Murder on the TTC express
NEWS / Innovative project gives commuters moments of respite from Toronto's transit irritations
Eva Salinas / Toronto / Thursday, January 17, 2013
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You may have seen it already: a moment free of advertising, news and weather, when, for 30 seconds, an episode of Murder in Passing fills the screens on Toronto subway platforms. A silent, black-and-white clip repeating every 10 minutes (with a delay, you may even catch it twice). 
 
The first episode, which aired Jan 7, opened the murder mystery with the death of a young man in a bike accident. Or, was it a young lady? The reporter at the scene of the crime isn’t too sure.
 
Toronto commuters are getting served some food for thought on transgender and transit issues, all on the TTC. No wonder they’re calling it transmedia.
 
“The great thing about the murder mystery genre is there’s lots of room for camp,” says John Greyson, who wrote and directed the series. “Our detective is an outrageous trans woman with a sharp tongue who gets away with real zingers.
 
“And underneath that first layer, there are the serious issues,” he adds.
Moynan King plays a "hard-core, political lesbian."
 
The 42-episode series, which runs daily until March 1, is a great showcase of Toronto’s queer theatre arts community. Nina Arsenault plays a chemistry professor with “lots of secrets,” and Moynan King is one hard-core butchy bike shop owner.
 
Meanwhile, Greyson is known for his television and film work, including Lilies and Zero Patience.
 
The project's existence is in large part due to another member of the city’s queer community, Sharon Switzer, who makes art programming happen on TTC screens.
 
King, a long-time collaborator with Buddies in Bad Times and co-founder of the Hysteria Festival, calls her bike boss character a “hard-core, political lesbian.” She recently saw some of the first clips running on a subway platform and says it was a great feeling. “You’re standing in the subway and there you are. Especially as a queer, you know, there we all are,” she says.
 
“It’s a question for me about how it will be received by an unsuspecting audience. People do stare at those monitors for sure, so yeah, I don’t really know, but I know that it feels really important.”
 
Of course, for many viewers it may be just a bit of fun to spice up a dull commute — each episode has a second part, done in operatic style, available online, and there are prizes for those who follow the clues and are able to solve the mystery before the detective does.  
Ramzi Ayash is the reporter in Murder in Passing.
 
“We think it’s the biggest sustained narrative created for public screens anywhere in the world,” Greyson says.
 
But scope aside, Greyson says the series is really the opportunity to engage the general public on those issues not often championed by the mainstream — cycling and transphobia.  
 
“I definitely think there’s a need for it on both topics, when we still have a mayor that says when cyclists get hurt or killed it’s their fault . . . And then likewise as much as transgendered issues have moved into the mainstream, there’s still a huge ways to go. The level of discrimination still exists everywhere we turn,” Greyson says.
 
“[The series] tries to hold a mirror up to the people on the platform. Can we have this conversation with each other? The irony is we’re all looking at the monitor so that we don’t have to look at each other.”
 
King agrees the combination of entertainment and education is innovative.
 
“Everybody loves a murder mystery, right? There’s something about the seduction of the form and then to infiltrate your ideas with things like political issues. I don’t know if anybody has ever done a project like this,” she says. “It definitely makes for a more enjoyable ride.”


Check out our interview below with John Greyson.
 
    


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Reader Comments


 
How I stopped drinking the Kool-Aid
When I came out as a young gay man and started participating in the visible gay community on Church Street in Toronto, I drank the “poison Kool-Aid” dished out by the left-wing gay establishment. In particular, whenever John Greyson premiered a film that was hyped by Xtra, I dutifully went to the movie with my friends. I never really liked his films, but pretended that I did. Greyson’s productions were not commercially viable and only got made because of taxpayer-funded grants he received from arts agencies. Still, I sat through his overrated films like Zero Patience (where two puppet anuses sang to each other), Uncut (where one character was depicted as eating the foreskin of Pierre Trudeau), and Proteus (during which I fell asleep). But, my tolerance for his films ended with Greyson’s divisive and hateful antics as a leading supporter of QuAIA and the anti-Israel movement. He and his ilk constantly condemned gay-friendly Israel, while supporting Israel’s homophobic enemies in the mid-East. At that point, I stopped drinking the Kool-Aid offered by Greyson and other members of the gay leftist elite. Even though I’m an alumnus of York University, I stopped making an annual donation to protest the decision of York to make Greyson a professor (I tell this to York’s telemarketers whenever they call asking for a donation). As a taxpayer, I deeply resent the money that the TTC is spending on Greyson's latest overrated film project (the TTC should instead use the money to improve its declining transit service). We should all stop drinking the Kool-Aid. See http://mentalfloss.com/article/13015/jonestown-massacre-terrifying-origin-drinking-kool-aid
Ken, Toronto ON
01/18/13 2:33 AM EST
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another toronto pc fraud
I agree that Greyson is an overhyped maker of propaganda films. His interview makes the entire project sound like one hugely expensive campaign of transgender education. If transgender people get this massive public audience and money for education what about other groups? Again Greyson uses whatever is most trendy, hides behind his PC policing line, rolls in public money and continues to make lousy "movies". The clips from this are so heavily didactic with trans trans trans that the it's a crashing bore and a cop out. He mentions a extreme US murder of a transwoman but everyone can pull out a holocaust example indeed right here in Toronto homeless and mentally ill people (hetero men and others) are murdered and tortured on the street. Where is their movie? What a waste of a good idea (movies in the ttc).
no more pantyhose, Toronto Ontario
01/18/13 8:26 AM EST
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Academic credentials?
It’s not surprising that the left-wing Faculty of Fine Arts at York University would appoint QuAIA’s John Greyson as a professor in the Department of Film. What is surprising is that Greyson’s biography on the Faculty website doesn’t list him as having earned any undergraduate or graduate degrees from a university. See: http://finearts.yorku.ca/about-us/our-faculty/john-greyson Yet, other members of the Department of Film are listed as having bachelor’s degrees, master’s degrees and doctor’s degrees. For example, the Faculty website biography of Professor Sharon Hayashi in the Department of Film lists her as having a BA from Brown University and a MA and a PhD from the University of Chicago. See: http://finearts.yorku.ca/about-us/our-faculty/sharon-hayashi Could it be that the leftists at York University actually succeeded in appointing Greyson, a fellow leftist, as a full-time professor without him having earned any undergraduate or graduate degrees? If so, the leftists at York are acting contrary to the Latin saying: nemo dat quod non habet (which translates as: you can't give what you don't have). If you don’t have an undergraduate or a graduate degree, it’s hard to see how you have any academic credibility in being a full-time professor for university students who are trying to earn such a degree.
Richard, Toronto Ontario
01/20/13 11:03 PM EST
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Moonbats
Is there any article that the moonbat patrol can't turn into an opportunity for an anti-QUAIA diatribe? Holy shit you people are psychotic.
Paul, Toronto ON
01/21/13 10:00 AM EST
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@Paul
Paul, your hurled your insults to the wrong people. Your first insult, moonbat, is a term used in United States politics as a pejorative political epithet referring to progressives or leftists. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moonbat Your second insult, psychotic, is hardly appropriate for the posts above. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psychosis Perhaps you can come up with another insult for gay Jewish people and their friends who don't like Jews in Israel being demonized by QuAIA at Pride.
Jake, Toronto ON
01/21/13 11:46 PM EST
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Speaking of John Greyson's QuAIA
Speaking of John Greyson's QuAIA, it looks like there are some cracks in the "united front" that Xtra and other left-wing Queer activists have been trying to present in favour of QuAIA having an unlimited right to free speech at Pride, no matter how inaccurate, offensive or hurtful that speech may be. Arun Smith, a Queer activist promoted by Xtra, has torn down Carleton University's free speech wall on the grounds that not every opinion is valid. See: http://news.nationalpost.com/2013/01/22/not-every-opinion-is-valid-activist-censors-peers-by-tearing-down-universitys-free-speech-wall/
Ray, Toronto Ontario
01/23/13 10:18 PM EST
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