Real Estate News
Food & Drink
City News
Deep Dives
Culture
Style
Newsletters
Membership
Submit a Tip
Subscribe
Sign in
News
Culture
CBC must change its TV programming for arts-hating rural Canadians
When it comes to TV watching, rural Canadians don’t like “the world’s best performing arts, intelligent drama and daring...
Advertisement
City News
Ugly new U.S. $100 bill: karma for making fun of Canadian money for so long
The U.S. Federal Reserve unveiled its new $100 bill yesterday, and—gasp!—it has colours. The bill has a purple security strip...
City News
City councillors hire consultant-scapegoat to give them permission for a raise
The Toronto city council has decided that it’s time to boost its salaries. Councillors haven’t had a raise in four years, and...
City News
Rampant pearl clutching as Queen’s Park updates sex ed to compete with Internet
Prudes, start your engines. The provincial government has announced changes to the sexual education curriculum, most radically for...
Advertisement
City News
Immigration judge found guilty, may have to trade sex for refugee status in prison
Steven Ellis, the immigration judge charged with attempting to trade sex for refugee status with a 19-year-old woman, was found...
Food & Drink
Canada gets its own Top Chef; wild speculation ensues
News came over the wire today that Canwest is producing a Canadian version of Top Chef that will air on the Food Network next...
City News
Volcanic disruptions: the best of the worst YYZ horror stories
Understandably, not everyone is taking his or her extended trip in Toronto as well as Ian McEwan . Flights to Europe are now...
Advertisement
City News
Breaking news: dogs not allowed to run for mayor
What kind of a world do we live in where dogs can't run for mayor? To quote the Sun : Well, Clarington happens to be where the...
City News
TTC riders allege that drivers can be rude, creepy, kinda sad
Stop the presses: TTC staffers are occasionally rude, cranky and offensive. The Toronto Star has the scoop today, based on...
City News
Tony Clement “feels used” as Justin Bieber cuts in front of him at St. John’s airport
Tony Clement understands the law of the Twitter: the more one mentions Justin Bieber, the more popular one’s tweets become. It...
Advertisement
City News
Junos report: Bieber and Drake have it bad, real bad
Who needs hardware when you have a homie ? Justin Bieber may have left last night’s Juno Awards empty-handed, but Stratford’s...
Real Estate News
Hotcakes and bubbles: six real estate metaphors and what they mean for Toronto’s housing market
More and more real estate trend stories appear every day. Clearly, the market is as busy as it was before the...
Food & Drink
The curse of 335 Yonge Street continues: wall collapses at Tatami Sushi
The corner of Yonge and Gould has to be the worst place in the city to set up shop. This afternoon, the brick wall above the...
Advertisement
City News
Five things we learned from Sarah Palin last night
As promised, former governor of Alaska Sarah Palin turned up in Hamilton last night to charm nearly a thousand guests and raise...
City News
This is not a joke: Carolyn Parrish slams Hazel McCallion for being “ungrateful, ungracious and downright rude”
When the premier and prime minister came to the GTA to announce new infrastructure spending, they made the mistake of inviting...
City News
A great night for Toronto sports fan masochism
Last night was catastrophically bad for Toronto sports teams. Let’s start with basketball. The Raptors won, which was fabulous...
Advertisement
City News
Smitherman’s new campaign boss wants to “unleash George”
Last Friday, after months of low-profile campaigning, George Smitherman' s manager, Jeff Bangs, left Smitherman's office for the...
City News
Blacklisted from the States, Oprah biographer heads to Toronto for book tour
After being denied media coverage from David Letterman, Larry King and Barbara Walters, author Kitty Kelley is promoting her...
Food & Drink
Restaurant owners taking tips from staff—and not in a good way
The restaurant industry in Ontario struggled more during the recession than most other industries. The one-two-three punch of the...
Advertisement
City News
Mayoral candidates trip over each other to gripe about new bike lanes
Reaction to the city’s announcement of a bunch of new bike lanes yesterday—including a separated one along a chunk of...
City News
New GTA area code to complicate established phone-based stereotypes
Just when downtowners thought they had suburbanites pigeonholed under the convenient umbrella term “905ers” (ignoring the...
City News
McGuinty to Toronto: no deal on TTC money this year
One of David Miller' s objectives in his last year in office is to hammer out a deal with Queen’s Park for the province to take...
Advertisement
City News
Tiger Woods’s Toronto doctor wanted by A-list athletes, FBI
What does it say about sports in this city when one of our biggest names doesn’t even play on a professional team? Or play at...
City News
Blame Canada for California debt crisis: Pamela Anderson owes state almost $500,000
According to her official Web site , Pamela Anderson considers herself a...
<<
1
...
29
30
31
32
33
...
41
>>
Advertisement
Summer Camp Guide
City News
Summer Camp Directory 2026
Discover our top-rated summer camps for kids of all ages
Best New Restaurants
TL Events
Toronto Life
’s Best Restaurants returns for its 10th-anniversary edition on June 8
General admission tickets are now on sale for Toronto’s biggest culinary night, featuring top chefs, restaurants and drinks
Big Stories
Deep Dives
Dead Reckoning: The executor of their estate was supposed to divide it among their friends and family. Instead, he bankrupted it
When Sami and June Suomalainen died, it fell to the executor of their wills, a lawyer they hardly knew, to sell their million-dollar midtown home and split the proceeds among their inheritors. Seven years and six lawsuits later, the beneficiaries haven’t seen a cent
Deep Dives
These are Toronto’s best new restaurants of 2026
This year’s list includes a 150-square-foot omakase counter, a Parisian brasserie in the Annex, Korean comfort food, Filipino karaoke and a Summerhill seafood spot that’s reinventing the raw bar
Deep Dives
Hoop Dreams: Inside the making of the Toronto Tempo, the city’s newly assembled WNBA team
After years of false starts, months of nail-biting negotiations between the league and the players’ union, and an 11th-hour scramble to build a roster, Toronto finally has its own major-league women’s basketball team. Now it just has to live up to the hype
Deep Dives
Live From New York: Inside the slay-or-be-slayed world of Studio 8H with
SNL
rookie Veronika Slowikowska
Slowikowska is the first Canadian to join the cast of
Saturday Night Live
in more than 25 years. She’s also this season’s breakout star. Now all she has to do is keep crushing it
Deep Dives
Better Call Deepak: Meet drug lord Ryan Wedding’s self-styled cocaine lawyer
The man who represented the infamous drug lord is unapologetically flashy—he has a Lamborghini and two Maseratis and wears $1,200 Louboutins. But did he become an accomplice to his client’s crimes? Deepak Paradkar says he was just doing his job. The FBI says he crossed a line
Deep Dives
The Redemption Tour: The Blue Jays are back. Can they finish what they started?
We’re not over it, but they are. Six months after that devastating defeat, the Jays take the field once more, bent more than ever on winning the World Series. Dispatches from the dugout
Deep Dives
My Life as a True Crime Spectacle: My father’s crimes fractured our family. Then came the press
My dad was the infamous Rolex Killer. The news of his crimes nearly broke me. And ever since, my family has been hounded by reporters, podcasters and true crime fanatics—a whole new circle of hell
Deep Dives
Robby on the Line: Out and about with Robby Hoffman, comedy’s equal opportunity assassin
Larry David is the indisputable king of brutal honesty. But if anyone comes close, it’s Robby Hoffman, the suddenly everywhere comic from whom no group is safe
Deep Dives
Notes on an Academic Scandal: Why did TMU demote a leading advocate of DEI?
Pamela Sugiman, a former arts dean at Toronto Metropolitan University, was a key player in the school’s push for diversity, equity and inclusion. When the backlash against DEI arrived, she was demoted. The school says it was a coincidence. She disagrees
Deep Dives
City of Renters: The dream of home ownership isn’t dead. Maybe it should be?
Scenes from the rent-for-life revolution
Deep Dives
This generation was pummelled by Covid high school. Now the job market wants to replace them with AI
It’s hard out here for a 20-something
Deep Dives
The High Price of Hope: Inside Toronto’s white-hot fertility market
Desperate wannabe parents are betting their life savings on unproven treatments and false promises
Deep Dives
Man vs. Machine: ChatGPT caused him to spiral into delusion. Now he’s suing OpenAI
Last spring, a chatbot convinced Allan Brooks that he had discovered a revolutionary mathematical theory. He says it nearly destroyed him
Deep Dives
Smart City: 20 mind-blowing Toronto inventions that are changing the world
Homegrown innovations that will transform lives for the better
Deep Dives
293 Days Without My Son: I gave up everything to rescue my kidnapped child from my abusive husband
When Valentino was abducted, I knew three things: he’d been taken by his father, he was somewhere in India and I would not rest until I found him
Deep Dives
The Violent Life of a Tow Truck Driver: How an unremarkable profession turned Toronto into a war zone
The towing industry has been hijacked by criminals and kingpins who fleece customers, beat up dissenters and shoot their enemies. Inside the brutal turf war for the city’s wrecks
Deep Dives
Street Fight: Inside the battle raging over Toronto multiplexes
If this city stands any chance of solving the housing crisis, it will need buildings with multiple units in residential neighbourhoods—a move that has many residents saying, “Anywhere but here!”
Just Listed
Just Listed
For Sale: 92 Arjay Crescent
As luxury buyers become increasingly focused on wellness, privacy, and long-term livability, a new generation of custom homes is emerging – one defined less by excess and more by thoughtful design
Just Listed
For Sale: 171 Durant Ave
This rare property features 2 houses on 1 lot
Just Listed
For Sale: 50 First Avenue
A testament to time presiding over one of Uxbridge's most storied streetscapes, this magnificently preserved circa 1880 residence commands its prominent corner lot with the quiet confidence of a true architectural landmark
Just Listed
For Sale: 7 Bentley Drive
A commanding architectural statement in prestigious Stonegate–Queensway, this newly completed custom residence by Bali Homes Group presents a refined interpretation of contemporary luxury living
Just Listed
For Sale: 75 Queen Street
Guelph is having a moment