The Future Herd

Metaviews Media Management Ltd.

A podcast exploring how collective wisdom and adaptive leadership can help us navigate the profound transformations reshaping our food and agriculture systems.

Season 1

  1. EPISODE 1

    1: Welcome to the Future Herd!

    Many independent actors, adapting together Food systems are changing faster than most of our institutions can keep up. The Future Herd is a podcast about understanding where our food actually comes from—how it’s grown, governed, financed, regulated, and lived with—and what it will take to adapt together in the decades ahead. Hosted by Jesse Hirsh, the show explores leadership through collaboration across agriculture, policy, technology, labour, and climate. Rather than treating food as a sector to be optimized, The Future Herd treats it as infrastructure: ecological, social, economic, and political. Season One is developed in alignment with the Agri-Food 2050 process, a long-term effort to think beyond short political and market cycles and toward the resilience of Canada’s food system over the next generation. The show’s founding partner is the Agricultural Adaptation Council, whose role is to create space for experimentation, dialogue, and collaboration across parts of the system that rarely speak to each other. Additional partners and perspectives are welcome. This introductory episode sets the foundation for the season by introducing the core idea behind the “future herd”: food systems are made up of many independent actors—farmers, animals, ecosystems, institutions, technologies, and communities—coordinating without central control. Adaptation emerges from interaction, not command. Across Season One, conversations return to a set of recurring themes, including long-term thinking and the meaning of 2050, interacting drivers of change, labour and the future of work, climate resilience, digital infrastructure and AI, public trust and narrative, equity and inclusion, governance as coordination, lived experience from the frontlines, and the persistent gap between vision and action. The Future Herd is for farmers, producers, policymakers, technologists, and anyone who eats—and wants to better understand the system they depend on.

    13 min
  2. EPISODE 2

    2: The Dance of Foresight: Reimagining Leadership in Agri-Food with Ruth Knight

    What does it really take to prepare the agri-food sector for the future? In this episode of The Future Herd, Jesse Hirsh is joined by Ruth Knight, director with the Agriculture Adaptation Council and chair of the Agri-Food 2050 committee, for a wide-ranging conversation on foresight, leadership, and cultural transformation in agriculture. Rather than treating the future as something to be predicted or controlled, Ruth argues that future readiness is a mindset—one rooted in curiosity, patience, dialogue, and imagination. Together, they explore why resilience emerges from conversation rather than consensus, how play and experimentation can unlock innovation, and why engaging younger generations is essential to the long-term health of the agri-food system. This episode examines the tension between problem-solving and big-picture thinking, the limits of top-down planning, and the need to shift from systems of control toward systems of emergence. At its core, the conversation asks how leaders can create the conditions for adaptation, learning, and collaboration over the next 25 years. Topics CoveredWhy foresight is a practice, not a predictionCuriosity and patience as leadership strengthsDialogue versus debate in sector-wide planningPlay, imagination, and safe experimentationIntergenerational leadership and youth engagementFrom control to emergence in agri-food systemsBuilding cultural capacity for long-term resilience GuestRuth Knight Director, Agriculture Adaptation Council Chair, Agri-Food 2050 Committee Independent Agronomist and Rural Development Consultant About the PodcastThe Future Herd explores leadership, collaboration, and long-term thinking in agriculture and food systems. Through conversations with sector leaders, policymakers, producers, and innovators, the podcast examines how we adapt together in an era of uncertainty.

    25 min
  3. EPISODE 5

    5: Leadership, Knowledge, and the Next Generation

    In this episode of The Future Herd, Jesse Hirsh sits down with Rene Van Acker, President and Vice Chancellor of the University of Guelph, to explore the evolving role of universities in shaping the future of agriculture and food. At a time when climate volatility, technological disruption, and political short-termism are redefining the operating environment for farmers and institutions alike, what responsibilities do academic leaders carry? And how can universities foster the collaboration, interdisciplinary research, and entrepreneurial energy required to build a more resilient food system? Van Acker reflects on the University of Guelph’s agricultural heritage and its culture of practical engagement—where research is designed not just to generate knowledge, but to put that knowledge into action. The conversation explores the importance of extension and public engagement, the power of cross-sector collaboration, and the growing role of students as drivers of innovation. The discussion also confronts climate change directly. While political rhetoric may fluctuate, farmers are experiencing increasing weather volatility firsthand. The challenge for institutions is to embed long-term foresight into planning processes that often default to short-term thinking. This episode is a thoughtful exploration of leadership, institutional responsibility, and generational momentum in the agri-food sector. In this episode, we discuss:Why collaboration is foundational to long-term agricultural resilienceThe evolving role of extension and knowledge mobilizationInterdisciplinary research and entrepreneurialism in agri-foodLeadership as the creation of “open space” for new futuresStudents as engines of innovation and transformationClimate volatility as the defining foresight challenge About The Future HerdThe Future Herd is a podcast about collaboration and leadership in a changing food system. Each episode features conversations with leaders, innovators, and thinkers shaping the future of agriculture and food.

    29 min
  4. EPISODE 7

    7: Leadership in a Volatile World with Tyler McCann

    Guest: Tyler McCann, Managing Director, Canadian Agri-Food Policy Institute (CAPI) Global trade is shifting. Geopolitics is intruding into supply chains. Food is no longer just food — it is leverage, resilience, and power. In this episode of Future Herd, Jesse Hirsh sits down with Tyler McCann, Managing Director of the Canadian Agri-Food Policy Institute (CAPI), to explore what leadership looks like in a world where stability can no longer be assumed. Together they examine: Why the global context for Canadian agriculture has fundamentally changedThe discipline of focus in a sector overwhelmed by issuesHow policy actually moves — and why convening mattersThe cultural tendency toward incrementalism in Canadian agri-food governanceWhy diversity of participation strengthens policy outcomesThe difference between a commodity sector and a strategic oneThe urgent need to build domestic value-added capacity Tyler draws on his experience inside federal government and now at CAPI to explain how coalitions form, how priorities get chosen, and where the real leverage points exist in shaping Canada’s agri-food future. At the heart of the conversation is a simple but consequential question: Does Canada treat agri-food as a strategic sector — or as a commodity engine navigating price cycles? In an era of geopolitical volatility, that distinction matters. About the Guest Tyler McCann is the Managing Director of the Canadian Agri-Food Policy Institute (CAPI), an independent, non-partisan organization dedicated to advancing policy solutions for Canada’s agri-food system. He previously served in senior advisory roles within the federal government and operates a farm in western Quebec. About Future Herd Future Herd is a podcast exploring leadership, strategy, and structural change across Canada’s agri-food sector. We focus on systems, policy, innovation, and the people shaping the future of food. If this conversation resonates, share it within your network and continue the discussion inside your organization. The future of Canadian agri-food will not arrive on its own — it will be organized.

    1h 3m

About

A podcast exploring how collective wisdom and adaptive leadership can help us navigate the profound transformations reshaping our food and agriculture systems.