Monday, July 28, 2008

The Mother Corp. Has Landed



What radio and television juggernaut could reach almost every living Canadian and unite them with the wonders of a redheaded she-devil and a stompin' singer's wedding yet still leave people apathetic about its future?

As the non-individual with the most votes so far, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation remains a part of the Canadian consciousness with such hits as Twitch City, Alan Hamel's Comedy Bag and Quentin Durgens, M.P. With 23 vote getters who played some sort of prominent role on the CBC, the public broadcaster has left a lasting mark in the field of mediocrity.

As one Tidewater Tramp fan put it:

"Presents a lineup of mediocrities that would be unemployed if they had to work out side the Mother Corp."

But is keeping Luba Goy warm through harsh Canadian winters enough to make the CBC the most mediocre? You decide.

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Sweeping Away The Competition




Paul Gross, aka. George Clooney North, may have stolen women's hearts in Aspen Extreme but can he steal votes away from his competitors? With average eyes you could get lost in and an adequate smile that makes teenage girls weep, Gross serged across the small screen after a career on the stage and in movies no one has heard of.

As one button presser said:

"Paul Gross is a wooden, uninteresting actor with aspirations to be a mediocre scriptwriter. He received front-page acclaim in Maclean's magazine when he jumped from his boring TV show to a boring bit part in a forgotten Hollywood movie. Then he entered the stratosphere of Canadian moviemaking through the taxpayer-funded sedative "Men with Brooms". His mediocrity was almost averaged out by co-starring with the (only) slightly-less mediocre Leslie Nielsen. Astonishingly he has not yet been given his own late-night CBC variety show, but since they haven't yet settled on a replacement for Ralph ben Mergui there is still time."

But is making a financially successful Canadian movie enough to crown him as the most mediocre? You decide.

Monday, July 21, 2008

Where Have You Gone Walt Whitman?



Some things look better in the shade and if you knew a black car is one of those things then you might have voted for Gino Vannelli.

Thanks to Canadian content regulations, his songs remain in regular rotation at the nation's leading light rock radio stations. One of Canada's first pop musician heartthrobs, Vannelli still surprises the listening public by not being dead. But is the ability to take in and exhale a steady stream of breaths enough to make him the most mediocre? As one voter said:

"Hairy 70's early 80's singer who sang really bland songs."

Can wild horses drag him away from the competition? You decide.

Saturday, July 19, 2008

Just Don't Call Me Late For Dinner


The Wrench. The Great One. The Rocket. The Hitman. Stubby.

Some nicknames instill fear, others inspire people with their greatness.

Rick Campanelli's does neither of those.

The bearer of Canada's most mediocre nickname, Campanelli was dubbed "The Temp" after he won a competition to become a temporary employee or "temp" at Much Music. With his proven ability to throw a Christmas tree into a dumpster and his "I have dental coverage" smile, he parlayed his delusions of adequacy into a spot on Global's version of eTalk Daily.

As one astute voter put it:

"I remember him as a VJ on Much Music and now I think he is a co-host of ET Canada. This guy is politically impotent, culturally irrelevant, and his death will not be remembered. But he's still on TV and he's recognizable. I can think of no other Canadian who espouses mediocrity like Rick 'The Temp'."

Campanelli's handle, while amusing for a few months, lost some of its lustre during his long tenure with the nation's music station, yet it still retained enough comedic value to surpass the likes of Jimmy the Janitor, Humble Howard Glassman and Dull Vicki Gabereau.


Thursday, July 17, 2008

Hockey Night In Blandada?



What makes a man and/or woman mediocre? Is it playing second fiddle on one of the nation's highest rated television shows or owning a voice that's instantly recognizable by anyone young enough to still have their hearing and old enough to use a toilet not made of plastic?

Bob Cole, long time play-by-play announcer for fellow nominee the CBC, is known for milking every syllable for all it's worth and for being Harry Neale's arm candy. As one voter put it:

"CBC Hockey Night In Canada Play-by-Play announcer. He takes a whiz-bang game like hockey and calls it so slowly as to give all Canadians a dull-like appearance."

Does Cole have the tin tongue needed to propel him past the likes of Craig Oliver? You decide.

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

The Moderately Honourable


With over 3,000 visitors since Canada Day, The Most Mediocre Canadian has become more popular than a hat store on free hat day during a semi-annual hat festival.

To celebrate this momentous occasion, Lies With Occasional Truth presents to you Canada's prime ministers* in order of votes received.

Steve Harper
Joe Clark
Jean "The Shawinigan Handshake" Chretien
Pierre Trudeau
Paul Martin Jr.
William Lyon Mackenzie King
Lester Bowles Pearson

What makes these men so mediocre? As some of our voters put it:

Stephen Harper - "He's managed to quash any and all progressive legislation to the insure the status quo stays intact. Safe injection sites only protect junkies. Let's get rid of those."

Joe Clark - "The most undistinguished, squishy and unconservative imaginable leader of a 'right wing' political party. His picture is prominently displayed under the word 'milquetoast' in the Canadian dictionary."

Jean Chretien - "Three majority governments whose biggest accomplishment was its majority governments."

Pierre Trudeau - "Permanently screwed up the country by turning it into an entitlement-minded socialist nanny-state run by unaccountable bureaucrats, and because he brought us the despicable HRCs (human rights commission)."

Paul Martin - "Canada's most perfect example of the Peter Principle in action, Paul Martin was such a mediocre leader that even his fall from the top was unexceptional."

William Lyon Mackenzie King - "Truly he will be remembered wherever men honour ingenuity, ambiguity, inactivity, and political longevity. Let us raise up a temple to the cult of mediocrity. Do nothing by halves which can be done by quarters."

Lester B. Pearson - "Played by all the rules, always tried to not rock the boat, defanged the Canadian military, invented peacekeeping (the lamest foreign policy and contribution to national pride ever)."

But do those things really put them above the Rene Simard's of our country? You decide.


*Leading in votes as the most mediocre, not in an actual election, federal or otherwise.

Monday, July 14, 2008

Jackpot?




They may have won the genetic lottery, but can Justin Trudeau or Ben Mulroney win the title of Most Mediocre Canadian?

Mulroney inherited his father's robust chin. Trudeau inherited his dad's ability to marry attractive women. One hosts a talent show that produces a distinct lack of celebrity on the part of its winners. The other went to Winterlude with fellow nominee Rick Mercer.

But does that make them the most mediocre?

As one Mulroney fan put it:
"Mediocre looks. Mediocre talent. Regularly praises mediocrity in the most maudlin fashion on Canadian Idol."

Trudeau, always the statesman, drew this vote:
"Making a career out of professional speaking while merely carrying a recognizable name. He is the Paris Hilton of Canada, without the fun."

Do famous last names give these men the edge over the competition? You decide.





Thursday, July 10, 2008

Say It Ain't So, Corky!



How sad is it that being one of Canada's top comedians equates, in cross-border conversion, to being a lowly contestant on a second-rate American reality show? Sad enough to earn Last Comic Standing finalist Sean Cullen a place in history as the Most Mediocre Canadian?

Or had he already rightfully earned that title as the leader of Canada's seminal "comedy" group Corky and The Juice Pigs? You decide.

Tuesday, July 8, 2008

Warren Kinsella: Apparently Canada's James Carville



Though he apparently had nothing to do with Kevin Costner's breakout performance in Field of Dreams, Kathy at Five Feet of Fury nonetheless justifies her vote for Warren Kinsella as the Most Mediocre Canadian. Read it here.

Monday, July 7, 2008

Can I See That Smile Again, If It's Not Too Much Trouble?



The votes keep pouring in and more than 100 people have now received at least one vote as proliferators of outstanding mediocrity. Not one to shy away from competition, former talkshow place-holder Alan Thicke is right in the thin of things.

He may have played the wise, square-jawed father on the only family television show to feature a character named Boner, but is the erstwhile Jason Seaver's appearance on the short-lived series JPod enough to relegate him to the lower depths of Canadian averageness? As one voter put it:

"Although I believe that there is a street named after him somewhere (Kirkland Lake?), here is a man that not only demonstrated mediocrity in-country, but exported ennui to the United States. The Alan Thicke show & Growing Pains - the perfect face of mediocrity."

Should he top the list alongside the likes of Kevin Newman and Luba Goy? You decide.

Friday, July 4, 2008

Waiter, There's Banality in My Soup



With hundreds of votes pouring in, many of which bear familiar names like Mulroney and Trudeau, let's take a moment to shine the spotlight on a lesser-known magnate of Canadian mediocrity.

Bonnie Stern may be the author of 12 best-selling cookbooks, but that doesn't mean her HeartSmart cuisine isn't as bland and tasteless as most Canadian cooking. According to one eloquent voter:

"No one has done more to neuter the Canadian palate than Bonnie Stern. She has somehow fooled the nation into believing that the home economist's anal obsession with low fat and high folic acid has something to do with fine cooking. She prances her way through the kitchen as though she personally invented fire, yet hasn't had a truly original idea in her entire career. Her cookbooks look like overblown margarine brochures."

Does she truly deserve a place among the frontrunning Clarks and Harpers? You decide.

Thursday, July 3, 2008

Brent Gretzky: The Mediocre One



Though he shares the NHL record for Most Points Scored by Two Siblings (Wayne: 2853, Brent: 4), Brent Gretzky's most amazing accomplishment might have been his ability to grow up in the Gretzky household without absorbing - even through accidental osmosis - any proficiency for the game of hockey. Still, with 13 NHL games under his belt, he has managed to make a career out of lacing up the skates. Now playing for the Brantford Blast of Major League Hockey, he can add Allan Cup Champion to his long list of mediocre triumphs.

Is he the Most Mediocre Canadian? You decide.

Tuesday, July 1, 2008

Vote cast, Canada asks "Who is that?"


Conspicuous tie wearer David Frum has received the first vote for the most mediocre Canadian. From his humble beginnings in journalist Barbara Frum's womb, he climbed the foot stool to reach the middle shelf in the kitchen cupboard of life. Infamous for coining the phrase "Axis of Evil," Frum was a speech writer for some guy in the States.

Is this man really the most mediocre Canadian?