• Why municipal governments might be best positioned to rapidly deploy climate solutions
    May 27 2024

    Guest: David Miller, former mayor of Toronto

    Former Toronto Mayor David Miller was always an advocate for the environment. But in the nearly 14 years since he left office he’s become one of the world’s great networkers for climate solutions, bringing together mayors from 96 cities to share policy ideas, programs and practices. In this episode of “This Matters,” Miller discusses why municipal governments are best positioned to rapidly deploy climate solutions and the ways he’s seen mayors make outsized impacts far beyond the boundaries of their cities by “hacking” their position to reduce emissions.

    What would you like to hear on Toronto Star podcasts? Let us know in this survey and you can enter to win a $100 gift card.

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    32 mins
  • The city-changing magic of wandering around
    May 21 2024

    Guest: Shawn Micallef, contributing columnist and author of “Stroll: Pyschogeographic Walking Tours of Toronto”

    In 2010, journalist Shawn Micallef first published his book of observations, suggestions and civic history gleaned from years of wandering around the city and paying close attention to what he saw. In the 14-years since, as Micallef became a freelance columnist for The Star, the book has been a perennial local favourite, running through several press runs. This week, a new, updated edition launches, for which he re-walked all of the terrain and revised to note how the city has changed in small and large ways. From the ravines to and entirely new neighbourhood, he talks about what one can learn about a city, and how you can grow to both love it and demand change from it, just by strolling around.

    What would you like to hear on Toronto Star podcasts? Let us know in this survey and you can enter to win a $100 gift card.

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    27 mins
  • Voices from the ground: a glimpse inside Canada's student encampments
    May 16 2024

    Guests: Journalists Samira Mohyeddin and Christopher Curtis

    Student protests that first erupted across the United States have now spread northward, igniting across Canada, including campuses at University of Toronto, McGill University, University of British Columbia and University of Alberta among others. The students say they want to end a war that’s claimed more than 34,000 Palestinian lives, according to local officials, destroyed or damaged every university in Gaza and displaced hundreds of thousands of people. The recent Israeli offensive against Gaza began after the Oct. 7 attack by Hamas militants which killed almost 1,200 Israelis with dozens still held hostage. The students are specifically calling for universities to cut all financial and academic ties with any Israeli company or campus that supports the military or illegal West Bank settlements based on international law. In this episode we take a look at what's going inside the University of Toronto and McGill University campuses through the eyes of two independent journalists, Samira Mohiyeddin and Christopher Curtis, co-founder of The Rover, who have been reporting from within the encampments.

    Audio sources: CBC News, Samira Mohyeddin, Christopher Curtis, Lance McMillan

    This episode was produced by Julia De Laurentiis Johnston, Paulo Marques and Saba Eitizaz

    With files from Marco Chown Oved

    What would you like to hear on Toronto Star podcasts? Let us know in this survey and you can enter to win a $100 gift card.

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    36 mins
  • PWHL is creating superstars and superfans
    May 7 2024

    Guest: Toronto PWHL season ticket holder and superfan Connie Hamers

    At the inaugural game of Toronto’s professional women’s hockey team, Connie Hamers had front-row seats, and immediately took a liking to the play of rookie Emma Maltais. By game two, she’d labelled her section “Emma Nation” and began bringing team swag she made (or had made) herself — signs, team roster reference lists, mini-sticks, hockey cards — to games to distribute freely to others sitting around her. She travelled with the team to other cities, founded a social media fan group, and quickly became one of the most well-recognized and liked people in attendance at games. As the team prepares for its first-ever playoffs, she sits down with fellow season ticket holder Edward Keenan to discuss a first-place finish for the team, the astonishing MVP-calibre performance of Natalie Spooner, what she loves about Maltais, why she has put so much time and energy into supporting and helping promote the team, and what she’s looking forward to in the playoffs. Plus, Hamers shares how she left her “Emma Nation” mark in places around the U.S. and Canada.

    What would you like to hear on Toronto Star podcasts? Let us know in this survey and you can enter to win a $100 gift card.

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    26 mins
  • Ontario has banned cellphones in class. We take a deeper dive into the new rules for schools
    May 2 2024

    Guests: Jasmine Eastmond, Tristan Kim and Kristin Rushowy

    The Ontario government has announced a crackdown on cellphones and vaping in schools, new regulations that are being seen as some of the toughest in Canada. According to Education Minister Stephen Lecce, the new government policy for cellphones, with some exceptions, is out of sight, out of mind. With this new move to ban cellphone use in classrooms, Ontario has joined a global movement with similar restrictions being imposed in the UK, Australia, France and some Scandinavian countries. There are many questions about enforcement and effectiveness, chief among them: how are teachers going to keep young people away from their phones in an increasingly digital ecosystem?

    Audio sources: CP24

    This episode was produced by Paulo Marques and Saba Eitizaz. With files from Emily Fagan

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    19 mins
  • After the verdict, Umar Zameer reflects
    Apr 26 2024

    Guest: Betsy Powell, courts reporter

    After the death of police Const. Jeffrey Northrup, the trial of Umar Zameer for first degree murder galvanized attention (and political rage) in the Toronto area. Now that he’s been found not guilty, people are left with questions about a prosecution that always seemed to be based on flimsy grounds. Reporter Betsy Powell covered the case for the Star from its beginnings to its conclusion, and spoke one-on-one with Zameer following the verdict. Now on “This Matters,” she shares her overview of the case, how the judge had expressed skepticism all along and the rare apology that judge issued to the defendant. We also share Zameer’s own reflections on the trial from Powell’s interview.

    What would you like to hear on Toronto Star podcasts? Let us know in this survey and you can enter to win a $100 gift card.

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    30 mins
  • A Q&A with Sophie Grégoire Trudeau
    Apr 23 2024

    Guest: Sophie Grégoire Trudeau

    Even before Sophie Grégoire Trudeau married Prime Minister Justin Trudeau she was an advocate for mental health, openly sharing her personal struggles with eating disorders. She discusses her new book. She shares those struggles afresh, along with tales of her parents, her schooling, her relationships, in her new book, “Closer Together: Knowing Ourselves, Loving Each Other,” which she describes as a personal journey toward empowerment.

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    41 mins
  • Poets discuss Taylor Swift’s lyrics as poetry
    Apr 22 2024

    We asked three published, award-winning Toronto poets to weigh in on Swift’s literary merit at a listening party on the album’s release day. The assignment: dissect three new songs as though Swift were a writer workshopping new pieces.

    Guests: Sanna Wani, a poet and poetry editor whose latest book, “My Grief The Sun,” was released in 2022; Jody Chan’s most recent volume of poems, “impact statement,” came out earlier this year and they are an artist-in-residence at the University of Toronto’s Queer and Trans Research Lab; Adam Dickinson, an author of four books of poetry and a professor in the Department of English language at Brock University.

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    1 hr and 5 mins