Oooooooooh, this should be good
Oooooh, I wish I had access to it!
Oooooooooh, this should be good
This is a wonderful person, a man all children could use as a role model. Perhaps some adults too ! Z and Bergy, does it get a y better?
I don't believe you do. These two are my heroes. And I'm 56.
I don't believe you do. These two are my heroes. And I'm 56.
i tried to explain to a friend, a very casual hockey fan, the impact Bergeron has had on this team and city. His career, from his tiny little body speaking barely a word of English when he was drafted, to quickly becoming an offensive threat at wing, Randy f***ing Jones almost killing him, coming back and TOTALLY reinventing his game and his career, now he’s better than before and doesn’t age. He just gets everything right on and off the ice. He is the perfect player. Period.
Chara is quickly climbing the ranks as well. He’s a very quiet type of leader obviously, but I’m noticing his presence more the last few years. He seems like such a calming presence in all he does and i find it extremely admirable. He’s another guy that just does everything right.
how lucky we are
I'm 57 I win, but not really cause I agree. Your a whole year ahead of your time.
i tried to explain to a friend, a very casual hockey fan, the impact Bergeron has had on this team and city. His career, from his tiny little body speaking barely a word of English when he was drafted, to quickly becoming an offensive threat at wing, Randy f***ing Jones almost killing him, coming back and TOTALLY reinventing his game and his career, now he’s better than before and doesn’t age. He just gets everything right on and off the ice. He is the perfect player. Period.
Chara is quickly climbing the ranks as well. He’s a very quiet type of leader obviously, but I’m noticing his presence more the last few years. He seems like such a calming presence in all he does and i find it extremely admirable. He’s another guy that just does everything right.
how lucky we are
Do you know what his full name is? In Quebec, since the early eighties, children born after that time took the family names of both their parents. His real name is Patrice Bergeron-Cleary. In Quebec, because of politics, anything pertaining to an anglophone slant is quickly brushed under he carpet. Bergeron is his mothers maiden name , Cleary is his fathers name. In Quebec, one quickly learns that if you want to advance, it's best to lose all ties to any anglophone slant, therefore Cleary got brushed under the carpet. Cleary is a Gaelic name. He was raised in a bi-lingual household and capable of speaking both languages (French and English) fluently. He was better at speaking French than he was at English simply because when you are brought up in L'Ancienne-Lorette,Quebec, 97% of the community is Francophone. Take it from me, if Patrice can speak English without any accent like he does, it because he was exposed to English (from his father) very early on in life .Otherwise he would sound like many other Quebec born hockey players like Serge Savard, Guy Lafleur, Jean Beliveau, Patrick Roy and so on, all capable of speaking English but not without their french accent. Bergy speaks without a french accent because he was fully capable of speaking English early on in life.
BTW, I couldn't respond to your bit with Gordon Lightfoot about the Pistols.
Huge fan. To me, Never Mind the Bollocks is the greatest rock and roll (yes) I've ever heard. Chris Thomas, who also produced the Pretenders first album, really caught their sound. Comprised mostly of singles and add=on's, it's fantastic.
BTW again, Steve Jones was a *great* elemental lead guitar player, Lydon was Lydon (effing hilarious and a jerk, but my kind of jerk), Matlock a fine pop songwriter, and Cook a good drummer.
PS I didn't understand PIL's first album at the time, but appreciated that it was weird, and different. If you were growing up in the late 70s AOR era, that was enough.
Shook Lydon's hand at a Paradise show in '85. He was wearing pajamas.
While Lydon himself admits that he's "the Kiss of death to most people" I think he's brilliant.
When you write lyrics like
f*** this and f*** that
f*** it all and f*** the f***ing brat
you may lose a little credibility as a lyricist but this guy was as sharp as blade, he knew exactly what he was doing, when and how to do it.
Way smarter than he would let on.
Sorry but this is incorrect. In this article Bergeron discusses in his own words how he knew very little English when he first joined the Bruins in 2003, and his early struggles with learning the language:
https://www.theplayerstribune.com/en-us/articles/patrice-bergeron-boston-bruins-nhl-playoffs
Some key parts:
"I was barely a legal adult when I first joined the Bruins in 2003...Learning to play at this level was a huge challenge on its own, but complicating things even more was the fact that I knew very little English.
I pretty much only had the basics down: hello, goodbye, thank you, backcheck and whatever else I could remember from the English classes that I hadn’t paid enough attention to while I was growing up in Quebec.
Early on there were so many times when I’d go to restaurants and I wouldn’t know how to pronounce anything on the menu. But on top of that my accent was superthick, so even if I made a go of it, there was pretty much no shot that the server would understand what I was trying to say. So I made a habit of just ordering the same thing as the person sitting next to me. I figured it would just be simpler that way. Granted the system had its flaws, but I ate.
Sometime during my rookie year, I was doing an interview on camera and I was trying to describe the feeling of playing in the NHL as “unbelievable.” The only problem was my English was nooot advanced enough for me to pronounce the word unbelievable. I mean, I could barely order a meal at that point much less pronounce five-syllable words. On camera interviews made me super nervous for that reason, and that wasn’t good because when I was nervous my English somehow got 10 times worse.
So during that interview, I found myself staring down the barrel of a camera sounding like a baby attempting to say his first words.
“It’s unbuh….”
“It’s unbuh-luh….”
“Un-buhhh….”
“Unbu-lu-lu … uhhh….”
“It was great!”
Don’t know where the tape of that interview is. Hopefully in a trash dump somewhere."
He also spoke about this during NESN's Bergeron at 1000 program. So Bergy's current fluency in English and relative lack of accent is simply due to hard work and the fact that he's Bergeron, so you wouldn't expect anything else than being really good at anything he puts his mind to.
Doesn't correspond with what I heard but we'll agree to disagree.
As someone who has lived his entire life in Quebec, if you're twenty years old before you start to learn English there is no way your losing that accent.
Agree to disagree? This article was written by Bergeron. In his interview with NESN he's talking about his own personal experiences. How can you claim to know better than Bergy about his own life and upbringing? He has said on multiple occasions that when he moved to Boston as an 18-year-old he could only speak a few words of English, his comprehension was poor and his Quebec accent was thick. He attended English classes at school but doesn't appear to have paid too much attention in them.
I don't doubt you personal experience but this goes beyond mere opinion of how things should be. Either it is indeed possible for a Quebecois to not learn English properly until 18+ and still end up very fluent in the language with a lighter accent, or Bergeron is lying or at least misremembering about his past. Those are the only two options. So which is it?
"Bodies." Agree. Lydon was great good fun.
Agree to disagree? This article was written by Bergeron. In his interview with NESN he's talking about his own personal experiences. How can you claim to know better than Bergy about his own life and upbringing? He has said on multiple occasions that when he moved to Boston as an 18-year-old he could only speak a few words of English, his comprehension was poor and his Quebec accent was thick. He attended English classes at school but doesn't appear to have paid too much attention in them.
I don't doubt you personal experience but this goes beyond mere opinion of how things should be. Either it is indeed possible for a Quebecois to not learn English properly until 18+ and still end up very fluent in the language with a lighter accent, or Bergeron is lying or at least misremembering about his past. Those are the only two options. So which is it?
Almost every Bruins fan knows that Bergeron could only speak a fews words in English when he joined the Bruins. He also said it himself many times. Many of them regularly commented on how his English was improving with every passing season. We could hear the difference in his interviews.Doesn't correspond with what I heard but we'll agree to disagree.
As someone who has lived his entire life in Quebec, if you're twenty years old before you start to learn English there is no way your losing that accent.
Do you know what his full name is? In Quebec, since the early eighties, children born after that time took the family names of both their parents. His real name is Patrice Bergeron-Cleary. In Quebec, because of politics, anything pertaining to an anglophone slant is quickly brushed under he carpet. Bergeron is his mothers maiden name , Cleary is his fathers name. In Quebec, one quickly learns that if you want to advance, it's best to lose all ties to any anglophone slant, therefore Cleary got brushed under the carpet. Cleary is a Gaelic name. He was raised in a bi-lingual household and capable of speaking both languages (French and English) fluently. He was better at speaking French than he was at English simply because when you are brought up in L'Ancienne-Lorette,Quebec, 97% of the community is Francophone. Take it from me, if Patrice can speak English without any accent like he does, it because he was exposed to English (from his father) very early on in life .Otherwise he would sound like many other Quebec born hockey players like Serge Savard, Guy Lafleur, Jean Beliveau, Patrick Roy and so on, all capable of speaking English but not without their french accent. Bergy speaks without a french accent because he was fully capable of speaking English early on in life.
Again i disagree....Doesn't correspond with what I heard but we'll agree to disagree.
As someone who has lived his entire life in Quebec, if you're twenty years old before you start to learn English there is no way your losing that accent.
Please provide where you got this story....it is incorrect.
BTW, I couldn't respond to your bit with Gordon Lightfoot about the Pistols.
Huge fan. To me, Never Mind the Bollocks is the greatest rock and roll (yes) I've ever heard. Chris Thomas, who also produced the Pretenders first album, really caught their sound. Comprised mostly of singles and add=on's, it's fantastic.
BTW again, Steve Jones was a *great* elemental lead guitar player, Lydon was Lydon (effing hilarious and a jerk, but my kind of jerk), Matlock a fine pop songwriter, and Cook a good drummer.
PS I didn't understand PIL's first album at the time, but appreciated that it was weird, and different. If you were growing up in the late 70s AOR era, that was enough.
Shook Lydon's hand at a Paradise show in '85. He was wearing pajamas.
Saw PiL at the Orpheum back in the late 80's. They played behind a huge screen hung in front of the stage, all you saw was silhouettes. Lydon said it was because "You don't deserve to see me." Still an awesome show. Got a PiL T-Shirt that just said "T-Shirt" (like the "Album" album). Wish I still had it.
The Lydon/PiL /Pistols stuff on this page made my night. Great stuff!
Please provide where you got this story....it is incorrect.