Thursday, February 12, 2026
ADVT 
National

Taxpayers Not Footing The Bill For Kanye West's Pan Am Performance: Organizers

The Canadian Press, 27 Jul, 2015 11:51 AM
    TORONTO — Organizers say taxpayers aren't footing the bill for Kanye West's headlining performance at the Pan Am Games closing ceremony on Sunday.
     
    They also aren't sure whether the rapper's mic problems and abrupt exit from the stage were genuine or planned.
     
    Pan Am Games CEO Saad Rafi says performance fees for West and the two other performers — Canadian howler Serena Ryder and Miami pop-rapper Pitbull — were covered by the concert promotion company Live Nation, which sponsored the Games.
     
    He says the Games organizing committee only contributed to expenses such as backing bands, makeup artists and transporting artists' equipment from the airport.
     
    There was a fleeting outcry when West was announced as the headliner for the ceremony, with several thousand people signing a petition urging organizers to replace him with a Canadian act.
     
    Some questioned whether tax dollars should be spent on an American and often controversial artist.
     
    The crowd roared its support for West at Sunday's event, but many expressed their confusion when he tossed an apparently faulty microphone up in the air and stomped off stage.
     
    Rafi says West is known to do the unexpected and "we may never know" whether his departure was staged.
     
    "The volume that he performs at is so high, it might have been what affected the sound system, but it also might be something his team planned all along, so you just never know because he's such a creative guy," Rafi told The Canadian Press.
     
    "His team controls his whole part of that show — lights, etc.," he said, adding that he hadn't heard any complaints from West's camp since the show.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ducks Rescued After Oil Spills Into Toronto Creek, Clean Up Underway

    Ducks Rescued After Oil Spills Into Toronto Creek, Clean Up Underway
    The Toronto Wildlife Centre said it had rescued 31 ducks — with at least a dozen more en route — that were slicked with oil by late Tuesday afternoon.

    Ducks Rescued After Oil Spills Into Toronto Creek, Clean Up Underway

    Harper's Office Attacks Mulcair, Trudeau After Rate Cut By Bank Of Canada

    Harper's Office Attacks Mulcair, Trudeau After Rate Cut By Bank Of Canada
    OTTAWA — The Conservative government is trying to turn bad economic news to its political advantage as the Bank of Canada outlines a gloomy financial forecast for the rest of the year.

    Harper's Office Attacks Mulcair, Trudeau After Rate Cut By Bank Of Canada

    New Democrat Decries Brief Security Shutdown At B.C. Legislature

    VICTORIA — Access to British Columbia's legislature was restricted briefly Tuesday due to security concerns resulting from a noisy protest inside the building's public gallery.

    New Democrat Decries Brief Security Shutdown At B.C. Legislature

    B.C. To Review Penalty And Fine Structure For People Who Spark Wildfires

    B.C. To Review Penalty And Fine Structure For People Who Spark Wildfires
    Forests Minister Steve Thomson said Tuesday that humans have caused 375 of the 1,086 wildfires that have been reported since April 1 and those flames have burned 440 square kilometres. 

    B.C. To Review Penalty And Fine Structure For People Who Spark Wildfires

    Crown Says Delta Police Officer Won't Stand Trial On Second-Degree Murder Charge

    Crown Says Delta Police Officer Won't Stand Trial On Second-Degree Murder Charge
    VICTORIA — A second-degree-murder charge has been dropped against a police officer involved in a lengthy armed standoff outside a Vancouver-area casino.

    Crown Says Delta Police Officer Won't Stand Trial On Second-Degree Murder Charge

    Record Warm Temperatures To Have Years-long Effect On B.C. Salmon Stocks

    VANCOUVER — Record-breaking temperatures along the coast of British Columbia will harm Pacific salmon for years to come, says the Fisheries Department.

    Record Warm Temperatures To Have Years-long Effect On B.C. Salmon Stocks