Avsnitt
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Junaid Khan is one of a growing number of non-Indigenous people in Canada learning Indigenous languages. We listen back to Duncan McCue’s 2023 documentary about the swell of interest in Indigenous languages across Canada.
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Many workers just don’t head out for a sit-down lunch with colleagues anymore, opting instead to eat quickly at their desks. What does our midday meal say about our modern lives?
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Saknas det avsnitt?
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It’s been a week since a “catastrophic” main break forced people in Calgary to limit their water use — thinking twice about everything from doing laundry to flushing the toilet. Guest host Duncan McCue checks in with Calgarians, and asks what we can learn from this crisis.
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An Ontario hospital has paused all tonsil and adenoid surgeries for minors after two children died following surgery. We talk to ear, nose and throat specialist Dr. Blake Papsin about what parents need to know.
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As negotiations for an Israel-Hamas ceasefire continue, discussions are slowly beginning to focus on what happens next — and what a future Palestinian state might look like.
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Drip pricing involves extra fees that show up at checkout, hiking the advertised cost of things such as movie tickets. It’s been banned by the Competition Bureau, but it’s still happening.
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Traditional wisdom suggests your rent shouldn’t exceed 30 per cent of your pay, but some Canadians could be forking out twice that much. We ask people to try a new interactive CBC tool that tells you what your rent should be based on your income — and look at how it impacts your financial future.
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Quebec Premier Francois Legault says an "explosion" of temporary immigration has strained healthcare, education and housing in his province. But some business leaders and advocates say Quebec needs more newcomers, not fewer.
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A new national security report alleges that unnamed MPs and senators knowingly helped foreign governments meddle in Canadian politics. The allegation has prompted heated debate about whether their identities should be made public, and what consequences they might face.
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Kara Swisher isn’t afraid to ask tough questions, or hold the men who lead big tech companies to account. The tech journalist talks to Matt Galloway about what she thinks of tech innovators like Steve Jobs and Elon Musk — and why she said no to job offers at every single one of the big tech companies.
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Race walker Evan Dunfee was literally bumped out of a medal at the 2016 Rio Olympics, but went on to win bronze five years later. Now he’s gearing up for Paris with a new definition of success, in a sport he describes as “running with rules.”
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Far-right populist parties made major gains in EU parliamentary elections on the weekend, even triggering a snap general election in France. The CBC's Susan Ormiston brings us the latest from Brussels.
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A decade ago, a group of primarily Indigenous children from Saskatchewan were part of a brainwave experiment that hoped to heal trauma. Now some are saying the study itself was traumatic and unethical. Geoff Leo explores the controversy in his documentary, Brain School
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Calgarians have been told to cut back on water use or risk running out entirely, as the city struggles to repair a huge water main break. Matt Galloway talks to city councillor Sonya Sharp.
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Alisa Siegel’s documentary Let it Shine tells the story of the University of Toronto’s first-ever course in Black gospel music, where you can hear the joy and community of a newly formed choir.
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Mary Loewen shows her passion for the Edmonton Oilers by going to games dressed as the Stanley Cup, covered in 3,500 silver sequins and wearing a glittery wig. Matt Galloway talks to Loewen — aka Mama Stanley — and fellow fan Stephen Pretty about staying “loyal to the Oil,” and their nerves and excitement as the team gears up for the Stanley Cup final.
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Catastrophic floods devastated B.C.’s Sumas Prairie in 2021, but now researchers want to avoid future disasters by flooding the area permanently, turning it back into the lake it once was. We hear from those who support a managed retreat — and those who would be forced out.
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The Current's Liz Hoath takes us inside an overcrowded and under-resourced refugee camp in Chad, where more than a million people have fled the war in neighbouring Sudan.
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Children’s drawings have been unearthed in the ruins of Pompeii, showing violent scenes of gladiators and the harsh lives of slaves. We explore how these youngest Romans saw their world before it was buried in the ash and lava of Mount Vesuvius.
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A statue remembering the Royal Regina Rifles has been unveiled in France, near the Normandy beaches they stormed on D-Day 80 years ago. Retired lieutenant-colonel Ed Staniowski tells us about the sacrifice and determination of these ordinary men from Saskatchewan.
- Visa fler