Afleveringen
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Plus: A Michigan bookstore gets a lot of unexpected help moving its entire inventory.
Also: Ahead of the inaugural game of the new Northern Super League, founder and soccer star Diana Matheson tells Nil it's been years in the making to get to the first professional women's soccer game ever played on Canadian soil. But now that we're here, she knows Canada is ready.
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Plus: Boston Globe reporter Billy Baker investigates a shockingly violent woodpecker terrorizing Rockport, Mass.
Also: It was no surprise that Paige Beuckers was picked first overall at last night's WNBA draft -- least of all to Gary Knox, a dad who just happened to be at the right place at the right time and predict her stardom way back in 2013, when she was in the sixth grade.
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Zijn er afleveringen die ontbreken?
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Plus: CBC's Kate McKenna tells us about stumbling onto a story of campaign âdirty tricksâ in an Ottawa bar.
Also: Speaking of watering holes, An Edinburgh man embarks on an ambitious project: creating miniature versions of some 300 pubs across the city. And he says attention to detail is the key to his success.
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Plus: Canadian Will Nediger writes his name in the history books -- in pen -- by taking second-place at the American Crossword Puzzle Tournament.
Also: Nil talks to Paul Wells about what the veteran political journalist thinks of the campaign so far, and what heâs looking for in the weeks ahead.
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Plus: A French presidential hopeful says migrants could be deported to Saint-Pierre-et-Miquelon, islands off the coast of Newfoundland.
Also: Alasdair Spark says heâs solved the mystery of that deeply creepy (and conspiracy theory-provoking) final scene in The Shining.
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Plus: We follow up with the starting pitcher for one of two absolutely terrible teams who both ended epic losing streaks this week.
Also: The mother of an Indigenous woman killed by police in New Brunswick tells us about her efforts to effect change in policing -- and about how one police chief on the other side of the country has responded.
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Plus: A conversation with Fred Armisen about the late, great Blondie Drummer Clem Burke.
Also: The editor of a low German newspaper tells us about his visit to a measles-afflicted Mennonite community in Texas... and about his efforts to get through to its residents.
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Plus: Baseball YouTuber Dan Sarmiento of Enjoy The Show breaks down an epic match up between two of the worst teams ever.
Also: Drumheller, Alberta is home to the world's largest replica dinosaur. And its owners say they plan to take it down. But a local food truck owner is launching a rebellion, hoping to save Tyra.
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On the other hand: It's boom time for the maker of Louisville Slugger baseball bats, thanks to a fad thatâs taking the sport by storm.
Also: With Jordan's Principle funding up in the air, the Council for Yukon First Nations is forced to halt crucial community services. And the executive director tells us it's heartbreaking for the people she serves.
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Plus: We'll hear from a pair of nonagenarians who have been exchanging the same birthday card with one another twice a year for eight decades.
Also: Newfoundland and Labrador Premier Andrew Furey takes us inside the Canadian decision making on a tariff response.
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Plus: Hooters declares bankruptcy, prompting a writer to remember an awkwardâŠbut ultimately sweetâŠexperience.
Also: The Norwegian Refugee Council's Secretary General Jan Egeland calls on the international community to end its "chronic neglect" of displaced people in eastern Congo.
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Plus: Canadian-born author Jonathan Stanley on the overwhelming response to a strangerâs viral Tiktok of him alone at a table, trying to sell his book.
Also: A Norwegian football club draws attention with itâs â apparently not April Foolâs related â stunt of offering its Man of the Match a whole bunch of eggs.
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Plus: Yet another aging McDonaldâs causes a stirâŠthis time in Leeds. We meet the man obsessed with the imperfection of its sign.
Also: A conversation with Turkey's Enes HocaoÄulları. The activist and organizer is one of the young people central to the anti-government uprising happening in the streets.
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Plus: The Neal Brothers challenging journey to produce an all-Canadian corn chip.
Also: A conversation with Democratic Congresswoman Julie Johnson. She's introducing legislation to condemn the use of an unsecured communications app by Trump administration officials - even if it's unlikely to have the votes to pass.
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Plus: Mixed feelings in BC as the âMcBargeâ, a relic of Expo 86, begins sinking into the Fraser River.
Also: Just a few months after opening, the demand for a Halal Food Bank in London, Ontario is already outpacing expectations. The director of the food bank tells us he's playing catch up.
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Plus: A historian investigates thousands of missing Scottish archival documentsâŠand finds a suspect in Canada.
Also: The first woman to be the curator of mycology at the New York State Museum says it's emotional to work on an exhibit about 19th century mycologist Mary Elizabeth Banning ... and give her some of the recognition she deserved when she was alive.
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Plus: The founder and former captain of Afghanistanâs women's soccer team says it's past time FIFA let them back on the pitch.
Also: One of the filmmakers of the Oscar winning documentary No Other Land is beaten and detained in the West Bank...and an activist there tells us about witnessing the moments before his arrest.
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Plus: A shark in New Zealand had an octopus on its head. Thatâs it. Thatâs the story.
Also: We take a closer look at anti-government protests in Turkey, and Toronto food blogger Aashim Aggarwal is using the current tensions between the U.S. and Canada as a way to highlight examples of Canadian cuisine. He defends the donair and Hawaiian pizza.
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Plus: As Heathrow Airport goes down, a British teacher scrambles to bring students home from Spain.
Also: A journalist in Khartoum tells us what the army's retaking of the presidential palace could mean for the deadly civil war in Sudan that's approaching the two year mark.
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Plus: A conversation with the man who listed his Washington DC townhouseâŠwith the help of a perfectly scaled LEGO recreation.
Also: Kenneth Stern helped craft an internationally recognized definition of antisemitism. Now heâs concerned with how itâs being applied.
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