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November 24th: Men who give gifts and the women who buy the gifts men give There's just over a month to go until Christmas. The malls are filling with shoppers, many of whom have a certain something in common: they're women. The Sunday Edition has uncovered a truth that people have been silent about for far too long. They sent documentary producer Frank Falk out to rip the wrapping off a widespread practice.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Visit Website November 23rd: Black Raspberries and Surfing the Dartmouth FerryThe poems continue to come for Robert Acorn, a man in his 80s. Writing has been a family pursuit, his brother Milton was a literary icon. Robert's newest collection is called Black Raspberries. He spoke with Matt Rainnie on the program Mainstreet in Charlottetown. After that interview, we'll meet two intrepid canoeists who surf the Dartmouth Ferry wake. Freelancer Shaina Luck spoke with them for the Halifax program Information Morning.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Visit Website November 20th: The Million Dollar Cow and Artist Brian BoultonLet's hear a bit about one of Prince Edward Island's bovine celebrities: Eastside Lewisdale Gold Missy. She's an island-born Holstein that sold at auction earlier this month for 1.2 million dollars. Following her story, we'll hear host Sheryl MacKay of CBC British Columbia's North By Northwest's visit to the Windsor Gallery in Vancouver. She was there to meet B.C. artist Brian Boulton. He's created a series of life-size and life-like pencil drawings.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Visit Website November 19th: Canada and Other Matters of Opinion with Rex MurphyYes, he's sly, witty, corrosive and discombobulating - and that's on a bad day - but who is Rex Murphy and why does he have so many opinions? Millions of Canadians look forward to his weekly show Cross Country Check Up on CBC Radio, his commentaries on The National on CBC TV and his Saturday column in The Globe and Mail. The best of those columns have been compiled into a brand new book called Canada and Other Matters of Opinion.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Visit Website November 18th: Thinking About Hana's Suitcase and Farm Radio InternationalThe spirit of Hana's Suitcase is in Winnipeg, MB. Her story has inspired students at Maple Leaf School to create an art project. Local artist Tamara Weller asked the grade six students to research a child affected by the Holocaust and create a suitcase for him or her. After we hear about that story, we'll hear from Gladson Makowa, a producer with the Story Workshop in Malawi, and Kevin Perkins, the Executive Director of Farm Radio International.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Visit Website November 17th: Overcoming Personal RoadblocksToday on the podcast, we'll meet a visually impaired runner (Noella Klawitter of Ottawa, ON), a violinist who was born without a right hand (Adrian Anantawan of Toronto, ON) and an actress who stutters (Krystal Garib, originally from British Columbia) but can now perform on international stages, including Broadway, thanks to a little help from the bard.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Visit Website November 16th: Photography in Papua New Guinea for Light Up the WorldLast weekend, many Prince Edward Islanders took part in the Nichola Goddard Light up the World fundraiser. Captain Goddard was the first female Canadian soldier to die in combat. Her parents live on PEI. The events started Saturday afternoon with the opening of an art show at the Confederation Centre Gallery. Photographer Dianne Bos traveled back to Papua New Guinea with the late Captain Goddard's parents, Sally and Tim.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Visit Website November 13th: Military Matters from Newfoundland and LabradorHave you ever visited a flea market and seen old war medals for sale? Ever wonder who owned those medals and how they got there?
Sherri Lang and her husband have set up a website to help families find missing war medals. After hearing from her, we'll hear from Ralph Brant. He's the manager of flight operations with Serco, the company that provides Services for Base 5 Wing Goose Bay in Labrador. He discusses the future of unmanned vihicles in the military.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Visit Website November 12th: Power Play and Memories of the FallPlaying is something we assume our children know all about but it turns out not all kids know what to do when they have down time. A pilot program of the Cape Breton Victoria Regional School Board is adding the lesson of playing to their curriculum. After that story, we'll hear an item from Daybreak Montreal. The world celebrated the fall of the Berlin Wall earlier this week. To mark the occasion, host Nancy Wood spoke with four Montrealers who are originally from Germany.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Visit Website November 11th: Breaking the SilenceThe casualties of war are particularly vivid today. We hear their names and we're reminded of the numbers. What we are less aware of are the invisible casualties – the soldiers who've survived with injured hearts and minds. For years, Ted Barris has been chronicling the otherwise untold tales of Canadian war veterans. His latest book is a remarkable foray in to the lives of men and women who "just don't talk about it."Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Visit Website November 10th: Coyotes and HumansTaylor Mitchell was the young singer-songwriter who was killed by coyotes while hiking in Nova Scotia. Mitchell's death has evoked a visceral response from people around the Maritimes. Biologist Bob Bancroft visited host Costas Halavrezos in the Maritime Noon studio to tell us about the relationship between coyotes and humans.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Visit Website November 9th: The Price of a Bargain, Mountain Equipment Co-op and BicyclesFirst up, an interview with Gordon Laird, the author of "The Price of a Bargain: The Quest for Cheap and the Death of Globalization." Following that conversation we'll hear from Tim Unger. He's a co-owner of The Fairfield Bicycle Shop in Victoria, BC and he's responding to Mountain Equipment Co-op's preparations to release their own line of bicycles. We'll also hear a reaction to the criticisms from a public affairs manager with MEC, Tim Southam.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Visit Website November 6th: Inside Hana's SuitcaseToday, we'll hear about the new documentary film entitled Inside Hana's Suitcase. Filmmaker Larry Weinstein and Hana's brother, George Brady, spoke with guest host Jesse Wente on Q.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Visit Website November 5th: Kittywigs and No Students at DurnessToday, we have two stories from the program As It Happens. Durness Parish School was built in 1760 in the far north of Scotland but for 19 years, the headmaster lived and worked at Durness Parish School with no students. After hearing from the current headmaster, host Carol Off speaks with false feline follicle specialist Julie Jackson. She makes wigs for cats. They're called Kittywigs.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Visit Website November 4th: Regent Park Resident Aziz RahmanToday's highlight comes to us from Toronto's Metro Morning. Last week, the show put a special focus on the Regent Park area of downtown Toronto. It's one of Canada's oldest and largest social housing communities and it's in the middle of a dramatic transition. One billion dollars will be spent over 15 years to replace old housing complexes with new subsidized apartment buildings and condos. Aziz Rahman has lived in Regent Park for about 13 years.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Visit Website November 3rd: Melissa BelShe's only 20 but she's ready to take on the world... well, at least Europe, for starters. Ontario singer Melissa Bel is about to unleash her talent with her debut CD called "Brave." It's being launched in five European countries. Melissa Bel spoke with Mary Ito on the Ontario program Fresh Air.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Visit Website November 2nd: Ian Rankin at the Ottawa International Writers FestivalIan Rankin is the man behind the best-selling Rebus series of novels. That series has finished, after two decades, and Rankin has now turned his attention to a new character, Malcolm Fox, in his latest novel, The Complaints. Host Alan Neal spoke with Ian Rankin onstage at the Ottawa International Writers Festival. They talked about his new character, a cop who works in the Complaints and Conduct Department in Edinburgh, investigating other cops.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Visit Website October 30th: Love & SavageryThe 20th annual St. John's International Film and Video Festival kicked off earlier this month with a feature film called Love and Savagery. It was written by poet, screenwriter and Newfoundlander Desmond Walsh. Love and Savagery is a love story about a Newfoundland poet exploring the Burren region in Ireland and an Irish barmaid. The film was shot in Western Ireland and Eastern Newfoundland and was directed by Quebecois Oscar-nominee John N. Smith.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Visit Website October 29th: The Antikythera MechanismThe Antikythera Mechanism was discovered a hundred years ago in the wreckage of a 2000-year-old ship. For much of the last century, researchers, like Dr. Daryn Lehoux in the Classics Department at Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario, have been trying to figure out what this complex mechanical device can do. Dr. Lehoux spoke with host Bob MacDonald on Quirks and Quarks.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Visit Website October 28th: Peak Oil and AgricultureFor a few weeks now, CBC Radio's political affairs program, The House, has been looking into the effects of higher energy costs on a number of different policy areas. This week, the show had a look at the food in your fridge. The CBC's Louise Elliott brought us a look at what the end of cheap oil means for agriculture. After that, we'll hear from farmer and teacher Rick Monroe of Kingston, Ontario.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Visit Website October 27th: Q&A with Dutch ThompsonDutch Thompson has a weekly column about the old days on Prince Edward Island that airs on CBC Charlottetown's program Mainstreet.
Last week, Dutch opened up the mailbag and answered a few requests from listeners who had some questions about the bygone days. Here he is with Mainstreet host Matt Rainnie.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Visit Website October 26th: Singer and 2009 Portia White Prize Winner Mary Jane LamondSinger Mary Jane Lamond has been nominated for the 2009 Portia White Prize. The award recognizes an artist who's left a lasting mark on Nova Scotia's creative landscape. Lamond is nominated in recognition of her use of modern instrumentation and arrangements to frame Nova Scotia's Gaelic traditions. Recently, she performed and chatted about her nomination on a live edition of CBC Cape Breton's program, Mainstreet.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Visit Website October 23rd: Jewelry from Recycled Materials and The Table From the Seas EdgeCatherine Sutherland wants us to rethink the ways we adorn our bodies. She's a jeweller who uses only recycled metals and much of her work is done with smashed glass from vandalised bus shelters. After meeting her, we'll meet Silas Birtwistle, who is also using his work to bring attention to the environment. He just finished his tour of the BC coast, looking for driftwood to build a table and 12 chairs. He'll add that to driftwood collected from three other "corners" of the earth.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Visit Website October 22nd: Pop LifeAndy Warhol once said "good business is the best art." Well, the National Gallery of Canada is hoping to cash in on Warhol and his contemporaries. Pop Life is a blockbuster exhibition coming to the gallery next June. It opened at the Tate Modern in London, England earlier this month. Jonathan Shaughnessy was there on opening night. He's the assistant curator of Contemporary Art at the National Gallery and he's in charge of bringing Pop Life to Ottawa.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Visit Website October 21st: Come, Thou TortoiseAuthor Jessica Grant's new book "Come, Thou Tortoise" is fresh, funny... and longish – about 310 pages. 300-year-old Winnifred - she's the tortoise – plays a supporting role in the novel. On the other end of the scale, there's Wedge. He's a mouse. Along with these two characters is Audrey Flowers. She's coping with her father's death. Author Jessica Grant joined host Shelagh Rogers from St. John's, Newfoundland to talk about the story.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Visit Website October 20th: A History of Ghosts and The Aykroyd FamilyThe family that seances together stays together. That seems to be true for the Aykroyds, anyway, and yes, we do mean comedy legend Dan Aykroyd and his father Peter Aykroyd. They were in Studio Q last week to talk about Peter's new book, A History of Ghosts: The True Story of Seances, Mediums, Ghosts, and Ghostbusters.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Visit Website October 19th: Danielle Smith and the Wildrose AllianceBack in the days when Peter Lougheed was the Premier of Alberta, the conventional wisdom was that the ruling Tories didn't have to worry about the parties to the LEFT of them. They needed to watch out for any party to the RIGHT. All these years later, Alberta Premier Ed Stelmach is, indeed, looking over his Right shoulder. This weekend, Alberta's Wildrose Alliance party elected a new leader. Host Anna Maria Tremonti spoke with one of the leadership candidates last week.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Visit Website October 16th: Australians on the Road in North AmericaA year ago, the family you're about to meet was living a pretty normal life in Perth, Australia, complete with a mortgage, work, school and a dog. Then came the big idea. They decided to sell the house, pull their daughter out of school, put all their stuff in storage and hit the pavement for a year-long road trip across North America. So far, they've logged 23-thousand kilometres. Fiona Leonard is an ex-diplomat, and currently a freelance writer.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Visit Website October 15th: Chloe Sainte-Marie's Innu Album and The Fiddle TreeQuebec singer and actress Chloe Sainte-Marie sang all of the songs on her new album in Innu. The songs were written by Innu poet and singer Philippe McKenzie. Host Susan Campbell spoke with Sainte-Marie and Romeo Saganash. In another musical story, musicians from around the world were on Cape Breton Island last weekend for the Celtic Colours International Festival. As part of the festival, seven special string instruments got back to their roots – in the forest.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Visit Website October 14th: That's Where I Want To GoEach year, the Anatomy Department at the University of Toronto receives the remains of about 130 people and each year, the department honours those who made the decision to donate. Medical students are there to acknowledge the gift. They speak, they play music and they listen to stories about the people who were prepared to be cadavers on a dissection table in the cause of health, education or research. Alisa Siegel put together this documentary.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Visit Website October 13th: Green Stickers from PEI's Autism Society and Cracking the Spud's Genetic CodePeople with autism can find themselves in difficult or dangerous situations when they have to deal with police or emergency workers. Now the Autism Society of Prince Edward Island has come up with a green sticker to put in homes and cars to give firefighters, police and paramedics a heads up. After we hear about that initiative, we'll learn about an international team of scientists with similar goals has cracked the genetic code of the planet's most popular vegetable.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Visit Website October 12th: Free-Range Turkeys in Punkeydoodle's Corners and A Playground Design (In Part) By Children!On Thanksgiving, most of us wouldn't trade places with a turkey but a turkey's life doesn't seem so bad on Church Hill Farm in Soutwestern Ontario. Co-owner Max Lass describes a day in the life of a Church Hill turkey. Then, the CBC's Lisa Robinson brings us along to the new outdoor playground at Grant MacEwan University's child care centre in Edmonton. It's been three years in the making and besides a team of professionals, the kids played a part in the design of the space.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Visit Website October 9th: Social Media for Local Businesses * Premature Births in Canada * Historic Buildings in Saint John, NBPierre and Dan Martell run a Moncton-based home-building company called Martell homes. CBC's Penelope Smart found out why their company is building its foundation on Twitter and Facebook. We'll also find out why more and more babies are born prematurely in Canada and why concerned citizens have put together a historic walking tour of downtown Saint John, NB. Joan Pearce met with CBC news reporter Sarah Trainor for a mini guided tour.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Visit Website October 8th: Eat, Shrink, LoveIn Lori Lansens' new novel, The Wife's Tale, she puts the reader inside the head - and body - of a woman who has spent her life carrying around a lot of extra weight and emotional baggage. When the woman's husband walks out after 25 years of marriage, his disappearance lightens her load and she begins to transform. Host Shelagh Rogers spoke with Lori Lansens about the book on a recent episode of The Next Chapter.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Visit Website October 7th: Grace Park on QThe Korean-Canadian-American actor Grace Park is easily and often recognized as Boomer - a humanoid cylon – from Battlestar Galactica.
Nowadays, she's starring in CBC Television's The Border. Grace Park took some time to chat with Jian Ghomeshi in Studio Q earlier this week.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Visit Website October 6th: Soap Box Derbies in Cascapedia-Saint-Jules and the CF-101 in Happy Valley-Goose BayFirst, we'll hear an item about the region of Cascapedia-Saint-Jules in the Gaspe Peninsula. Last week, children of all ages were putting the finishing touches on their prized chariots. They've been spinning wheels and adjusting bearings all year for the soap box derby. There was a much bigger vehicle rolling through the streets of Happy Valley-Goose Bay in Labrador last week. It was a CF-101 Voodoo fighter jet.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Visit Website October 5th: Bathing in HistoryMost women wouldn't turn down the chance to spend a day relaxing at a spa. Doing that in an 8 century-old Roman bath is a totally different experience. Hammam el ward is one of the oldest Roman baths in Syria. It's also long been known in the Syrian culture as a place to get a diva-like treatment in the old fashioned way and it's where some women look for a potential bride for their sons.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Visit Website October 2nd: The Virtue of Forgetting in the Digital AgeIn his new book, Delete: The Virtue of Forgetting in the Digital Age, Viktor Mayer-Schonberger argues that forgetting is a natural human process and he argues that digital technology and cheap storage are creating all sorts of problems, from an assault on privacy to an inability to make decisions. Spark decided to look into the issue of memory and started with the story of a man whose life was profoundly affected by the long arm of digital memory.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Visit Website October 1st: Dr. Richard Cytowic and Discovering the Brain of SynesthesiaYou've heard the expression "blue Monday" but what if Mondays really were the colour blue? And Tuesdays were red? Well, for some people, they really are. These people actually sense the days of the week and the months of the year, as being coloured. It's one form of a neurological condition known as synesthesia, where a person's senses overlap and combine - for instance, seeing sounds or hearing colours.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Visit Website September 30th: Author Wayson Choy on The Next ChapterMedical emergencies and near-death experiences are the stuff TV series are made of. They can be intense but distant, too – somehow outside of our own experiences. On the other hand, when Wayson Choy writes about his illness, the experience feels personal and recognizably real. Choy went through two brushes with death. There was a lot a drama and long stretches of slipping in and out of consciousness and hovering in a place somewhere between life and death.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Visit Website September 29th: Hawksley Worman on MainstreetAs a rock singer-songwriter, Hawksley Workman is a Juno award-winner. As a music producer, he's worked with the likes of Great Big Sea, Serena Ryder, The Skydiggers and Hey Rosetta. Last weekend, Hawksley Workman performed at The Guild in Charlottetown, PEI. Our host for CBC Prince Edward Island's Mainstreet is Matt Rainnie and he spoke with Workman before the performance.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Visit Website September 28th: A Rare Violin and 50 Jobs in 50 StatesLast week, fourteen lucky musicians won the privilege to play a rare instrument for three years. One of those instruments - a violin - has an unusual story. Owner Greg Cook told that story to Carol Off on As it Happens. Then, we'll hear about how twenty-seven-year-old Daniel Seddiqui spent the last 50 weeks traveling across the 50 U.S. States and working 50 different jobs. Last week, he spoke with Carol Off while he was spending the final week of his vocational voyage in Napa.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Visit Website September 25th: Henry Leland HouseA new housing complex in Kamloops, British Columbia is using tough love to get homeless people off the streets. Henry Leland House is named after the homeless person in Kamloops to most recently die out in the cold. The house does take a disciplined approach but, as the CBC's Shelley Joyce tells us, it's helping people rebuild their lives.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Visit Website September 24th: Polaris Prize Winners on QEarlier this week, it was announced that F*****d Up are the winners of this year's Polaris Prize for best Canadian album. It was for their record "The Chemistry of Common Life." A couple members of the F****d Up crew made it up to Studio Q the very next morning to talk about the big night.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Visit Website September 23rd: Lean TimesBoth of today's highlights come from CBC Toronto's Metro Morning special series, Lean Times, in which producer Mary Wiens is looking at how people are adapting to today's economy. It's not all bad news. The economy has forced some folks to make long overdue changes. In our first highlight, Mary introduces us to Robert Irvine and in our second, she brings us a view from the financial industry. She spoke with the CEO of Caldwell ecurities, Tom Caldwell.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Visit Website September 22nd: Message In A BottleCBC Radio listeners in Newfoundland and Labrador know Ross Traverse as a gardener extraordinaire who's often a guest on Radio Noon but he recently had an adventure an ocean away from his home in Torbay. Three years ago, he gave a letter to the Atlantic and ended up getting it back, along with some new friends. Central Newfoundland Morning Show host, Leigh Anne Power, reached him at his home to get the details. Here's their conversation.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Visit Website September 21st: Immigration Minister Jason Kenny on easier immigration for Afghan interpreters working with Coalition ForcesToday's highlight is a follow-up story from an examination done earlier this month by The Current. Guest host Jan Wong had spoken with an Afghan national who worked as a translator for coalition forces in Afghanistan. He told her about the sometimes life-threatening risks that translators face while working there. Well, last week, Immigration Minister Jason Kenny announced that Canada is going make immigration easier for Afghan interpreters.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Visit Website September 18th: What ever happened to the flying car?This week on Spark, contributor Hannah Classen sought to find out what ever happened to the flying car.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Visit Website September 17th: Alberta's Rat PatrolWith the rat infestation in Swift Current, SK, you might expect more rodents than ever to be found by Alberta's Rat Patrol officers. They travel along the Alberta-Saskatchewan border looking for rats and giving out poison to farmers who think the rodents might be on their land. Rat Patrol officers are getting a lot more calls this year but the CBC's James Hees tells us that they're not finding any more rats this year.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | |