All in a Day
Summary: CBC Radio's All In A Day is Ottawa's number one afternoon drive program. Alan Neal and the All In A Day team offer compelling local stories, as well as regional, national and international reports.
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Podcasts:
Gisele Paquette of Gingham Wisdom Workshops dropped by the studio with a recipe for mustard pickles that's been passed down in the Maritimes for generations.
The final round of our Teen Reading Series, "Off The Shelf", with Adeola Egbeyemi defending THE SCORPION RULES by Erin Bow, and Sarah Ham defending THE PICTURE OF DORIAN GRAY by Oscar Wilde.
We conclude our Starstruck summer astronomy series with Gary Boyle explaining why you don't need a $10-thousand dollar telescope to continue your exploration of the night sky!
As teens are gearing up to go back to school, how welcoming are schools now for trans, gay, and bi youth?
A gigantic tiger that's half the size of the Peace Tower. It's one of the paintings of Sanjay Sundram's Silent Cities collection, where animals take over our town.
Our teen reading series, Off The Shelf, continues, with two books examining very different teen experiences: the Tulsa gangs of 1965, and romance of 2016 New York.
A romance tale told through postcards, letters, and a whole lot of X's...the War Museum unearths the private correspondence between a private and his love.
Kyle Brownrigg, one of the comic finalists gearing up to win $25,000 Sirius Top Comic Prize, tells us about his craft.
The fine folks at Ottawa's Shifter Magazine have curated a playlist featuring local hip-hop and R&B artists music lovers ought to know about. Kevin Bourne from the magazine joined Alan Neal in studio to preview some of the tracks.
The union that represents Ontario elementary public school teachers vowed to "vigorously defend" any educator who uses the modernized sex-ed curriculum in the classroom this school year in defiance of the province's decision to impose an outdated version. The All in a Day teacher's panel responds to the news.
More than half a million Rohingya refugees are still living in refugee camps in Bangladesh, one year after they fled violence in Myanmar. With the monsoon season underway in Bangladesh, what are the new concerns for Rohingya refugees? The executive director of Doctors Without Borders Canada shares what he saw during a recent visit to their camps.
It's a diplomatic crisis that all started with a tweet. As the temperature continues to rise in the row between Canada and Saudi Arabia, some are asking whether Twitter is the right place to carry out diplomacy. We put that question to Canada's former ambassador to the Middle Eastern kingdom.
A decade ago, she was singing on the streets. Now, Canadian soprano Simone Osborne is a rising star in the Opera world, along with her husband, bass-baritone Gordon Bintner. The opera power couple take the stage at Chamberfest tonight.
"Believe in yourself," that' one of the messages Peter Joynt gives to students when the rapper visits schools. Little did he know those words would be enough to propel one 13-year- old girl into a new project. They tell us about the journey to making a song together.
Tonight's Chamberfringe performance is inspired by Leslie Ting's personal experience of watching her mother gradually lose her vision. She's woven sights and sounds into a concert that looks at sight, sound, and the absence of each, to explore the way our senses shape us.