Hamilton

Hamilton wants to live stream final Tragically Hip show in Gage Park

The city has already live streamed other shows at public events, such as Canadian Idol in 2007. The final show of the Hip tour will be Aug. 20.

The city has already live streamed other shows at public events, such as Canadian Idol in 2007

The city of Hamilton will look at live streaming the final Tragically Hip show in a Gage Park event on Aug. 20. (Clemens Rikken/Canadian Press )

The city of Hamilton will look at live streaming the final Tragically Hip show this summer in what it hopes will be a low-cost or free event at Gage Park. But not everyone likes the idea.

If we're not about bringing the community together to celebrate our own culture, we're in the wrong line of work.- Matthew Green, Ward 3 councillor

City council voted 15-1 on Wednesday to get permission to live stream the final show of the Man Machine Poem tour on Aug. 20.

The city envisions broadcasting the CBC's stream on a screen at Gage Park, with tickets offered at cost to residents.

The idea came from Matthew Green, Ward 3 councillor, who called it a chance for Hamiltonians to come together to celebrate an iconic and distinctly Canadian band.

Some Hamilton city councillors called the Hip a distinctly Canadian band important to a generation. Others said other bands fit that bill too. (CP Archives)

"I'm interested in a family event that brings people together," he said.  

"If we're not about bringing the community together to celebrate our own culture, we're in the wrong line of work."

But not everyone was in favour. Donna Skelly, Ward 7 councillor and former CHCH reporter, said such an event isn't the city's job.

There are capable private sector companies that want to do the same thing, Skelly said. And people can already watch it on the CBC.

Also, different bands are iconic to different generations, she said. Why do it for this band?

From hockey glory to historical tragedy, the Hip have told Canada's story through their music and lyrics. (Getty Images)

City staff will report back in July about the feasibility of the project, including whether the CBC can offer streaming rights. The broadcaster has fielded numerous requests from cities and venues for similar events, it said on Monday. The CBC is still in discussions with the band on details.

The final tour comes after the band announced that its lead singer, Gord Downie, has incurable brain cancer.

Tickets for the tour sold out in seconds, then popped up at inflated prices on resale sites such as StubHub.

It's not the first time the city has live streamed an entertainment event, said Anna Bradford, Hamilton's director of tourism and culture. 

For example, when local musician Brian Melo won Canadian Idol in 2007, the city live streamed the finale at Hamilton Place.