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.

Ongoing History Daily: The real woman at the heart of "Mr. Brightside"

“Mr. Brightside” was the very first single by The Killers. It first showed up in the UK on an indie label called Lizard King—and only 500 CD singles were available. Since then, the song has been played almost three billion times on Spotify and hundreds of millions more views on YouTube. It also has been on the British charts for 489 weeks. It’s the song that won’t go away and one that just keeps on giving for The Killers.

The wild thing is that it’s based on a real story.

A quarter-century ago, frontman Brandon Flowers walked into The Crown and Anchor, a bar in his hometown of Las Vegas, only to find his girlfriend cheating on him. Completely heartbroken, he went home and wrote out all the lyrics by hand. Now it’s one of the biggest hits of the century. I wonder what that woman thinks of all this?

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

'I had no right': 14-year-old who murdered Pickering grandmother apologizes

A 14-year-old boy who admitted to brutally killing a Pickering, Ont., senior in May 2025 in a random and senseless attack stood up in an Oshawa courtroom Tuesday and apologized for his actions.

Wearing a navy pin-striped three-piece suit and black glasses, with handcuffs around his wrists and leg shackles around his ankles, the boy, now 15, was given a chance to speak at the conclusion of his sentencing hearing. He unfolded a piece of white-lined paper and awkwardly read a statement he had written as family and friends of the victim, Eleanor Doney, listened intently.

“After months of reflection, my perspective of the matter has been deduced. I’ve come to comprehend, to recognize the seriousness of my actions and see how my actions have caused a great deal of pain,” said the boy, who can only be identified as A.S., as his identity is protected by a publication ban under the Youth Criminal Justice Act (YCJA).

“Sincerely, I’m deeply sorry for all of the horrible deeds I have committed, first of all, and I had no right to commit that wretched act,” A.S. said.

“What I can do is learn from this and acknowledge my wrongdoings and work on restructuring. Moving forward, I will do better and learn from this. I will try and pray to God for a chance at being a righteous man despite my flaws.”

A.S. pleaded guilty to first-degree murder in April, admitting that on May 29, 2025, around 3 p.m., he approached the 83-year-old, who was raking leaves on the front lawn of her Lynn Heights Drive home, before engaging her in conversation. He then stabbed her and chased her as she tried to flee, before stabbing her again.

According to an agreed statement of facts read out at the guilty plea, the retired kindergarten teacher had eight stab wounds to her lower back, hands, arm, face and neck. The fatal injury was a stab wound through her neck, which severed Doney’s carotid artery.

Court heard that A.S., who has been in custody since his arrest on May 29, 2025, continues to demonstrate a consistent preoccupation with themes of violence, harm to others and an ongoing fascination with serial killers.

The Crown and defence told Superior Court Justice Lisa Wannamaker they jointly submit that the maximum youth sentence for first-degree murder is appropriate for A.S., who pleaded guilty in April to the first-degree murder of Eleanor Doney.

The two parties disagree on whether credit should be given for presentence custody. Under the YCJA, the maximum sentence is six years in custody followed by four years to be served in the community under supervision. It is at the discretion of the judge to decide whether to give credit for time served in presentence custody.

Assistant Crown attorney Tammy D’Eri initially indicated the Crown would be filing a notice to seek an adult sentence for A.S. due to the seriousness of the case. D’Eri told Wannamaker that A.S. no longer meets the criteria for an adult sentence due to a recent decision from the Supreme Court of Canada regarding a youth known as I.M.

The Supreme Court of Canada ruled that in a YCJA case, in order to impose an adult sentence, there are two wrongs the Crown must prove beyond a reasonable doubt. The first is that the young person had the maturity and capacity for moral judgment of an adult at the time of the offence. D’Eri said after receiving the psychological and psychiatric reports for A.S., the Crown realized it could not satisfy that prong of the test.

Doney was a beloved mother, grandmother and retired kindergarten teacher who had been married for 63 years and was the primary caregiver to her husband at the time of her murder.

The Crown said that while A.S. meets the criteria for the IRCS program (Intensive Rehabilitation Custody and Supervision), reserved for youth with serious mental health issues, the seriousness of the offence is high and the facts of this case fall on the most serious end of the spectrum.

“You have the discretion to give no credit for presentence custody,” D’Eri said. The Crown said a doctor’s report indicated that it appears A.S. has little insight into his actions or understanding of why he committed the offence. “The IRCS report suggests a significant and lengthy intervention is needed for A.S.,” D’Eri explained.

She also told Wannamaker that the teen continues to demonstrate a consistent preoccupation with themes of violence, harm to others and an ongoing fascination with serial killers in writings and inappropriate discussions with peers and staff.

“There have been several behavioural reports in the last few months. A.S. was involved in a peer-on-peer altercation. He was not the aggressor. Staff had to intervene. He told staff he hasn’t felt this alive since the incident before the court,” said D’Eri. Audible gasps could be heard from Doney’s family and friends seated in the courtroom.

“He has a limited ability to recognize the harm caused to others. Those observations are highly concerning. The risk to reoffend is ongoing. A lengthy sentence is necessary in an attempt to address the underlying issues,” D’Eri added, pointing out that A.S. appears to blame others and shows a lack of personal responsibility.

The Crown also pointed out that there were many other concerning incidents occurring around the time of the murder.

“Bringing a knife to school, making an utterance to a girl at school in chat messages. It’s not an isolated incident. It appears to be an ongoing pattern of events,” said D’Eri, telling court that one doctor who assessed A.S. found his thinking persistent. “That is of great concern,” D’Eri concluded.

Defence lawyers Erin Dann and Dean Embry argued that while A.S. has been in custody for 13½ months, he should be given credit for one year, leaving a five-year custodial sentence followed by four years to be served under supervision in the community.

“By committing this inexplicably horrific offence, he brutally killed an elderly woman for no reason whatsoever while she was in front of her home,” said Dann.

Dann pointed out that A.S. has already been accessing programs since being in custody and said there are good prospects for rehabilitation.

She pointed to a psychiatric report in which he scored in the low- to moderate-risk range for criminal reoffending and which showed his overall risk for future violence is low if his mental health is properly attended to and monitored.

Dann pointed out a doctor found that one of his risk factors, such as his criminal alignment with the serial killer character, is likely influenced by mental health issues. She noted that deficits in remorse are also related to his mental health symptomatology.

Dann said one doctor noted significant non-verbal learning deficits that met the criteria for autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and a specific learning disorder, including what she described as severe deficits in non-verbal reasoning. “These were undiagnosed at the time of the offence,” said Dann, who also noted the doctor found A.S. has challenges with executive reasoning and social relationships.

Dann said that A.S. also had a difficult upbringing. “His father does not live permanently or consistently with the family. There are language barriers with his mother and grandmother. His caregiver has significant mental health issues. I also note his age. He had just turned 14 two months earlier,” she said, adding that A.S. also pleaded guilty.

“In many ways, as identified in those reports, he operates in a manner where his developmental age may well be lower than his chronological age. He has an unsophisticated view of the world. We are told he expressed a desire to become an accountant because he wanted to wear a suit and count money,” Dann said. She also pointed out that when A.S. completed some psychological testing, he celebrated by kicking his feet together when he completed an assignment.

One doctor, Dann said, found that A.S. “likely meets the criteria for a major depressive disorder with psychotic features in the months leading up to and at the time of the offence. There was strong evidence of delusional thought processes and disorganization in the weeks directly leading up to the offence,” which the doctor at the time of her report found concerning.

Dann said that A.S. appears to be amenable to treatment. One doctor has recommended psychiatric and clinical intervention, which is part of the IRCS plan. “A.S. will be followed by a forensic psychiatrist in order to monitor any of those issues and to intervene and prescribe medication if necessary,” Dann said.

Dann told court these factors attenuate A.S.’s degree of responsibility. “Clear decompensation in his mental health obviously did not excuse the conduct in any way, but these factors do offer some context,” Dann concluded.

Justice Wannamaker will deliver her sentence on Wednesday.

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

FedEx employees say they reported voyeurism concerns to management, were told to 'relax'

Several FedEx employees in Delta, B.C., are calling on the company to do more to protect their privacy, following allegations of voyeurism.

They told Global News that their concerns were raised to management in the past, but they were ignored.

On Monday, Delta police said it is suspected a recording device was hidden in a staff washroom at the Tilbury FedEx depot and employees alleged that those images were uploaded online.

“I was really shocked, and the first thing that came to my mind was like, ‘Oh my God, I could be one of them!’ Like, I was panicking,” Bara, a FedEx employee, said. Global News is not releasing her last name due to privacy concerns.

Last Tuesday, an employee was arrested and released without charges, police said.

FedEx said in a statement to Global News on Monday that he was terminated.

Victim’s advocate Gurpreet Kaur, who founded Kaur Movement, said that since word has spread about the voyeurism investigation, several employees have been making damning accusations.

“Now I have seven people coming forward, including men, that have said that they saw him walking into the washroom, female washroom, several times,” she said.

“They reported him, but nothing was done.”

Global News spoke to two employees who say they saw the suspect entering and exiting the women’s washroom at least three times in the last year.

They said they reported it to management and were told to “relax.”

Global News repeatedly asked the FedEx spokespeople about the allegations, but they did not directly address them. They did say that an internal investigation is underway.

Employees said they want to ensure their dignity is protected.

“We deserve to feel safe and private in the bathrooms that we use every single day,” Bara said.

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

1 woman's death, another's serious injury prompts e-scooter warning from Vancouver police

Vancouver police are warning the public about the dangers of not wearing helmets while riding an e-bike or an electric scooter.

This warning comes after a woman died and another woman was seriously injured in separate incidents over the weekend.

Police said a 30-year-old woman was riding a scooter on July 3 in the area of Venables Street and Commercial Drive at 10 a.m. when she collided with the side of a vehicle.

The woman, who was not wearing a helmet, hit her head on the ground and was conscious when she was transported to the hospital, but she died from her injuries on July 11.

Then, on Sunday at approximately 2 p.m., a woman riding an electric kick scooter was hit from behind by a man riding another electric kick scooter in Coal Harbour.

Police said the 54-year-old woman was taken to the hospital with a head injury and broken collarbone, but is expected to recover.

“Neither victim was wearing a helmet while riding,” Sgt. Adam Donaldson of the Vancouver Police Department said in a release.

“In both incidents, a helmet may not have prevented the collisions, but it could have significantly reduced the severity of the injuries. Please make sure to wear a properly fitted helmet and ensure it is secured appropriately.”

Under Section 19 of the Electric Kick Scooter Pilot Project Regulation of the BC Motor Vehicle Act, operators must wear a bicycle safety helmet that meets the requirements set out in Section 184(1) of the Motor Vehicle Act.

Police are also concerned about irresponsible scooter riders, with videos being posted online of Lime scooters racing through a Vancouver Safeway and the Pacific Centre Mall.

In a statement to Global News, the Lime Scoot Boyz said what they are showcasing is not a prank; it’s just people having fun.

“At no point was anyone’s life in danger in these videos,” they said. “Sure, it’s unconventional, but we were never going fast or out of control.”

They said they encourage everyone to scoot safely.

Lime did not provide anyone for an interview with Global News on Tuesday.

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

'I can't keep losing everything': Pierrefonds residents demand flooding solution

For residents on one Pierrefonds street, flooding is more than an occasional occurance. They say it has become a recurring reality. After another round of flash flooding on the West Island last month, homeowners on Fleming street say the city has failed to take action despite proof the problem has existed for years. As Felicia Parrillo reports, many homeowners have taken matters into their own hands.

Whenever heavy rain is in the forecast, families on Fleming Street say they brace for the worst.

For Melissa St. Germain, flooding isn’t a one-time disaster. It’s become a regular part of her life.

She lived in this home as a little girl, since the 1970s. She eventually bought it from her parents and now lives here with her own family.

She’s seen the property flood nearly a dozen times over the past few decades.

“It’s my son’s 18th birthday. We have plans tonight, but we’re probably going to cancel if we’re expecting the weather we’re supposed to,” said St. Germain. ” I have to stay home and protect my house –I have to protect everything. It’s not right.”

Just a few houses down, Miruna Mazilu says years of flooding have turned her and a team of neighbours into quasi-investigators.

She has spent years documenting and recently digging up city documents and engineering reports that she believes clearly point to a long-standing problem.

Right outside her home sits a temporary pump that residents say can prevent flooding — when connected.

“We had a few times where it wasn’t installed properly, or it was not monitored by the city properly, which was very frustrating — to have the pump in front of you and get flooded,” said Mazilu.

Some residents say since they can’t rely on the city pump, they’ve been forced to install their own sump pumps, generators, and other costly upgrades to protect their homes.

Many have now joined a proposed class action lawsuit.

And while legal proceedings could take years to yield results, they’re looking for immediate answers.

“You call the city and say, ‘Can you please have someone bring a pump,’ and either the response is, ‘You’re not a priority,’ ‘I don’t have that as an order,’ or, now that there is a class action lawsuit, ‘Too bad for you, I’m not getting involved,'” said Galia Desautels.

The borough declined an on-camera interview, citing the ongoing litigation as one reason.

A spokesperson, however, said crews would reconnect the temporary pump ahead of Tuesday’s forecast rainfall.

But after decades of repeated flooding, residents say they’re no longer looking for temporary fixes..

“We need a permanent solution — we can’t beg every time rain is expected for you to put a pump on the street. That’s not a solution, that’s a band-aid,” said St. Germain.

“I can’t keep losing everything. I just can’t.”

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

3 Winnipeg care homes face air conditioning outages during summer heat wave

WATCH: Air conditioning outages at personal care homes

Three Winnipeg-area personal care homes do not have fully functioning air conditioners amid an intense heat wave.

Hot, humid weather has hit the city in recent days, with humidex temperatures surpassing 40 C over the weekend.

Pembina Place Personal Care Home, the Middlechurch Home of Winnipeg in West St. Paul and the Donwood Manor Personal Care Home do not have fully operational AC units, a spokesperson for the Winnipeg Regional Health Authority (WRHA) confirmed in an emailed statement for Global News on Monday.

Work on repairs, and temporary fixes to keep residents cool, are underway at all three homes, according to the spokesperson.

“The health, comfort and well-being of residents remain our top priority, and staff continue to monitor residents closely while this work is underway,” the statement from the regional health authority reads.

At Pembina Place Personal Care Home, the almost 20-year-old rooftop air conditioning unit failed, causing the outage, according to Gary Ledoux, CEO of The Bethania Group, the company that owns the home.

He estimated the temperature inside to be around 25 C.

Instead of replacing the rooftop unit, which Ledoux said he was told would take two years, three new units are being installed on every floor of the 57-bed facility.

The province expects those units to be operational on Wednesday.

Mechanical issues knocked out the air conditioning in some parts of the Middlechurch Home of Winnipeg, and “are being fixed as quickly as possible,” WRHA said.

“In the meantime, residents are being supported with interim cooling measures, including access to air-conditioned common areas and portable cooling equipment where needed,” its statement said.

The province told Global News it expects the replacement part to arrive at the home on Wednesday, adding it will be installed as soon as possible.

Flood-related damage, following heavy rainfall in early June, stopped the AC at Donwood Manor. The WRHA said temporary units were installed in residents’ rooms while repair work continues.

Norbert Bargen’s 94-year-old mother lives in Donwood Manor. He commended staff’s efforts to keep residents cool and comfortable.

“They’re working very hard under the conditions to help our loved ones,” he told Global News, saying staff is “doing what they can.”

An air conditioning unit is visible through the window of a unit in Winnipeg's Donwood Manor Personal Care Home.

An air conditioning unit is visible through the window of a unit in Winnipeg's Donwood Manor Personal Care Home.

Jordan Pearn / Global News

Sue Vovchuk, executive director of the Long-term and Continuing Care Association of Manitoba, said the AC issues are a symptom of something larger — a lack of funding.

“Everyone is underfunded,” she told Global News. “When you go to a meeting with government, you leave and there’s a lineup behind their offices. So, it’s a matter of how do we give some to everyone? I don’t think it’s out of maliciousness, but I think there’s just (a) lack of monies available.”

“We need to make sure that older adults remain front and centred.”

Building infrastructure, resources and staffing are impacted by fiscal constraints, she added.

“We have to make sure that we have modernized equipment and we’re properly funded,” Vovchuk said.

“We have to make sure we do have, not disaster management planning, but a plan in place when we know that we’re going to have (a) heatwave, like we’re going to have times where the weather is really hot, or we have flooding, all those pieces.”

An emailed statement from Manitoba Minister of Health, Seniors and Long-Term Care Uzoma Asagwara said the ministry’s first priority is assuring residents are safe and have access to any and all tools they may need to stay cool.

“We are working directly alongside personal care homes and regional health authorities to respond to immediate needs and improve conditions,” the minister’s statement said.

“Residents and families deserve to know their loved ones are safe and supported. We will continue working alongside facilities and regional health authorities to provide the resources needed, respond to emerging issues and protect residents throughout this period of extreme heat.”

WRHA said no residents have been treated for heat exhaustion or heat stroke.

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

Alberta entering prolonged mosquito season not seen in decades: 'Eaten alive'

Entomologist Ken Fry says he got dozens of mosquitos bites while golfing in central Alberta this week.

“I got eaten alive,” Fry said with a laugh.

“If I allow myself to scratch, then it just makes it worse so I ignore it as much as possible.”

Fry says he is among many Albertans who haven’t been able to avoid the blood feeders in weeks.

Mike Jenkins, a biological sciences technician for the City of Edmonton, says they are facing a prolonged mosquito season not seen in decades.

He says the last time Edmontonians were vigorously swatting the flies was in 1990.

“I got so many mosquito bites. I actually got one on my tongue back then,” Jenkins said in a Monday phone interview.

“She took off before I noticed that she was feeding on my tongue. But, yeah, that was not a fun one.”

Heavy rainfall in Alberta is behind the mosquito boom.

In 1990, Jenkins said it had been raining in the province since May. “This year, we’ve been seeing mosquitoes since the real heavy rains came in about late June,” he said.

“It’s been probably years since we’ve seen sustained multiple weeks’ worth of rainfall.

“There’s water in places I haven’t seen in literally decades. The mosquitoes are being produced from those habitats.”

A flooded street ni Edmonton on Friday, July 10, 2026.

A flooded street ni Edmonton on Friday, July 10, 2026.

Courtesy: Brian and Linda Piers

Jenkins said the city is hearing from a lot of locals complaining about the flies.

Bug spray has also been flying off the shelves and Albertans have taken to social media to swap tips on where to find the latest stock.

Fry, who also teaches entomology at Olds College, says the mosquitoes have been laying eggs near bodies of water.

Their eggs can stick around for up to a decade and they hatch under water, too, into larvae, which look like small worms. These sleeper-skeeters grow into adults in 10 days.

So with more rainfall, the eggs that weren’t able to hatch during the drier summers Alberta has had in the last few years are hatching now, Fry said.

That’s compounded their boom.

“Eggs can sense that they’re now under water and that there’s organic matter there for the larvae to feed on,” Fry said. “So they help keep your streams and creeks clean.”

Birds and other systems have also been feasting on the larvae. When the mosquitoes hatch, the females are fertilized by the males.

Then hungry females needing protein to grow eggs begin doing what humans least enjoy: sucking their blood.

The females can lay about 100 eggs at a time.

Jenkins said the city is trying to reduce the number of mosquitoes this summer. Trucks have been spraying pesticide along roadways.

He said if Alberta continues to see more rain in the following years, the flies are set to return again in abundance as this season has seen thousands of new eggs.

“The mosquitoes that are out there now are going to be laying eggs. That’s going to refill that egg bank.”

Fry said Albertans should avoid wearing dark and rough clothing, and cover their skin as much as possible.

“Don’t look like a cow, because mosquitoes are adapted to blood feeding on deer, moose, horses, and cows,” he said.

“You can’t win here, because if you wear light-colored clothing, then you look like a flower. And the females also like nectar.”

Primary Care Alberta says in a June notice that those bitten by mosquitoes should keep an eye out for West Nile virus symptoms.

It said: “While the risk of West Nile virus remains low in Alberta, some mosquitoes can carry the virus, so it’s best to avoid being bitten at all.”

© 2026 The Canadian Press

Saskatchewan Roughriders defence sends message in dominant win over Hamilton

WATCH: Saskatchewan defence dominated their week 6 matchup against Hamilton, sending a message to the rest of the league.

Through the first month of the season, the Saskatchewan Roughriders defence had been creating pressure, but takeaways were not coming. On Sunday night at Mosaic Stadium, that changed in a big way.

“It felt like everything finally came together,” said head coach Corey Mace after the game. “I’m happy. I think this is something we’ve been waiting for as a defence, certainly, and then obviously you can see how that can turn the tides for this team.”

It was the type of complete defensive performance that had been missing despite Saskatchewan’s strong 3-1 start, and one that reminded the rest of the CFL why this unit is among the top in the league.

The Roughriders forced multiple turnovers and sacks and did not concede a touchdown to Hamilton in their 38-7 victory. Saskatchewan linebacker Josh Woods returned an interception for 107 yards and a touchdown, his second pick of the season.

“Not used to running as far definitely, but I think after the last one everybody was getting on me about going down so I had to see if I could get it and thank God I did,” said Woods.

Veteran defensive back James Vaughters is showing why the Riders signed him this off-season, having recorded two of the three sacks in the game for Saskatchewan. The four-man rush is looking better than ever, and he says it’s due to a team effort.

“Everybody played well on the D-line across the board and it was nice to even have our subs come in and do their thing really well, too, so I think as the guys continue to develop we can do some really special things,” Vaughters said.

While Trevor Harris threw a pair of touchdown passes and the offence did its part, it was Saskatchewan’s defence that dictated the pace from start to finish. Saskatchewan scored 27 unanswered points in the second half, with 20 of those coming just in the fourth quarter.

The Roughriders’ relentless pressure and opportunistic secondary turned what had been a competitive game into a statement victory.

If this is the version of Saskatchewan’s defence that shows up consistently, the rest of the league has reason to be concerned. The Roughriders head into their bye week at 4-1, carrying momentum and renewed confidence after their most complete defensive performance of the 2026 season.

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

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