TOPIC: SCHEDULE
IDEAS schedule for November 2024
Highlights include: the story of the Chatham Coloured All-Stars; Miglena Todorova on the legacy of Doris Lessing, examining the prisons we choose to live in; and the 2024 Massey Lectures delivered by writer and poet Ian Williams explores how to restore the lost art of conversation and why listening is so important.
Ideas |
IDEAS schedule for October 2024
Highlights include: why author Susan Neiman argues "wokeism" is foundationally wrong; writer Randy Boyagoda makes the case for the importance of universities; our series, New World Disorder, continues examining where democracy is going now; and a deep dive into what makes left-handers so special.
Ideas |
IDEAS schedule for September 2024
Highlights include: a series that explores what kind of world the Universal Declaration of Human Rights was supposed to create; the cultural history of the horse; brutalist architecture beyond aesthetics; a theoretical physicist explains a radical theory of gravity; what went wrong when bureaucracy entered the workplace; and how an artist’s death can generate positive meaning for us.
Ideas |
IDEAS schedule for August 2024
Highlights include: honouring Lois Wilson minister, Senator, human rights advocate —and inspiration; the complicated story of our fight to the death with rats; hinge moments in Salman Rushdie’s life; cartoonist Kate Beaton on what is collectively lost when working-class voices are shut out of opportunities; and writer and MD Jillian Horton on creating a more compassionate medical system.
Ideas |
IDEAS schedule for July 2024
Highlights include: what we can do to avoid the dreaded choke whether it be sports, music or everyday life; Astra Taylor's 2023 Massey Lectures, The Age of Insecurity: Coming Together As Things Fall Apart; once imprisoned in Turkey, writer Ahmet Altan reflects on the meaning of freedom; and how a movement in West Africa prompted a rethink about what being educated means for people born into a colonial legacy.
Ideas |
IDEAS schedule for June 2024
Highlights include: the invisible superpower of smell; why Christian communities are just as polarized as secular society; BBC Reith Lectures on the role AI plays in distorting the integrity of democracy; the endangered reality of an Old Growth forest in Nova Scotia; and Anishinaabe arts leader Jesse Wente's talk called “Remembering the Future."
Ideas |
IDEAS schedule for May 2024
Highlights include: a reality check on reality TV; exploring the role of solidarity in confronting political and social problems; a deep dive into why the powerful sense of smell is underestimated; examining how humans are changing fire; and when it comes to decisive action, do we have a moral duty to revolt?
Ideas |
IDEAS schedule for April 2024
Highlights include: why joy and delight are essential to living a good life; how states create “ghost citizens” and keep them in limbo; professor Miglena Todorova on the making and potential unmaking of violent men; and the remarkable life and work of Wilhelm von Humboldt.
Ideas |
IDEAS schedule for March 2024
Highlights include: The art of driving trucks across northern Ontario in winter; why joy and delight are essential to a meaningful life; an ongoing series of interviews marking the 60th anniversary of Massey College; and the 2023 Massey Lectures by Astra Taylor on the "defining feature of our time": insecurity.
Ideas |
IDEAS schedule for February 2024
Highlights include: why cigars and the Cuban way of life is under severe threat; Canadian thinkers try to define “reasonableness” and what it is to behave reasonably; a look inside the delicate world of queer diplomacy; and asking the question: Is marriage working for women?
Ideas |
IDEAS schedule for January 2024
Highlights include: the work of Canada’s saddest poet, Quebec’s Émile Nelligan; how the fall of Rome lives on as a modern myth; longtime news anchor Lisa LaFlamme on the prospects of journalism and democracy in these unsettling times; and an audio journey through the complexity of the human body.
Ideas |
IDEAS schedule for December 2023
Highlights include: why we need to reckon with disgust; the first Black woman publisher in Canada; the history of bombing; the forgotten music of exiled composers; the philosophy of Christmas; and the theories and the evolution of the relationship between dogs and humans.
Ideas |
IDEAS schedule for November 2023
Highlights include: Filmmaker and writer Astra Taylor's 2023 Massey Lectures entitled The Age of Insecurity: Coming Together as Things Fall Apart; Abenaki artist and filmmaker Alanis Obomsawin on the quiet power of listening; and defending the cormorant — a gangly dark bird, with a bad reputation.
Ideas |
IDEAS schedule for October 2023
Highlights include: lessons from the Ancient Greek writer Herodotus on understanding the human causes of conflict; to how the Socialist government of Chile tried to create an early intranet to monitor its economy; to author Donna Morrissey on widowhood; and questioning whether notions of beauty can offer hope.
Ideas ||
IDEAS schedule for September 2023
Highlights include: a conversation with the 2023 Massey Lecturer Astra Taylor; lessons from the Ancient Greek writer Herodotus; examining whether smart city technologies make for smart living; and a special series called The Greatest Numbers of All Time.
Ideas |
IDEAS schedule for August 2023
Highlights include: More episodes from David Suzuki’s radio archive from 1989, 1999 and 2010; Naheed Nenshi on renewing civic purpose in Canada; The BBC Reith Lectures on the theme: The Four Freedoms; and philosopher Susan Neiman on why 'wokeism' is foundationally wrong.
Ideas |
IDEAS schedule for July 2023
Highlights include: episodes from David Suzuki’s radio archive from 1989, 1999 and 2010; Tomson Highway's 2022 Massey Lectures exploring language, creation, sex and gender, humour, and death; and a reprise of our series called The New World Disorder.
Ideas |
IDEAS schedule for June 2023
Highlights include: the continuation of the three-part series, Man Up! The Masculinity Crisis exploring the state of manhood; examining the consequences of over population; André Picard on 40 years of health journalism; and a special series on Nunavik’s artistic and political history.
Ideas |
IDEAS schedule for May 2023
Highlights include: music that reveals tensions and myths of France through the 20th and 21st centuries; exploring the many afterlives of the Queen of Sheba; the hidden history of interned in labour camps during World War One; and what exactly is The Great Reset?
Ideas |
IDEAS schedule for April 2023
Highlights include: philosopher Susan Neiman on how “wokeism” short-circuits what it means to be on the left; human rights lawyer Hina Jilani on her quest to help make a better world; and IDEAS explores our capacity for credulity to understand why so many people get “taken in” by scams and conspiracies.
Ideas |
IDEAS schedule for March 2023
Highlights include: Literary scholar Peter Brooks points to the dangers of seeing everything as a story; Cree writer Tomson Highway's 2022 Massey Lectures, and Nigerian writer Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie on why the greatest threats to free speech today are not legal or political, but social.
Ideas |
IDEAS schedule for February 2023
Highlights include: the weird world of pseudo-archaeology; a deep-dive into the uncertain future of money; Alexander Bell’s fraught legacy with the deaf community; the rich and complex world of Newfoundland’s Indigenous literature; and how geometry can be used to corrupt democracy.
Ideas |
IDEAS schedule for January 2023
Highlights include: the history of school trains bringing education to children in isolated communities of Northern Ontario; how a colonialist approach to Arctic research by academia has neglected traditional knowledge; and the chaotic history and uncertain future of money.
Ideas |
IDEAS schedule for December 2022
Highlights include: how coyotes inform our storytelling and myth; a demon attack in Quebec in 1660; historian Aanchal Malhotra on inheritance and unlearning after the 1947 Partition of India; and IDEAS ponders deep philosophical questions about Christmas like: is it ethical to lie to children?
Ideas |
Video
2:06
Video
RAW: Joe Kornelson of Functional Transit worries the changing schedules and fewer buses will ultimately hurt ridership
RAW: Joe Kornelson of Functional Transit, says people may throw up their hands in frustration and stop taking the bus