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A nation's culture can in fact often times be reflected and shaped by its artists . Steve Smith as Red Green gave us a glimpse of Canadian sensibilities , often times self deprecating in a way that is refreshing , while still not apologizing for being Canadian . One of my favorite scenes from the show involved a manhole cover that Harold discovered near the lodge . Harold was concerned it might be something important , and asked if they should contact the Air Force . Red asked if he meant the USAF , and Harold replied no the Canadian AF . Red looked at his watch and stated it was after 5:00PM , the Canadian AF had already gone home Dusty
I added Red Green (Steve Smith, who also had an earlier show with his wife) and Don Harron to the list after I had posted it here. I also thought long and hard about adding the cast of The Beachcombers, but I'm not sure how much impact they had out in the Maritimes.One of my favorites from the Red Green Show was the quintessentially Canadian Gordon Pinsent, who played Hap Shaughnessy. Hap was a water-taxi operator, but he'd tell you he was canada's answer to James Bond - at least, until he retired.
My cousin became a Canadian thanks to the Vietnam War. This Canadian thing seems, at least with your dog breeds, to be very cloak and daggerishish - with the Labrador Retriever coming from Newfoundland, and the Newfie coming from Labrador. Don't really know about the people of Newfoundland, but the Landseer Newfie is possibly (all right, definitely, the greatest dog ever!).
More than anything else, Canadians are defined by a fairly small group of very talented people, concentrated in just a few professions - almost all performers or writers or other creative types.
I read and re-read what you said above but ...I really disagree with the idea that you can characterize an entire nation consisting of First Nations people, Labrador fishermen, Toronto urbanites, Vancouver 'hippies', Alberta wheat farmers, Saskatchewan uranium miners, and South Asian new immigrants by saying"Canadians are defined by a very small group of ...".You certainly wouldn't say that about any other nation, like "Slovakians are defined by a very small group of ...." or "Americans are defined by a very small group of ....".It's not even accurate as a gedankenexperiment .... On the other hand, as a piece of Wild Guzzi fotting around, like "Could Chuck Norris whip Seraph?", I suppose it could waste an afternoon ...Lannis
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zuVsHt3rBnc
That's a nice song and a well-done video.I'm glad to be able to note, however, that you could have substituted the name of almost any northern US state for "Canada", and the scenery, lyrics, etc would still have been appropriate!Lannis
Thanks to the loonie, give a gal a $1 bill in a dark gentleman's club and she thinks you're giving her a deuce.(Or so I've heard)
When my grandfather came to the States he had trouble with getting change, what with all the American money being the same color. He was accustomed to $1 bills being green, $2 was reddish, $5 was blue and so on.All before Loonies of course.
While I mentioned The Box (I absolutely love 'L'Affaire Dumoutier'!),
this is an older vid but i still believe it represents what exists between Canada and the USAhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lrA4V6YF6SA
I have had a couple of Canadian crew members on boat. They seem normal enough and go in noticed until they put mayonnaise on their French fries and fried chicken revealing their secret identity.