Gothamatic 8.2.2012
By Zoran Milich - Wednesday, February 8, 2012 - 0 Comments
Every day, Zoran Milich walks the streets of New York City, camera in hand
Every day, Zoran Milich walks the streets of New York City, camera in hand. We’ve collected some of his favourite shots. Welcome to Gothamatic, or how a Canadian photographer sees life in NYC.
Gothamatic 8.2.2012
Tiptoe through the concrete
Musical performances on Park Avenue. (Photo by Zoran Milich/Gothamatic.com)
1 of 22 Photos
-
Gothamatic 2.1.2012
By Zoran Milich - Wednesday, February 1, 2012 at 6:41 PM - 0 Comments
Every day, Zoran Milich walks the streets of New York City, camera in hand
Every day, Zoran Milich walks the streets of New York City, camera in hand. We’ve collected some of his favourite shots. Welcome to Gothamatic, or how a Canadian photographer sees life in NYC.
0Gothamatic 2.1.2012
Can I see your I.D.?
A cat sits in front of the goods at a liquor store in Astoria, Queens, New York City. Photo by Zoran Milich/Gothamatic.com
1 of 20 Photos
-
Gothamatic: 25.01.12
By Zoran Milich - Wednesday, January 25, 2012 at 4:52 PM - 0 Comments
How a Canadian photographer sees life in NYC
Every day, Zoran Milich wanders around New York City, camera in hand. We’ve collected some of his favourite shots. Welcome to Gothamatic, or how a Canadian photographer sees life in NYC.
0Gothamatic: 25.01.12
Care bear on the move
Hats in the shape of animals are keeping New Yorkers warm this winter. (Photo by Zoran Milich/Gothamatic.com)
1 of 19 Photos
-
Watch an excerpt from ‘Winter’, a documentary about Sarah Burke and Rory Bushfield
By macleans.ca - Friday, January 20, 2012 at 1:08 PM - 0 Comments
…
-
Watch Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall’s election ad bloopers
By macleans.ca - Wednesday, January 11, 2012 at 1:59 PM - 0 Comments
…
-
Watch Stephen Harper discuss jobs and the economy with CityNews
By macleans.ca - Friday, December 2, 2011 at 6:25 PM - 0 Comments
…
-
The end of Occupy Toronto
By Tom Henheffer - Tuesday, November 22, 2011 at 4:05 PM - 0 Comments
Scenes from the dying days of the protest in St. James Park (VIDEO)
-
How to make beans n’ toast the perfect student dish
By Jessica Allen - Thursday, November 10, 2011 at 3:13 PM - 0 Comments
It’s cheap and it’s healthy. Here’s how to make it taste good, too.
Pythagoras thought they were evil and Aristotle said they were destructive. Plus, there’s also that really funny song about them. We’re talking about beans, specifically in their most glorious rendering, on toast. Not only are they versatile in the kitchen, high in fibre, protein and iron, but they’re also incredibly cheap—especially the dried variety—making beans perfect student grub. Maclean’s, along with two Toronto chefs, presents three variations that may just be the greatest thing on sliced bread.
-
Watch our augmented reality demo
By macleans.ca - Thursday, November 3, 2011 at 5:24 PM - 0 Comments
…
-
Drink like an Egyptian
By Jessica Allen - Thursday, November 3, 2011 at 1:50 PM - 0 Comments
Experimental archaeology recreates ancient brews after analyzing pottery shards and bronze vessels
When it comes to food these days, everything old is new again, which isn’t that surprising after years of genuflecting in the church of molecular gastronomy. The only altar left for foodies to worship at is an old one. Jars of preserved goods, just like grandma used to make, line the kitchen shelves of countless restaurants. Noma, voted the best restaurant in the world last year, fashions most of its dishes from ingredients foraged from the Danish woods. Menus, including the one at Chicago’s Next, are built around a particular time and place, like Paris circa 1906. Chefs, including Charleston, S.C.-based Sean Brock, hunt down long-forgotten varieties of grains, vegetables and fruit, and Toronto’s own Jamie Kennedy prefers the rare Canadian heritage breed of wheat called red fife.And then there’s Patrick McGovern, an archaeologist at the University of Pennsylvania Museum who, after analyzing the residue that lingers in the nooks and crannies of millennia-old potted vessels, is bringing ancient elixirs back to life. It’s gastronomical nostalgia on steroids.
McGovern, a pioneer in the field of biomolecular archaeology who did undergraduate work in chemistry and has a Ph.D. in Near Eastern archaeology, has collaborated on five beverages with Sam Calagione, the award-winning founder and president of Dogfish Head brewery in Delaware: Midas Touch, an Iron Age beer based on samples found in the king’s supposed tomb; Chateau Jiahu, a Chinese blend of grapes, rice and honey based on the oldest sample of booze ever discovered; Theobrama, a 3,200 year-old Honduran chocolate drink; Chicha, a corn beer with Peruvian lineage; and Ta Henket, an Egyptian ale being released in December with 18,000-year-old components.
-
Occupy Wall St. hits Times Square
By Zoran Milich - Tuesday, October 18, 2011 at 4:11 PM - 0 Comments
Scenes from the month-old demonstration’s trek to NYC’s tourist mecca
0Occupy Wall St. hits Times Square
Zuccatti Park
Scene from the Occupy Wall Street demonstration in Zuccatti Park in New York City. (Zoran Milich)
1 of 18 Photos
-
Scenes from the Occupy Wall St. protest in NYC
By Guy Godfree - Thursday, October 6, 2011 at 7:36 PM - 1 Comment
Thousands gathered in New York City this week to join the burgeoning movement
1Scenes from the Occupy Wall St. protest in NYC
Before the march
NYC - Wednesday, Oct 5: Protesters gather at the north end of Zuccotti Park (or Liberty Park Plaza) before beginning a march to City Hall. (Guy Godfree/Maclean's)
1 of 21 Photos
-
Steve Jobs and iEverything
By macleans.ca - Thursday, October 6, 2011 at 6:20 PM - 1 Comment
From the original Macintosh to the iPod to the iPhone, Steve Jobs helped upend nearly every facet of the tech industry
-
Steve Jobs’s commencement speech at Stanford University in 2005
By macleans.ca - Thursday, October 6, 2011 at 12:29 PM - 0 Comments
…
-
Cocktails at the Soho House with Jessica Allen
By Jessica Allen - Tuesday, September 13, 2011 at 5:33 PM - 0 Comments
Allen samples the cocktails on offer to the stars at TIFF
-
Jessica Allen hits the red carpet at the ‘Coriolanus’ premiere
By Jessica Allen - Tuesday, September 13, 2011 at 12:55 PM - 4 Comments
Our intrepid reporter chats up Ralph Fiennes, Brian Cox and Jessica Chastain
-
Emily Blunt on what it takes to make a good romantic movie
By Brian D. Johnson - Monday, September 12, 2011 at 4:54 PM - 0 Comments
The star of ‘Salmon Fishing in the Yemen’ sits down with Brian D. Johnson
-
Muscling into the ‘Ides of March’ press conference
By Jessica Allen - Sunday, September 11, 2011 at 12:04 PM - 0 Comments
If George Clooney and Ryan Gosling are good at anything, it’s attracting a crowd
-
Scenes from the red carpet at the Killer Elite premiere
By Tom Henheffer - Sunday, September 11, 2011 at 7:32 AM - 0 Comments
Robert De Niro and Jason Statham stop to chat about the “thinking man’s action movie”
-
‘What’s your favourite sports movie?’
By Jessica Allen - Saturday, September 10, 2011 at 10:27 AM - 7 Comments
Jessica Allen snags Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie on the red carpet at the ‘Moneyball’ premiere. Sorta.
-
Scenes from the red carpet at the ‘Ides of March’ premiere
By Tom Henheffer - Saturday, September 10, 2011 at 10:13 AM - 0 Comments
George Clooney and Paul Giamatti stop for a chat
-
Scenes from the opening night of TIFF
By macleans.ca - Friday, September 9, 2011 at 6:13 PM - 0 Comments
The festival gets underway with premiere of Davis Guggenheim’s U2 doc
0Scenes from the opening night of TIFF
Opening Night Gala premiere of From The Sky Down
September 8, 2011: Fans wait at Roy Thompson Hall for the Opening Night Gala premiere of From The Sky Down at the Toronto International Film Festival. (Kara Dillon/Maclean's)
1 of 30 Photos
-
Sarah Polley on married life, Seth Rogen, and who left her starstruck
By Brian D. Johnson - Friday, September 9, 2011 at 10:57 AM - 0 Comments
Brian D. Johnson interviews the Canadian actor
-
Mr. Brainwash at Toronto’s Gallery One
By Tom Henheffer - Thursday, September 8, 2011 at 12:14 PM - 0 Comments
The French artist and subject of Bansky’s ‘Exit Through the Gift Shop’ on leaving his mark on Toronto during TIFF
-
Photo gallery: The cult of Jack Layton
By macleans.ca - Tuesday, August 30, 2011 at 11:48 AM - 5 Comments
Canadians may have liked the NDP, but they loved Jack Layton
In mourning the death of Jack Layton, Canadians displayed an affection for the NDP leader that arguably surpassed their affection for the NDP itself. Below are some of the images captured at Layton’s funeral and other sites where Canadians paid their respects to the most popular politician the NDP has ever known.


















