Close X
Monday, November 18, 2024
ADVT 
National

Rod Stewart's Seal Coat Explanation Draws Doubts From Anti-Sealing Activist

16 Jul, 2015 12:59 PM
    ST. JOHN'S, N.L. — Anti-sealing activist Paul Watson says he has his doubts about Rod Stewart's public statement that he didn't realize he was donning a sealskin coat during a visit to a clothing store in St. John's, N.L.
     
    The rock and roll artist was in the city on Saturday and had his photograph taken wearing the coat at the Always in Vogue clothes shop.
     
    After store employee Darren Halloran posted the photo on social media, a response on Stewart's Facebook page says he didn't check what the jacket was made of and was irritated the photo was being displayed.
     
    "Rod has since been very upset to learn that the shop has been using this image as an advertisement for an industry that he does not know much about and certainly does not support," says his Facebook page.
     
    "Rod went there to play music and as always had an absolute blast performing to the people of Canada."
     
    Watson says he thinks Stewart's explanation was prompted by criticism from his fans.
     
    "It might be popular to say you support the seal hunt in Newfoundland, but it isn't very popular anywhere else," he said Thursday in a telephone interview from France.
     
    Watson wrote a commentary on Stewart's decision to wear the coat on Facebook, going so far as to rewrite the lyrics to his song "Do Ya Think I'm Sexy?" to reflect the controversy surrounding the seal hunt.
     
    Halloran says he regrets he didn't tell the star more about the political controversy and he didn't intend to cause problems for Stewart by posting the picture.
     
    "We didn't do it for publicity and we apologize he had to go through this right now," he said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    British Columbia Government Faces Off With Bountiful Leader Over Polygamy

    British Columbia Government Faces Off With Bountiful Leader Over Polygamy
    VANCOUVER — The leader of a fundamentalist religious commune in British Columbia's southern interior will square off in court today against the provincial government over whether the province has the right to charge him with polygamy.

    British Columbia Government Faces Off With Bountiful Leader Over Polygamy

    $100,000 Reward Posted For 2 Killers Who Escaped US Prison Near Canadian Border

    $100,000 Reward Posted For 2 Killers Who Escaped US Prison Near Canadian Border
    The hunt for two murderers who cut their way out of a New York state prison near the Canadian border heightened Monday after a $100,000 reward was offered for information leading to their capture.

    $100,000 Reward Posted For 2 Killers Who Escaped US Prison Near Canadian Border

    Health Ministers Discuss National Pharmacare Program To Pay For Prescription Drugs

    Health Ministers Discuss National Pharmacare Program To Pay For Prescription Drugs
    Ontario Health Minister Eric Hoskins, who is a physician, is a strong advocate for a universal pharmacare program to operate alongside the universal health-care system

    Health Ministers Discuss National Pharmacare Program To Pay For Prescription Drugs

    Four Children Injured In Shed Fire On Manitoba Reserve, One In Serious Condition

    Four Children Injured In Shed Fire On Manitoba Reserve, One In Serious Condition
    NELSON HOUSE, Man. — Manitoba RCMP say four children were injured in a weekend shed fire on a remote northern reserve.

    Four Children Injured In Shed Fire On Manitoba Reserve, One In Serious Condition

    Blind And Autistic B.C. Man Flies Plane To Fulfil Last Goal On Bucket List

    Blind And Autistic B.C. Man Flies Plane To Fulfil Last Goal On Bucket List
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A 67-year-old British Columbia man who was born blind and autistic has checked off the last item on his bucket list by flying a plane.

    Blind And Autistic B.C. Man Flies Plane To Fulfil Last Goal On Bucket List

    South Korean MERS Outbreak Evokes Visceral Response In Canada's SARS Veterans

    South Korean MERS Outbreak Evokes Visceral Response In Canada's SARS Veterans
    TORONTO — For the people who fought Toronto's devastating SARS outbreak in 2003, the news out of South Korea right now sounds eerily familiar.

    South Korean MERS Outbreak Evokes Visceral Response In Canada's SARS Veterans