Lofty Pines Motel – The Tragically Hip
Wetlands, New York, New York 7-23-1998
Author Archives: -chris
The Hip Tracker is Dead.
That’s right fans; The Hip Tracker is dead.
Last week some arrogant jerkoff decided to hack our server and delete the Admin accounts, along with add their own graphics, and generally be a pest. This forced our hand and we implemented an upgraded version of the tracker software.
This turned out to be a good move, but sadly the loser hacker saw it as a new challenge and eventually gained access to the accounts and made changes, sent spam messages, deleted users, etc. which brings me to the point: The Hip Tracker as you knew and loved it is dead.
If you have any ideas on how to resurrect it, please let me know.
YouTube: The Hip – 2006-06-30 – Charlottetown, PEI
New torrent posted: The Hip in Charlottetown on June 30, 2006.
SETLIST: 2007-10-10 – San Francisco, CA
The Warfield, San Francisco, CA
01: The Lonely End Of The Rink
02: Grace, Too
03: My Music at Work
04: Gus: The Polar Bear From Central Park
05: Family Band
06: Ahead By A Century
07: Gift Shop
08: In View
09: Poets
10: Pretend
11: Fireworks
12: At The 100th Meridian
13: Escape Is At Hand For The Travellin’ Man
14: Fiddlers Green
15: Yer Not The Ocean
16: Locked In The Trunk Of A Car
17: Fire in the Hole
Encore
18: Put it Off
19: COVER: “Mr. Soul” by Buffalo Springfield
20: New Orleans Is Sinking
YouTube: Gord Downie on 2003-07-04 – Orillia, ON
This DVD is available for download now through The Hip Tracker.
Now, a Dollar Is Really Worth a Dollar (Hip mention)
Now, a Dollar (Canadian) Is Really Worth a Dollar (U.S.)
By PATRICK McGEEHAN
Published: October 1, 2007
New Yorkers, like most Americans, pay precious little attention to what happens in Canada, that large, sparsely populated region with the chronically inferior currency.
Check that last part. Now that the Canadian dollar, known as the loonie, has flapped its way to parity with the American dollar (formerly known as the almighty), Canada suddenly looks like a proud nation of 33 million people whose cross-border purchasing power has grown by more than half in five years.
Tourism officials in New York have taken notice. They acknowledge that they took Canadian visitors for granted in the past, but now they are drawing up plans to lure more of them to the state and New York City.
The state is running ads in Toronto newspapers and on Canadian Web sites, inviting Canadians to spend fall weekends in northern and western New York. The city’s tourism agency, NYC & Company, is rushing to open an office in Toronto, which would be its first in Canada. “This seems like sort of a psychological opportunity,†said George A. Fertitta, the chief executive of NYC & Company, referring to the parity of the two currencies.
The Canadian dollar, nicknamed for the image of a loon that it bears, passed its American counterpart on Friday, when it hit a new 31-year high of almost $1.01. In early 2002, it was worth about 62 cents.
Back then, the flow of visitors from Canada to New York City was in a post-9/11 swoon. The number of visitors dropped to 693,000 in 2003, from 920,000 in 2000, a decline of almost 25 percent. By last year, it had rebounded to 840,000, making Canada the No. 2 foreign source of visitors, behind Britain, according to NYC & Company.
Now, with Canadians brandishing their reinvigorated loonies, tourism officials have stopped ignoring them and started encouraging them to join the parade of bargain-hunting foreigners flooding into New York. When it comes to shopping, little prodding seems to be required.
“Friends will be coming to town and they’ll say, ‘We need one day to shop,’†said Jeff Breithaupt, an Ontario native who coordinates cultural activities for the Canadian Consulate in Manhattan and is an editor of a newsletter titled The Upper North Side. For Canadians, said Mr. Breithaupt, the advent of parity between the currencies has become both a point of pride and a spur to travel. His own parents had been “on the fence†about a trip to the city later this year, he said, but they told him last week that they would come, citing the exchange rate as a deciding factor.
Mr. Breithaupt, who also organizes a series of concerts by Canadian musicians at Joe’s Pub in Greenwich Village, said he expected more Canadians to venture south next month to hear the Tragically Hip, a rock band that sells out arenas in Canada, perform in the more intimate venue of the Grand Ballroom in Manhattan and other clubs around New York.
The shopping and spending habits of Canadians are not markedly different from those of American tourists, Mr. Fertitta said. He estimated that the typical Canadian visitor might spend slightly more than the $370 the typical American visitor spends in the city, but far less than the estimated $1,400 that the typical visitor from overseas spends. That gap explains why the city has focused its 2007 tourism promotion on Europe, including ads portraying New York as a bargain for foreigners, he said.
But officials at the Empire State Development Corporation, a state agency that promotes business, decided to strike while the loonie is hot. They spent about $1 million on ads aimed at the potential visitors in the Toronto area this summer and plan to spend an equal amount trying to attract them this fall, said Thomas Ranese, chief marketing officer for the agency.
“I think Canada’s a significant market for us that New York State has never fully optimized,†Mr. Ranese said Thursday, speaking by phone from Chautauqua, near Lake Erie. He said he had just left a resort, Peek’n Peak, about 90 miles southwest of Buffalo, where he said about half of the cars in the parking lot bore Ontario license plates.
Mr. Ranese said incoming traffic from Canada had risen in recent weeks, much of it headed for shopping malls. The trick, he said, would be to convert more of those day-trippers, like Mike and Jennifer Fields of Hamilton, Ontario, into overnight guests.
The Fieldses, who were bound yesterday afternoon for a duty-free store on the American side of Rainbow Bridge near Niagara Falls, said they were lured by the Canadian dollar’s achieving parity, combined with the local sales-tax rate of 8 percent, compared with 14 percent in Ontario.
“It’s so cheap over here,†Ms. Fields said. “This is the first time I’ve come over in a long time — more than 10 years.â€
For those who stay overnight, there is an added bonus: They can bring back $400 in purchases without paying duty at the border, as opposed to $50 for day-trippers.
Joseph Sanelli, the general manager of the Four Points by Sheraton hotel near Niagara Falls State Park, said he was not sure the tax savings would motivate visitors to stay longer, but the exchange rate shift had provided a late-summer boost. Occupancy was 92 percent in the past month, up from 72 percent in September 2006, he said. “Usually after Labor Day, you can just about lock the doors,†he said.
For Canadian visitors, the cold shower on their newfound pride comes on the way out. At the border bridges operated by the Niagara Falls Bridge Commission, the fare can be paid with $3 American or $3.50 Canadian — a far cry from parity.
Drivers are complaining to toll takers, “Gee, our dollars are about at par, why is the toll so different?†said Tom Garlock, the commission’s general manager.
Lately, he said, more of them have been holding on to their loonies and paying in United States currency. The commission, which raised the toll last spring from $2.50 American (the Canadian rate did not change), is considering another adjustment to account for the exchange-rate shift, Mr. Garlock said, but first it wants more evidence that parity is here to stay.
David Staba contributed reporting.
The Unique Motel Podcast – October 1st, 2007
Today marks the launch of The Unique Motel Podcast. Check it out now, and be sure to leave feedback for the Motel keepers. The first edition is available in two different bit rates to hopefully satisfy most people’s downloading abilities…
SETLIST: 2007-10-01 – Eindhoven, Netherlands
Here’s the review from the show that Big A sent in:
Best fucking show topnight
Thuigs daddy fidders spring wheat locked
Setlist
01: The Lonely End Of The Rink
02: New Orleans Is Sinking
03: Don’t Wake Daddy
04: Ahead By A Century
05: In View
06: Gift Shop
07: Family Band
08: Courage
09: Thugs
10: Fiddler’s Green
11: Yer Not The Ocean
12: Locked In The Trunk Of A Car
13: Wheat Kings
14: Blow At High Dough
15: Fire In The Hole
Encore
16: Luv (Sic)
17: Something On
18: Fully Completely
SETLIST: 2007-09-30 – Cologne, Germany
Prime Club, Cologne, Germany
01: Yer Not The Ocean
02: New Orleans Is Sinking
03: Escape Is At Hand For The Travellin’ Man…
04: Gus: The Polar Bear From Central Park
05: In View
06: Bobcaygeon
07: Nautical Disastar
08: Courage
09: Pretend
10: Family Band
11: At The 100th Meridian
12: Ahead By A Cenytury
13: Luv (sic)
14: My Music At Work
15: Little Bones
Encore
16: At The Lonely End Of The Rink
17: Fireworks
The Hipfans in attendance described the club as being “smaller than the Horseshoe”…
Hip Documentary UPDATE
Here’s an update on the project from Dan – the lead singer of Little Bones, one of the acts featured in the documentary.
————-
I have some info from Good Company Pictures.
They noted that the airing station is the E Channel (Entertainment Channel), and the documentary (a series of 4 shows) runs 1 hr per week at 10PM covering Tribute acts for:
Oct21 – The Police
Oct28 – Rush
Nov 4 – Queen
Nov 11—The Tragically Hip
That’s all I can find so far. So The Hip trib should be on at 10 pm on Rem. Day.
Should be interesting ….
Take Care,
Dan fom Little Bones.