Ongoing History: The Foo Fighters album that Dave Grohl hates

Many artists won’t go back and listen to their previous albums because all they hear are the mistakes and the things they should have done to make it better. But what’s done is done and it’s just best to move on. This happens to Dave Grohl every once in a while. He has a very hard time listening to the fourth album, One By One, from 2002.

Nothing was working during those sessions after three-and-a-half months of work and spending more than a million dollars in studio fees. Production was halted, and Dave went off to do some work outside the band, including a stint with Queens of the Stone Age. Then there was Taylor Hawkins’ near-fatal overdose, which messed things up even further.

The album did eventually come out and sold a respectable four million copies, but Dave feels it doesn’t sound like the band and didn’t feel right. Today, he thinks there are only four good songs on the record and seven bad ones.

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

Ongoing History Daily: The History of the word "punk," part 2

Last time, we traced the meaning of the word punk from the late 1500s to the 1950s. For all those centuries, the word had nothing to do with music. So how did that word come to describe a certain type of rock?

The first time anyone saw the word in print in a musical context was 1969, when the critic Lester Bangs used the word to describe a band called the MC5 in a review in Rolling Stone. In 1971, the writer Dave Marsh used the term “punk rock” in Creem magazine in May 1971. In June ’71, we’re back to Lester Bangs using the word in a long essay called “Psychotic Reactions and Carburetor Dung” while referring to bands with loud, fuzzy guitars. From there, it graduated to the New Yorker, where they used it in an article about the New York Dolls.

And finally, there was a mid-70s fanzine in New York that covered the weird underground stuff in the city. That magazine was called Punk, (a name chosen by writer Leggs McNeil). For many people, any band that appeared in Punk (like the Ramones, for example) was a “punk band.”  From there—well, here we are.

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

Man charged with 1st-degree murder after fatal tent fire in Ontario

A 33-year-old man wanted in connection with a fatal tent fire in Greater Sudbury has been arrested and charged with first-degree murder, police say.

The arrest comes nearly a week after emergency crews responded to two tents on fire at Energy Court at about 3:40 a.m. on June 11.

After extinguishing the flames, firefighters located a deceased individual inside one of the tents.

Police initially treated the fires as suspicious before later confirming the case was being investigated as a homicide.

Detectives identified a suspect and issued a warrant for his arrest.

Following a post-mortem examination, the victim was identified as a 41-year-old Greater Sudbury man. His name has not been released out of respect for his family.

Investigators determined several individuals were seen fleeing the two tents immediately after the fire began at about 3:20 a.m.

Brandon Gramling-McEwan was arrested Tuesday and is charged with first-degree murder, possession of a weapon for a dangerous purpose, two counts of arson with disregard for human life, two counts of arson causing property damage and possession of incendiary material.

Police said Gramling-McEwan was held in custody overnight and is scheduled to appear in bail court on Wednesday.

The investigation remains ongoing.

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

U.S. releases text of Iran deal by dictating it to journalists

U.S. President Donald Trump on Wednesday, during a bilateral meeting with India Prime Minister Narendra Modi at the G7, was asked how confident he was a peace deal with Iran would be signed by Friday. “I think it will be done, they want to sign. They want to get back to a normal life,” Trump said. The president added, “this is a memorandum of understanding, it’s a very strong one… this is a long, pretty detailed memorandum that goes into a regular contract. I would think they would do it, if they don’t then that’s okay, we’ll have to start the process again.”

Senior U.S. officials dictated the memorandum of understanding with Iran to journalists Wednesday after days of secrecy, and Iran suggested that its deal with the United States could be signed by Presidents Donald Trump and Masoud Pezeshkian.

Such an signing ceremony would represent a major step for the two countries, which saw diplomatic relations break off in 1980 over the U.S. Embassy hostage crisis in Tehran.

The U.S. officials spoke on condition of anonymity to read the the draft, which Iran has not released, ahead of formal signing ceremony set for Friday.

According to the officials, the draft agreement includes a new “minimum” standard for downblending of highly enriched Iranian uranium and has provisions to ensure the “territorial integrity” of Lebanon after Israel’s latest attacks against Hezbollah in Lebanese territory.

In return, the U.S. will move to waive, but not eliminate, some wide-ranging sanctions against Iran once the deal is signed.

The U.S. draft of the agreement also secures toll-free passage of the Strait of Hormuz for only 60 days, and it does not preclude fees in future, the officials said.

Meanwhile in Iran, Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmail Baghaei was quoted by Iranian state television talking about the potential for the two presidents to sign the pact.

Pezeshkian became president on a promise of seeking better relations with the West. However, he’s been sidelined for months after Iran’s mass killing of protesters in January and in the war as hard-liners have taken over the levers of the country’s theocracy.

Trump cast some uncertainty on whether the signing would happen as planned. Asked how confident he was that the ceremony would take place, Trump remarked on the unpredictability of deals.

“You never know with deals, do you? But you’re going to find out pretty soon,” he said.

The U.S. and Israel went to war on Feb. 28 in part to prevent Iran from ever getting a nuclear weapon, although Trump’s goals in the conflict have repeatedly shifted. The interim deal stops the war before that aim is secured. Instead, it opens a two-month period for nuclear negotiations and appears to offer Iran several benefits up front while extracting little in return.

The U.S. agreement to immediately allow Iran to sell its oil freely and the offer to eventually lift all sanctions, for instance, represent major concessions that go beyond the terms of Iran’s 2015 nuclear deal with world powers. Trump withdrew America from that pact in his first term, declaring it the “worst deal ever.”

The accord likely will draw intense opposition in Washington, and it appears to be a major setback for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who has come under criticism at home from the media, his opponents and even some allies as details emerge.

Much of the agreement would restore the status quo before the war, including ending hostilities, restarting negotiations between the U.S. and Iran over Tehran’s nuclear program, and reopening the strait, which is a crucial passage for the world’s oil and natural gas and whose closure created a historic energy crisis.

The deal includes an end to the fighting in Lebanon between Israel and the Iranian-backed militia Hezbollah. That is one of the most delicate parts of the agreement because Israel has maintained it will continue to defend itself and to occupy vast swaths of Lebanon. Iran has said Israel must withdraw under the deal, although the leaked versions make no mention of withdrawal.

A person who was briefed on the memorandum of understanding after it was signed and another who viewed a copy beforehand said it largely matched the text of what was published by the Saudi-owned broadcaster Al Arabiya, which reported details of the deal Tuesday. The two people spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the discussions.

Another two officials in the Mideast, who spoke on condition of anonymity for the same reason, also said the versions published by Al Arabiya and Bloomberg broadly matched the final agreement.

The White House and other American officials have not published the terms and did not immediately respond to questions.

However, White House communications director Steven Cheung wrote online Wednesday after CNN published a leaked version of the deal that it “does not reflect the language of the actual” agreement, without elaborating.

Iran also has not published an official version of the deal. The country’s semiofficial Tasnim news agency, close to its paramilitary Revolutionary Guard, claimed Wednesday that Bloomberg’s version had missing portions, without offering a full accounting.

Trump has cited various goals for the war, including at times vowing it would end Iran’s nuclear and missile programs and its support for Hezbollah and other proxy groups in the region. He also suggested it could lead to toppling the Iranian government.

The interim deal falls short of all of these goals, but Trump hailed it Wednesday.

“Nobody knows what it is, but it’s very strong,” Trump said in France, where he was attending a Group of Seven summit.

But he also opened the door to abandoning it: “It’s a memorandum of understanding, and if I don’t like it, we’ll go back to shooting at them, dropping bombs.”

Some concessions to Iran — including the full lifting of sanctions and the release of frozen assets — would happen gradually and be linked to progress in the nuclear talks, according to officials from Pakistan, a key mediator. They outlined some of the deal’s major points on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue.

But in the meantime, the U.S. will issue waivers to sanctions that allow Iran to sell oil freely.

The Islamic Republic’s oil export revenues in 2024 were more than $46 billion. Its main buyer of oil, China, is believed to have bought at below-market prices because of its willingness to ignore the sanctions.

Granting oil waivers at the start of the 60-day talks strips the U.S. of a major point of leverage. Only at the conclusion of the overall deal in 2015 were sanctions on Iran’s oil lifted.

The interim deal also opens the door to ending all sanctions Iran faces from the U.S. and at the U.N. — including those over Tehran’s weapons programs and human rights abuses — though it says the schedule for that will be worked out later. Still, that far surpasses the 2015 deal, which only lifted some sanctions in exchange for Iran drastically reducing its enrichment and stockpile of uranium.

The accord would also provide Iran with at least $300 billion to rebuild after an intense U.S. and Israeli bombing campaign — an extraordinary figure and another major benefit for Iran. The money also appears dependent on the progress of further negotiations.

U.S. Vice President JD Vance has said Gulf Arab nations would invest that amount. But Gulf countries would likely be reluctant to help Iran after Iranian attacks in the war destroyed oil facilities and other sites in their territory.

Trump reiterated Wednesday that the U.S. would not contribute and said it was up to other countries if they wanted to invest.

The deal provides a major win for the global economy — the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow mouth of the Persian Gulf through which a fifth of all oil and natural gas traded once passed before the war began. Since then, Iranian attacks on shipping and the threat to vessels effectively shut the strait.

The strait’s closure drove up energy prices around the world and made many basics, including food, more expensive. Iran let out some vessels that paid tolls, something never done before in the strait, which has long been considered an international waterway.

The U.S. later provided military support to get other tankers out, but traffic was nowhere near levels before the war.

The deal also says the U.S. will lift a blockade imposed on Iranian ports and that the strait will return to its prewar traffic levels in 30 days, while acknowledging Iranian mines may need to be destroyed.

The interim deal sets a 60-day window, which can be extended, to negotiate over limiting Iran’s nuclear program, which has been discussed at multiple rounds of talks during Trump’s second administration without success. The U.S. promises not to make threats of military action under the current deal after two rounds of talks were interrupted by attacks.

Iran maintains its nuclear program is peaceful, though it has enough highly enriched uranium to build multiple atomic bombs, should it choose to do so, according to the International Atomic Energy Agency.

In the interim deal, Iran reiterates that it will never build a nuclear weapon — a promise it also made in the 2015 nuclear accord.

Miller and Price reported from Washington, and Magdy from Cairo. Associated Press writers Aamer Madhani in Evian-les-Bains, France, Darlene Superville in Geneva and Munir Ahmed in Islamabad contributed to this story.

© 2026 The Canadian Press

RCMP officer charged with uttering threats online targeted to Donald Trump

An RCMP officer based in Quebec has been charged with uttering threats online toward U.S. President Donald Trump.

According to the RCMP, Evenson Dumerlus, 34, of St-Jean-sur-Richelieu, allegedly posted a video on his Snapchat account in which he “made threatening comments” toward U.S. President Donald Trump.

The video was allegedly posted while Dumerlus was deployed to oversee security operations at the G7 summit last year in Alberta.

The investigation was taken over by the Special Investigations Unit after an  RCMP officer reported the video. Dumerlus was removed from his duties on the same day as the incident.

“The RCMP takes seriously any threats that can affect one’s sense of security,” the federal police force said in a news release issued Wednesday.

“Violent statements will not be tolerated. Perpetrators may face criminal charges involving significant sentences. Such incidents must be reported if we are to combat this type of crime.”

Dumerlus is expected to appear on July 30, 2026, at the St-Jean-sur-Richelieu courthouse.

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

Ontario creates new rules for real estate brokerages in light of iPro Realty scandal

Ontario real estate brokerages will soon be required to submit annual financial filings to the province’s industry regulator in a move it says will “strengthen financial oversight.”

Starting Oct. 1, all brokerages will be required to “attest to and submit” information about financial statements, trust and access, unclaimed trust monies and compliance attestations, the Real Estate Council of Ontario (RECO) said.

RECO said Tuesday the new regulations apply a “proactive oversight model” and will use the data to “inform its risk framework and focus regulatory resources where risks to consumers are greatest.”

“Ontarians buying or selling a home should have complete confidence that deposits are protected,” Stephen Crawford, minister of public and business service delivery and procurement, said in a news release. “This initiative delivers on our government’s commitment to strengthen consumer protection, improve oversight and address risks before they escalate.”

The move comes in the wake of a scandal involving iPro Realty. Its co-founders were accused of misusing millions from trust accounts to cover operating expenses and payments to investors.

RECO said the shortfalls amounted to about $10.5 million, calling it a “serious breach” of the agency’s responsibilities under the law and to its customers and agents. The agency was forced to close in August 2025, leaving 2,400 agents to seek work elsewhere.

In October 2025, RECO announced that agents could expect 50 per cent of their unpaid commissions, a number that was upped to 100 per cent in January.

“RECO is enabling the full payment of all eligible commission protection claims. Funds from RECO’s insurance program stability fund are being placed in a protected trust to address the shortfall that RECO believes resulted from the misappropriation of trust funds by iPro’s principals, while concerted recovery efforts continue,” Jean Lépine, administrator and acting CEO for RECO, said in a news release at the time.

RECO said it will work with brokerages to protect consumers from any kind of financial mismanagement.

These changes will help RECO spot red flags earlier, intervene rapidly, and take timely and effective regulatory action where consumer funds and commissions are at risk,” Lépine said.

RECO added it plans to introduce monthly trust reconciliation reporting requirements in 2027, which will further enhance its audit framework, marking “a definitive shift towards a more proactive, data-informed regulator.”

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

South Saskatchewan gun seizure prompts weapons trafficking charge: RCMP

A Saskatchewan man is facing several charges after RCMP seized five guns earlier in June, including one that was stolen and resold.

In a news release, RCMP said police initially searched a home in the RM of Estevan and seized four guns and ammunition on June 8.

Officers also spotted a handheld item they believed was an explosive, but “did not consist of explosive materials” while searching the home in south Saskatchewan, the release said.

Following the search, RCMP said officers arrested a 23-year-old man from Hitchcock, Sask.

After his arrest, RCMP said officers visited Frobisher, Sask., where they seized a prohibited gun, which they alleged was stolen and illegally sold.

The suspect was then charged with weapons trafficking and possession of property worth less than $5,000 that was obtained by crime, police said.

He is also facing four counts of possession of a firearm when knowing possession is unauthorized and four counts of unsafe storage of firearms.

The accused appeared in Estevan Provincial Court last Thursday and is set to appear again on Tuesday.

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

Canada's energy supply 'potential' gets G7 backing in push for global pivot

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney is leaving the G7 summit without a formal one-on-one meeting with U.S. President Donald Trump, but says the two held several discussions over the past 36 hours. A hot mic captured Carney reassuring Trump that Canada's agreement involving Chinese electric vehicles includes strict limits to prevent market flooding.

Canada and its “potential” to boost global energy supplies got a shoutout in the G7’s joint statement on geopolitical issues Wednesday, after a summit seized with finding solutions to the fallout from the Iran war.

The mention was included in a section on the Middle East, which touched on international efforts to reduce reliance on the vital Strait of Hormuz shipping lane. Iran’s closure of the strait, through which about one-fifth of the world’s oil flows, caused energy prices to spike around the globe.

“We commit to accelerate the diversification of energy supply routes in order to reduce global vulnerability to the Strait of Hormuz and to increase our energy stocks,” the G7 statement reads.

“We welcome the potential for Canada to deliver significant additional capacity to global markets in the coming years.”

Prime Minister Mark Carney has been looking to stimulate Canada’s economy by pitching the country as a reliable energy exporter, with efforts underway to fast-track new infrastructure and expand port capacity.

Carney brought that message to the G7 Summit in France this week, and told reporters Wednesday that Canada is ready to deliver what the world needs.

That includes diversifying energy infrastructure both in the Middle East and elsewhere, he said.

“Canada has the ability to do several things, and we’re on the path to do several things,” he said, such as increasing liquefied natural gas production and exports to Germany and other allies.

Statistics Canada said this month that Canada is exporting natural gas to countries other than the U.S. at record levels, with 57.6 million gigajoules shipped overseas in March — about 16 per cent of total exports.

Natural gas production rose 5.6 per cent year over year that same month, the report said, compared with an increase of just 0.2 per cent in crude oil production, the smallest increase in 10 months.

Carney added that an expansion of the existing Trans Mountain oil pipeline “will go ahead,” while discussions are progressing with Alberta on a new pipeline to the West Coast as part of a broader energy agreement between Ottawa and Edmonton.

Pipeline capacity is also being increased into the U.S. through projects like South Bow, which will revitalize parts of the previous Keystone XL pipeline.

“If you total those up, it’s a material amount of additional energy that Canada can provide,” Carney said, noting that those projects only account for what’s being built in Western Canada, with other infrastructure possibilities in the east as well.

“It’s quite substantial, and it’s important to our European partners, it’s important to our Asian partners, and it was raised with me in a number of bilaterals as well.”

A statement from the Prime Minister’s Office highlighting Carney’s work at the summit said France, Germany, Italy and South Korea “intend to partner with Canada to stockpile critical minerals, which will catalyse further energy partnerships.”

The summit came after U.S. President Donald Trump announced a deal with Iran that would lead to a 60-day ceasefire and reopen the Strait of Hormuz to global shipping, with further negotiations aimed at a permanent end to the war.

The G7 joint statement also mentioned the Iran deal and the Strait of Hormuz in a section on the war in Ukraine, with leaders committing to “increase the pressure on the Russian war economy.”

“In this context, we will strengthen our sanctions on the oil and gas sectors,” the statement says.

“We consider this the right moment to proceed with additional measures, as President Trump has delivered a deal that we support in reopening the Strait of Hormuz.”

The U.S. temporarily waived sanctions on Russian oil during the Iran conflict in a bid to ease energy prices, allowing global purchases that have funneled revenues into Moscow’s war machine.

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

Kangaroo 'doing well' after capture in Montreal's South Shore, zoo says

RELATED: Mystery marsupial spotted near Montreal found, the Quebec government confirmed.

A red kangaroo that was hopping around Montreal’s South Shore is on the mend and doing well, says the Quebec zoo where the animal is staying temporarily after being captured the night before.

Granby Zoo confirmed to Global News the red kangaroo was in its temporary care after the provincial government caught it Tuesday evening.

“Upon arrival, the animal was immediately taken in charge by our animal care and zoological medicine teams,” the zoo said in a news release. “We are pleased to confirm that he is doing well. This morning, he was alert and feeding normally.”

He is currently being housed in an environment “adapted to his needs,” the zoo said, and away from public view to support his recovery.

Quebec’s Department of Wildlife said shortly before 7 p.m. Tuesday, ministry teams had planned an operation to ensure the marsupial’s survival and eventually captured it. It had been reported on the loose on Friday, with videos surfacing on social media showing it hopping around a field in Boucherville, Que.

The kangaroo is believed to have previously been kept illegally in facilities that did not comply with Quebec regulations, the province said in an email.

“In relation to the animal’s captivity, the owner has been questioned,” a spokesperson for the department said. “An investigation is currently underway … Given that the case is under investigation, we are unfortunately unable to provide further details at this time.”

The Granby Zoo said in its release that keeping exotic animals in captivity in the province is regulated under Quebec legislation and subject to “strict requirements to ensure both animal welfare and public safety.”

The Service de police de l’agglomération de Longueuil, which oversees the South Shore, said the investigation into the kangaroo is under the government’s oversight and the police force does not have involvement.

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

British presenter Jeremy Clarkson reveals cancer diagnosis on his TV show

WATCH: Jeremy Clarkson warns that "sombre" episodes of 'Clarkson's Farm' are upcoming as show tackles his cancer diagnosis.

British TV presenter and media personality Jeremy Clarkson, best known for hosting the motoring shows Top Gear and The Grand Tour, has revealed he has been diagnosed with an aggressive form of prostate ​cancer.

Clarkson, 66, one of the U.K.’s most well-known and high-profile TV figures, shared the news during filming of his hit Amazon show Clarkson’s Farm, in episodes that aired on Wednesday.

“I’ve got cancer,” Clarkson told two of the show’s other main characters in a sombre scene shot last year.

“I ​had a medical, remember, back in May? I disappeared off the other week ​and I had a biopsy and it is cancer, and it’s aggressive.”

Clarkson revealed that the cancer was caught early and that he had since undergone a procedure to remove 10 per cent of his prostate.

“If I hadn’t have got myself checked out and ​they hadn’t caught the problem early, this could well have been my last harvest,” he said. “It’s only because they did catch it early, there’s every hope that I’ll be harvesting this farm for many, ​many years to come.”

In an Instagram video posted Tuesday, ahead of the episodes airing, Clarkson warned viewers they were in for a “difficult watch.”

“Ordinarily, we try to keep the show bucolic, charming and cheerful,” ‌he ⁠said. “But the final two episodes, which drop in the middle of the night tonight, are … they’re none of those things, really,” he told his followers.

Clarkson, a controversial figure, found global fame as one of three presenters of the BBC’s Top Gear, which he fronted for 13 years alongside James May and Richard Hammond, but lost his job after he punched a member of the production team in 2015. The trio then moved to Amazon, where they hosted The Grand Tour, which ran from 2016 to 2024.

He subsequently began ​making his ⁠successful documentary-style series Clarkson’s Farm, also on Amazon, which follows his often haphazard and comedic foray into operating Diddly Squat Farm just outside the idyllic English village of Chadlington, Oxfordshire.

The Diddly Squat Farm Shop near Chipping Norton belonging to TV star Jeremy Clarkson.

The Diddly Squat Farm Shop near Chipping Norton belonging to TV star Jeremy Clarkson.

James D. Morgan // Getty Images

His partner, Lisa, who runs the farm’s shop, and several recurring characters have gained popularity among the British public for their humorous squabbles, tendency to muddle through the challenges of farming and bureaucracy, and heartfelt connection to the farm’s animals.

The shop is highly popular and regularly attracts large crowds, who often line up outside. Clarkson also owns and operates a pub in the area called the Farmer’s Dog that serves food, drinks and ingredients exclusively grown or raised in Britain.

Customers queue outside The Diddly Squat Farm Shop near Chipping Norton belonging to TV star Jeremy Clarkson in Chipping Norton, Oxford, England on August 13, 2022.

Customers queue outside the Diddly Squat Farm Shop, near Chipping Norton, belonging to TV star Jeremy Clarkson in Chipping Norton, Oxford, England, on Aug. 13, 2022.

James D. Morgan // Getty Images

Addressing his diagnosis from a hospital bed during the final episode of Season 5, he said: “I don’t know what’s going to happen. But look, what I wanted to say was: ⁠if ​this is all successful, I’ll see you for Season 6, and ​if it isn’t, I won’t. Take care, everyone.”

— with files from Reuters

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

You May Also Like

Top Stories