Advanced search
- TITLES
- NAMES
- COLLABORATIONS
Search filters
Enter full date
to
or just enter yyyy, or yyyy-mm below
to
to
to
Exclude
Only includes titles with the selected topics
to
In minutes
to
1-17 of 17
- Watch Chef Aldo and Chef Jo travel across cottage country and get paired up with cottagers who may...or may not be gourmet cooks in the kitchen. See how nothing gets in the way of a good meal when Chef Jo and Aldo Compete to Eat.
- Follows the escape of Chanie Wenjack from the Cecilia Jeffrey Indian Residential School and the brutal winter conditions he faces on the outside.
- For many Canadians, their introduction to clearcut logging came from news reports about the Clayoquot Sound protests back in 1993, known as the War in the Woods, when some 12,000 people showed up on the remote west coast of Vancouver Island to join the blockades. While much of the area was spared, elsewhere in B.C., clearcutting remained the status quo, and old growth forests have continued to fall. Today, precious little old growth remains, and First Nations and environmentalists are again taking a stand. This new War for the Woods has captured the attention of Canadians once again, including Stephanie Kwetásel'wet Wood, a journalist for the Narwhal who lives and writes in North Vancouver, and reports on Indigenous rights and the natural world. She's on a journey to understand how B.C.'s old growth forests have all but disappeared in this troubling time of climate change. Thirty years after the historic blockades in Clayoquot Sound, Stephanie travels to Tla-o-qui-aht territory where the protests took place, meeting Tribal Park Guardians, community leaders and others to learn more about the legacy of these actions. For the Tla-o-qui-aht and other central Nuu-Chah-Nulth nations, standing up to protect their forests didn't begin in 1993. The War in the Woods followed a successful fight to protect Meares Island in 1984, and before that, thousands of years of stewardship rooted in a worldview that sees the human and non-human worlds as interconnected. Today, they are exploring new land use visions and models of Indigenous-led conservation, including phasing out old growth logging altogether, but as communities struggle to balance environmental stewardship with meeting their economic needs, the hurdles to protecting these ancient forests have grown ever more complicated. With an industry that prioritizes profits over the health of the forests, and precious time left to save these intact ecosystems, the stakes in today's War for the Woods could not be higher.
- CAPTIVE is a cinematic exploration into the heart of darkness, exploring the trauma of captivity as seen through the eyes of girls abducted by Boko Haram and a journalist coming to terms with her own past.
- Art Bust is a investigative and true crime podcast that explores the murkier side of the art world, where scandals, cons, cultural looting, and big bucks reign supreme. The program is hosted by celebrated U.K. author and art journalist Ben Lewis.
- All five O'Gorman boys went to war, and their mother made a desperate plea for one of them to be spared. Dean O'Gorman traces the family story back to New Zealand's blackest day. The Battle of Passchendaele on October 12, 1917.
- From citizenship ceremonies across the country, new Canadian citizens share their stories about their lives before coming to the country as well as their hopes and dreams for the future in a new land.
- The Followers: Madness of Two is a true crime podcast that examines how a perfect suburban mom get wrapped up with doomsday preppers and prophets. The program is hosted by Sarah Treleaven who investigates the story of Lori Vallow and Chad Daybell, the strange beliefs they shared, and the disappearance of their two children.
- Kathleen Goldhar was so happy her friend Arya had finally found someone after a bad divorce. Mordechai Horowitz seemed perfect. Smart. Rich. Creative. But like so many things that seem to be perfect - it was too good to be true.
- Behind every catfish, there's the bait. Who is Janessa Brazil? Stolen images of an adult entertainment star are being used to con victims out of thousands of dollars, breaking hearts in the process. Journalist Hannah Ajala embarks on a quest to find Janessa, in this 7-part true crime series. And who is responsible for catfishing scams?
- They explore each teaching through the eyes of Anishinaabe storyteller Tanya Talaga, and through the lives and experiences of people she's proud to know. These truths, told through contemporary stories, help you find common ground here on Turtle Island, so that you can live together, justly.
- Gord Downie and the Secret Path band perform music from the Secret Path album at Roy Thomson Hall.