Showing of 81 results
Short Cuts
#255 This Op-Ed Could Kill People
COVID-19 coverage continues, for the most part, to be even-handed. But that’s not why you listen to this podcast. A look at what’s going wrong in Canadian reporting, as well as the personal and economic impact the pandemic is having on newsrooms.
Wag the Doug
#18 Doug In The Time Of Cholera
Doug Ford has been widely commended for his response to COVID-19. Are people just looking for comfort or has the crisis truly brought out the best in the Premier?
OPPO
#60 A Virus Designed To Test Society’s Weak Points
As the realities of COVID-19 begin to take hold in Canada, the strains on our society become most visible where we're most vulnerable. A veteran of Hong Kong's SARS epidemic, reporter Ian Young of The South China Morning Post joins to help put it all in perspective.
CANADALAND
Isolation Interview: Margaret Atwood
"My life is never exactly normal. But it's normal for me."
CANADALAND
#318 The Last Picture Show
COVID-19, Cineplex, and the end of moviegoing as we know it
Short Cuts
#254 Wave Of Isolation
In a time like this, we’re so flooded with information that good, quality journalism matters more than ever. But that doesn’t mean there isn’t stuff to make fun of. Plus, how are newsrooms coping with the realities of a contagious virus?
CANADALAND
Isolation Interview: Jen Agg
Restaurauteur Jen Agg just wants to get home.
CANADALAND
Isolation Interview: Robyn Doolittle
What feels most weird right now? Doing normal things
CANADALAND
#317 Meditations In An Emergency
We are facing an unprecedented shutdown of services and businesses across the country. Health columnist Andre Picard was an early voice calling for Canada to “shut it down” in the pages of the Globe and Mail. He talks to us about how COVID-19 compares to other epidemics he’s covered, the media coverage so far and why he was pushing for social distancing before the government embraced it.
Short Cuts
#253 Panic! At The Discoronavirus
As COVID-19 is declared a global pandemic, how are Canadian media handling the coverage? And what opportunities can moments of crisis provide for a shift in business reporting?