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    2 mai 2024- Read time: 9 min
    The Bulletin: Art deco disasters, spinning cakes, and Montreal cowboys [Issue #75]The summer season's started at Montreal’s public markets. Starting this weekend, the Atwater, Jean-Talon and Maisonneuve markets, plus neighbourhood and solidarity markets, will welcome their open-air vendors and restaurants. | Photograph: Courtesy Société des Marchés publics de Montréal / © Bodoum

    Now that our feeds have quieted down following a day of International Workers' Day protests and grocery store boycotts, we're looking forward to a weekend full of so much stuff to do that's we're positive we missed something.

    There's peak energy all around right now, from new announced architectural and landscape designs reshaping the city to big municipal and industrial developments (not all good, but bear with us), and it's not even close to the zenith of the year. There's good juice to drink in bars, a lot of events around Cinco de Mayo and May 4th Star Wars hokum, and some Taylor Swift-themed burleque—more than enough to go 'round.


    upload in progress, 0

    Activities, parties, points of interest, art exhibitions, you name it: These are the weekend events you don't want to miss.

    Thursday

    • Cadence Weapon is bringing their launch tour for the album Rollercoaster to Le Système with Martyn Bootyspoon & Jayemkayem, and admission's free.
    • Catch comedian Mike Paterson and a bunch of guest comedians at the Comedy Nest throughout the weekend, starting here.

    Friday

    • Get ready for an electrifying journey of pole, drag, comedy, burlesque, and beyond with Café Cléopatra's Through the Eras: A Taylor Swift Variety Show.
    • British rapper Giggs, the 'godfather of road rap' known for starting a 145 BPM revolution, is going to be playing Le Studio TD.

    Saturday

    • Le Livart has a new evening dedicated to electronic music, AUBE, a celebration of nightlife, music and dance that introduces guests to an international artist, as well as two emerging talents.
    • The 7th edition of La Biennale d’art contemporain autochtone has a series of exhibitions with works by more than 60 artists at Art Mûr.
    • a Care Label and Vasimolo are turning Osmo x Marusan into a Night Market Party with the kitchen running late, pumping out some tasty Thai food.
    • Sae Low's hosting an exposition for Montreal ceramist Marie-Eve Dompierre and her eponymous studio on May 4.

    Sunday

    • Just a friendly reminder that Tam Tams is going to be back up and running on the mountain, weather permitting.
    • Instead of tacos and tequila, celebrate Cinco de Mayo with music of Mexico performed by the Orchestre Philharmonique du Québec, conductor Francisco Javier Gutiérrez, violinist Alexandre Da Costa and tenor Antonio Figueroa with mariachis.

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    Friendly reminder: Make your mother's day reservations now! Get those cakes, like this one from Lecavalier Petrone, reserved! Buy flowers! | Image: @lecavalierpetrone / Instagram

    WHAT TO EAT & DRINK IN AND AROUND MONTREAL

    Scope the latest restaurant openings, recommendations on where to eat, plus new menus, old classics, and everything in between.

    The best new restaurants this month

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    • The Atwater, Jean-Talon and Maisonneuve markets, and the city’s neighbourhood and solidarity markets, are welcoming back open-air vendors and restaurants with terraces.
    • Lulu Epicerie's Beiroots Groove Ensemble is returning on May 4 with wines by the glass and a shawarma included in the price of a ticket.
    • Take the REM to Panama station and check out the Anhui (or Hui) Chinese food of @nouillesdehui.
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    • Hear ye, hear ye: Montreal natural wine and cider maker Lieux Communs is bringing their wares to the terrasse opening of Supernat on May 5.
    • There are few better places to celebrate Cinco de Mayo than at Caifan in the Plateau.
    • Cicchetti's got some nice juicy wines to try out on Sunday, May 5 with $2 oysters—nice way to end the weekend, if you ask us.
    • From May 1 to 7, La Pizza Week returns for its 4th edition, where over 500 restaurants nationwide (including Montreal) will unveil unique twists on the dish.
    • Chef Tom Allain will be bringing some east coast flavour in the form of donairs to Cremerie Dalla Rose on May 4.
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    • Ramen 9000 will be doing one last pop-up at Kitano Shokudo on May 4th and 5th before summer arrives, so snag a spot while you can.
    • Be sure to grab a seat at Bar Otto when the modern Korean restaurant 9 Tail Fox crosses the Saint-Henri/Little Burgundy divide for a pop-up on May 5th.

    Enriching local Thai culture

    Laotian Montrealer Chitakone Phommavongxay (Chita) and Thai Montrealer Siriluksamee Rangthong (Nim)'s new Thai noodle shop in the Plateau has a fresh look and feel, but all it comes from a traditional standpoint. (The Main)

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    Here, you'll find a weekly round-up of the latest local news, from entertainment to current affairs and more.

    A few of their favourite things

    Get to know James Kerr, a Montreal-based digital artist and animator better known as Scorpion Dagger, the source of remixed European art from the 14th to 17th centuries including Northern Renaissance paintings with real life humour through animated digital collages.(The Main)

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    Actually, mama, let your babies grow up to be cowboys

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    Chris MacArthur’s photographs of Hillbilly Night capture what provided a haven for country music fans and performers in Montreal.
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    Why can't we have nice things?

    Verdun's natatorium was inaugurated in July 1940. It was the first outdoor pool in Montreal and the largest in Canada at the time, and remained in the city as a rare piece of art deco architecture. Now it might just... disappear. (CTV News)

    Beloved Verdun natatorium slated to be demolished
    The natatorium pavilion in Verdun has been closed for renovations since 2017 and now the 86-year-old-building will likely be torn down.
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    "The New Vic

    On Mount Royal’s southern side, a steep climb up University St. from bustling downtown Montreal, a new university hub is taking shape. Parts of the old 17-building, 35-acre site are being turned into a place of learning that will one day be swarming with people. (Montreal Gazette)

    McGill expansion will create new downtown lookout, Mount Royal access
    On the mountain’s southern side, the old Royal Victoria Hospital is being transformed into a university hub. But the public will also be welcome.
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    Just one lil' bump (in prices)

    Cocaine jokes aside, fares for traveling by public transportation in the greater metropolitan region will increase by 3% on average from July 1. The ARTM defends this announcement by saying it's an increase lower than inflation. (La Presse)

    Photograph: Steven Wright on Unsplash

    Getting ready for a devastating wave

    Xylazine, known as a “zombie drug,” plunges people who consume it into a prolonged state of unconsciousness, in addition to creating strong dependence and irreversible physical damage. It's struck American cities, now it's here. (Le Devoir)

    La «drogue zombie» circule déjà à Montréal
    L’an dernier, 19% des échantillons d’urine de consommateurs montréalais de fentanyl contenaient de la xylazine.
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    "A city within a city"

    The City of Montreal is planning to build a carbon-neutral district of 20,000 housing units on the site of the former Montreal Hippodrome and land east of the Namur Metro station. (CBC Montreal)

    Thousands of housing units, tramway in Montreal’s new Hippodrome plan | CBC News
    This new district, “Namur-Hippodrome,” will have green spaces, parks and public squares. It will also include local businesses and services, health-care facilities, two primary schools and one high school.
    CBCJoe Bongiorno

    And now for anticipated police repression

    Mirroring protests found on university campuses in the States that have caught the attention of so many recently, students are occupying the McGill Campus to denounce McGill and Concordia Universities’ financial and academic ties with Israel. (The Rover)

    McGill Encampment: Students Stand Firm Against Their Universities for a Boycott of Israel – The Rover
    Students are occupying the McGill Campus to denounce McGill and Concordia Universities’ financial and academic ties with Israel.
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    Fun!(damental rights)

    With the video game industry being valued at more than $1.4 billion in the province's economy and with 15,000 employees, the Confederation of National Unions (CSN) is launching a campaign to try to unionize the entire video game industry in Quebec. (Radio-Canada)

    Un syndicat pour toute l’industrie du jeu vidéo au Québec? | RCI
    La CSN collabore avec Games Workers Unite pour tenter d’organiser la défense des droits des travailleurs dans un milieu où les syndicats sont rares.
    Radio-Canada.ca

    Efforts to leave no one behind

    Quebec’s Moving Day on July 1 is exactly two months away, and many are starting to worry whether they’ll have a place to live. Montreal has announced a $3.5 million program to help, but will emergency measures fix the housing crisis? (CityNews Montreal)

    Montreal announces $3.5M to help renters find housing with Moving Day fast approaching
    Quebec’s Moving Day, on July 1, is exactly two months away, and many are starting to worry whether they’ll have a place to live. Montreal announced $3.5 million to help. “This support is still really needed because most of these tenants don’t have any other places to go and could easily fall into homelessness without […]
    CityNews MontrealBrittany Henriques

    And that wraps yet another weekly bulletin. We’ll be back with more curiosities, local stories, and events to discover next week.

    If ever you catch something we should know, don't hesitate to reach out to us on Instagram.

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