Notes from my 2nd 2-Day Toronto Business Trip
Notes from my 2nd
2-Day Toronto Business Trip
By
Martin Bodek
Day 1:
3:00 AM: Rise and shine, take 1.
Help my MIL with her bags, grab a quick meal, get all my stuff ready at the
front door, see my MIL into her Uber at 3:45 AM, for her flight back home, and
I plop back asleep on the couch.
4:45 AM: Rise and shine, take 2. Grab
another quick bite, grab my bags, wait for my Uber, and hope he arrives before
my 5:00 AM morning sprinklers soak both him and me.
He arrives at 4:57, baby, and whisks
me off to Newark Airport. Claudio is the man.
I arrive so early, that I’m the only
person on the TSA line. The only one. Just me. Doesn’t mean they badger me any
less, or ratchet down their condescending treatment. They treat me just the
same. I’m patted down again, this time, a bit too intimately. The Friends
episode where Chandler uses Joey’s tailor comes to mind: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fTzEybULzRg
I survive the ordeal, make my way to
the gate, and look up at the clock. From the front door of my house to the gate
has taken me all of 35 minutes. Wow!
I’m using Porter Air again. A Bombardier Dash 8 Q400, with the funky propellers and
landing gear that descend from the engines, which is six feet from my face. I
take videos of them in action, taking off and landing, because I’m a kid like
that.
We ascend into cotton-candy clouds,
and the flight is not uneventful, but in a great way.
Now see, Toronto is Northwest of
Newark, at a bearing of 307º, whilst we are headed along a bearing of 303º, towards
a spot which is 33 miles directly south of Toronto (Yes, I had to look up all
these terms), which is off course.
Why do I even notice this?
Because directly outside my window
is Niagara Falls, and it is astonishing and beautiful from my vantage point. I
grab as many pictures as I can. They’re gorgeous and I’m happy I have them.
We then ride along the Northwest rim
of Lake Ontario and land safely. I take more videos of the landing gear. I’ve
been busy with my phone for this flight.
I land safely. When I describe to
Border Patrol the purpose of my visit in a creative way, I actually elicit
laughter. Finally! I guess I’m something like 1 for 147.
I get my car rental lickety-split,
am tickled to death once again by the fact that a ferry gets me to the
mainland, immediately switch to 88.1, the greatest radio station on the planet,
and enjoy all this great music throughout my visit, which you’ll never hear in
the U.S.:
Big Data, Dangerous: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E8b4xYbEugo, don’t watch the video. It is NSFW naughty, shockingly
gory, and flat-out insane.
July Talk, Beck + Call: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5OkqAztfS-4, great combination of talented and interesting voices.
Arcade Fire, Everything Now: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zC30BYR3CUk, excellent music, ABBA-ish, and superior to the garbage
noise they called music on SNL (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=16Ut5B1K-14).
July Talk, Push + Pull: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YWywb9i-z7Y, there they are again. Man, that guy’s voice is something.
The Killers, The Man: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DfedYa_JovE, this one might make it to The States. You heard it here
first!
Bjork, It’s Oh So Quiet: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=htobTBlCvUU, never heard the full song. So big-band bat$#!+ bonkers
that you have to love it.
I judge places by their signage.
Toronto is very eager to let you
know when an exit off a highway is coming up, at least four times within a
quarter mile of the exit.
On the other hand, I keep seeing
this sign that says, “Buses Excepted.” Uh, buses excepted from what? Finally,
after five such examples, I see another one with a sign above it that says, “No
right turns.” Aha. Hey Toronto, you have at least five signs whose introductory
information is missing. Clean that up, will ya?
Work at site 1.
Now, I have the kind of job where
people report problems to you, then, in person, the problem disappears.
However, in this case, every
possible problem appears. Fascinating.
Off to site 2.
Let’s stop for lunch. I need a
sandwich and coffee.
I find a kosher bakery (Amazing
Donuts). They have neither sandwiches, nor coffee.
I try the pizza shop (Pizza Café) next
door. They have sandwiches, no coffee.
A café with no coffee.
I have a sandwich, and I’ll get a
coffee from the Starbucks on the corner.
While I’m chowing down, I notice an
Aroma restaurant across the street.
Guess what it says on the awning?
Sandwiches and coffee.
Life is like that.
Off to site 2.
Work.
Boy the people are friendly here.
I walk through a set of doors and
hold it for the person behind me. She says, “Thanks!”
I open the next set of doors, and
hold, she says, “Double thanks!”
In New York, the second hold would be
met with a nod and grunt, the first “Thanks!” having usually expended the day’s
full politeness output.
I take out some cash from an ATM.
They have transparent bills! Awesome! Check it out: http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/business/2011/11/canada-introduces-new-plastic-currency/
After work, I head out for a quick
dinner. I suddenly find myself in a neighborhood that is clearly – from the
looks of the imposing, impressive, impossibly-sized houses – the Beverly Hills
of Toronto.
I’m right. It’s called Bridle Path,
and it’s the most affluent neighborhood in all of Canada. Houses go up to $27
mill. Prince, of blessed memory, had a house here.
I notice there are bicyclists all
over this town. I also notice that none of them – that’s none, as in *none* -
uses hand signals.
I don’t even know what the hand
signals mean, but it doesn’t matter. When a cyclist puts out an arm and does
motion-y things with it, I give a wide berth, plain and simple.
C’mon folks, the life you save may
be your own.
I have a quick, yummy dinner at
Bubby’s Bagels, and grab some snacks for the road. We’re goin’ downtown.
I find underground,
self-explanatory, self-parking (death before valet) and go looking for the
Canadian Walk of Fame. Waze leads me into the lobby of an office building.
Oopsie. Google leads me to the right spot. I’m here to see one name above all,
and I find it: Terry Fox. My first, and eternal, running hero.
I find him, and I notice there’s no
signature. He didn’t live long enough.
I also notice a Mordecai Richler.
There are Martins aplenty across various Walks of Fame, but I don’t think there
are many that have my Hebrew forename. Turns out, my dad is a fan.
Off to the Rogers Centre to see the
Jays vs. Rays. It’ll be my 7th major league baseball stadium. I’m a
little behind Bartolo Colon’s record of 44.
It’s here where I decide this is a
city of drunks. I’ll get to that in a minute.
First, security: They want you to
remove your cellphones, camera, and sunglass cases. Everything else you can
carry through the metal detector. Interesting.
Second, the kosher stand: The line
is out to Lake Michigan, I swear. I’ll be back later.
Third, my seat: $43 to sit four rows
behind the Jays dugout. I’d have to pass my child over to molech to grab a seat
like that at Yankee Stadium.
Fourth, my family: Back home, my
wife tries her darndest to find the game on TV, finally managing to jump
through some serious hoops to get it done, but they never see me. From
screenshots, I can tell that on multiple occasions, I was an inch out of frame.
Our boys were furious. I’ll make it up to them with a Yanks or Giants game.
Fifth, the game itself: Awesome.
Jays come from behind to win 7-6.
Now, let’s discuss these drunks.
Drunk #1: Or, as I call him, The
Boring Drunk. This guy sits four seats over to my right, with his daughter, and
keeps ordering tall beers until he’s smashed. I’m frequently used to pass along
the money in one direction, and the beer in another.
Why do I call him boring? Because
despite getting drunker and drunkier and drunkiest, his material never changes.
He starts with “Hey Jose! Hit the
ball!” and ends with “Ayyy, Joosurey, hizz the blah.”
Gotta change it up, dude!
He doesn’t even care which beer he’s
getting. At the end of the game, with at least 7 tall beers in him, he orders
his last, as follows: ‘Ayyy, feermen, g’me whizzoover is goalest.”
Translation: “Hey, Beerman, give me
whichever is coldest.”
Drunk #2: The Funny Drunk. This guy is
about five rows behind me, drinking at the same pace as Drunk #1, but keeping
the material fresh. Well, in the sense that he’s trying different things, but
centered around a general motif: the quality of player in at-bats in various
comparisons to as many female private parts as can be counted. He cannot be
shushed, and women literally cover their children’s ears when this guy sends
his piehole flapping. He is a riot.
Drunk #3: This is the unnerving one,
whereas the first two are just for fun. You can’t be surrounded by this many
drunks without getting into a problem, can you?
Here’s what happens:
I exit my seat to pee, and get me
some of that kosher food, not necessarily in that order.
When I return, I notice dozens of
fans gathered around the entrance to the steps to their seats. I figure, maybe
they’re just trying to get a better view. I unfold my ticket, present it to the
usher, and keep moving forward. She stops me, and says, “You have to wait until
he’s finished with his at-bat.”
Oh, I never heard of a rule like
that. Okay, no problem. I fold up my ticket and wait for the at-bat to be over.
As I’m folding up the ticket, an
overcorpulent fellow, perhaps 6’5”, sporting a beer in his left hand which is
about a foot away from me, looking down his nose at me with contempt, says: "Are
you in a rush, sir?"
Now, there’s no correct answer to
this question that would have me getting away from this interaction without one
of us losing a few teeth.
I choose to defuse, as I learned
from 90210, and I say jack squat, staring at the batter until he’s out (while
Mr. Barfight sizes me up and down, and while I judge distances between me and
him just in case he wants to start something), and head back to my seat,
leaving him to mumble racist spew about me to this wingman.
Whatever.
Ball game over! Jays win! Thuh uh
uh, Jays win!
Sorry, wrong team announcer.
I walk back to my car, with the
crowd, fetch it, and head to my hotel.
There’s a parking lot attached to
it. Must be theirs, right? Wrong. It’s only once you enter, and roll all the
way to the bottom that they show you a sign saying this isn’t part of the
hotel, and anyway, it isn’t a 24-hour lot. How about you put that sign at the
entrance, hm?
Upon exiting, I meet:
Drunk #4: Two (allegedly) sober guys
are holding their drunk friend between them, as they all try to cross the
street in front of my car. The two anchors let go, and Drunkie falls all over
my car, conking my rearview mirror and hitting the floor. He pops up, flops
around like he’s Weekend at Bernie’s, and continues on his way.
I find the right parking lot, in the
back of the hotel, check in, crash, have a good night’s sleep, and…
Day 2:
…I’m out the door for a spirited
5:30 AM run through downtown and Lake Ontario.
Not two blocks into my run, guess
who I run into?
Drunk #5: Now this one is the most
interesting of all. He’s decked out in a business suit and attache case, all
put together properly, but instead of a coffee in his right hand, he’s holding
a beer. There are so many possibilities here. He could simply have grabbed the
wrong beverage, and didn’t notice yet, or perhaps he’s nervous as hell for an
interview, or maybe, just maybe, he’s simply Canadian. I don’t know. You
decide.
I run down Yonge St, which is
clearly Toronto’s Broadway, past many pretty glass buildings (That’s the new
rule for every city on earth: all new buildings must be made of glass), along
Lake Ontario, and back to the hotel. 6.6 miles of invigorating fun in the crisp
air. Great way to start my day.
Now I’m consistent with saying that
life is never a straight line.
I have a card with a credit card
stripe that I received from the desk. I’m supposed to swipe it through the
machine, and I can get out of the lot, right? Because there’s really only four
directions this card can go, right?
Ahahahahahaha! Wrong.
There aren’t four ways to turn a
card! No, you have to apply certain pressure in certain directions, and
sometimes bend it funny, and today, I also have to re-park, and visit the lobby
desk twice before I’m allowed to exit the parking lot.
Because in reality, there are a
Rubik’s-Cubesque 54 quintillion combination to how you can swipe a card, and I
finally get it right on the 27 quintillionth combination.
Arrrrgh!
Anyway, I’m finally free.
Ooh, black squirrel!
I had back to Bubby’s where I load
up for the day. I have breakfast there, and take lunch and dinner to go.
Work
Traffic from hell, but music from
heaven. See list above.
My flight is delayed, as are many
others, as are many later, and prior, but this is a small airport, and small
airports are the best thing in the world, and despite the chaos and disorder, I
nevertheless approach the desk, ask if I can get on that one flight that
doesn’t seem delayed, and badabing, badaboom, my flight is switched, and I’m
outta there. I’m going to have dinner with my family and put my kids to sleep.
Oh cool! MetLife stadium! The field
is totally ripped up! Oh wait, they must be having those dirtbike competitions!
That’s how close the view is!
I watch the landing gear unfold and
land again, because it’s awesome.
Newark Airport is an idiot at
receiving you.
·
In Customs, they have one guy
directing traffic, one. That’s like a mouse in a field of elephants.
·
They have signs pointing
“International Travelers” in a certain direction. Now what exactly *is* an
international traveler? Does it mean that I just came from an internation? That
I generally travel internationally? How about “foreign”? That’s a much better
word.
·
“Use these kiosks” another sign
says. Who should use them? Me? Somebody else? National travelers? I’d ask the
one guy customs guy, but he’s already the coroner has already declared him dead
by trampling.
I get right through, after the
border office grunts me ahead. No joy here, but practical ebullience during
every other part of my journey. Your job is what you make of it.
Part of the reason my company sends
me around so much is because I bring a certain enthusiasm to my vocation. I, in
turn, am well received.
I bless you all that you should find
joy in everything you do too.
I'm off to Latin America.
I write about stuff, as you can see. I even write books
about stuff: http://www.lulu.com/spotlight/mbodekatgmaildotcom, http://tinyurl.com/BodekKindleBooks. Buy them.
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