Watch This: Still Standing in Small Town Canada

3 people laughing in a barn loft with dried plants hanging above them
Rogersville, New Brunswick.

“When you grow up in a small town in Newfoundland, you see that people have a sense of humor about hard times. I turned that into a career and hit the road.”

standup comedian on stage

Minto, Manitoba, population 85.

That bit of narration begins, and perfectly encapsulates, the premise of the CBC TV series Still Standing. It’s kind of a mix of travel show, stand-up comedy special, and small town documentary.

Think Corner Gas meets Rick Steves, and you’ll be on the right track.

Brick storefronts in a small town.
Maple Creek, Saskatchewan.

“Now I’m on a mission to find the funny in the places you least expect it – Canada’s struggling small towns. Towns that are against the ropes, but still hanging in there, still laughing in the face of adversity.”

Johnny Harris sits on a swingset that is partially submerged.
Manitou Beach, Saskatchewan.

Each episode, comedian Johnny Harris travels to a different rural Canadian town and spends time learning what life is like there.

Fraser Lake, British Columbia.
looking at photos
St. Laurent, Manitoba

That means tasting the local cuisine, trying out unusual things people there do for work or for fun, and visiting sites important to the town’s history. He chats with residents to find out what makes where they live special and what makes it challenging.

Painting in Wells, B.C. with the easel set up on a snowy hillside
Wells, British Columbia.
Man standing at the edge of a body of water, admiring a picturesque view of mountains.
Okanagan Falls, BC, “OK Falls” for short.

He then weaves all those experiences and his insights into a stand-up set tailor-made for that particular town. Instead of relying on tired tropes deriding small town life, he celebrates the unique quirks of each place he visits in a way that is both warm and really funny.

2 men laughing in a farm field.
Buxton, Ontario.

audience watching stand-up comedy

Since locals make up the live audience for his set, he can make a super-specific reference about the town or its residents, and everyone gets it. Laughter and nods of recognition ripple through the crowd, because everyone knows what (or who) he’s talking about.

canoeing
Wakefield, Quebec.

As viewers, we’re in on the jokes too. The show’s clever editing cuts back and forth from Johnny’s comedy set to the experiences that inspired it.

Scenic Bamfield Inlet from the show Still Standing.
Bamfield, British Columbia (pilot episode screencap).

The pilot episode, for example, takes place in Bamfield, a beautiful village on Vancouver Island in British Columbia.

2 people walking next to the water in Bamfield, B.C. from the show Still Standing
Bamfield, British Columbia (episode screencap).

At the Bamfield Marine Sciences Centre, Johnny takes a tour lead by enthusiastic staff member Kelly, and then has an awkward encounter with a sea cucumber.

Everyone in the room has probably met Kelly. A good number of them have probably even met the sea cucumber. And we’ve seen the footage, so we know them too.
2 men sit on a water taxi boat in Bamfield Inlet
Bamfield, British Columbia (episode screencap).

At the point in the set when he mentions water taxi driver Mark, we’ve already seen him ferry Johnny across the Bamfield Inlet. We’ve heard him talking about the fishing industry that motivated many people to relocate to the town, then drove them away, and why he continues to stay there.

It kind of feels like we were riding along with them.

Carcross, Yukon

In fact, by the end of each episode, I tend to feel like we’ve just been introduced to a fascinating new corner of Canada and met some of the lovely people there.

And, in a way, we have.



Still Standing night at the drive-in theatre in Manitou Beach, Saskatchewan.

Still Standing is free to stream on Tubi, Freevee, and Pluto. Even though I just started watching it, there have already been nine seasons of the show and a tenth one is in progress!

All photos in this post are via Still Standing/CBC. Quotes are from Johnny Harris.

Young people learning a dance while wearing traditional Danish costumes. Johnny Harris sticks out like a sore thumb.
New Denmark, New Brunswick.

On an Uphill Track: Funiculars

Los Angeles funicular Angels Flight - current

Los Angeles funicular Angels Flight - current

I first encountered the word funicular on a hillside in Sedona. Known as the “Hillevator” (hill + elevator), the small railway gave tourists a shortcut between Uptown Sedona and L’Auberge Resort and Oak Creek at the bottom of the hill.

Hillavator in Sedona

While I’m a bit fuzzy on the exact definition (I think it involves cables and pulleys), a funicular is basically a passenger vehicle that goes up and down a hill on a track.

Hillavator Sedona by Tiffany Joyce

By nature, they’re very localized and customized to the spot they’re in. Maybe that’s why I find them intriguing.


Angels Flight Railway, Los Angeles, California

While Sedona’s Hillevator is now out of commission, another quirky old funicular has recently come back to life. After its brief appearance in the movie La La Land, the push to restore the Angels Flight Railway in Downtown Los Angeles may have gained steam, and it reopened in August of 2017.

  • Called “The Shortest Railroad in the World,” it travels a single block.
  • At the bottom: Grand Central Market
  • At the top: California Plaza – Los Angeles Musuem of Contemporary Art, Grand Performances amphitheater, and restaurants
  • Virtual 3D tour
  • In 1901, Colonel James Ward Eddy built the Angels Flight funicular. More recently, his great-great-grandson built the Angels Flight app.
  • One way: $1

 


Penang Hill funicular

Penang Hill Railway, Penang, Malaysia

  • Longest Funicular Track in Asia
  • Located on the Malaysian island of Penang
  • At the bottom: Jalan Bukit Bendera base station near George Town.
  • At the top: former British hill station Penang Hill. The resort town’s attractions include the three-storey Astaka Cliff Cafe, which houses food courts, souvenir stands, an owl museum, and Love Lock Penang Hill.
  • Round trip: RM 30 (standard), RM 80 (fast lane)

Love Unlocked

 

Flowers in Grimsel, Switzerland Picture: KWO / Photo: David Birri http://gallery.grimselstrom.ch/grimselerlebnis/grimselwelt/taelli/
Gelmer Funicular

Gelmer Funicular, Innertkirchen, Switzerland

 

100 Street Funicular, Edmonton, Alberta

  • Opened this past December to provide wheelchair and stroller access to river valley trail system.
  • Has already been out of service repeatedly, partly because of cold weather. (Not sure why that was a surprise in Canada!)
  • At the bottom: River Valley Promenade
  • At the top: Promontory viewpoint, Hotel Macdonald
  • Free

 

Glória Funicular, Lisbon, Portugal

Ascensores e Elevador, Lisbon, Portugal

 

Images via WellingtonNZ.com

Wellington Cable Car, Wellington, New Zealand

 

Have you ever ridden in this type of vehicle? Where were you?

 


Photo sources:

Angels Flight by Channone Arif (CCL)

 

Sedona –

  • From a print of a photo I took in the early 2000s. Our friend Ozan was joking around with his hands on the window. (He’s not trapped in there or anything.)
  • Tiffany Joyce (CCL). She actually got married in Sedona when the Hillavator was still in operation!

 

Los Angeles –

 

Penang Hill –

 

Switzerland –

 

Edmonton –

 

Lisbon –

 

Wellington –

Your 2018 Local Art Loves

becklaneartistFinished portrait of soul singer Lauren Mitchel.

In February, we focused on local artists and asked you to share local art you love from wherever you are.

Check out these submissions by artists and fans, and keep showing love to local arts!

 

Sculpture by Peter Skidd

 

Scottsdale, Arizona

Peter Skidd produces large works in steel, especially hand-painted wall art in the shape of bowls, waves, or lotus flowers.

He and his wife Sarah are a dynamic team, who we got to meet during a Hidden in the Hills studio tour.

 

Manitoulin Island, Ontario

Jocko Moriarty shared this work “purchased from a craft and souvenir shop in M’Chigeeng, Manitoulin Island, Canada and painted by island artist Leland Bell*.”

 

Richmond, Virginia

Mixed media artist Sarah Irvin shared High Note. It’s part of a series of pieces she creates by writing on Yupo, a smooth synthetic paper, and then smearing the ink with a squeegee. Her solo show, In and Out of Weeks, is at the Page Bond Gallery in Richmond through March 31.

 

https://www.instagram.com/p/BdrEGZHAB_L/

Shenandoah Valley, Virginia

Another Virginia artist, Jessie Rublee creates ceramics for both functional and decorative uses. This porcelain vase is from her Frail and Sound series, which explores the dichotomy between the strength of the earth and fragility of pottery.

 

https://www.etsy.com/listing/539611287/unique-mandala-pillow-self-care-anxiety

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Jenny Parks draws an original, one-of-a-kind illustration on each pillow she makes – like this mandala “cuddle pillow” with a napping bunny curled up in the center. Her work is meant to comfort people in need of healing.

 

Beck Lane's portrait of soul singer Lauren Mitchell.

Sarasota, Florida

Many of Beck Lane’s works are vibrant, unconventional portraits of women. She recently completed a two-canvas painting of soul singer Lauren Mitchell.

 

San Francisco, California

Matthew McKinley shared pieces from several artists he’s worked with in the Bay Area. (More on his Instagram.)

 

Art by Barking Owl

Sophia Lee incorporates non-traditional materials into her paintings, like the expired make-up that gives color to Night Stroll.

 

Self-proclaimed “artist of multiple personalities” LE BohemianMuse feels abstract art is more able to capture the complexity of life. Her acrylic painting Bedlam Desired is from the Chaos Series.

 

Parade

Arran Harvey is interested in how people group together. In this spirit, Parade Crowd 2 focuses on the spectators, rather than what they’re watching.

 


*Note: This is the Canadian Leland Bell (a.k.a. Bebaminojmat), Woodlands school artist of Anishinabe (First Nations) ancestry. He was born on Manitoulin Island in 1953 and still lives in Ontario. Not to be confused with the American Leland Bell (1922-1991), a figurative painter born in Cambridge, Maryland to Russian-Jewish parents. Anyone else think it’s a weird coincidence that there are two 20th-century North American artists with the first name Leland?

 


Photos in this post link to their sources. Each one comes either from the artist or the person who submitted the work.