Barcelona and PSG Outshine Opponents

Barcelona and Paris St Germain put themselves in a very comfortable position after wining their respective first leg matches in the Champions League round of 16.

Barcelona outplayed Man City and controlled possession throughout ninety minutes of play, registering an impressive 2-0 win in the City of Manchester Stadium. The first goal came in the 54th minute after Martin Demichelis was sent off for fouling Lionel Messi inside the 18-yard box. Messi converted the penalty striking the ball down the middle of the goal.

Dani Alves doubled Barca's lead in injury time after a give and go with Brazil teammate Neymar.

Man City have an uphill battle ahead of them, they must score two goals in Camp Nou to have any chance of advancing to the quarter-finals.

Meanwhile Zlatan Ibrahimovic scored two goals for Paris St Germain in a 4-0 thrashing of Bayer Leverkusen, Blaise Matuid opened the scoring for PSG in the 3rd minute, upon receiving a pass from Marco Verratti he netted the ball past Bend Leno to give his side an early lead.

Ibrahimovic's goals came three minutes apart, a penalty in the 39th minute followed by a thunderous strike into the top corner in the 43rd minute. Yohan Cabaye added a fourth goal to finish off Leverkusen who will have an almost impossible task ahead of them in the second leg on Mar. 12. Barcelona and Manchester City are scheduled to play the same day.

Julio Cesar Joins TFC on Loan From QPR

Brazilian goalkeeper Julio Cesar is the newest addition to a made over Toronto FC squad. The move is not official yet, but a number of sources stated Cesar will be joining TFC on a loan from Queens Park Rangers.

``Julio he should be officially introduced to his new club. Toronto should be finalizing the last few details and he should be in great condition. There will be no problem with him,`` Brazil coach Luiz Felipe Scolari told the media in a press conference.

This MLS offseason TFC showed their commitment to winning by making several high profile moves.including England striker Jermaine Defoe and American midfielder Michael Bradley.

TFC manager Ryan Nelsen said he is delighted at the opportunity of working with Cesar and is hopeful his club can seal the deal.

``I`m kind of excited if something like this did eventuate, for all the fans of Toronto, for all you guys, to be able to have a current Brazilian national team player about to go to the World Cup is something special for the club and for the city, in my opinion,`` said Nelsen.

TFC became the MLS`fourteenth team in 2007 and are looking to make their first trip to the playoffs. They`ll be kicking off their first regular season game on the road Mar. 15 against the Seattle Sounders.

Maidana Upsets Broner Via Unanimous Decision

All good things come to an end. Adrien Broner's undefeated record came to a halt when he faced the heavy hitting Argentine Marcos Maidana in their WBA welterweight championship fight at the Alamodome in San Antonio last night. 

Maidana was looking to impose himself throughout the bout and wasted no time. He came out in the first round swinging powerful shots rocking the champion and forcing him to back up. Maidana knocked down Broner twice, the first knocked down came in the second round when he landed a solid left hook. Broner was sent to the canvas again in the eighth but that knockdown was negated when referee Laurence Cole deducted a point from Maidana for headbutting.

Maidana relied heavily on his power, according to CompuBox numbers he threw a total of 964 punches, 231 of which were power shots while connecting only 38 jabs. Broner was by far the least active of the two fighters connecting 149 of 400 punches. All three judges scored it for Maidana 117-110, 116-109, 115-100.  

"The plan was to fight any which way we can do it, and we won," Maidana said. "This win is very satisfying to me. My plan was to win with my heart and keep going forward. Every time I landed a punch I felt like I was hurting him."

Upon hearing the official decision Broner stormed out of the ring and declined to speak to the media. However he did speak with Showtime when the broadcast went off the air.

"All I can do is go back to the drawing board and comeback and fight my ass off," Broner said. "I'm okay. Things happen. I fought a hell of a fight, but he was the better man tonight. We can rematch it anytime."

Golden boy promoter Richard Schaefer said the victory will open many opportunities for Maidana.

"I think it was an unbelievable performance...It was Maidana's night. It was his biggest night and opens the doors to many great fights," Schaefer said.

He added that a rematch would essentially sell itself, Broner agreed.

Art Gallery of Ontario Celebrates Unveiling of David Bowie Is

The official grand opening of David Bowie Is, an exhibit revealing David Bowie's works and impact on music and popular culture will take place tonight at the Art Gallery of Ontario in Toronto.

The show was first introduced in London last March, where it drew more than 300,000 people to the Victoria and Albert Museum.

Bowie, known for big hits such as Space Oddity and Ziggy Stardust has been a major player in the music scene for over four decades and was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1996.

The exhibit offers hundreds of articles from the Bowie library, including costumes, set designs, albums, music videos and handwritten lyrics.

Geoffrey Marsh is the co-curator of the Victoria and Albert Museum. Marsh said many fans are interested in the works leading up to the concerts and album covers.

"What people are fascinated in seeing is the .world behind the superstar," Marsh told CBC news. "Although there is a lot about the concerts and the albums, which people might have bought or might have been to, what we really wanted to show is the creative processes behind that."

David Bowie Is will run at the AGO until Nov 27

World's First Inflatable Music Hall Set to Tour Japan

 The world’s first inflatable music venue is due to open in Japan next week. The Ark Nova, a portable concert hall designed by British sculptor Anish Kapoor and Japanese architect Arata Isozaki will be touring areas affected by the 2011 earthquake and tsunami.

Made of an elastic material designed for quick inflation and deflation, the bright bulbous structure seats about 500 people and will make its debut in the town of Matsushima where it will host the Lucerne Festival.
The purpose behind the project is to bring some comfort and joy to the areas heavily hit by the disaster.
“We felt that the site in Matsushima, amidst the destruction of the tsunami, needed a temporary structure and an inflatable seem to be appropriate,” Kapoor told the Telegraph.
Michael Haefliger is the Artistic and Executive Director of the Lucerne Festival and was the driving force behind the Ark Nova.
“The images of March 11, 2011 have left their mark on all of us,” Haefliger said. “I felt a strong desire to make a contribution to overcoming the consequences of the catastrophe, within the scope of what we have to offer.”
The Lucerne Festival will run from Friday until October 14 . For more information on the festival and the Ark Nova visit ark-nova.com/en.

Bottle your own wine

In a small kitchen at the back of her shop, Esther Ciciarelli is preparing a customer’s order. She opens up a small cardboard box and takes out a clear plastic bag containing a dense red liquid of grape concentrate and pours it into a white pail.

“This is Chilean Merlot,” she said. Knowledgeable of wine making, Ciciarelli and her brothers bought into a Wine Kitz franchise seven years ago. They have been running and operating the business at their 429 Wilson Ave. location since.

They spent their childhood watching their father make the wine.

“It’s been a part of our culture ever since we were kids. My dad would make wine straight from the grapes,” Ciciarelli said.

Each batch she makes is about 23 litres. For the Merlot she adds about 90 grams of oak chips.

“The majority of red wine has oak chips which really complements the aroma and flavour of the wine,” she said.

Oak chips can be added anytime before bottling the wine, but Ciciarelli recommends adding them during fermentation.

“The longer the chips are integrated, the more character it will give your drink,” she added.

For 17 years Charles Fajgenbaum helped wine lovers enjoy the winemaking experience.

Fajgenbaum, 52, owns and operates Fermentations, which sells winemaking products. That’s not where his DIY career in spirit began, however. He recalls the first drink he made was beer.

“I was 16-years old when I made my first batch at home and it drove my parents crazy. My mother wondered what the heck I (was) doing.” he said.

The process of making the wine provides the initial motivation.

“I’ve always been a bit of a science geek and...I looked at it as a science process not an art process,” he added.

Fajgenbaum worked in the sales and marketing department for a pharmaceutical company, and prior to opening Fermentations winemaking was only a hobby. Enjoying a great glass of wine was Fajgenbaum’s inspiration for starting his own business.

“Everybody (the winemaking industry) was trying to make things as cheap as possible not as good as possible,” he explained.

One technique he uses is adding fresh grape juice rather than concentrate. “By the time you transform the heck out of something it’s been so transformed from what it’s supposed to be,” he explained.

Although the majority of their customers place an order, Ciciarelli said they still have a few customers who buy a batch of wine to make at home, and do so for economic reasons.

“When you buy a bottle of wine from the LCBO, 59 per cent tax is incorporated in the bottle you’re buying,” she said.

Keith Nickleson, a teacher, has been making homemade wine for 15 years, and credits this to the savings he gets.

“When I make my own bottle at home the whole thing only costs about $4,” Nickleson said.

For some people winemaking is not only a passion, but also a family tradition.

Al Toste watched his parents make wine. He said that his favourite part of the experience is the fermentation.

“The fermentation releases the smell of the wine and the aroma of it, and to me that’s a good experience,” Toste said. “That’s when you know you’ve made a good wine.”

Like Toste, Fajgenbaum enjoys the process, but said the most rewarding part for him is when he actually tastes the finished product.

“I know people who are cabinet makers, and after all the nailing and sawing is done, you know the piece of furniture is complete,” Fajgenbaum said.

“It’s the same thing with wine you have to enjoy the process, but it’s nice to know you also have a great end result.”

Do-it-yourself lifestyle essential in launching television networks

Cottager Tony Armstrong faced a plumbing dilemma one day a few years ago. The foot valve in his water pump wasn’t working. He came up with two solutions.

“It was late October and the water (Lake Simcoe) was very cold and I wanted to fix the damn thing as soon as possible," Tony Armstrong said. “Why not a television show that showed people how to fix their foot-valves?”

Armstrong is a producer and director with Cottage Life Television, providing programs that cater to the needs of cottagers.

Cottage Life Television was launched in 1992, at a time when there were no channels broadcasting do-it-yourself programming. But Armstrong said he knew there was a market for it.

“We knew the demand was there,” he said. “I was working with a lifestyle magazine. So we took a chance in producing the show, buying the (advertising time) and selling the ads ourselves...and it paid off.”

He added that when launching the television show his intention was to reach the readers of their magazine.

“Initially the estimate was to reach the same audience, but then each of those channels had their own built in audience, so we were having people coming to Cottage Life Show that didn’t know there was a magazine.”

Do-it-yourself television has seen a rise in popularity since the early ‘90s and there is no stopping it, said Angela Jennings, president of Fusion Television. She’s also a producer of lifestyle series such as Divine Design and Colour Confidential.

The shows take viewers through the process of transforming homes from their original look to an inspired space, while giving them home improvement tips along the way. She said these shows empower viewers.

“People have become empowered over the years as these genres became demystified,” Jennings said. “In the '80s, only wealthy people hired interior designers.”

“By expanding the popularity of these things via television, they became more accessible to the average person and hence was born the, ‘I can do that!’ attitude that permeates DIY programming,” she added.

Maria Armstrong, (no relation to Tony Armstrong) is the executive producer of Big Coat Productions; she credits the popularity of the DIY genre to people’s growing interest in being self-reliant.

“I think people want to learn to do things and do them well whether it’s decorating or cooking,” she said.

She underlined the importance of informing people, and said the entertainment aspect of the show has to play a key role.

“The genre is heading in more of the reality type approach,” Maria Armstrong said.

“People want to be entertained as there are so many videos focused at ‘how-to’ so the television programs have to inform as well as entertain.”

Tony Armstrong agreed that shows need to entertain,but said it’s important they focus on the project rather than the people.

“When I first started in this was the legitimacy of it that was entertaining,” he said. “The people who wanted to turn their barn into a house were interesting people, but the barn was the star of the show.”

The DIY Network offers online programming with expert advice on home improvement projects. Tony Armstrong said more networks should look to the Internet.

“If you want to paint your living room and you turn on HGTV and there is nothing on painting, your curiosity hasn’t been satisfied,” Tony Armstrong said.

“So broadcasters need to take the leap of faith and start programming for the web.”