
If your idea of Canada is dominated by maple syrup, hockey, flannel shirts or the G-20 Summit, it's time to discover Toronto as the new capital of Cool.
Toronto boasts a population of five million people, 200 ethnic groups and 130 languages. Each year the city absorbs approximately 50,000 immigrants, making it Canada's largest city and surprisingly one of the most culturally diverse communities in North America.

Although the Toronto skyline is dotted with a dizzying array of towering glass residential developments, it is the renewal of the once dodgy but now trendy West Queen, Ossington and King West neighborhoods that have visitors buzzing about the galleries, custom clothing boutiques, restaurants and specialty stores. As a reference consider these districts to be Toronto's Brooklyn.
The best way to get an insider's view of these neighborhoods is to take a tour with Betty Ann Jordan of InSite walking tours. Betty Ann, a former art journalist, has an all access pass to the young entrepreneurs responsible for the revitalization of these areas.

Moving further along you will discover the beating heart of the city lies in Kensington Market, Little Italy, Chinatown, Little Portugal, Greektown, and Little India. It is in these neighborhoods that you will see, feel and taste the vibrant mash-up of globalization and daily life coming together. If you really want to feel the beat, stick around for the ultimate street party Caribana, one of the largest Caribbean carnivals in the world. Caribana takes place July 30-August 1st.
To make use of the mild summer and early fall temperatures, Canadians have ingeniously packed their events calendar full of outdoor festivals. The festival organizers have strategically designed the programs to foster a new creative hub for art enthusiasts of all levels. By doing so, they have discovered that arts and music festivals attract an international crowd of repeat visitors.
As a return on their investment, the city of Toronto receives cutting edge art, innovative cultural programs and moProxy-Connection: keep-alive
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importantly, art tourism dollars that trickle down to all sectors of the local economy.
The key to making this equation work is strong community outreach. Instead of maintaining the mystic of art as being exclusive and indecipherable, the Canadians have literally taken the arts to the streets. The annual Luminato Festival recently showcased ten days of city wide performances, exhibitions, and artist talks.
An example of public art was the installation by the visual arts collective, FriendsWithYou. The artists who are known for their vivid pop aesthetic and large scale outdoor installations transformed Queens Park into Rainbow City. The park was filled with towering inflatable totems, bounce houses and celestial creatures that invoked playful interaction for the young and old alike.

The hands down show stopper of Luminato was the theatrical production The African Trilogy. The production featured three individual plays Shine Your Light, Glo and Peggy Picket Sees the Face of God. Each play examined the multi-faceted relationship between Africa and the West by navigating the explosive questions 'Just who do they think they are? Just who do they think we are? Just who do we think we are?' The African Trilogy is smart, irreverent, challenging and brilliantly directed and acted.
During autumn the art party continues with the prestigious Toronto International Film Festival, September 9-19th. The film festival routinely attracts the Hollywood A-list as well as a half a million attendees each year.
From October 2-3rd the term Northern Lights will have new meaning with the Nuit Blanche Festival. Nuit Blanche features 24 hours of outdoor art installations that will light up the night sky throughout the city. The grand finale of Toronto's arts festivals is Flash Forward, celebrating the work of emerging photographers, October 6-10th.
If you haven't noticed by now, Canadians are crazy about art. If they don't grab your attention outside, they will grab it when you try to go to sleep. At the Gladstone Hotel art is not something you simply hang on a wall, it is the hotel room itself. The 100 year old hotel features 37 artist designed rooms that showcase an individual theme for each room.
The Gladstone also presents a full schedule of exhibitions and an innovative Artist in Residence program for international artists who specifically want to create work in Toronto. On the luxurious end of the hotel spectrum, the newly opened Thompson Hotel has followed suit with a commissioned mural by Javier Mariscal, rooftop pool parties and celebrity DJ's.

Believe it or not, Torontonians refer to food as 'the art that feeds people'. The city's chefs have expanded the palette of Canadian cuisine with an infusion of ethnic spices and inventive menus. The city's eclectic mix of culinary tastes and styles can be best experienced at Origin, a popular St. Lawrence neighborhood restaurant.

The overall gourmet trend is on food that is local, natural, healthy and delicious. This mandate is easy to pull off due to Toronto's close proximity to abundant farms, vineyards, and lakes. To highlight the city's commitment to healthy food, Toronto will be hosting the first ever Conscious Food Festival, August 14-15th.
Say goodbye to flannel. Toronto is the hot new destination for all things crazy, sexy, cool.
Lauri Lyons is the author of Flag: An American Story and Flag International
Photo Credits: Toronto Times, Luminato Festival, Gladstone Hotel, Lauri Lyons, Paula Wilson
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Admittedly, it ain't no T.O. -- but Ottawa rocks. We have art, clubs, music, theatre, museums (boy do we have museums!), Mother Nature, good jobs, great homes, and diversity. We are laid-back like Vancouver, historic like Montreal, and kitchen-party-lovers like Halifax.
Ottawa is great 'hoods and warm people. And for a lot of you young people -- who right now are having a good time out clubbing into the wee hours, but someday ... have to start thinking about marriage and raising a family -- we are ... well, a great place to raise a family!
My Mom tells me about Toronto in the 40s, the 50s, when we lived in Mimico (a name most of you wouldn't even recognize but if you are long in the tooth and have lived in Toronto -- not "T.O."! -- long enough, you'll know the area I'm talking about). She'd take us kids out our front door and in 5 minutes we'd be swimming in Lake Ontario.
My Mom remembers Hurricane Hazel and how Torontonians pulled together in the aftermath (ask your Grandparents about that nasty storm; wow).
I don't live there anymore, but the thing I like most about Toronto is that, everytime I visit her, I discover some new, hidden little treasure. And it's usually something only a few others know about. That's what makes Toronto a rare treasure.
My first impression of Toronto was that it was a great Canadian city. My first impression of Montreal was that it was a big American city that happened to largely speak French.
That was a false rumor. There was no secret law passed suspending civil rights.
http://news.therecord.com/article/737169
Rumour?
Police pulled the same routines during G20 meetings in London and Pittsburg - it happens everywhere the G20 is held, and while it's wrong and anti-democratic, its by no means a Toronto-specific problem as much as you want it to be.
And frankly I don't see the problem with having corporate sponsorship of large art events, especially when they do so much for the city, perhaps you could explain why they are such a bad thing.
I guess as far as pizzerias go, it's also the history of Grimaldi's which draws me there as a former Rat Pack hang out, the checkered table cloths and the line ups out the door which sometimes wrap around the block. It's the kind of place you see wedding parties stop in front of to take some of their wedding photos--truly iconic. But I will check out some of the Italian joints in Toronto. Maybe there is something comparable as far as freshness goes. But boy, Grimaldi's tastes, to me, like they've grown the tomatoes in the back yard, they're so fresh.
"poor, overworked, underpaid" people in toronto? sure, just like in every other north american city. well, every other city period. "crushed by very high taxes"? by global, or even large north american city standards, ridiculous. i would have ignored those remarks, but the `toronto is like a city in "the third world"' crack cannot be ignored. it's not just offensive, but absolutely preposterous. toronto still approximates peter ustinov's amusing, if somewhat exaggerated, assessment in the 70s - like a little manhattan, run by the swiss. jackga either has absolutely no idea whatsoever what life, and poverty, in a large city in a developing nation is really like, or, sadly, there may just be a few too many people in toronto these days who look like they may have immigrated from "the third world" for jack's taste. or both, of course.
You've also left out some of the more interesting, engaging neighbourhoods such as the Annex & The Danforth -- two of the cities most culturally, econimically diverse communities.
Sadly, jackga is correct -- for the most part. If you're a local & don't have a high-disposal income, your entertainment/dining options can be severely limited.
Oh, and I'm sure someone's already mentioned this, but it's Queen West, not West Queen.
Obviously you can forget about eating on King West on a fixed income for example, but then again - I don't eat at those pretentious places with bland generic "haute cuisine" even now. There are plenty of places in the West End that are nice and affordable.
And your comment about the contest was really funny!
You're being facetious when you say that Toronto is like a 3rd world city. Either that or you haven't in fact lived here for 25 years, or traveled in 40 countries - because if you have actually been abroad and lived in Toronto like many of us, that comparison would seem absolutely absurd.
Now no one's denying that Toronto has problems - I've been involved with organizations dealing with many of them, and many of my friends are in social work of various kinds, so I'm aware of them. And while it's not an excuse to not tackle these issues of poverty and discrimination, I always ask people who rag on Toronto a simple question: which city in your mind does it better?
Which big city can go from being mostly mono cultural to being 2/3rds non-white in 50-60 years (by 2030), and have one of the lowest crime rates of any big city in the world? And have no communal violence?
I have no issue with people not liking Toronto, obviously - to each their own. But this utter contempt from some posters makes me think that perhaps there isn't just a little bit of the old, classic Canadian game of "let's hate Toronto" going around.
Which is ok, you just need to be honest about it and not say ridiculous things like Toronto is a 3rd world city.
As a Torontonian I have to take exception to jackga's comment. Okay buddy, you may not like the city and that's fine...urban life isn't for everyone but come on!!! I lived for years on minimum wage in the city. Sure I wasn't going to dinner at north 44 (one of our awesome high end restaurants) but there were still PLENTY to do! Almost all of the things listed in this article are free to the public. The city is beautiful, vibrant, fun and the most multi-cultural city in the world.
The city has it's problems but I am SO proud to call Toronto home!
I think you mean: "Whoever wrote this article must have a warped sense of humour." Just sayin'.