24 months interest-free payment plans from Nova Scotia Power.”

However, many Nova Scotia Power users Global News spoke with expressed frustration when they heard late fees are being reintroduced.

“This is just another unaffordable cost for a lot of households that unfortunately put a burden that’s maybe not affordable on people,” said Hannah Zilke.

“So I think it’s unfair and there should be other ways to manage that cost.”

Fellow resident Nancy Smith said the utility was “greedy.”

“It’s just Nova Scotia Power being greedy, you know. And unfortunately, they’re the only game in town as far as power utilities,” she said.

“So what are you going to do?”

The utility announced Wednesday it is also setting up a community energy fund of half a million dollars to support organizations that help customers in need, through a matching program with other organizations.

Chris Benjamin, co-chair of the Affordable Energy Coalition, says it’s a good investment but with the province having the highest rate of energy poverty in the country, he was disappointed to see the late fees return.

“So it will impact people. And that is my first thought. It’s unfortunate that we even have such a thing as late fees or that we punish people for situations that they really have no control over,” he said.

“I lament and I regret the fact that they even charge penalties … that’s an example of a corporation providing an essential service and where they have to make a certain a guaranteed profit rate. So that’s the flaw in that system.”

He says he believes the only way to adequately address the problem of energy poverty would be through government legislation.

“Government action is really warranted here. Energy poverty is a persistent and crisis-level problem in this province, and government needs to act on that with investment and support for the people who really need it,” he said.

© 2026 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

Cat burglar? Suspect reportedly stole kitten before attempted bank robbery

Police responding to a bank robbery in Maryland earlier this week were allegedly met by a real-life “cat burglar” when the suspect was found to be carrying a stolen kitten.

The Prince George’s County Police Department told Global News in a statement that officers arrested a man suspected of stealing a cat and taking it to a bank branch in Beltsville, northeast of Washington, D.C., which he allegedly attempted to rob.

“The suspect did have a stolen cat, and the cat was returned,” the statement said, though it did not say where the feline had been stolen from or to whom it was returned.

Authorities said there were no injuries reported and did not provide the suspect’s identity, but said the incident was under investigation.

According to a Facebook post from the organization Beltsville Community Cats, a local cat rescue centre, the stolen animal is currently in its care.

It identified the feline as a “3.5-month-old tuxedo kitten” named Magnolia, saying “she had quite the adventure today,” and went on to claim that the cat had been stolen from an adoption habitat at Pet Supplies Plus in Beltsville.

In the post, the shelter alleged that the suspect, who it claims was a male, “walked across the parking lot to a nearby PNC Bank branch and tried to use her as an accessory in his attempted robbery.”

“He asked the bank manager to hold the kitten while he wrote a note, then handed the note to a teller demanding all the cash,” it alleged in the Facebook post.

Police did not formally corroborate the shelter’s claims.

“Thankfully, the robbery was unsuccessful,” the shelter’s statement claimed, “the suspect was arrested, and Magnolia was found safe and sound in the bank manager’s office, where the two had bonded over their shared ordeal,” it also alleged.

Magnolia is now back to doing what she does best: “stealing hearts,” the shelter wrote, adding that the kitten’s short stint as an accessory to a crime was over and that she is still up for adoption.

Local NBC affiliate 4 Washington reported Tuesday that employees at the Pet Supplies Plus claimed a suspect had visited the store daily for several weeks to look at Magnolia before managing to use a key to open her enclosure, snatch her and run off.

The outlet said it spoke with a woman named Stephanie Stullich of Beltsville Community Cats, who said she had received a call from a panicked pet store employee reporting that a kitten had been stolen.

The call prompted Stullich to make her way to the store, where she “immediately saw all of these police cars,” and thought, “‘Wow, that’s a heck of a response for a stolen cat,'” she told 4 Washington.

“But then I realized they all were going down to the bank,” she said.

“They came back out a few minutes later and said, ‘Yes, there is a cat inside the bank,” the outlet reported.

“Apparently he went into the bank with the cat in his arms, and he walked up to a bank employee and said, ‘Can you hold this?'”

© 2026 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

Nickelback announces new album, 'Everything Under the Sun'

Canadian rock band Nickleback has announced their 11th studio album, Everything Under the Sun, will be released on Oct. 30.

The band shared the news on Tuesday and released the album’s first single, Rattle the Cage, featuring guitarist John 5.

The upcoming new album marks the band’s first new music since their 2022 album, Get Rollin.

“This album has every side of the band on it,” frontman Chad Kroeger said in a press release.

“There are songs that hit as hard as anything we’ve ever done, songs that take chances, and songs that remind us why we’ve been doing this together for so long.”

Kroeger said that the first single “felt like the perfect way to kick the door open — it has the energy we’ve been feeding off every night on stage, and can’t wait for people to hear it.”

The album also marks Nickelback’s first release with Virgin Music Group.

A tracklist for the new album has not yet been released.

Everything Under the Sun comes after the band’s documentary Hate To Love: Nickelback, which premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival in 2023 and their Get Rollin’ World Tour.

Hate to Love: Nickelback explores the formation and success of the Hanna, Alta., band whose massive 2000s hits include How You Remind Me, Photograph, and Far Away.

The band’s popularity eventually made them targets of internet memes that helped solidify their prominence in the pop culture.

Kroeger previously said that “it turns out negativity sells.”

“So, we’re going to ride that sucker all the way,” he added.

In a statement, the Canadian Music Hall of Fame inductees said it had been “a long road to get this project across the finish line.”

“We hope everyone enjoys our story, fans, friends or otherwise,” the band added.

Hate to Love: Nickelback was directed by British documentarian Leigh Brooks, who was originally hired to capture behind-the-scenes moments and promotional interviews for the band’s 2017 album Feed the Machine.

—with files from The Canadian Press

© 2026 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

$75K of cocaine, crack cocaine seized at northern Manitoba airport: RCMP

A woman has been arrested after arriving at a northern Manitoba airport with tens of thousands of dollars’ worth of drugs, the RCMP said.

Bunibonibee Cree Nation First Nation safety officers told police about the incoming aircraft, according to a news release.

Officers boarded the plane on the runway at Oxford House Airport and removed two female passengers.

“Further investigation revealed a 23-year-old female from Bunibonibee Cree Nation was concealing cocaine and crack cocaine,” the RCMP said, adding the community value of the drugs is around $75,000.

Two counts of possession for the purpose of trafficking were laid against the 23-year-old, who will remain in police custody until she appears in court.

The second woman was released without charges.

© 2026 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

TTC prepares to install automatic train signalling, promises more frequent service

Toronto’s transit agency has signed an agreement to replace the signals used on Line 2, the Bloor-Danforth line, a move it says will allow trains to run more often and with fewer delays.

The new deal will see Hitachi Rail Canada install a communications-based train control (CBTC) system for the Toronto Transit Commission.

The system is used to automatically control speed and distance between trains, letting them operate closer together, meaning they can arrive at stations more frequently.

“We’re modernizing the TTC by investing in systems that increase capacity, improve reliability, enhance safety and support a growing city,” TTC CEO Mandeep Lali said in a news release.

“CBTC is the next evolution in signalling, enabling us to better manage trains in real time and deliver more frequent service to customers.”

The new system has been used on the Yonge-University line for the past three years, but isn’t expected to be fully operational on Bloor-Danforth for a decade.

The TTC said the project would begin in 2028 and was scheduled to wrap up in 2037.

© 2026 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

B.C. Lions chase a second straight win versus Elks

Roughly two weeks ago, Nathan Rourke and the B.C. Lions did something no other CFL team has been able to this season: Defeat the Edmonton Elks.

B.C. (1-3) earned a 36-24 home win over Edmonton (4-1) on July 4 ahead of its bye week. The Lions resume play Friday night facing the Elks at Commonwealth Stadium.

Rourke, naturally, figured in the win, passing for 320 yards and a TD. But the CFL’s outstanding player and top Canadian last season was also intercepted twice and didn’t have a rushing attempt.

Running back James Butler was the offensive catalyst, rushing for 135 yards and two TDs on just 15 carries.

Defensively, B.C. held CFL rushing leader Justin Rankin to just 19 yards on seven carries. Rankin added 10 catches for 100 yards but had no touchdowns in the contest.

Still, Rankin is on pace for 1,847 yards rushing and 1,069 yards receiving, which would make him the first player in CFL history to achieve that double. He’s also projected for 26 total touchdowns (Milt Stegall holds the current record of 23) and 2,916 scrimmage yards (current mark is 2,414 yards held by Mike Pringle).

Rankin has also rushed for 100 or more yards four times this season while Edmonton’s defence has forced 16 total turnovers.

Edmonton starter Cody Fajardo finished 34-of-51 passing for 395 yards and three TDs versus B.C. but was intercepted three times. The Elks are coming off a 40-17 home win over Ottawa last week as Rankin ran for 107 yards and two TDs and had three catches for 43 yards and a touchdown.

Fajardo completed 19-of-24 passes for 340 yards and two TDs while Javon Leake added 85 yards rushing on 10 carries as the Elks ran for 215 yards on 33 attempts overall. Edmonton intercepted Ottawa’s Jake Maier four times, including two by Kordell Jackson.

Rourke (1,403 passing yards), Toronto’s Chad Kelly (league-high 1,804) and Montreal’s Davis Alexander (1,779) are on pace for the sixth, seventh and eighth 6,000-yard seasons in the CFL. Anthony Calvillo, the Alouettes offensive co-ordinator, was the last player to reach the mark (2004) while David Archer and Doug Flutie are the only ones to achieve the milestone in the same season (1993).

Pick: Edmonton.

Montreal Alouettes vs Calgary Stampeders (Saturday afternoon)

At Calgary, Montreal (4-1) looks to sweep the home-and-home series following last week’s 37-30 victory at Molson Stadium. Canadian receiver Tyson Philpot had nine catches for 132 yards and a TD for the Als. Alexander completed 22-of-30 passes for 301 yards and a TD and hasn’t thrown an interception this season. Ditto for Vernon Adams Jr., who had 272 passing yards and three TDs last week for the Stampeders (2-3), who are 1-2 at home but the losses have been by a combined five points. The win was a 58-36 decision over Ottawa on July 2.

Pick: Calgary.

Toronto Argonauts vs Hamilton Tiger-Cats (Saturday night)

At Hamilton, Toronto (2-3) plays its final ‘home’ game on the road due to the World Cup after a 40-34 win in Regina on June 26 and last week’s 30-21 loss in Winnipeg. In addition to leading the CFL in passing, Kelly is also tied with Adams for most TDs (14) but has thrown a league-high eight interceptions. Toronto’s defence is ranked last overall in yards allowed per play (7.73), passing yards (375 per game) and 30-plus yard completions (14). Trouble is, the Ticats (2-3) are minus starter Bo Levi Mitchell (ankle) and managed just 250 net offensive yards in last week’s 38-7 road loss to Saskatchewan.

Pick: Toronto.

Winnipeg Blue Bombers vs Ottawa Redblacks (Sunday night)

At Ottawa, Dru Brown could face his former team after leading Winnipeg (3-2) past Toronto last week with incumbent Zach Collaros (neck) out. The Redblacks (0-5) sent Brown back to the Bombers on June 23 and last week he threw for 339 yards with a TD and interception in his ’26 debut. Brown spent two seasons in the Canadian capital after starting his CFL career in Manitoba in 2021. The Bombers are last in offensive points per game (22.0) but the Redblacks are eighth in offensive points allowed (34.2 per game). What’s more, they’re 0-3 at TD Place while the Bombers are 2-0 on the road.

Pick: Winnipeg.

Last week: 3-1.

Overall: 11-11.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 15, 2026.

© 2026 The Canadian Press

Alberta government creates bike lane complaint line ahead of fall legislation

Alberta’s government has launched a public complaint line for bike lanes.

Albertans can now fill out a form online sharing their concerns about bike lanes in their communities, such as whether they feel the lane is underused or has taken away parking spots.

The province says the feedback it gathers will inform future policy decisions.

https://x.com/DevinDVote/status/2077430356819808441

Transportation Minister Devin Dreeshen says he wants to hear from Albertans if bike lanes are creating traffic congestion, hurting businesses or prolonging emergency response times.

Dreeshen has said legislation is coming this fall but has provided few details on what it may include.

He says transportation networks need to put people first.

— More to come…

© 2026 The Canadian Press

Arrested as a Teen, Kurt Cobain Unknowingly Produced a Valuable Piece of Music History

As a teenager, Kurt Cobain had his fair share of run-ins with the police. But little did he know, a fingerprint card – taken by the Washington Department of Police after he was arrested for public intoxication at the age of 19 – would eventually become a highly-sought-after piece of music memorabilia with an impressive value.

© 2026 Corus Radio, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

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