![]() |
ART IMITATES MAX: This is ChatGPT's response to my request for a rendition of Max and his new pal on the roadside near Burwash. |
Pete's Blog & Grille
Sunday, April 27, 2025
Friends to the Max
Wednesday, March 5, 2025
John School
"I think I may need some executive coaching. Is that one of the suite of services offered by Pete's Blog & Grille?"
![]() |
PUTTING THE BILL INTO PLAYBILL: I swiped my cousin-in-law's photo off the Facebook account of the little person on the left. Pretty sure. |
I told him that we here at Pete's B&G hadn't yet fully developed our full "suite" of executive coaching services but I'd have something ready when he got back from his stroll. (That's where Johns go, right? Haha)
So here it is:
10 tips guaranteed to catapult you to the very top of the corporation. In no discernible order, and with no proven results.
10) Start close to the top. It's way easier to be appointed president if you start as vice president.
9) Sucking up is under-rated. Do what you're told. That might be the single most important rule you'll ever learn in school. Nobody I've ever met in any context enjoys being told they're wrong, about anything. The only thing worse than being informed you're mistaken is having it proved to you, especially when others are watching. Just yesterday, I watched the excellent Netflix movie Whiplash about a (supposedly) 19-year-old drummer who defies his bully conductor only to prove to the world that he's as good a drummer as Buddy Rich. Elaine Benes would put it this way: "Fake! Fake! Fake!" I suck at doing what I'm told.
8) Speaking of sucking up, my wife many jobs ago told me I spent a lot of time"sucking down." Time I could have put to good use polishing the brass's brass I used talking to the building-maintenance guy about Dustbane, that stuff Mr. Dorigo the St. Albert's school custodian cleaned up kids' barf with. It's a smell you don't forget. The Dustbane. Barf too.
![]() |
JIM'S DANDY: Cormier would have seen through this cheap excuse to run his photo just to attract readers. And he'd have approved. (I think it was the baby's FB account I stole this great pic from.) |
6) Stay on topic.
5) Wanna hear something funny? I was already on journalism job number four--at Chimo Media in Toronto--the very first time that any journalist I knew refer to what he was doing as a "career." It was another role model of mine, the late Jim Cormier. Jim was considering a move to another magazine and said "I have to think about how this would affect my career." I asked him to repeat it. Nobody in my "wingin'-it" universe had ever used that word before.
4) If Jim were alive I know he would actually be at the top of his profession, because that's the way he rolled. Very smart, ambitious but kind, way too good looking, funny and likeable besides. So this tip should actually read, "be more like Jim Cormier".
3) And forget about the sticking to plans.
2) And next to finally, if you're reading Pete's Blog&Grille for executive coaching advice, you might as well isskay ouryay areercay olongsay.
1) Sorry. Thought I had 10. I was wrong. Godspeed (whatever that means) your career dreams John.
Wednesday, February 19, 2025
Stompin' 2.0
![]() |
SUSSING THEM OUT? Go to Kurt Suss Music on Facebook |
Dogman's full of colourful story telling. And it brims over with love of dogs and love of family in equal measures.
I happened to meet the writer, Suss, a professional dog guy a few months ago. And every once in a while I get to know somebody I want to yell to the world about.
Okay okay. I've ever met anybody boring. True fact. Scratch any person's surface--never mind scratching, just ask--you'll get drama.
That said.
If Pete's Blog&Grille was a podcast, Suss would be a regular guest for as many weeks as it takes him to share the stories behind each of the songs on his two CDs.
(I'd have told you about these recordings sooner but I don't have a CD player in the house any more. Just the car. I had to wait til I took a reasonably long drive, which was last week.)
Every song is about a Canadian legend. Or ghost story. Or obscure piece of history that you probably don't know.
Case in point, first time I heard Mad Trapper, I was northbound on Sorauren Avenue, which is adjacent to the street we live on. About 30 seconds into Dark Day in Saint Thomas, his lyrics actually made me, say, out loud, "Really?"
And then, a second later, his lyric was "Yeah," as if he could have heard me. And then I got a bit blue. The song's about Jumbo the elephant getting killed in St. Thomas, Ont. I had no idea.
Another? Cloud 11. Hands up anybody who remembers the escaped inmate Donald Kelly who was making headlines around Ontario back in the '70s, as he outran the law. Cloud II was a tracking dog that got killed in the process.
![]() |
WANT TO CONTACT KURT: Try 'Hey Siri! Who's the world's worst self promoter? Or try isiscanine@hotmail.com. |
On the same album as the Jumbo song are not one but TWO bus songs!
Two bus ballads!
My mom and dad have a bus carved on to their gravestone.
Last century, a few weeks before I met Helena, my dad gave me my very own 44-passenger school bus because he had no use for it anymore. Who else do you know had one of those?
But I digress.
A Bus Just Like Neil's is a tribute to Neil Young's touring vehicle, and The Little Blue Bus is a Glace Bay, Nova Scotia, French fry place that, according to Suss's lyrics, even Stompin' Tom Connors approved of.
Did I say Stompin' Tom? Are you, like me, thinking Stompin Tom 2.0?
Kurt would be chuffed. (Good name for a song: Suss got chuffed!)
He's a huge Connors fan and believes he ran into the late singer long ago, before Connors was a household name. (Which he is, in Canada, in case anybody Stateside's reading this.)
Recalls Suss: "I actually met him [Connors] once but didn't know who he was. I was 16 and dating a girl whose sister worked for a sound studio in Toronto. I occasionally helped out a bit with making sounds for TV productions.. Tom was there previewing one I think I may have even got him a pop."
Suss can tell a story.
Here's the thing.
Suss told me he's on the lookout for more Canadian stories and legends to sing about.
Which brings me back to that beautiful old bus I owned when I met Helena.
Pop star Don McLean was a lonely teenage broncin' buck with a pink carnation and a pickup truck.
I'll start by telling Kurt F. Suss, I was all alone but I owned a bus.
I am on to something here..
Friday, January 24, 2025
Fearless (ish) Fred
![]() |
THE TROUBLE WITH ANGELS: God knows who most of these kids are. I can name about half. |
![]() |
PS: Fred looks the same now as he did in grade one. |
Saturday, January 4, 2025
Hitting it into the park
![]() |
ED OF HIS CLASS: He spent countless hours in High Park with us. |
BENCH IMPRESSING: Musician, husband, brother, nephew, son, weight lifter, and pun lover Paul |
Tuesday, December 24, 2024
Getting what you parade for
![]() |
MARY CHRISTMAS: If you can't laugh at your sisters, what's the point of having'em? Mary on left, Norma and Charlene in the middle. |
What follows are nine things I learned marching in the 2024 Toronto Santa Claus parade as a snowman:
9) Go before you go. At 11:05 a.m., and with a parade start time set at 11:30, I--fully rigged out in my snowman getup--realized I should have gone before I left home. Due to all the zippers, boots, hood, Velcro and whatnot, an activity that normally takes 30 seconds topped the 15-minute mark. At one point, I was standing at the urinal with the fluffy white snowman costume piled knee high round my ankles when a man behind me says, “You’re melting.”
![]() |
GOLD, FRANKINCENSE AND MERCH: The cool tee was the handiwork of Frosty Fan Jon Butler! |
1) If this last one isn't proof the magic of Christmas is real, I'll eat my snowman hat. “It’s not bad now but I bet it’s going to be bad soon,” is what I thought for the first kilometre or two of the parade. I was dead certain that I'd be tired and cranky and sore at parade's end, that I'd be itching, desperate even, to join my sisters for beer and Italian food, as we'd planned. I was wrong! The parade was nearing the final corner, I thought, "I don't want this to end!" I could have walked another parade! Turns out, prancing around and joking and high-fiving strangers and making an ass of myself in front of 750,000 happy people is what I was put on earth to do.
Tuesday, November 12, 2024
Another fun recipe from the Carter sisters' kookbook
![]() |
My response? "I love you and I will try rilly rilly hard to not tell anyone that you asked if clown beauty sleep is really a thing. But no promises."
The reason this Halifax-based cousin asked about clown beauty sleep is, she was wondering whether I would be attending the Taylor Swift concert here in Toronto, on Saturday, Nov. 23rd.
Of course, the answer is no.
It's not that I don't like Taylor Swift. In fact, if her other songs are as good as the two that I am familiar with, Carolina and Mean, I totally get the fuss.
I also admit, I totally dreamt about Taylor Swift.
Last Friday. I know because I wrote it down after I woke up, something I rarely do.
My late brother Ed was there, too. He and I were working as funeral home assistants at Taylor Swift's funeral. And at the dress rehearsal, while her dancers practised their routine in one corner of the funeral home, other people lined up at the coffin to bid the singer goodbye.
In true Ed fashion, he said "Pete if we don't do this, we'll regret it forever," so he and I got in line. When we arrived at Swift's casket, Ed reached over to brush some hair out of her eyes. She sat up.
Ed was like, "Oh-oh."
Swift proceeded to stand and dance, right there in the coffin.
I've had a similar dream about Ed.
But never mind that.
When my cousin asked about her concert, I said I couldn't stay up late that night because the next day, Sunday November 24, I and three of my sisters are marching in the Toronto Santa Claus parade as clowns, so we would need our clown beauty sleep.
Ha-ha.
Clown beauty sleep might not be a thing, but me, Charlene, Norma and Mary as clowns in the 120-year-old parade sure is. It's almost hard to believe this is happening but there you go.
Charlene and Norma will be upside down clowns; Mary a musical elf carrying a giant eighth note. I'll be a snowman. Wearing a top hat.
It was Charlene's idea. She was a clown last year and persuaded us to join her this go-round.
I am the youngest of the four but the maturest.