600 épisodes

An in-depth look at the issues, culture and personalities shaping Canada today.

The Big Story Frequency Podcast Network

    • Actualités
    • 5,0 • 1 note

An in-depth look at the issues, culture and personalities shaping Canada today.

    A trip inside the courthouse for Donald Trump's trial

    A trip inside the courthouse for Donald Trump's trial

    On the 15th floor, a former US president, flanked by secret service members and the whole nine yards, faces criminal charges, an historical first. On the floors below, the business of a city courthouse tries to continue as usual, with court appearances for things like shoplifting and public urination.

    It's been two weeks since the trial began, and the former president has been complaining about the temperature. When he isn't appearing to fall asleep. What's it like in the courthouse? What's the bigger picture of a former president running to get his job back while facing jail time? Would Donald J. Trump ever actually wind up in jail? Really?!

    GUEST: Andrew Rice, features writer with New York Magazine, covering the Trump trial.

    • 24 min
    What's really happening at Columbia University?

    What's really happening at Columbia University?

    It started at Columbia University. And the NYPD came in hard, right away. Which, naturally, sparked more protests on campuses everywhere from Texas to Quebec. News reports can sometimes make these encampments—which are mostly composed of students risking their academic careers to speak up for Palestinians—seem huge, chaotic and full of antisemitism.

    But how much of what's actually happening on campus makes it into 30-second clips and 60-point headlines? How does the current wave of protests compare to to others in a long history of campus activism? What do the protesters want? And why are many universities trying to crack down so hard on them?

    GUEST: Justin Ling, investigative journalist, reporting for The Line

    • 30 min
    Inside one of the largest art frauds in history

    Inside one of the largest art frauds in history

    Norval Morrisseau is among the most iconic Indigenous artists in Canadian history. His instantly-recognizable paintings adorn the walls of institutions across the country, from art galleries to Universities and provincial legislatures. To say nothing of the art dealers and auction houses that have made millions selling his works. The only problem? A whole lot of them have turned out to be fake.

    Even in the world of Indigenous art, where artists have been complaining about forgery for years, the scale of the Morrisseau fraud is unprecedented. So how did authorities uncover the deception? Who's behind the fakes? And what does this say about artist's ability to protect their work?

    GUEST: Luc Rinaldi, writing in The Walrus

    • 20 min
    Paydirt E2: Bees, stags, does and Vegas

    Paydirt E2: Bees, stags, does and Vegas

    In the months after the Ford government cut into Ontario’s protected Greenbelt to allow housing development, the premier’s ties with developers were suddenly under a microscope.

    Rumours were flying. Journalists and independent watchdogs were digging. And the day Doug Ford swallowed a bee turned out to be very consequential for another reason.

    • 34 min
    A conversation with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau

    A conversation with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau

    After an announcement at a Honda plant in Alliston, Ontario that will bring billions in new electric vehicle investment, the Prime Minister sat down with The Big Story to chat in-depth about the climate crisis, the future of electric vehicles and his government’s efforts to find opportunity amid a world on fire.

    • 34 min
    How secure is Canada's Arctic?

    How secure is Canada's Arctic?

    Recently the department of defence announced a plan to pour billions of dollars into Northern security. And there's no doubt that in a changing world the Arctic region has become more important, for Canada and our allies, as well as for our adversaries.

    But what does 'security' or sovereignty even mean when we're discussing a huge swath of land, sparsely populated and lacking the infrastructure to change that? What does the DoD plan to use that money for, exactly? And how will it work with the Indigenous people who live in the region?

    GUEST: Andrea Charron, professor and the Director of the Centre for Defence and Security Studies at the University of Manitoba.

    • 22 min

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