COMING UP
Please fasten your seatbelts, we’re about to take a trip down memory lane. We talk to the ‘boys on the bikes’ who had an extremely close-up view of the Gimli Glider miracle 40 years ago.
With the much-anticipated Barbie movie finally in cinemas, local bars and restaurants are getting into the spirit with pink-hued cocktails. AV Kitching takes a boozy cruise through five bars’ Barbie- (and Ken)-themed offerings in Friday’s arts section.
Eugene Hutz, the Ukrainian-born frontman of the Brooklyn punk-rock group Gogol Bordello, like so many around the world, can’t keep his mind off the news in Ukraine. He knows all about the Ukrainian diaspora in Manitoba, those who’ve been here for years as well as the 20,000 newcomers who have fled the Russian invasion. Alan Small talks to the singer/actor ahead of the group’s Burton Cummings show on Saturday night.
And in sports, tomorrow night the Winnipeg Blue Bombers host the Edmonton Elks at IG Field and the Sea Bears are in Calgary taking on the Surge. On Sunday, FC Valour will host York United at 6 p.m. at IG Field.
IN CASE YOU MISSED IT
For the National Hotdog Day-inspired edition of Tasting Notes, Eva Wasney embarked on a local “Tour de Chien-Chaud” for the sake of journalism.
After eating a hotdog a day (sometimes two) during this investigation, she shared reviews of the best hot dogs in the city, as well as a sidebar of honourable mentions. You can read about it here.
Driving east on Wilkes Avenue, you may notice a full-scale wooden pirate ship. Resident Doug Cook, inspired by the legendary Captain Cook, custom-built the land-locked frigate, which measures an impressive 23 metres long from stem to stern.
Furthermore, there is an oblong-shaped above-ground pool that rests in the centre of the ship’s main deck. David Sanderson talks to Cook about his new hobby. You can read more about it here.
ONE GREAT PHOTO

Allan Woodhouse (left), Tom Sophonow, Brian Anderson, and Frank Ostrowski outside of the law courts Tuesday. Woodhouse (left) and Anderson were exonerated by Court of King’s Bench Chief Justice Glenn Joyal, almost 50 years to the day after being charged with the 1973 killing of Ting Fong Chan. (Mikaela MacKenzie / Winnipeg Free Press)
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