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  • The Current Weekly is on hiatus during the COVID-19 pandemic
    2020/04/17
    During the COVID-19 pandemic, we’ve decided to put the podcast on hiatus for the time being. In the meantime, you can find full episodes of The Current, and some of our most engaging conversations, over in our main podcast feed.
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    1 分
  • Meditate, ditch the news & call your friends: How to cope during the COVID-19 pandemic
    2020/03/27
    One of America's first COVID-19 patients, Christy Karras, shares her experience of the disease — and Canadians in the thick of self-isolation offer some tips for coping. And, as more of us hunker down at home, some believe it's the perfect time to start a new project, but others think maybe we should all just take a nap. We discuss whether an obsession with productivity is the real pandemic, according to one writer. Plus, Toronto ER doctor James Maskalyk is facing the outbreak at work. He shares how meditation has made him a more compassionate physician, and why he thinks it could help everyone.
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    38 分
  • As COVID-19 upends Canadian lives, these helpers are lending a hand to those in need
    2020/03/20
    From coast to coast, Canadians are banding together in the face of the coronavirus pandemic. Facebook groups are popping up to organize grocery runs, and a group of med students are offering free babysitting to front-line health workers. We hear why. But while many Canadians are getting accustomed to working from home, others don't have that luxury. They share the challenges of working during a health crisis. And, when the board game Pandemic came out in 2008, it was based on the creator Matt Leacock's experiences during the SARS outbreak. But during the COVID-19 pandemic, the cooperative game is gaining traction once again. For more stories, visit: cbc.ca/thecurrent | Get in touch: thecurrent@cbc.ca or twitter.com/thecurrentcbc
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    25 分
  • Why you should embrace the 'neighbourhood of animals' all around you
    2020/03/13
    Author Richard Louv wants people to explore their relationship to animals in nature, and has some eye-opening stories about encounters in the wild. Plus, being a woman in the restaurant business can be challenging, even for America's youngest sommelier Victoria James. She tells Matt Galloway about her experiences — the good and bad — and why she believes the wine world needs a culture shift. And then, fact checker-in-chief: When the late Rob Ford was mayor of Toronto from 2010 to 2014, journalist Daniel Dale worked to keep him honest. Now he's CNN's presidential fact checker — calling out lies and misinformation from U.S. President Donald Trump. For more stories, visit: cbc.ca/thecurrent | Get in touch: thecurrent@cbc.ca or twitter.com/thecurrentcbc
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    34 分
  • No sick days: How coronavirus could hit some Canadians' paycheques
    2020/03/06
    Concern over the coronavirus is growing and Canadians are being told to stay home if they're under the weather. But that's left some workers without paid sick leave feeling stuck. Plus, the Netflix dating show Love Is Blind has viewers glued to their screens. We break down what makes reality shows about strangers falling in love so appealing. And, if you love skiing, we have some not-so-good news. A recent study projects that climate change could leave your favourite hills looking pretty green by the end of the century.
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    33 分
  • L'Arche volunteer responds to Jean Vanier revelations, debating plant-based meats, hearing loss, mental health & assisted dying
    2020/02/28
    A long-time L'Arche volunteer and a resident share their response to an independent investigation that found the organization's founder, a religious leader, Jean Vanier sexually abused six women over three decades. Future of food, or flash in the pan? Author Mark Bittman gives his take on so-called plant-based meat substitutes. The New Yorker's David Owen, author of Volume Control: Hearing in a Deafening World, explains how the world around us is hurting our ears -- and why future hearing aids might not carry the same stigma they once did. Finally, Minister of Justice and Attorney General David Lametti explains recently tabled changes to medically assisted dying legislation.
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    41 分
  • The pros and cons of solidarity protests; The incredible power of walking; A gift from the sea
    2020/02/21
    We hear from two members of the Wet'suwet'en Nation with differing opinions on the country-wide solidarity protests, and from Mohawk policy analyst Russ Diabo on why this story has struck such a nerve. Erling Kagge, who has walked to both the North and South Poles, tells us why putting one foot in front of the other is more profound than you might think. And after the tragic death of one of Newfoundland's top fisherman, his family donates a very special gift to someone our listeners may remember.
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    36 分
  • Wet'suwet'en protests, Vancouver's wrestling scene, campus mental health
    2020/02/14
    Matt is in Vancouver this week bringing you stories from BC, starting with one of the biggest stories in the country: the fight over the Coastal Gaslink Pipeline. Then, some pro wrestlers in Vancouver's growing scene teach Matt the ropes. And he speaks to Santa Ono, the president of UBC, about addressing the crisis in campus mental health and Ono's own history with mental health issues.
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    34 分