My good friend Cory wrote about me…

In addition to all the attention from the Globe article, Cory wrote about our adventures on his site, and deftly wove it into his larger point about the trajectory of our cities. He’s a really good writer, and a very innovative thinker and I’m proud to know him.

Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow

Of course, the real solution to Teslas – and every other kind of car – is to redesign our cities for public transit, walking and cycling, making cars the exception for deliveries, accessibility and other necessities. Transitioning to EVs will make a big dent in the climate emergency, but it won’t make our streets any safer – and they keep getting deadlier.

Last summer, my dear old pal Ted Kulczycky got in touch with me to tell me that Talking Heads were going to be all present in public for the first time since the band’s breakup, as part of the debut of the newly remastered print of Stop Making Sense, the greatest concert movie of all time. Even better, the show would be in Toronto, my hometown, where Ted and I went to high-school together, at TIFF.

Ted is the only person I know who is more obsessed with Talking Heads than I am, and he started working on tickets for the show while I starting pricing plane tickets. And then, the unthinkable happened: Ted’s wife, Serah, got in touch to say that Ted had been run over by a car while getting off of a streetcar, that he was severely injured, and would require multiple surgeries.

But this was Ted, so of course he was still planning to see the show. And he did, getting a day-pass from the hospital and showing up looking like someone from a Kids In The Hall sketch who’d been made up to look like someone who’d been run over by a car:

Me and a very beat-up Ted Kulcyzycky, Stop Making Sense event, TIFF, Scotiabank Theatre, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

In his Globe and Mail article about Ted’s experience, Brad Wheeler describes how the whole hospital rallied around Ted to make it possible for him to get to the movie:

He also mentions that Ted is working on a book and podcast about Stop Making Sense. I visited Ted in the hospital the day after the gig and we talked about the book and it sounds amazing. Also? The movie was incredible. See it in Imax.

That heartwarming tale of healing through big suits is a pretty good place to wrap up