Fan choice: Karan Aujla puts Punjabi music on the map at the Juno Awards dailyhive.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from dailyhive.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Representatives for Bell Media said Monday that a "scheduling change" was behind their decision to quietly remove 299 Queen Street West from a planned debut last Friday on the channel and its streaming service.
CBC Windsor's Amy Dodge, Meg Roberts, Nav Nanwa, Peter Duck, Tom Addison and retired host Tony Doucette have their trivia knowledge put to the test in a Sounds of the Season radio roundtable challenge.
People in Lakeshore will tell you: It's a peaceful community with lower home prices and good schools — and certainly not the GTA. And that's exactly what the town's growing South Asian community enjoys about the rural municipality east of Windsor.
A new documentary called 299 Queen Street West tells the story of MuchMusic through the eyes of their video jockeys, also known as VJs. The film will be closing out the Windsor International Film Festival this year with a screening and Q & A on Nov. 5. Windsor Morning host Nav Nanwa spoke with director Sean Menard and former MuchMusic VJ Rick Campanelli, also known as Rick The Temp, about the film.
Tecumseh runner uses Detroit Free Press Marathon streak to mark his family's growth cbc.ca - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from cbc.ca Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
A regrettable chapter in Canadian history is being remembered in Windsor, Ont., this week. It has been a century since most Chinese immigrants were excluded from entering Canada — a policy that lasted 24 years.
Amy Verma's business depends solely on the goodwill between India and Canada. But that relationship has soured recently after the prime minister accused the Indian government of being involved in the killing of a prominent Sikh leader in B.C.
When he first started creating content years ago, Stewart "Brittlestar" Reynolds says he was 43-year-old and out of his depth in a sea of good-looking young people. Now, the Stratford-based comedian, father and husband is fighting the "dumbageddon" with his new book, Welcome to the Stupidpocalypse released last week. The book explores, politics, social media, parenthood and business with Reynolds' typical sense of humour.
Parimal Parikh says many international students he recently interviewed for a job at his South Asian grocery store were emotional. Parikh owns Namaste Indian Supermarket in Windsor and was looking to hire for seven positions.