Afleveringen
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Would you rather visit the expansive beauty of Canadaâs Arctic, or watch humpbacks breach as you ramble along Newfoundlandâs coast? Perhaps youâd be surprised by the Prairies, or get lost in rainforests of Haida Gwaii, the âGalĂĄpagos of the Northâ? Robin Esrock, author of The Great Canadian Bucket List, shares his top picks for holidays closer to home.
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Ian Clements got himself an unusual 30th birthday present: a vasectomy. Heâs among a growing number of young men going under the knife because they donât want kids, pointing to reasons including the economy or the threat of climate change.
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Palestinian Akram Said says Gazans are slowly returning to their homes, to search the rubble for loved ones killed by Israelâs airstrikes. Said shares why he stayed in Gaza for the last 15 months, and what the ceasefire means for humanitarian aid reaching those who need it most.
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Undocumented migrants in the U.S. are bracing for mass deportations threatened by President Donald Trump. Matt Galloway talks to a young man terrified his family will be scooped up by immigration officials, and a Trump supporter who says the deportations are necessary.
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Winnipeg has a bold new plan to move people out of encampments and into housing, modelled on a strategy that reduced homelessness by 60 per cent in Houston, Texas. But one critic warns the plan involves moving people out of public housing to make space in a tight rental market â and could put a cohort of lower-income people at risk.
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After 13 years in exile, Alma Salem kissed the ground when she finally returned to Syria, after the fall of Bashar al-Assadâs regime. Matt Galloway talks to the political activist and two other Syrian women â human rights advocates Azza Kondakji and Noura Aljizawi â about their hopes for rebuilding their country, and why they say the role of women in that future is non-negotiable.
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Bonny Reichert grew up hearing her fatherâs stories of the Holocaust, and finding comfort in sharing traditional recipes with him. The Canadian journalist-turned-chef shares her dadâs story, and the trauma she herself carries, in the new memoir How To Share An Egg.
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Kaitlyn Braun, a pregnant young woman in crisis, takes dozens of birth workers through an escalating series of disasters â rape, baby loss, and even a coma. One by one, the doulas struggle to support her and grieve with her, and even save her life as theyâre led down a distressing path. And then the truth comes out.
In this six-part true crime series, Sarah Treleaven untangles a complex web of lies and deception to ask who Kaitlyn really is and why she did the things that she did. Cases like these puzzle legal experts and raise intricate moral and ethical questions. This is not your average con. Kaitlyn is not your usual scammer.
Kaitlyn's Baby is Season 2 of The Con â a podcast exposing the art of deception â from CBC and the BBC World Service. Season 1 - the critically acclaimed catfishing quest, Love, Janessa, launched in January 2023.
Content warning: The latest season of The Con contains references to medical emergencies, including baby loss. We also deal with sexual assault and there is some strong language.
More episodes are available at: https://link.mgln.ai/VPyaaH
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Itâs been 50 years since two Canadian scientists solved a great mystery: where do monarch butterflies go during winter? But while they unlocked how these tiny creatures fly thousands of kilometres every year, thereâs still parts of this natural wonder that we donât understand.
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The broadcaster Scott Oake lost his son Bruce to a drug overdose more than 10 years ago, and has worked tirelessly since to help other families avoid that same heartbreak. He talks to Matt Galloway about opening a recovery centre named after Bruce, and his new book For the Love of a Son.
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Kaitlyn Braun convinced dozens of birth doulas that she was pregnant, claiming she was suffering through an escalating series of disasters: rape, baby loss, and even a coma. Sarah Treleaven tells Galloway about the complex web of lies she untangles in the new CBC podcast The Con: Kaitlyn's Baby.
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Matt Galloway talks to people who have travelled to Washington for Donald Trumpâs inauguration, in celebration â or in protest â of his second term as president.
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Donald Trump is set to sign as many as 100 executive orders on his first day in office. We discuss the potential fallout if he enacts campaign pledges on mass deportations and tariffs that could devastate Canadaâs economy.
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The baker Daniel Leader is a pioneer of artisanal breadmaking, but he says his early loaves were more like paperweights. In a conversation from last month, Leader shares what he learned about his craft along the way, and why baking bread can feel like meditation.
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Tik Tok could be banned in the U.S. this weekend, sparking panic among influencers who make their living from the social media app. Journalist Emily Baker White explains why itâs drawn the ire of U.S. lawmakers.
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Jacqueline Simoes lined up for hours in the snow for the chance of registering with a new family doctor coming to Walkerton, Ont. earlier this week. But so did more than a thousand others.
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Doctors are proposing a new definition of obesity that goes beyond measuring BMI. We talk to Dr. Sanjeev Sockalingam about how the new diagnosis, and drugs like Ozempic, could change the conversation around body size and health.
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New Brunswicker John Batt is the brains behind popular Instagram account @Canada.gov.ca, sharing some wild stories of Canadiana. He shares some of those stories with us, from the band that got Neil Young signed to Motown to a strangely controversial, very delicious pickle known across the Maritimes.
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Hundreds of miners have been trapped in a South African goldmine for months, after entering to excavate illegally. But while police say they refused to surface over fears of arrest, the workersâ families say they were simply too weak to leave after authorities cut off food and water. Journalist Carien Du Plessis explains how this stand-off came about, and why a rescue operation ended abruptly this week with dozens of bodies being pulled from the mine.
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Russian President Vladimir Putin once won over George W. Bush by appealing to his Christianity, and tried to intimidate Angela Merkel with her fear of dogs. The CBCâs Terence McKenna explores how KGB techniques helped his rise to power in the new documentary Putin's Journey.
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