I'm a big fan of Anthony Bourdain and I have seen a lot of his shows. However, up until last night, I was under the impression that he had never done an episode about Toronto. Turns out I was wrong. Yesterday I discovered that, back in 2012, he did one as part of his two-season show, The Layover.
As a born and raised Torontonian and as a fervent supporter of this city, I'm always a combination of excited and nervous before I watch a show like this. I'm excited because I love Toronto and I like seeing it showcased. But I'm nervous because, what if they don't do a good job showing it off?
Maybe it's hometown insecurity, or maybe it's just my inner desire to want to properly sell Toronto to the rest of the world. Either way, my mixed feelings were not unfounded.
The episode opens with Bourdain coming into downtown from the airport and immediately saying, "It's not a good looking town. They sort of got the worst of the architectural fads of the 20th century. It looks like every public school in America, every third-tier city library, Soviet chic, butt-ugly, glass box.”
Things get generally more positive after this initial impression, and eventually Bourdain does admit that the city has great food, nightlife, diversity, etc. But there is this interesting moment in the middle of the episode where a bunch of Torontonians are asked: What one thing would you say best describes Toronto?
Most didn't know how to answer it.
This got me thinking:
What is our thing? There are, of course, the obvious answers. We are diverse. We have great ethnic foods. We have numerous sports teams. And people are generally nice. But these are a little too generic and boring for me. There are also truly unique features like our ravine network, but I wouldn't call this our single most notable feature.
The right answer, in my view, is that Toronto is the economic and cultural capital of Canada. It used to be Montréal (which you all know I love deeply), but that's no longer the case today. Broadly speaking, there's only one global city in this country and, like it or not, it's Toronto.
I think it's important to recognize this ranking because economic opportunity is one of the principal reasons that people live in cities in the first place. And if we are to compete globally, we are going to need to be both confident about our place in the world and insanely ambitious about our goals.
So that's my answer: Toronto has global city status. But clearly we need to be much better at recognizing and building on it.