Flashback: Pete Seeger name-checks Bob Dylan

Dollar store deals, getting medieval and more

Bargains on basics(external link)

Media Video | Trying to get a deal at dollar stores

Caption: CBC's Venture explores a new retail trend: the dollar store. Aired June 20, 1993.

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The discount store Dollarama is planning to build a new distribution centre near Calgary and open hundreds of new outlets across Canada, the Canadian Press reported recently. CP noted that the chain's price points "tend to be lower."
Dollar stores — where items often cost literally one dollar — were still new in 1993, when the CBC business show Venture(external link) looked at coupon usage and other shopping trends(external link). Host Robert Scully said Canadians had become bargain-hungry hagglers.
"I've discovered dollar stores, and I started buying some of my basics there," said one woman. Another savings tip: "Crafty shoppers know that a commissioned salesperson has become fair game for a haggle," said Scully.

Music with meaning(external link)

Media Video | Why folk music? Pete Seeger explains in 1965

Caption: As a guest on CBC's This Hour Has Seven Days, the singer discusses the folk song as comment by musicians like Joan Baez, Harry Belafonte and Bob Dylan. Aired Feb. 7, 1965.

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Among those also portrayed in the new movie, A Complete Unknown, about young Bob Dylan is his folk elder Pete Seeger. "Seeger was deliberately trying to use folk music to feed activist causes," wrote CBC Entertainment's Jackson Weaver in a recent review.
Pete Seeger spoke and performed often on CBC-TV in the 1960s, according to the catalogue for our TV library. In February 1965, he was a guest on the current affairs program This Hour Has Seven Days(external link). (A day earlier, he went skating on an outdoor rink and performed at Massey Hall, according to the Toronto Star.)
When host Patrick Watson remarked there was often social commentary in folk music, Seeger agreed. "The words have got some meat in them," he told Watson. "With almost every folk singer I know — Joan Baez, Bob Dylan, Harry Belafonte — all of them, I think, think of a song as saying something."

Medieval times(external link)

Media Video | Club revisits medieval times in 1994

Caption: A group of men and women in Ottawa recreates the music and mayhem of the Middle Ages. Aired on CBC's Midday on Feb. 10, 1994.

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The just-published 2025 CBC Arts Trend Forecast(external link) predicts the year's themes in arts and culture. "The middle ages, or at least our fantasies of medieval Europe, have already stormed the gates of our collective imagination and will only continue to influence culture in the year to come," said a piece on one trend.
Chainmail is specifically referenced, meaning Ottawa armourer Bill Fedun was ahead of his time by more than 30 years (or behind it by about 500 years). Back in 1994, a report on CBC's Midday profiled his work with the Society for Creative Anachronism(external link) as they went deep into the dark ages.
For one club member, it wasn't just about knights. "I like to reproduce the clothes that they wore at the court," she said. "There's also calligraphy, illumination, parchment-making, cooking. There's a lot of different aspects to it."

Game for anything(external link)

Image | Pong display

Caption: CBC's Marketplace explored the game Pong in 1976. (Marketplace/CBC Archives)

A student in electromechanical engineering in London, Ont., has unofficially beat the Guinness World Record for building the world's tiniest arcade machine, CBC News reported this month. For the project, she chose a video game that CBC viewers learned all about in 1976(external link): Pong.

Aces high

Image | WWI pilot in 1981

Caption: A reunion of surviving First World War pilots took place in Paris on Remembrance Day in 1981. (The National/CBC Archives)

Snoopy's imaginary air battles with the Red Baron — the Peanuts pup's alter ego was a First World War pilot — are the focus of a current exhibit at the Royal Aviation Museum of Western Canada in Winnipeg. CBC News was there when some real-life flying aces reunited in Paris in 1981.

Special delivery

Image | Warren Russell of Twin Delivery in Prince Albert, Sask., in 1982

Caption: Warren Russell said many businesses found it hard to pay the postage rates in effect at the post office in 1982. (The National/CBC Archives)

Before the mail strike ended last week, CBC Radio's Cost of Living looked at a man who made a side hustle for himself by launching a substitute delivery service. In 1982, CBC News reported on an alternative to Canada Post in Prince Albert, Sask.

Money matters

Image | $5 image of Laurier

Caption: In 1969, Earl Cameron of CBC News announced that prime minister Sir Wilfrid Laurier would soon replace the monarch on the Canadian $5 bill. (Newsmagazine/CBC Archives)

Among the headlines that emerged from last week's fall economic statement: Terry Fox will be the new face of the $5 bill. Farewell to Sir Wilfrid Laurier, who was put on the bill as part of a 1969 exercise in acknowledging our prime ministers.