The Ongoing History of New Music, episode 1083: The 50 biggest all-time alt-rock one-hit wonders (BONUS SHOW!)

If a newspaper makes a mistake or leaves something out in a story, they print a correction as soon as they can. If something erroneous is posted on a website, etiquette requires an update or correction to be added to the original post.

In science, if new data comes to light and a previously announced theory or conclusion has to change, that’s fantastic. That’s what science is. It’s a constant pursuit of the truth, and if the facts don’t support the theory, then the theory must be changed.

And when you’re making a list involving complicated data—especially on a project which few (if any) people have attempted before—it’s incumbent upon the researcher to go back and fix any errors and omissions.

This is known as an “erratum,” an error in printing or writing. Protocol requires that a list of corrected errors be appended to a book, a journal, or any published material. Again, we must go where the facts lead us.

This is such an occasion. This is a bonus episode on the 50 biggest all-time alt-rock one-hit wonders. Let’s just call it the “Oopsie Show.”

Songs heard on this show:

  • Ghandarvas, First Day of Spring
  • Shadowy Men on a Shadowy Planet, Having an Average Weekend
  • Elton Motello, Jet Boy Jet Girl
  • Flesh for Lulu, I Go Crazy
  • Pigbag, Papa’s Got a Brand New Pigbag
  • The Refreshment, Banditos
  • Edie Brickell and New Bohemians, What I Am
  • Dee-Lite, Groove is in the Heart
  • Dexy’s Midnight Runners, C’mon Eileen
  • Mazzy Star, Fade into You

Here’s Eric Wilhite’s playlist.

The Ongoing History of New Music can be heard on these stations:

 

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

Ongoing History Daily: On-stage accidents

Accidents happen at work, and the stage is no exception. Ask Karen O of The Yeah Yeah Yeahs. She climbed a speaker stack during a set in Sydney in 2003 and managed to concuss herself when it all came down. To her credit, she climbed back on stage and attempted to finish the show.

Muse’s Matt Bellamy also tried to soldier on in 2004 when he smacked himself in the face with his guitar at an Atlanta gig. He tried to keep singing, but his mouth wouldn’t stop filling with blood. It took a few quick stitches at the hospital to fix that issue.

Then there was the case where Metallica’s James Hetfield almost got BBQed  back in 1992. At a show in Montreal, he got too close to some on-stage magnesium-based pyro that burned at 1,000 degrees. He was sent to the hospital with second- and third-degree burns.

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

Ongoing History Daily: Right place, wrong time

Sometimes you miss a big break by that much. Nirvana’s original drummer, Chad Channing, began to lose interest in the band in 1990 despite having just gone on a rather successful UK tour. He left before Nirvana’s Nevermind story began with Dave Grohl as the band’s drummer.

New Yardbirds bassist Chris Dreja decided he preferred photography and left the group, just as they were changing their name to a little band known as Led Zeppelin. A bassist named Tim Staffell walked out of a band called Smile he shared with a roommate in 1970. Staffell is a nice guy, though: he pointed to his flatmate, a fellow by the name of Freddie Mercury, in the direction of his eventual Queen bandmates.

Guitarist Keith Levene only lasted five shows with The Clash in ’76 and left a month before they broke out on The Sex Pistols’ Anarchy Tour. Unluckily enough, he also walked out of Public Image Limited two months before their they broke out commercially. Bad timing, Keith.

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

Winnipeg Blue Bombers quarterback Taylor Elgersma hits field for rookie camp

Football season has arrived, with the Winnipeg Blue Bombers kicking off their three-day rookie camp on Wednesday at Princess Auto Stadium.

Close to 60 first-year players and quarterbacks were on the field looking to make a good first impression, including much-heralded Canadian quarterback Taylor Elgersma.

The Hec Creighton Award winner is one of six QBs in this year’s camp, with a stable that also includes returning starter Zach Collaros, Terry Wilson, Payton Thorne, Bryce Perkins, and Cole Anseewu of the Manitoba Bisons.

The 24-year-old Elgersma is eager to get started with the Blue and Gold after just signing with the club three weeks ago.

“Just super excited,” said Elgersma. “Obviously I’ve been to a couple of (CFL) training camps in the QB internship program, but being able to be here for the first time and look around this place, it’s beautiful, so what more can you ask for.”

The six-foot-five-inch Elgersma was the Bombers’ second-round pick in last year’s draft, but attended camp with the NFL’s Green Bay Packers in 2025.

“I feel confident with my ability to throw the football and my ability to read the defence,” he said. “I think I’ve shown that and so it’s all about getting better day-by-day.

“The best way to attack training camp is to go day-by-day, right? Like, what can I learn from today to get better for tomorrow, what can I learn from tomorrow to get better for the next day. If you take that mindset into it then you’re probably going to be successful.

“So that’s kind of where my head tries to stay at. I think you’re getting a lot thrown at you in training camp, a new playbook, new guys, new receivers. And so, the best thing you can do is just keep your head down and work.”

He’ll be trying to win the backup job behind Collaros. Now 37, Collaros is back for his seventh season in Winnipeg.

Collaros was gushing over new offensive coordinator Tommy Condell, calling him a master communicator and a great teacher. Collaros doesn’t have much of an opinion on the new playoff format that was recently announced as he said he trusts the league’s decision makers.

The Bombers QB1 is more focused on the new rule changes and more specifically the new 35-second play clock. He believes it’ll improve the flow of the game but it’s also something they’ll need to work on in camp leading up to their first game.

“It’ll be something that you got to figure out,” said Collaros. “I’ve never sat there and held a stopwatch during the game and timed that. I would imagine it was around 40-some seconds but I think 35 will make it exciting.

“I think a lot of us come from down south anyways and you have that moving clock whether you’re in the NFL, NCAA or whatever that looks like. I think it’ll become second nature after a few reps.”

Rookie camp continues on Thursday at 10:00 a.m. at Princess Auto Stadium.

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

Over 220K free Toronto FIFA Fan Festival tickets sell out within hours

WATCH: Toronto unveils programming for FIFA Fan Fest.

Toronto says overwhelming demand for free FIFA Fan Festival Toronto tickets saw the first allotment snapped up within four hours of registration opening.

In a statement Wednesday, Sharon Bollenbach, executive director of the FIFA World Cup 2026 Toronto Secretariat, said 220,000 general admission tickets were acquired shortly after the online portal launched.

“We’re excited by the response to FIFA Fan Festival Toronto general admission ticket registrations,” Bollenbach said.

“The enthusiasm reflects the excitement building as Toronto gets ready to welcome the world for the FIFA World Cup 2026 and celebrate our ‘World in a City’ spirit.”

The city said demand for tickets was higher than anticipated, though premium ticket options remain available for purchase online.

Toronto officials also said more free tickets will be released in waves throughout the tournament, with the next release scheduled for May 15 at 10 a.m. EST.

FIFA Fan Festival™ Toronto will run from June 11 to July 19 and feature live match broadcasts, entertainment, interactive experiences and more than 30 food vendors serving international cuisine.

The city said the event is open to all ages, with general admission free but only available online in advance.

People who secured tickets will receive a barcoded confirmation on May 15.

Additional performances and programming details are expected to be announced closer to the World Cup games.

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

Toronto mother who threw baby boy to his death down garbage chute found NCR

A Toronto woman who threw her four-month-old son into the garbage chute, killing him, in November 2024 has been found not criminally responsible (NCR) due to a mental disorder.

A forensic psychiatrist who assessed Karessa Edwards testified the 30-year-old was psychotic at the time and put her son in the garbage chute in response to command auditory hallucinations.

Sitting in the prisoner’s box wearing a green prison-issued sweatsuit, Edwards listened quietly as her lawyer told Superior Court Justice Jane Kelly his client was pleading not guilty to second-degree murder due to a mental disorder.

Edwards then sat quietly, listening to assistant Crown prosecutor Liz Jackson read out a disturbing agreed statement of facts.

It was Nov. 20, 2024, around 11:25 a.m. when police were called to the multi-storey residential building at 855 Roselawn Ave. by the baby’s father, Sadiki Bacchas.

According to the facts, Bacchas had gone out to run some errands around 8:20 a.m., leaving the baby alone with Edwards in unit 801 where the couple and their baby, Azuri Bacchus, lived.

Around 10:20 a.m., Edwards carried Azuri to the garbage room on the eighth floor and intentionally threw him down the chute to the garbage compactor in the basement of the building.

After throwing Azuri down the garbage chute, Edwards then climbed or jumped down the chute herself, causing abrasions to her arm and back.

Around 10:30 a.m., Bacchas called Edwards to inquire about Azuri.

The baby’s mother advised him that she didn’t know where Azuri was and suggested that perhaps the baby was with her mother, the baby’s grandmother.

Bacchas called the child’s grandmother who advised Azuri was not with her.

At 10:40 a.m., Bacchas arrived back at the Roselawn Avenue apartment and attended the couple’s eighth-floor unit where Edwards continued to claim that she didn’t know where Azuri was but believed he was in the garbage chute.

Bacchus then went down to the garbage room in the basement and located the baby items before calling 911.

When police arrived, Azuri was found without vital signs. The boy was rushed to hospital, where he was pronounced dead.

An autopsy revealed the cause of death was either blunt impact injuries sustained from being thrown down the garbage chute, a consequence of compression by the compactor mechanism in the garbage bin, or by blunt impact injuries inflicted before the infant was thrown down the garbage chute.

The facts state that when Edwards threw her son down the chute, she knew doing so could kill him and that it did cause his death.

Forensic psychiatrist Mark Pearce, who met with Edwards at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH) in January 2023, testified she suffers from schizophrenia which started around 2020, although some mental health symptoms began appearing in 2015, when she had her first child.

Pearce said Edwards likely demonstrated all the symptoms of schizophrenia including hearing voices, delusions, disorganized thinking and disorganized behaviour.

Pearche explained he came to his conclusions after looking at police body-worn camera from the time of her arrest, medical records from jail and from Sunnybrook Hospital, where she spent a week after the arrest.

Pearche also observed a transcript between Edwards’ mother and the baby’s father from a prior criminal proceeding.

“She’s reported hallucinations, others have seen her talking to herself, she’s reported paranoid delusional beliefs. She’s being monitored. Her thinking was very scattered as seen on police body cam at the time of her arrest, and disorganized behaviour given she was throwing random things out in the weeks leading up to the offence,” the psychiatrist added.

“She said she was hearing voices through the walls for weeks or months. Ultimately, she heard command hallucinations telling her to dispose of the victim, the baby in the garbage chute,” he explained.

Pearce said at the time of her arrest, Edwards had a blank stare on her face. “One officer wrote, ‘I’m not even sure she’s aware what’s going on,'” Pearce told court.

“To paramedics, she reported hearing voices in the walls since moving into the building, I think it was in the summer of that year. On body cam footage, she seemed quite perplexed, moody — which doesn’t mean she was psychotic. She mentioned about gangs and being followed and then she was brought to hospital,” Pearce explained.

Once she arrived in hospital, Pearce said she told doctors had been brought to hospital “based on traumatic experiences” which “you cannot really see.”

She also claimed that “nothing” had occurred that day.

Doctors at Sunnybrook diagnosed her with a primary psychotic illness. “Everyone there thought she was very psychotic as well,” Pearce said.

Pearce said Edwards was also treated by a psychiatrist at Vanier Institute for Women.

He said once prescribed anti-psychotic medication, it helped her symptoms and when she didn’t take them properly, the symptoms reappeared.

The psychiatrist also said that Edwards had likely been suffering from psychotic symptoms dating back to 2022, given she had been involuntarily hospitalized three times.

“She was held in hospital a couple of times but only for a few days, given her age. Her mother had concerns about her behaviour, (and) had obtained a Form 2 compelling an assessment in hospital. As a result, she was put on a Form 1 and was kept in for 72 hours,” Pearce explained.

Hospital officials didn’t think she was an acute risk to others.

“She had a stable childhood, went to college, steady employment before the onset of the illness,” said Pearce, who added her daughter had called 911 about her behaviour.

The psychiatrist concluded at the time she threw Azuri in the garbage chute, Edward’s symptoms were quite severe and she was responding to a command hallucination to hurt a child. “She didn’t know the wrongfulness of her behaviour. I thought she met the threshold for NCR.”

During cross-examination, Edward’s lawyer Christien Levien asked Pearce if he thought postpartum depression played a role in the offence. Pearce said he believed it contributed.

“The stress of being a mother, not sleeping well. That contributed as well. Cannabis likely contributed to some extent as well. Those were the main stressors,” he added.

Sadiki Bacchus sat in court as Jackson read his victim impact statement and a letter he penned to Azuri.

“My son, I only have pictures now … a frozen piece of time to remind me of how it was when you were here and mine. I see your beautiful eyes each time I close mine. How I wish I could change the course of time,” Bacchas wrote.

Before being sent off to begin getting treatment at a psychiatric hospital, Kelly asked Edwards if she had anything to say to the court. Edwards declined.

Kelly’s voice cracked as she told court Azuri was a vulnerable child who could not defend himself.

“You will now be put before the Ontario Review Board who will oversee your future,” said Kelly, who encouraged Edwards to comply with her psychiatric treatment and to take her medication.

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

Man charged with accessing plane at Vancouver airport appears in court

The man who is charged with accessing a plane at Vancouver International Airport early on Monday morning appeared in court on Wednesday morning.

Okito Wosha made his Richmond court appearance on the phone from the hospital where he is being held under the Mental Health Act and is awaiting a mental health assessment.

He’s charged with break and enter, mischief and two counts of assaulting a peace officer.

The incident happened at 4 a.m. on May 4.

Sources tell Global News Wosha scaled a fence at YVR and headed toward an empty Porter passenger plane, then climbed into a wheel well.

The plane was parked on the apron just south of the domestic terminal.

Police and security surrounded the aircraft and about two hours later, Wosha was arrested.

A spokesperson for Porter says the cabin wasn’t breached. The plane was inspected and later returned to service.

Wosha’s next court date is set for Monday, May 11.

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

Driver killed, another person injured in 2-vehicle crash east of Calgary

Alberta RCMP confirmed a man has died following a two-vehicle crash Wednesday morning at the intersection of Highway 1 (Trans Canada Highway) and Range Road 281, just east of Chestermere.

The Mounties said they received a call about “a serious motor vehicle collision” around 8 a.m. Wednesday.

A 73-year-old male driver of one of the vehicles died from his injuries on scene, while a 19-year-old female driver of the other vehicle was transported to hospital in Calgary, where she was treated for her injuries.

There’s no word yet on what caused the crash, but the RCMP Collision Reconstruction team has been called in to investigate.

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

Spring thaw not letting up as flooding persists in Saskatchewan communities

RELATED: Flooding Forces People from their Home at Red Earth Cree Nation

Sections of Highway 5, east of Saskatoon remain closed due to flooding, according to the Highway Hotline, as the spring thaw continues in Saskatchewan.

The province’s Water Security Agency (WSA) says eastern and northeastern parts of the province around Carrot River are expected to be hit the hardest by flooding in the coming days. Some communities, including the RM of Meadow Lake, are already seeing the water pulling back.

“It’s really how this snowmelt has occurred, which has got us in this situation that we’re facing today,” said Shawn Jacques, president and CEO at the WSA.

Four advisories have been issued since mid-April as a result of the above normal snowpacks in northern communities and a delayed start to autumn, he added.

“(The floods are) something that we haven’t seen in our province for a while – we’ve been kind of on that drier cycle … Unlike many years where we get an earlier start to the spring thaw, we just didn’t see that. The cooler temperatures remained right to the end of April,” said Jacques.

“We saw some late snowstorms that brought significant precipitation to the northern part of the province. Then, when you get that rapid warm up it melts very quickly and then it overwhelms the river systems.”

When those river systems are too full, overland flooding begins.

As a result of floods, some communities including the Red Earth Cree Nation, initiated their emergency response plans and began evacuations.

The Saskatchewan Public Safety Agency cannot provide a total number of evacuees for this flood season, it said. Evacuations are managed, and called for, by individual First Nations or municipalities.

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

Opposition calls for income-tax cut to be tacked onto Manitoba's budget

RELATED: Budget reaction from Manitoba Opposition finance critic Lauren Stone

Manitoba’s Opposition Progressive Conservatives are calling on the NDP government to add an income-tax cut to this year’s budget.

A bill to enact the budget is expected this week, and it is to include a tax cut on food sold at grocery and corner stores.

The government is hoping to pass the bill before the legislature rises for the summer next month, and the Tories say they will help speed passage of the bill if it also cuts income taxes.

The Tories are demanding an increase in the basic personal amount — income that people can earn tax-free — from $15,780 to $21,000 this year.

They say that would save an average two-income family $1,000 a year, which is roughly 10 times more than the government’s food tax cut.

The NDP government has a solid majority of legislature seats and can pass bills without the support of the Opposition, but the Tories say the government should compromise and help families fight inflation.

© 2026 The Canadian Press

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