Ottawa has a Dragon and Spider over the top Festival. Children are encouraged to be in AWE of the DRAGON.. Coming Soon to your city for real..the Anti-Christ will be revealed as soon as the male bride child of Rev 12;5 leaves/departs.. I am an Overcomer are you?? The devil is real, Levithian is real, the DRAGON is real, and SATAN is real and all his minnows/deamonds.
La Machine’s spider and dragon-horse captivate Ottawa
By
Monique Scotti
National Online Journalist, Politics Global News
Mythical monsters are roaming
the streets of Ottawa this weekend in a street art performance called
La Machine. It's an impressive show meant help people rediscover their
own city. Mike Le Couteur explains.
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La Machine’s dragon-horse Long Ma and spider Kumo have emerged
from hiding in Ottawa, drawing enormous crowds to the nation’s capital.
Kumo
awoke Thursday night after a tense, 40-minute wait outside the city’s
Notre Dame cathedral. She was lifted by crane down off the building
after her operators rappelled down from another crane in a spectacular
aerial display.
La Machine had to get special permission from the city’s Catholic archbishop to launch the spider from atop the church.
Kumo is pictured just before she woke on Thursday night in Ottawa.
Monique Scotti/Global News
On Friday morning, it was Long Ma’s turn. The dragon-horse awoke
outside city hall in the presence of Ottawa Mayor Jim Watson (with help
from the tickle of a feather) and proceeded to stomp, roar and fume his
way through the downtown core toward Kumo.
READ MORE: Otherworldly battle about to rage in downtown Ottawa
Hundreds
of thousands of people were expected to turn out for the displays,
which continue for the next three days, and Ottawa did not disappoint.
The throngs stretched into the tens of thousands, filling the streets
that have been closed down for the unique, $3.5-million event.
La
Machine is a performance company based in France. They were convinced
to select Ottawa for their North American debut this week, as part of
the city’s contribution to Canada’s 150th birthday celebrations.
Ottawa
2017 executive director Guy Laflamme has been working with La Machine’s
artistic director, François Delarozière, for years to bring their
vision to life.
“This is not a parade, this is monumental street
theatre,” Laflamme explained last week, adding that he wants to see
people experience the spectacle through the eyes of a child.
Long Ma makes his way through downtown Ottawa on Friday, July 28, 2017.
Monique Scotti/Global News
Traffic throughout the downtown core will be significantly disrupted
until late Sunday night as the machines carry out a series of
“walkabouts” leading up to a climactic battle on Sunday outside the
national war museum.
For a complete list of road closures and accompanying maps, click here. The city’s transit service is also providing live updates.
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