Saturday, December 31, 2011

New Year's Eve events and parties in Toronto

 
New Year's Eve events and parties in Toronto
Published on blogTO | shared via feedly

New Years eve TorontoNew Year's Eve is upon us. Still not sure what to do? Here's a round-up of ways to count down the end of 2011.

NEW YEAR'S EVE PARTIES

For those looking to welcome 2012 in a bar, club or event venue, check out our New Year's Eve Party Guide as well as our events section that includes hundreds of events taking place today and tonight in Toronto. Have an iPhone or IPad? You can also look up events via our new iPhone and iPad apps.

MOVIES

Live music and/or drunk friends not your thing? Why not catch up on some of the year's best films, now playing in theatres. Our movie listings section has a comprehensive listing of showtimes and movies screening in Toronto tonight as well as movie trailers for most films. Check out our recommendations of newly released films as well as what's going on in the rep cinemas.

NATHAN PHILLIPS SQUARE

No budget for this New Year's Eve or just want to spend the night outside with some fireworks? Then the city-supported NYE party at Nathan Phillips Square might be for you. This alcohol free event is family-friendly and starts at 9pm. Live music and performances courtesy of Howie D, Karl Wolf, JRDN, Neverest, Aleesia, Anjulie and the cast of American Idiot.

Photo by Nikopol TO in the blogTO Flickr pool


Thursday, December 29, 2011

The Top 10 TV Shows of 2011

 
The Top 10 TV Shows of 2011
Published on the TV addict | shared via feedly

With the vast array of astoundingly good TV shows currently airing across the television landscape, it is incredibly hard to point a mere Top 10.   In an effort to single out what I thought reached the Top 10 for 2011, the following are 10 shows that excelled in writing, casting, characters, cinematography, direction, production and publicity.  Interestingly, 4 out of 10 of the shows are British TV shows, which just goes to show that America cannot claim exclusively to be the “best of the best.”


 
DOCTOR WHO 
First and foremost, DOCTOR WHO takes the top crown.  No matter what other critics say, it is a remarkable achievement for any TV show to continue to enthral viewers after 48 years – of which it aired over 33 televised seasons in more than 50 countries around the globe.  The genius in recasting the lead character every couple of years adds to the renewed interest in fans and the writers in creating new stories; but, by far, the current broadcast run under the helm of Steven Moffat and showcasing the enumerable talents of Matt Smith has been nothing short of extraordinary.  I am not alone in this belief, as DOCTOR WHO has secured a number of BAFTA nominations in recent years – including a recent nomination for Best Actor, and winning in prior years for Best Drama and Best Writing.  This past year has been perhaps one of the most shocking, surprising and delightful seasons ever as it began the season with the death of The Doctor and ended with his wedding.   The cleverly cast ensemble made up of Matt Smith, Karen Gillan, Arthur Darvill and Alex Kingston has infused the series with life and energy and created an addictiveness that crosses demographics like no other show ever – children, parents and grandparents are tuning in and living for just a few more moments with the infamous Doctor.  Any show that can achieve all that deserves to be number one on the year-end Top 10 list!
 

FRIDAY NIGHT LIGHTS
In its fifth and final season, FRIDAY NIGHT LIGHTS went out on top.  It received a Best Drama nomination at the Emmys, won for Best Writing, won in the Best Actor category for its lead Kyle Chandler, and also secured a Best Actress for its co-lead Connie Britton.  It also won the Writer’s Guild award for Best Drama Series.  It was the “dark horse” at the Emmys, but it was by far the fan favorite.  FRIDAY NIGHT LIGHTS is an anomaly in that it aired for two seasons in primetime television on NBC, before being picked up for an unusual deal where DirecTV had first broadcast rights and NBC would reair later in the year.  Regardless of the creative scheduling and financing, FRIDAY NIGHT LIGHTS remained a superb drama series that had the unique quality of feeling real.  It created a world so life-like that viewers felt that it actually existed somewhere in Texas.  It gave us the golden duo of Kyle Chandler and Connie Britton, who brought their characters Eric and Tami to life and infused them with such charm, grace and love that we all wanted to be adopted into their family. Already the future feels dimmer knowing that we will never get to share in the joys and triumphs of the Taylors in 2012.
 

DOWNTON ABBEY
Looking at another family that captured our hearts and imaginations, the British series DOWNTON ABBEY invited us into a world of declining gentry, where a once-establish English family struggled with the encroaching changes of the world around them and the resulting entangled lives of the upper and working class.  It was an old fashioned soap opera that everyone was talking about — from the U.K. to the U.S. viewers could not wait to see what would happen next.  Ratings alone proclaimed the series to be an instant hit and now audiences in the U.S. are breathlessly awaiting the second season to find out how the pending world war will impact the lives of these new treasured friends.  In addition to its addictiveness and water-cooler impact, DOWNTON ABBEY is simply the gold-standard in classic storytelling.  Its visual style and carefully intertwined character-stories are breathtaking.  It is a sight to behold and a story that captivates.  It also managed to win 6 Emmy awards, including Mini-Series, Directing for Mini-Series, Writing for Mini-Series, Cinematography for Mini-Series, and Supporting Actress for the indomitable Maggie Smith as Countess of Grantham; and is currently nominated for four Golden Globe nominations for 2012, including Best Mini-Series.


 
THE GOOD WIFE
Also rising to level of both critical and popular acclaim, THE GOOD WIFE continued to challenge our perceptions of the legal system and office romances.  While simultaneously lauding and condemning the problems from “sleeping with the boss,” it created a world where we were dying to know whose secrets would be revealed next.  The court cases both overshadowed and subtly back-dropped each of the prevalent personal stories of the lead characters.  But foremost, the story of Alicia Florrick (Julianna Margulies) and her attempt to juggle a professional career and a personal life was simply riveting.  Whether it was subtly flirting with an admitted killer to get his assistance or her steely inner strengthen in the face of devastating news, Alicia Florrick was undeniably captivating.   Then woven into this carefully constructed tapestry are an array of characters that also kept up glued to our television sets, whether it was Archie Panjabi as Kalinda Sharma, Christine Baranski as Diana Lockhart, Josh Charles as Will Gardner, Chris Noth as Peter Florrick, Scott Porter as Blake Calamar, Alan Cumming as Eli Gold, Michael J. Fox as Louis Canning, or America Ferrera as Natalie Flores.  THE GOOD WIFE knows that the dilemma of a woman scorned who is trying to find happiness and professional recognition is a thorny path – but it also makes fine television drama.  Nominated for Best Drama and winning for Best Actress at the 2011 Emmys, THE GOOD WIFE remains one of the best and more thoroughly entertaining shows on television.


 
LUTHER
Perhaps one of the most controversial shows this past year, LUTHER dared to up the ante in its storytelling and took viewers back into the fractured world of police detective John Luther, who would do anything to get the bad guy and protect those he cared about.  The cases were bone-chilling, but striding confidently through it all was Idris Elba as the complex John Luther – and Elba instinctively brought the sexy back into police work.  Whether it was smoozing and then brushing-off an admiring serial killer or rescuing a reluctant prostitute, Elba used his charm and presence to his best advantage – and we weren’t the only ones noticing as he secured award nominations on both sides of the pond for his electrifying portrayal.  The only thing missing from this stellar series was more screentime with the equally fascinating Alice Morgan, portrayed by Ruth Wilson.  It was criminal to so sparely use such a razor-sharp character who provided such a fantastic foil for Elba’s Luther.  The chemistry between the two set the screen on fire and made us wonder who was the hunter and who was the prey in their twisted game.  Idris Elba also rightly received Emmy and Golden Globe nominations for his phenomenal portrayal in LUTHER.
 

JUSTIFIED
Another lawman who lives outside the law to make sure the ends-justify-the-means, Raylan Givens, as portrayed by Timothy Olyphant was unpredictable, smoldering and surprisingly courtly in his daily life.  In JUSTIFIED, the dance between Raylan Givens and his nemesis/frenemy Boyd Crowder (Walton Goggins) mesmerized us all.  Just who was the good-guy and who was the bad-guy became murkier with each episode and intrigued us every second.  Life in Harlan County is not black-and-white, only shades of gray, and depending on the issue and the task at hand each had a turn at making us wonder which role they were playing in their esoteric game of chess.  Regardless of the moral ambiguity and gamesmanship, the series crackled with tension and lured us into a world where anything could happen.  So while bullets were quick to fly and alliances even quicker to disintegrate, there was an underlying feeling of mutual respect and admiration between Raylan and Boyd.  That unexpected camaraderie drew viewers in and made us cheer for both sides of the law.  The Emmys clearly agreed bestowing 4 nominations for Timothy Olyphant, Walton Goggins, Margo Martindale and Jeremy Davies; securing a win for Margo Martindale who was simply incredible in her guest-starring role as the ruthless Mags Bennet.


 
THE WALKING DEAD
To be honest, it is astounding that a show about zombies would ever make a Top 10 list.  But due to the sheer audacity to create a stylized and exceptional character-story about the survivors caught up in a zombie-apocalypse, THE WALKING DEAD has earned a place on this list.  Not content to be a mere horror/freak-show, the series strives to offer a riveting and well-made piece of television drama.  So much so, that it has received a Writers Guild nomination for Best New Series, a Golden Globe nomination for Best Drama, and several Creative Arts Emmy nominations.  THE WALKING DEAD’s talent understood that they were not just making another thriller of the week and strove to make a series that is considered art-worthy.  If this year’s fall finale is any indication, it also does not shirk from challenging our ethical and moral beliefs on what lengths humans will go to in order to survive.  But rather than appall us with it audacity and gore, THE WALKING DEAD instead invites us into a world that feels so real that we wonder if it foreshadows the next chapter of our human existence – especially in today’s world with concerns about bird flu and other biological weapons, and anything else that hovers on the edge of fringe of science.  Solidifying its rightful place on this list, THE WALKING DEAD has also been nominated both by the Writers Guild and the Golden Globes as Best New Drama series.


 
FRINGE
Another television series that pushed boundaries and expectations this past year was FRINGE.  Regularly underestimated, FRINGE continues to provide astoundingly well-conceived and brilliantly portrayed stories that also challenge our perceptions about the world around us.  The dual-universe stories and the mirroring of its characters in two different worlds is enthralling.  It also challenges us to rethink what we think we know about the characters introduced in the first season and how they have evolved.  Most shows are content to create their characters fully-formed early on, but in FRINGE’s case, with each episode, the core characters changed with a chameleon-like grace and astound us all over again — even now that the series is in its fourth season.  Credit goes the writers who created them and the stars Anna Torv, John Noble, Josh Jackson, Jasika Nicole and newcomer Seth Gabel for their stunning ability to seamlessly transition between their multi-faceted and increasingly fascinating characters.  It has never been more fun to watch the kaleidoscope spin and see where everyone lands up next and who he or she may be next.  Science fiction is an enigma in and of itself, yet FRINGE makes it look effortless and exciting.
 

THE CLOSER
Not content to be a mere procedural, THE CLOSER consistently offers up some of the finest, most finely-tuned, and nuanced crime stories on television.  Frequently shown from the various perspectives a tight-knit and meticulous police unit that seek only to capture the culprit or persons responsible for the heinous crimes they are entrusted with investigating, the series never fails to captivate.  The show stepped up its game in 2011 with the addition of a continuing story involving a ruthless lawsuit filed against the unit’s Deputy Police Chief, Brenda Leigh Johnson (Kyra Sedgwick).  With the addition of both Mary McDonnell and Mark Pellegrino, as Captain Sharon Rador and defense attorney Gavin Q. Baker III respectively, the show reached a new plateau of stellar and integrated storylines.  The show was no longer about just catching criminals and dolling out “punishment that fits the crime” when the law could not hold them, the series focused on the ramifications of vigilante justice and the temptation to enact personal vengeance when trying to uphold law that do not always offer justice.  Turning the spotlight on the sometimes questionable tactics employed by Major Crimes to close their cases has ratcheted up the suspense and tension in this remarkable series.   In virtually every year since it first debuted, THE CLOSER has secured best actress nominations and best ensemble nominations for its outstanding cast. This past year has not been an exception as it received Screen Actors Guild and Emmy nominations for its lead Kyra Sedgwick and Mary McDonnell, who stands poised to assume the lead role in the spinoff series MAJOR CRIMES next year.


 
THE HOUR
Newcomer THE HOUR is a British series that took viewers behind-the-scenes in the newsroom and the lengths the government will go to in order to manipulate the media for its own ends.  On the surface, the series appeared to be a “slice of life” look at a media team transiting to television and to making themselves relevant in the fast-changing world of politics.  But when one of the reporters became suspicious of a friend’s death and the ripple-effects in the news he was being asked to cover, he unearthed a labyrinthine conspiracy that sent chills down our spines.  Finely-helmed by Romola Garai, Ben Whishaw and Dominic West — as well as a fantastic guest-appearance by Burn Gorman, the series caught our attention and held it.  Until its final moments, we were never sure exactly what was going on, but we only knew that we could not stop watching.  It was gripping, thrilling, and thought-provoking.  It will be a pleasure to see where the series goes in its second season.  I am also not the only one who took notice as THE HOUR just received Golden Globe nominations for Best Mini-Series, and Best Actor and Actress nominations in a mini-series for Romola Garai and Dominic West.
 
All in all, 2011 was a fantastic year on television and it was difficult to carve out a few of the exceptional shows currently on the air for this list.  Kudos to the shows that made the list!
 
Finally, a few series worthy of “honorable mention” for their sheer addictiveness and providing superior entertainment in 2011 are: MERLIN, HAVEN and ONCE UPON A TIME – all shows without which 2011 would have been much paler in comparison.


Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Watch Kristen Bell’s HOUSE OF LIES For Free Online Right Now!

 
Watch Kristen Bell’s HOUSE OF LIES For Free Online Right Now!
Published on the TV addict | shared via feedly

Just how confident is Showtime in HOUSE OF LIES, their newest series starring Don Cheadle and Kristen Bell? So confident that they’ve decided to take a page from the Pringles “Once you pop, you can’t stop” playbook by offering up the series premiere for free via Sho.com, iTunes, YouTube and select television providers’ free On Demand channels and websites. Oh, and on the off chance you’re asking yourself just how you can possibly thank us for this incredibly awesome tip, by all means feel free to return to theTVaddict.com after watching the premiere and share with us what you thought. Enjoy.


'The Big Bang Theory': Kaley Cuoco, others talk 100th episode

 
'The Big Bang Theory': Kaley Cuoco, others talk 100th episode
The 100th episode of "The Big Bang Theory" is certainly going to be a different sort than what we have seen from the show by and large over the years -- mainly because it is going to actually explore...

Monday, December 26, 2011

TV Bits: Karen Gillan and Arthur Darvill Leaving ‘Doctor Who’, Plus: ‘Animal Kingdom’, Leonardo DiCaprio, Jane Fonda, and More

 
TV Bits: Karen Gillan and Arthur Darvill Leaving ‘Doctor Who’, Plus: ‘Animal Kingdom’, Leonardo DiCaprio, Jane Fonda, and More
Published on /Film | shared via feedly

It’s a sad day for Whovians as news breaks that Karen Gillan and Arthur Darvill will be leaving Doctor Who in the next series, with a “heartbreaking end” planned for the couple. Thankfully, we’ve got some other bits that should help cheer everyone up, including a longer preview for 30 Rock and a peek at HBO’s new comedy Veep. After the jump:

  • Karen Gillan and Arthur Darvill — a.k.a. Amy and Rory — will depart Doctor Who
  • Showtime develops a drama based on David Michôd’s Animal Kingdom
  • NBC offers up a hilarious 5-minute preview of the Season 6 of 30 Rock
  • HBO plans Leonardo DiCaprio-produced criminal/medical thriller Beat the Reaper
  • Jane Fonda signs on for a recurring role on Aaron Sorkin’s HBO series Newsroom
  • HBO unveils a trailer for the Julia Louis-Dreyfus Vice President comedy Veep

Doctor Who executive producer and head writer Steven Moffat announced this week that stars Karen Gillan and Arthur Darvill, who play Amy and Rory on the long-running sci-fi series, will be exiting the show in the next series. “I’m not telling you when and I’m certainly not telling you how, but that story is going to come to a heartbreaking end,” he said. Moffat also promised that the Doctor (Matt Smith) would be meeting “a new friend” in coming episodes, though he declined to mention anything about “he, she, or it.”

Gillan and Darvill have been with the series since the start of Smith’s run as the Eleventh Doctor in 2010. Feel free to share your favorite memories of the couple — or, alternatively, your rants about why you’re thrilled they’re gone — in the comments. [Daily Mail]

If you walked out of Animal Kingdom wishing you could spend just a little more time with Smurf Cody and her criminal brood, you must be made of tougher stuff than I am — and Showtime’s got good news for you. The cable network has begun developing a new drama based on the hit 2010 Aussie crime thriller, which like the original movie will follow “the tense battle between a criminal family and the police, and the ordinary lives caught in the middle.”

John Wells, Jonathan Lisco, and Andrew Stearn — all from Southland — are set to executive produce, with Lisco also writing; the film’s writer/director David Michôd is also on board as an executive producer. [Deadline]

Earlier this week the first teaser for Season 6 of 30 Rock had us wondering what could possibly be the big secret Liz (Tina Fey) is keeping from her colleagues. While we still don’t know for certain, a just-released longer preview offers some possibilities — including a very handsome, very non-Jack-Donaghy-approved new boyfriend played by James Marsden.

30 Rock returns 8 PM Thursday, January 12 on NBC. [Vulture]

And now, for a handful of HBO-related bits…

Earlier this week saw the release of two trailers for Judd Apatow and Lena Dunham’s Girls, but apparently I was so busy being amused by those that I failed to notice the network had also released one for its other upcoming female-led comedy series, Veep. Created by In the Loop director Armando Iannucci and starring Julia Louis-Dreyfus, the political satire follows a senator who lands the job of Vice President of the United States, only to find that it’s nothing like she expected. Anna Chlumsky and Tony Hale also star.

Veep hits April 2012 on HBO — as do Girls and Season 2 of Game of Thrones, which means I know exactly what I’ll be doing four months from now. [Screen Rant]

Aaron Sorkin‘s already collected quite a cast for the tentatively titled Newsroom, his new HBO series about the goings-on at a fictional cable news network, with Jeff Daniels, Emily Mortimer, Alison Pill, Sam Waterston, Olivia Munn, Dev Patel, and Josh Pence all signed on to star. Now the latest addition is Jane Fonda, who’s just been cast in her first major TV role as recurring character Leona Lansing.

The character’s name is a nod to former Paramount CEO Sherry Lansing and businesswoman Leona Helmsley, but it’s her resemblance to Fonda’s ex, CNN founder Ted Turner, that’s got people talking: Lansing is the CEO of the cable news network’s parent company, described as “a titan and her corporate concerns often conflict with the reporting of the news outlet she owns.” [TV Line]

Leonardo DiCaprio is getting into the TV business with Beat the Reaper, an upcoming drama project for HBO based on Josh Bazell‘s novel of the same title. Brian Koppelman and David Levien (Ocean’s Thirteen) are attached to write and direct the project, and will also serve as executive producers along with DiCaprio. The thriller follows a young doctor who crosses paths with a patient who recognizes him as a former associate of a notorious crime family. As the doctor struggles to keep his past buried, he must contend with old nemeses and unexpected revelations about his history.

Beat the Reaper was originally set up at New Regency back in 2009 as a possible starring vehicle for DiCaprio, but when Brad Weston became the company’s new president/CEO in August he deemed it a better fit for television. [Deadline]


Sunday, December 25, 2011

Happy Holidays from theTVaddict.com

 
Happy Holidays from theTVaddict.com
Published on the TV addict | shared via feedly

We interrupt your regularly scheduled holiday proceedings to wish each and every one of you a safe, healthy and happy holiday season. May all of your [insert your holiday here] wishes come true.* Particularly if they happen to coincide with a few of ours (Which you can see after the jump).

For life to imitate art in terms of Syfy’s upcoming creature feature JERSEY SHORE SHARK ATTACK.
For a portion of the thirty million or so viewers who made Jerry Seinfeld’s sitcom the very definition of “Must See TV” to realize that HAPPY ENDINGS is the new SEINFELD.
For NBC’s upcoming new series SMASH to be just that.
A second season for TERRA NOVA. And not just because an Australian set visit is incredibly high up on our bucket list. Okay, maybe a little.
More Twitter followers.
Should the unthinkable happen and FRINGE not get renewed for a fifth and likely final season, we ask that Fox give the Producers enough warning so that they may craft the proper final arc fans of this fantastic science fiction series so richly deserve.
Some good news for Soap fans. Seriously. These poor people who have been sticking by their shows for 20, 30, heck 40 years deserve a break. Not THE CHEW.
For the gang from HOW I MET YOUR MOTHER to finally share with us the identity of that titular mother.
Last year we said we’d settle for three million more viewers for NBC’s PARENTHOOD (Read: The best show that you’re not watching), this year we’ll settle for two. Cool?
For the entirety of the American media to make a pact to wholeheartedly ignore whatever cockamamie scheme, feud, or faux run for office Donald Trump has up his sleeve for his annual all-too-obvious effort to boost ratings for his train-wreck of a reality series that is THE CELEBRITY APPRENTICE.
Premiere dates for COUGAR TOWN, AWAKE and COMMUNITY that don’t include the PR speak “sizzling summer series.”
For Apple’s much buzzed about TV to become a reality.
For a Rina Mimoun penned odd couple style series featuring EVERWOOD alum Tom Amandes and Treat Williams. And speaking of alumni from our favourite shows of season’s past….
Paris Geller (aka. Liza Weil) where art thou? Melissa McCarthy can’t be the only star to come out of the eerily prescient named town of Stars Hollow.
Peace on Earth, Good Will Toward Men, Yada, yada, yada.

Fun Fact: Our traditional list of TV-related Holiday wishes is the real deal as evidence by the astoundingly high number of wishes from last year that came true, including: Kristen Bell’s return to TV, JACK & BOBBY: THE COMPLETE SERIES released on DVD iTunes, an iPad edition of Entertainment Weekly and a satisfying ending to LIFE UNEXPECTED!


Saturday, December 24, 2011

Will 2012 mark the return of Transit City?

 
Will 2012 mark the return of Transit City?
Published on blogTO | shared via feedly

Transit City Toronto 2012First things first, that's a serious question. Despite the fact that Transit City was thought lost shortly after Rob Ford took his position as mayor of Toronto, more and more signs point to the possibility that, at the very minimum, there will be a significant public push to revive the former LRT-based transit plan. Speculation that it might be possible to restore the initial plans for LRT on Sheppard and Finch ramped up when David Miller, speaking with Newstalk's 1010's John Moore in September, indicated that you could just turn Transit City back on "like a switch." While that was a provocative statement, few believed that such a thing was actually possible.

Many still don't. There are, however, others out there who point toward the resistance — both from the public and on city council — to the Fords' attempted takeover of the Port Lands redevelopment as a potentially watershed moment in this mayoralty. Prior to the kickback on this issue, Ford (be it Doug or Rob) tended to get what he wanted. Could a similar campaign to revive Transit City have the same effect?

In a timely and intelligent post on his mayoral watchdog site, Ford for Toronto, Matt Elliott does a good job establishing why there might be room for cautious optimism from Transit City supporters:

"Is a Port Lands-style consensus possible with these transit plans? Early indications are good. Aside from Ford, very few councillors expressed strong objections to the on-street operation of Eglinton and other Transit City routes when they were first proposed. And there's certainly an appetite for more transit in more places, which is what we'd get if council rejected Ford's all-underground scheme for Eglinton and reverted to something resembling the Transit City plan."

Elliott is careful to note, however, that the best strategy for critics of Ford's transit "plan" will be to frame a campaign for change under the guise of compromise, a move that might encourage the mayor to cop a less stubborn approach to new transit options without the risk of full-scale embarrassment. This is smart thinking — not just because, as Elliott notes, it might "leave room for the mayor to save face," but because it would also allow his allies on council to vote for a new transit plan without completely alienating Ford.

So how does the matter get before council given that Ford ditched the transit plan he inherited without taking it to a vote? Last week, the Grid's Edward Keenan pointed out that the punitive costs associated with the cancellation of the original Transit City plans — which have been estimated at $65-million — could prove the impetus for a councillor to pass a motion asking Metrolinx to revert to the initial and only plan that was actually approved by city council back in 2009. The big question is whether or not there's the political will to vote in favour of such a call.

Some councillors who initially aligned themselves with Ford on transit have since reconsidered. Upon news that Scarborough will be without rapid transit until 2019 (and quite possibly a lot longer), Councillor Chin Lee (ward 41) had some regret-laden advice for his constituents who supported a subway extension plan that very well be dead in the water. "It's just be careful what you ask for and think of all the implications," he said. Raymond Cho (Ward 42), Keenan notes, has also done an about face since seeing what's in store for Scarberians over the next few years.

Add to this the possibility of more and more public pressure via websites like Save Transit City and a #CodeBlueTO-type campaign, and you can expect to hear the words Transit City uttered more and more often in 2012. The longer that Ford's Sheppard subway extension remains stalled, and the more complicated and expensive that it gets to bury the entirety of the Eglinton LRT, the more likely it is that something's got to give. Will this result in the restoration of the city's former transist plan? That remains to be seen. But the betting is good that a very serious movement to restore viable transit options in under-served areas is on the horizon.