Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Kanye West, Pitbull To Perform At Toronto's Pan Am Games Closing Ceremony

The Canadian Press, 25 Jul, 2015 01:45 PM
    TORONTO — The Pan Am Games come to an end tonight, with a closing ceremony set to feature Kanye West.
     
    The Chicago hip-hop artist will be joined by Serena Ryder of Millbrook, Ont., and Miami pop-rapper Pitbull for the ceremony, to be held at Toronto's Rogers Centre.
     
    Although organizers have been secretive about plans for the ceremony, they allowed a few details at a news conference on Friday.
     
    The show will feature 500 costumes made from 3,000 yards of fabric, 510 volunteers making up the show's cast, 150 broadcast cameras and 300 lights.
     
    As of Friday, organizers said a "couple thousand" tickets remained available, although the opening ceremony in the same venue drew a sold-out crowd of roughly 45,000.
     
    Ryder will sing the Pan Am Games' official song "Together We Are One," reflecting the show's theme, which TO2015 organizing committee CEO Saad Rafi said was "unity through diversity."
     
    He also promised that the show would close with a "huge, captivating" fireworks show that would be even bigger than what audiences saw at the opening.
     
    Each of the three featured artists is expected to play a few songs. The ceremony will also feature the parade of nations (less formal than in the opening) and the handover to Lima, Peru, which will hold the next Pan Am Games in 2019.
     
    Rafi stressed Friday that the show's featured musical guests, though they merited most of the headlines, are only part of the show.
     
    "It's really important to be clear that the closing ceremonies are for the athletes — for the spectators and the audience (too) but traditionally it's to celebrate the athletes and their performance," he said.
     
    "It's not their concert," he added later. "It's the closing ceremonies and they're performing in it — all three of them, I might add."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Strings That Bind Us: Ayaan Ali Khan And Jeanette Bernal-Singh Rehearse In Vancouver

    Strings That Bind Us: Ayaan Ali Khan And Jeanette Bernal-Singh Rehearse In Vancouver
    Watch this behind-the-scenes video of sarod virtuoso Ayaan Ali Khan and Vancouver Symphony Orchestra violinist Jeanette Bernal-Singh rehearsing today in Vancouver. 

    Strings That Bind Us: Ayaan Ali Khan And Jeanette Bernal-Singh Rehearse In Vancouver

    Conservative MP Wai Young Makes U-Turn On 1985 Air India Bombing Remarks

    Conservative MP Wai Young Makes U-Turn On 1985 Air India Bombing Remarks
    OTTAWA — A Conservative MP is backtracking on her claim that Canada's spy agency knew there was a bomb on an Air India plane that exploded in flight three decades ago, killing 329 people.

    Conservative MP Wai Young Makes U-Turn On 1985 Air India Bombing Remarks

    Woman Killed In Port Alberni, B.C. After Early-Morning Attack

    Woman Killed In Port Alberni, B.C. After Early-Morning Attack
      PORT ALBERNI, B.C. — A woman has been killed in Port Alberni, B.C., and RCMP in the Vancouver Island city say the case is a homicide.

    Woman Killed In Port Alberni, B.C. After Early-Morning Attack

    B.C. Ministry Failed To Protect Children Sexually Abused By Father: Judge

    B.C. Ministry Failed To Protect Children Sexually Abused By Father: Judge
    B.C. Supreme Court Justice Paul Walker also ruled the father sexually abused his toddler while the kids were in the care of the Children's Ministry.

    B.C. Ministry Failed To Protect Children Sexually Abused By Father: Judge

    Canadian Dollar Plunges To Post-recession Low After Central Bank Cuts Key Interest Rate

    Canadian Dollar Plunges To Post-recession Low After Central Bank Cuts Key Interest Rate
    The loonie was down more than a full U.S. cent Wednesday afternoon at levels not seen since March 2009, when Canada was in the midst of a deep recession.

    Canadian Dollar Plunges To Post-recession Low After Central Bank Cuts Key Interest Rate

    Bank Of Canada Cuts Key Rate To 0.5 Per Cent, Slashes Economic Outlook

    Bank Of Canada Cuts Key Rate To 0.5 Per Cent, Slashes Economic Outlook
    The Bank of Canada said its lower outlook for growth was due to three factors: Canadian oil producers cutting their investment plans, slowing growth in China and non-resource exports faltering — a trend it described as "a puzzle that merits further study."

    Bank Of Canada Cuts Key Rate To 0.5 Per Cent, Slashes Economic Outlook