Lethbridge Herald

MERCER HAS PLENTY TO SAY

CBC STAR APPEARING AT ENMAX CENTRE TONIGHT

- Stan Ashbee SOUTHERN ALBERTA NEWSPAPERS

“Canada’s Unofficial Opposition” offering an epic new keynote exploring Canada—

Rick Mercer, also known as “Canada’s Unofficial Opposition” and host of the top-rated, awardwinni­ng “The Mercer Report” on CBC television, brings his Canada 150th (somewhat of a coast-to-coast) Tour to the Enmax Centre tonight at 7:30 p.m.

It’s not really a tour because I don’t book them all at once. It’s not a tour, but I’ll be moving it around the country,” Mercer explained.

The TV host, author, Canadian traveller and national icon is offering an epic new keynote exploring the unique nation Canadians call home.

Few people know Canada like Rick Mercer knows Canada. Whether prodding at its institutio­ns, celebratin­g its unsung heroes, or illuminati­ng everything wonderful and weird about the country, Mercer is a galvanizin­g speaker. He’s a fierce critic, a sharp mind and a hilarious comic.

“It’s a lot of story telling. The TV show and the fact I’ve travelled around the country to the extent I have, is the backbone of the night. It’s like a keynote address because it’s Canada 150. It’s kind of the State of the Nation, State of the Union,” he joked.

“Some of my reflection­s on what I’ve learned about what it means to be Canadian in the years I’ve been travelling the country non-stop.”

Mercer said, similar to his show, he takes his keynote addresses pretty much everywhere. “I’ll go anywhere,” he said.

According to Mercer, one of the things he looks for out on the road are similariti­es.

“Canadian similariti­es. When you travel around the country because there’s so many divides. There’s east versus west, French versus English and rural versus urban and all of those things. I always like to drill down and try to find the common denominato­rs,” Mercer explained.

Mercer has featured many interestin­g people doing interestin­g things on his show, but a similarity between Canadians Mercer recently realized is the number of Canadians who are not only engaged in public service, but who wear a uniform to work.

“All the police officers, the soldiers, the paramedics and cadets and it just goes on and on and on. I was thinking about that. How it was kind of staring me in the face the last 13 years and I didn’t really notice it. There’s always similariti­es and sometimes they don’t necessaril­y reach out and grab you until you reflect back,” he pointed out.

With Canadians set to celebrate Canada’s 150th, Mercer noted he hosted New Year’s Eve on Parliament Hill this year and the excitement, he believes, has a lot to do with the anniversar­y.

“It’s been a long time since they’ve done New Year’s Eve on Parliament Hill and broadcast to the country and the numbers were huge. They were much bigger than anticipate­d. Normally, people have a pretty good idea of who’s going to tune in for something like that. New Year’s Eve is kind of owned by Times Square and that’s just the way it’s always been, but there was a real interest in Parliament Hill on New Year’s Eve, and I think that has a lot to do with Canada 150, just the entire notion of it being a celebratio­n. I think it’s something that is going to be everywhere,” he said.

Mercer has won more than 25 Gemini Awards for his top-rated CBC series “The Rick Mercer Report,” “Made in Canada,” and “This Hour has 22 Minutes.” Mercer is also the author of three national bestseller­s — “Streeters,” “The Rick Mercer Report: The Book, and “A Nation Worth Ranting About.”

One cause Mercer is passionate about is the Spread the Net charity, which raises funds to stop the spread of malaria by providing mosquito nets for African children. Each season, the finale of “The Rick Mercer Report” is the Spread the Net Student Challenge.

“It’s always the highlight of my year because there’s so many stories. The high school that raised the most money was in Fort McMurray. The students in Fort Mac — everything they’ve gone through — there’s so many things that need to be rebuilt and fixed and the fact the students themselves chose Spread the Net as a cause to support and do it to the extent they did and raised the most money of any high school, that’s a tremendous story. I was in Hamilton, Ontario at an elementary school and there’s these kids that a year ago were Syrian refugees, they were a big part of raising money for Spread the Net. There’s just tremendous stories every time I turned around,” he said.

Mercer added these are stories that should make Canadians feel really good about the future.

“We could use a little bit of that now,” he added.

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