iPolitics By Janet E Silver. Published on Feb 2, 2021 11:24am (Andrew Meade/iPolitics)
Jonathan Kalles
Kalles left the Prime Minister’s Office last summer after spending 18 months as Justin Trudeau’s Quebec adviser, a service he also provided three different cabinet ministers before joining the PMO.
Speaking with iPolitics, Kalles said the idea of joining McMillan a growing firm affiliated with the McMillan law firm really appealed to him, because it draws on his professional experience in politics and the law.
Of his former role in the PMO, Kalles said he doesn’t miss waking up to 150 plus emails a day, but, “When you work like that, that kind of adrenalin (rush), you are never going to match it. … I miss that sometimes, as my job was triage, in many ways; the volume was intense.”
COVID ads have had varying effects, with some super cringeworthy : marketers - Medicine Hat NewsMedicine Hat News
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Tara Deschamps
A character being called Mr. Covidhead is shown in this screengrab taken from a Government of Alberta video as part of their campaign to remind Albertans how stealthy and fast COVID can spread through any social gathering. THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO, Government of Alberta, covidloves.ca MANDATORY CREDIT February 03, 2021 - 11:53 AM
TORONTO - When former communications agency director Erin Bury considers ads she s seen from governments during the COVID-19 pandemic, a villainous character with an active social life is the first thing that pops into her mind.
Mr. Covidhead, whose virus-shaped head and malevolent grin made him a popular topic last year, was the centrepiece in ads from the Alberta government where he slow dances at house parties, digs into turkey at a family dinner and even prepares for a night out on the town.
Winnipeg Free Press By: Tara Deschamps, The Canadian Press Posted:
Last Modified: 2:25 PM CST Wednesday, Feb. 3, 2021
TORONTO - When former communications agency director Erin Bury considers ads she s seen from governments during the COVID-19 pandemic, a villainous character with an active social life is the first thing that pops into her mind.
A character being called Mr. Covidhead is shown in this screengrab taken from a Government of Alberta video as part of their campaign to remind Albertans how stealthy and fast COVID can spread through any social gathering. THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO, Government of Alberta, covidloves.ca MANDATORY CREDIT
COVID ads have had varying effects, with some super cringeworthy : marketers
by Tara Deschamps, The Canadian Press
Posted Feb 3, 2021 2:53 pm EDT
Last Updated Feb 3, 2021 at 2:58 pm EDT
A character being called Mr. Covidhead is shown in this screengrab taken from a Government of Alberta video as part of their campaign to remind Albertans how stealthy and fast COVID can spread through any social gathering. THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO, Government of Alberta, covidloves.ca MANDATORY CREDIT
TORONTO When former communications agency director Erin Bury considers ads she’s seen from governments during the COVID-19 pandemic, a villainous character with an active social life is the first thing that pops into her mind.
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