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As seen on TV: Father, daughter reunion

All the household drama fades during a trip to Toronto -- home of hit teen drama, Degrassi: The Next Generation.

 

360 The Restaurant at the CN Tower provides a glorious 
view of Toronto.
360 The Restaurant at the CN Tower provides a glorious view of Toronto.
ALAN SOLOMON / MBR

Going to Toronto

•  Getting there: American Airlines flies nonstop from Miami to Toronto; Air Canada and WestJet fly nonstop from Fort Lauderdale, a three-hour flight with roundtrip airfare starting at $320. Other major airlines make the trip with a change of planes and travel time of five hours or longer.

•  Information: www.seetorontonow.com or www.toronto.ca/visitors/.

WHERE TO STAY

•  Park Hyatt Toronto, 4 Avenue Road; 416-925-1234; www.parktoronto.hyatt.com. This elegantly restored hotel is centrally located, offers fine dining at its restaurant, Annona, and is home to Stillwater Spa, one of the city's top-rated day spas. Rooms $293-$494.

•  HI-Toronto Youth Hostel, 76 Church St.; 877-848-8737; www.toronto-youth-hostel.com. The hostel is downtown, two blocks from St. Lawrence Market and central to just about everything else. $30-$99.

WHERE TO EAT

•  Trattoria Nervosa, 75 Yorkville Ave.; 416-961-4642; www.eatnervosa.com. Noisy, fun, close atmosphere. We had Caesar salad, margherita pizza, and spaghetti with clams. Entrees $10-$23.

•  360 The Restaurant at the CN Tower, 301 Front St. West; 416-362-5411; www.cntower.ca. It's hard to beat the view of the city and Lake Ontario from this rotating restaurant perched 1,151 feet above the ground. The prix fixe is the best deal, $45 for three courses. Entrees $38-$58.

•  Archeo Trattoria, 55 Mill St.; 416-815-9898; www.archeo.ca. Rustic Italian cuisine with a few modern twists. Entrees $14-$25.

WHAT TO DO

•  Bata Shoe Museum, 327 Bloor St. West; 416-979-7799; www.batashoemuseum.ca. This unique museum traces the history of footwear with an impressive collection numbering more than 10,000 shoes. Adults $12, seniors $10, students $6, children ages 5-17 $4.

•  Over the Rainbow, 101 Yorkville Ave.; 416-967-7448 or 877-967-7448; www.rainbowjeans.com. In business for 32 years, this store has the largest selection of jeans in Canada, and the T-shirts, tanks, sweaters, and outerwear to go with them. Teen shopping nirvana.

•  Vikaspa, 88 Avenue Road; 416-929-5509 or 877-772- 8454; www.vikaspa.com. Vikaspa has star power with clients like Hilary Swank, Kate Hudson, and Robert Downey Jr. Facials $130-$150, massages $90-$125.

The Boston Globe

Teen drama. We have a lot of it in our house.

Given all the fussing and fuming, door-slamming, name-calling and general moodiness that goes on these days, it's sometimes hard to imagine my daughter, Emma, 14, and I doing anything together -- other than fighting.

So it's funny that a teen drama, this one televised, opened a door into my daughter's world for me and launched us on a journey of discovery about ourselves and this fabulous city.

Degrassi: The Next Generation, now in its eighth season, is the latest installment in a long-running series of youth-oriented TV shows, all based and filmed in Toronto and shown on The N network. It is also Emma's absolute favorite show. Her laptop is loaded with episodes purchased at the iTunes store, and she has watched several of them many times over.

When I proposed that the two of us take a trip together, there was no hesitation on her part as to our destination. We were off to Toronto in search of any and all things Degrassi.

THE BACKSTORY

During our three-hour flight, I watched several episodes of the show in a cram course Emma designed. I quickly discovered that key characters such as Mia, Clare, Peter and Sav are typical high school students, only better looking and beset by an endless series of character-building crises torn from today's headlines.

At dinner that night in the stylish Annona restaurant at the Park Hyatt Toronto, our home away from home, Emma regaled me with background information about her favorite characters. Absent sarcasm and raised voices, it was easily the longest conversation we'd had in months.

There aren't many tourist stops around town related to Degrassi because the show is shot at the Epitome Pictures studio complex about 10 miles from the city center. The studio is closed to the public, but we arranged to meet the show's executive producer, Stephen Stohn, for a tour and an interview. I wanted to understand how this show had gotten such a hold on Emma.

``Our rule has always been never to have a scene with just adults. It's always about the kids,'' said Stohn, an entertainment lawyer and president of Epitome Pictures. He is married to Linda Schuyler, who created the Degrassi franchise back in the 1970s with its first show, The Kids of Degrassi Street. ``Our message is that you have the power to make choices. But there are also consequences. We've never tried to say there is a right choice or a wrong choice.''

Stohn was a gracious host and guided us through the studio complex with stops at several familiar sets, including the entrance to the Degrassi Community School. Emma was agog and aglow.

Schuyler and Stohn clearly are on to something. Their current show is the highest-rated on The N cable network (available on Comcast and DirecTV), and it has received a shelf-full of accolades. ``It's nice to have ratings and awards, but the e-mails we receive about kids and parents talking together about things in the show really mean more,'' Stohn said.

We kept that positive vibe alive on our cab ride back to the hotel. (I did, however, slip into my all-too-familiar role of embarrassment enabler by speaking too freely with the driver.) That afternoon, Emma had an appointment at the über-hip Vikaspa down the street from our hotel. She emerged two hours later buffed by a facial and relaxed by a full-body massage. When I suggested a little shopping, we were happily still speaking the same language.

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