What distinguishes this moment in media is that for the past 20 years the assumption was that we were in a transition from print to online media and now it's clear that online media is dying and we don't seem to be transitioning into anything. Just less.
https://t.co/A9QYC5aaGK
@shawnmicallef Really? Without your usual phone number? My relatives don’t use WhatsApp (neither do I) but I guess I could let them know they’ll be receiving txts from me through tan unknown number.
@shawnmicallef I tried Airalo and it ruined my phone for my visit to NYC. Couldn’t communicate with any of my non-iPhone relatives. If you rely on text messaging to plan dinners or park excursions, you still need Rogers.
Freedom Summer, 1964
Photographs taken in Mississippi during the filming of “A Regular Bouquet,” a documentary by Richard Beymer via the Washington University Digital Gateway Image Collections
@mattgurney “The Canadian political class is weak and naïve. The entire purpose of it is dividing up the spoils in a country that is considered to be rich.” I’ve thought about those two sentences for a year. They’re useful as an overlay to explain what’s been happening at all levels.
I love Toronto‘s back lanes. They’ve seen almost no change in the last hundred years. Many of the garages are still based on the original structures and some still with horse entrances.
Black History Month is drawing to a close, but Black history continues. This recently-acquired image from 2020 is part of our Sarah Peebles collection. https://t.co/peCaFAJUgD #BlackHistoryMonth#TorontoHistory#TorontoArchives