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.

Ongoing History Daily: Another hazard of AI

No matter what you may hope, artificial intelligence is not going away. And while there are a lot of scary things about it, AI can be used as a tool when it comes to making music. But if you’re an AI user, here’s a request: Stop being polite to the chatbot because it wastes tremendous amounts of energy.

AI doesn’t work on word count. It counts tokens. In general, one token equals four characters of text. The more tokens you use—in other words, the more text you use in your prompt—the more data needs to be processed. If you use unnecessary words like “please” and “thank you,” you are burning energy.

According to UN research, an end to just 25% of politeness would save up to 100 gigawatts of electricity, which could otherwise be used to supply power to nearly 750,000 for a year.

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

Ticks are spreading anaplasmosis, not just Lyme disease, CMA warns

With summer well underway, experts are urging caution when it comes to ticks. Cases of Lyme disease and other tick-born illnesses have been increasing in Quebec over the last decade, partially due to climate change. As Felicia Parrillo reports, health officials say the key to prevention is education.

A new paper published in the Canadian Medical Association Journal urges doctors to consider anaplasmosis as a possible diagnosis for patients with unexplained fever as tick-borne illnesses rise in eastern Canada.

Senior author Dr. Michael Quon, an internal medicine specialist at The Ottawa Hospital, and his colleagues described the case of a 79-year-old man who had a fever, chills and generalized weakness that caused him to fall last summer.

Although the patient didn’t remember having a tick bite, he lived in a rural area in eastern Ontario where tick-borne disease is endemic and often spent time in the woods.

In hospital, the patient had a low blood cell count and developed shortness of breath, mild kidney injury and myocarditis, which is inflammation of the heart muscle.

Doctors gave him the antibiotic doxycycline to cover a range of possible bacterial infections, including anaplasmosis, a lesser-known illness carried by the same blacklegged tick that spreads Lyme disease. They are also known as deer ticks.

Doxycycline is the first-line treatment for both Lyme disease and anaplasmosis, Quon said.

The patient quickly improved and ultimately made a full recovery. Lab results came back after treatment had started, confirming anaplasmosis.

“It’s really important to be talking about this infection because we’re observing it more and more in clinical practice, in internal medicine, and it’s new,” Quon said in an interview.

“This is not an infection that we encountered even five years ago in the hospital.”

Quon said he wanted to publish the case study because the initial symptoms of anaplasmosis — such as fever, tiredness, headache or gastrointestinal issues — are very general and could be caused by a wide variety of illnesses.

But he wants physicians to specifically consider anaplasmosis in regions with a growing prevalence of blacklegged ticks, which range in size from a poppyseed to a sesame seed, including much of eastern Canada.

That’s because anaplasmosis is “highly treatable” with doxycycline.

If left untreated, anaplasmosis can cause serious complications, including myocarditis, brain inflammation, acute respiratory distress and kidney failure.

Doctors should ask patients about their outdoor exposure and whether or not they have used protective measures such as using insect repellent containing DEET or inspecting themselves for ticks, Quon’s paper, published Monday, said.

But they should also keep in mind that 50 to 75 per cent of patients diagnosed with early Lyme disease do not remember their tick bites, so the same challenge is likely with anaplasmosis, he said.

Quon’s main message to physicians is to start doxycycline right away if anaplasmosis is a clinical possibility rather than waiting for a positive lab test, “because the risk of (disease) progression is significant.”

Jules Koffi, a senior epidemiologist with the Public Health Agency of Canada, said the prevalence of blacklegged ticks has been rising in this country from Manitoba eastward, but especially in Ontario, Quebec and Nova Scotia.

With that comes an increase in tick-borne diseases, including both Lyme disease and anaplasmosis, he said.

Among ticks collected for examination in 2024, six per cent tested positive for Anaplasma phagocytophilum, the bacteria that causes anaplasmosis, Koffi said.

That’s up from three per cent in 2022, he said.

Koffi said it’s important for physicians to consider both anaplasmosis and Lyme disease as possible diagnoses and noted a couple of telltale signs that can help distinguish the two.

“Lyme disease often presents with an expanding rash in its early phase while anaplasmosis usually presents as a flu-like illness without a rash,” he said.

Plus, patients with anaplasmosis often have a low blood cell count.

However, patients can also be infected with both tick-borne illnesses at the same time, Koffi said.

Despite the increase in tick-borne illnesses, they still remain relatively rare and doctors emphasize they don’t want to discourage people from spending time outdoors in the summer.

“Please keep going outside,” said Dr. Jeffrey Pernica, an infectious diseases specialist at Hamilton Health Sciences’ McMaster Children’s Hospital.

The best thing people can do is take simple precautions, he said, including wearing insect repellant containing DEET or Icaridin.

Doing tick checks on yourself and your children is important, Pernica said.

Ticks can sometimes “crawl into inconvenient places,” so don’t forget to check your genitals and have someone look at your backside, he said.

Giving kids a quick bath every day is a good way to check them for ticks.

“As long as you check yourself for ticks every day, the probability of getting these more unusual tick-borne infections plummets dramatically,” Pernica said.

Removing ticks from your skin as soon as possible reduces the chance of getting a tick-borne disease.

“A tick has to be on you for more than 24 to 36 hours to get Lyme disease,” he said.

Although it’s not yet clear how long it takes for a tick to transmit anaplasmosis after it latches on to your skin, Pernica said pulling it off within a day means the probability of getting infected is likely “very, very, very small.”

The Public Health Agency of Canada advises using fine-point tweezers to grasp the tick as close to the skin as possible and slowly pulling it straight out, without twisting. Then, wash the bite area with soap and water or an alcohol-based sanitizer.

People can take a photo of the tick once it’s out and submit it to eTick.ca to have it identified, the agency said, noting that doing so can also help with tick monitoring efforts in Canada.

© 2026 The Canadian Press

Regulated iGaming market goes live in Alberta, government aims to box out grey market

WATCH: Regulated online gambling coming to Alberta next month: What will change?

Alberta’s regulated iGaming system is now live, starting the race for private sports betting companies and online casinos to stake their shares in the provincial gambling market.

It makes Alberta the second province to officially open the doors to private online gambling operators, behind Ontario.

Nearly 50 companies paid $200,000 in registration and permit fees leading up to Monday’s launch, but Service Alberta Minister Dale Nally said he thinks closer to 20 are ready for customers.

A spokesperson for the provincial gambling regulator, the Alberta Liquor, Gaming and Cannabis Commission, or AGLC, said “all systems are a go” as of midnight.

The new system stems from legislation passed last year by Premier Danielle Smith’s government. Nally, who oversees the AGLC, has said the goal is to protect online bettors in the province.

Before Monday, online gamblers in Alberta either took advantage of the government-owned PlayAlberta or risked offshore sites with no consumer protection.

Alberta’s new system seems to have made an impact already.

One online platform headquartered in Estonia — Coolbet — announced earlier this month that it was pulling out of Alberta as a result of its regulations.

“We know that while gambling will never be safe, people will be safer in the regulated space,” Nally said in a recent interview.

Alberta will also be cashing in on some revenue it was missing out on with residents placing unregulated or grey-market bets. The new system is to see Alberta collect 20 per cent of each company’s revenue.

The government is forecasting a $76-million bump to provincial coffers in the first year, said Nally, although the regulatory system is “not about the money.”

“It never has been,” he said. “This has been about putting players’ safety and player responsibility first.”

Alberta’s self-exclusion program for brick-and-mortar casinos, which allows people to essentially ban themselves from gambling, is also applicable to online operators. Companies are required to let Albertans set their own time or wager limits.

Nally said one per cent of gross online gambling revenue would be set aside to spend on problem gambling programs, resources and treatment.

Two per cent is to be earmarked for First Nations. Nally said how those funds would be spread out is still being determined.

Ontario has allowed residents to use online casinos and sportsbooks since 2022. Every year since, iGaming Ontario, the provincial regulator, has reported significant growth in overall betting, revenue and active accounts.

Ontario has also seen significant increases in the number of people seeking help for gambling.

A University of Toronto study in March suggested that the rate of men under age 24 who called Ontario’s gambling helpline increased by more than 300 per cent since 2022.

It also found that the number of active online accounts per 100,000 people increased by 239 per cent in the first three years, to about 7,300 from 2,160.

Nally said its possible Alberta will see the same.

But he said Ontario’s numbers could be explained by higher public awareness of gambling addiction and the resources available.

“Those problematic gambling behaviours didn’t begin the day that (Ontario’s) market launched,” he said. “They existed previously, but there wasn’t as much awareness.”

For Albertans who don’t gamble, Nally said Monday’s launch might just mean they start seeing more online betting ads and commercials, on top of the ones meant for Ontario’s market that have been popping up for Alberta audiences for some time.

“I think it’ll be more of the status quo. Maybe some more billboards,” Nally said.

One expert said already being inundated with ads might mean Alberta has seen the brunt of online gambling.

“I expect there might be a tiny increase in helpline calls and maybe a tiny increase in problem gambling. But I don’t think it’ll be as significant as we saw in Ontario,” said Robert Williams, a professor with the University of Lethbridge’s addiction and mental health program.

The clinical psychologist and member of the Alberta Gambling Research Institute said he doesn’t expect a lot of the money will stay in the province, because many online operations are multinational companies.

“It’s an economic vacuum on the province,” said Williams.

“It’s not like establishing a casino where you have a huge economic footprint by building it with all local supplies, hiring local people … you leave a lot of the cash in the jurisdiction.

“With an online website that you’re simply importing to a different country, there’s very little expense, with the exception of your competitive advertising.”

A few operators are starting in Alberta with charity donations.

FanDuel, a major online sportsbook based in the United States, said in a news release last week that it’s donating $30,000 to the Canadian Red Cross in Alberta and $50,000 to the Dollar A Day Foundation to support mental health resources.

“As we plan to enter this new market, we’re committed to delivering a best-in-class entertainment experience and meaningful community engagement remains at the heart of everything we do,” said Dale Hooper, general manager with FanDuel Canada.

DraftKings, another U.S.-based sportsbook and online casino operator, said it would be giving $150,000 to Food Banks Alberta on Tuesday and that employees would be putting in some volunteer hours.

River Cree Resort and Casino, just west of Edmonton, said it won’t be ready to offer online gambling until later this year.

Vik Mahajan, the resort’s chief executive officer, said it’s possible online betting will take away some business from physical casinos, but he also sees it as an opportunity to grow.

“If there is an iGaming market that opens up, we have to be a part of it.”

© 2026 The Canadian Press

Five Songs You Must Hear This Week (13 July 2026)

Last Friday (July 10) was a big, big day when it came to new singles. I’d hate for these songs to fall between the cracks, so I’ve gathered them all together for this week’s Five Songs You Must Hear list. You want alternative? Okay, you asked for it.

1. L’Rain, Soulless Cycle
Single (Independent)
Recommended If You Like: Glorious, glorious noise

L’Rain, known to her parents as Taja Cheek, is an experimental American multi-instrumentalist from Brooklyn who draws on all kinds of different influences and inspirations. The resulting compositions, she says, are all “approaching songness.” Beware all ye who press on: This is different.

2. Hannah Peel & Beibei Wang, Awaken the Insects
The Endless Dance (Real World Records)
RIYL: I have no words for this

This project, a debut album (Peel is a producer and composer; Wang is a Chinese percussionist), originates in Northern Ireland and has been described as “Two women talking in totally different languages that had a wonderful chat.” Once again, this is wonderfully different. I doubt if you’ve heard anything like this before.

3. Menno Versteeg, I’m Gonna Be (500 Miles)
6 Covers from 6 Years Ago (And One from Six Weeks Ago) (Royal Mountain Recordings)
RIYL: Covers, obviously

Menno, he of Hollerado and Anyway Gang, has a new EP, the contents of which are summed up in its title. Most of these are unreleased and come from Johnny Nash, Louis Armstrong, Ben E. King, Neil Young, Patsy Cline, Bob Dylan and this very different take on The Proclaimers’ classic.

4. Derek Downham, Praying
Single (Independent)
RIYL: Fresh Toronto sounds

Derek has been knocking about the Toronto scene for some time, working, writing, and touring with the likes of Gord Downie, Ron Sexsmith, Serena Ryder, and Broken Social Scene. He was also in The Beauties, which was the house band at The Dakota. A debut solo album is on the way. We must pay attention.

5. OSTON, Placebo Effect
Single (Independent)
RIYL: Canadian punk

OSTON (real name: Austin Wolfe) is a singer originally from Utah but now based out of LA. She specializes in “melodramatic diary-like indie pop anthems about heartbreak, obsession, grief, and mental health.” Great production on this track, too, especially towards the end.

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

Iran-backed group behind anti-Jewish attacks, U.K. says

British Prime Minister Keir Starmer is under growing pressure to combat antisemitism in the United Kingdom after two Jewish men in London were stabbed. Redmond Shannon explains how Starmer is being criticized for the rise in antisemitic attacks, and what's he's now promising to do.

A series of arson and vandalism attacks on Jewish sites in Britain were the work of a proxy group backed by Iran, the U.K. government said Monday.

The government said it is banning the Islamic Movement of the Companions of the Right, or IMCR, also known as Harakat Ashab al-Yamin al-Islamia.

It also banned Iran’s powerful paramilitary Revolutionary Guard as a threat to national security. Committing sabotage on behalf of the groups will be punishable by up to life imprisonment after Parliament approves the legislation, which the government expects to take place by the end of the week.

Security Minister Angela Eagle said in a statement that the IMCR has claimed seven attacks in the U.K. The group had said online that it was responsible for a string of arson attacks on Jewish sites in London in recent months, including fires at synagogues and Jewish charity ambulances, as well as a Persian-language media organization critical of Iran’s government. No one were injured in the blazes.

“Sitting behind IMCR were members of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Qods Force, who almost certainly directed IMCR attacks across Europe,” she said. Quds, or Jerusalem, Force is the Guard’s expeditionary unit.

The group sprang up online earlier this year and has also claimed responsibility for synagogue attacks in Belgium and the Netherlands.

Law enforcement officials and intelligence experts say Iran-backed proxy groups are behind a growing number of attacks in Europe, most targeting the Jewish community and Persian-language media critical of Iran’s Islamic government.

They typically work by recruiting members of criminal groups to carry out sabotage and other attacks.

Authorities said Monday that Britain is also designating the GRU Volunteer Corps, a group controlled by Russia’s military intelligence agency, as a national security threat. The U.K. says the group conducts foreign intelligence collection and hostile covert operations on behalf of the GRU.

Authorities said the new measures will make it easier for police and intelligence agencies to tackle what they call “thugs for hire,” or anyone supporting the proxy groups.

“We have already taken tough action against the Iranian regime and those linked to it, and against Russian operatives and networks targeting our country. These new powers will make it easier to prosecute and lock up anyone carrying out their dirty work here in Britain,” Prime Minister Keir Starmer said in a statement.

The bans come under a new U.K. law that took effect last week, giving the government powers to tackle proxy organizations carrying out hostile activity on behalf of foreign states.

Earlier this month, two Romanian men were given prison sentences over the stabbing of a journalist from a Persian-language television station, an attack the judge said was carried out on behalf of the Iranian state.

There was no immediate comment from Iran.

The European Union in January listed the Revolutionary Guard as a terrorist organization over Tehran’s bloody crackdown on protests.

© 2026 The Canadian Press

Air Canada, technicians union sign new tentative agreement

Air Canada AC.TO said on Monday it has reached a tentative collective agreement with the union representing the airline’s 11,000 technical operations, airports and cargo, logistics and supply employees.

The four-year agreement would take effect from April 1, 2026, and would remain in place until March 31, 2030, the company said.

The agreement is subject to ratification by the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers union membership.

If ratified, it would represent the sixth collective agreement concluded at Air Canada this year, the company said.

© 2026 Reuters

Fire rips through Bangkok music bar, killing at least 27

A huge fire tore through a music bar in Bangkok overnight, killing at least 27 people and leaving 25 hospitalized in critical condition in the Thai capital’s most deadly blaze in 17 years.

Photos from the Rong Beer Na Ladprao bar in a northern part of the Thai capital showed people fleeing as flames shot out the single-story building and thick black smoke billowed into the sky. Shoes lost and scattered as their owners sought to flee could be seen in pictures from the aftermath of the tragedy.

Bangkok city officials said the fire broke out shortly before midnight Sunday, and it was about half an hour until firefighters brought it under control.

By daylight Monday morning, the site had been cordoned off as dozens of Thai forensic officers combed through the burned remains for clues about what caused the fire.

The building’s street-facing windows had been blown out and debris littered the sidewalk, including charred television sets, speakers and an electric guitar. From outside, the scale of the devastation was visible through the shattered windows, where burned-out tables, some still holding empty beer bottles, stood inside.

Thai national police chief Kittharath Punpetch said most of the dead were found trapped in windowless bathrooms near one of the rear exits of the bar, where they may have sheltered to escape the flames in the hall.

He said the exit had not been used, and people may have been obstructed from reaching it by a table set up in the hall to sell candy, or because it was too dark to find it.

Access to another exit near the kitchen might also have been narrowed by shelving units and lockers, said Kittharath, who visited the scene Monday morning. There were signs that at least some of the exit doors might have been locked shut, he added.

Investigators are focusing on the ceiling above the performance stage, where they found materials that may have been used as decorative elements, he said. Police will examine whether flammable materials were used in the interior and how electrical wiring was installed across the ceiling.

Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul told reporters that a musician who was performing at the bar told him that he saw smoke coming out of a circuit breaker near the stage before the power went out, then an explosion was heard and thick smoke quickly filled the place.

According to Bangkok’s Erawan emergency services center, the number of injured people was 73, with 25 in critical condition. Bangkok Gov. Chadchart Sittipunt said most of the deaths were caused by smoke inhalation and that the authorities are working on identifying victims as many did not carry ID.

Some Buddhist monks visited the site Monday morning to pray for the victims, while nurses handed out face masks to people nearby to help protect them from smoke and lingering fumes from the burned-out building.

A registration spot was set up to gather information from relatives coming at the scene looking for their loved ones.

Singer Sukanya Wongwongwai said she was performing nearby when she heard news of the fire and rushed to the scene because several of her bandmates were performing at the bar. She said one of them died, three were hospitalized and one hasn’t been located.

“From what I heard from people who were inside, when the fire started everything went dark. The power was out and there was smoke everywhere, so they couldn’t locate other people,” she said.

Distressed family members gathered at Bangkok’s Institute of Forensic Medicine in the afternoon to identify the bodies of the fire’s victims.

Through tears, a woman who asked to be identified only by her nickname, Nid, said she had just identified the bodies of her daughter and son-in-law.

She described her son-in-law as “a very good person, he worked very hard to earn money” and said her daughter had just graduated.

“She recently started working as a computer teacher. And now they’re dead,” she said.

A migrant worker at the bar lost his younger brother

Keo Oudone Poungpany, 24, was at the institute to identify his younger brother’s body. The two, migrant workers from neighboring Laos, were bar employees working when the fire broke out.

Poungpany said he was using a restroom outside of the bar when the fire broke out.

“I really don’t know what happened,” he said, recounting that while walking back toward the bar, he encountered dozens of people running away from the flames and heard terrifyingly loud noises.

From the outside of the bar, he began shouting for his brother. “The heat was unbearable, I couldn’t get back in,” he said.

“For now, I want to bring my younger brother’s body back home,” said Poungpany. “I want to bring him home to my parents. My parents are waiting for their kids to come back together, but now one is gone.”

In 2022, 14 people were killed by a fire at a music bar in the eastern part of the country. And more than a decade before that, 67 people were killed and more than 200 injured in a fire during a Jan. 1, 2009, New Year’s Eve celebration at the Santika nightclub in Thailand’s capital. That blaze was apparently sparked by an indoor fireworks display.

© 2026 The Canadian Press

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