Amy Packwood

A Wasteland No More

There's a new kind of climate change heating up the nation's newsrooms.Welcome to the Golden Age of environmental journalism. But is it a sustainable development?

It’s another warm, sunny day in late October 2006 and Alanna Mitchell is working in a tiny window-walled office that overlooks her porch in Toronto’s east end. She’s finishing an article for The Walrus, to be published in the winter, about the furious pace of climate change. A framed copy of the mock front page […]

 Ann Ruppenstein

Dear Sylvia

Dear Sylvia

You are a pioneer of first-person journalism in Canada. So, has it always been just about you?

I’m in the basement and it’s cold. Above the low hum of the ventilation duct and the steady breathing of two elderly men sharing the room with me, I hear creaky wheels approaching. I’ve been waiting for only a few minutes, but not knowing what to expect and being in unfamiliar territory, makes it seem […]

 John Mather

Hot Prospects

The Calgary Herald has huge ambitions: to turn a minor-league paper into a major-league daily—even if it means putting up with a slew of embarrassing rookie mistakes

Except for his $250,000 grey F430 Ferrari and his equally costly Bentley Arnage, Brian Hunter kept a low profile in Calgary. The 32-year-old millionaire lived otherwise inconspicuously in one of the city’s many sprawling suburbs, waiting for his one-hectare, $3-million house to be built. Hunter traded in natural gas for a Connecticut hedge fund called […]

 Chris Richardson

It’s a Crime

Toronto streets aren't "nighttime killing fields"—but it's easy to say they are

Chuckie smashes the metal pipe into the side of Freshy’s face. Freshy hits the cement with a thud. Before the 16-year-old knows what’s happening, he’s pummelled by half a dozen guys wearing heavy winter jackets and thick-soled basketball shoes. Curses fly through the night air near the intersection of Jane Street and Finch Avenue in […]

 Andrea Lau

Shining a Light

The editor who fell down the elevator shaft and other tales, trials and misconceptions from the subterranean depths of the trade press

In a prospector’s camp, Bob Richards reads by oil lamp about the toil behind a modest Newfoundland mine. The story of Duck Pond and its deep sedimentary rocks captivated him – this, he thought, is how Canada was built. The article moved him to contact the author. “Madame,” he wrote, “I bow to your journalistic […]

 Shannon Wilmot

The 140-Year War

A close look at the warriors, battlegrounds and legends of a Canadian institution: the Parliamentary Press Gallery

Sitting in the House of Commons, above and behind the Speaker’s chair, I’m enjoying the 50-yard line view reporters get of all the debating and name-calling in federal politics. It’s Monday, October 30, 2006, and Speaker Peter Milliken declares “case closed” on the Peter McKay-Belinda Stronach “dog-gate affair.” But I’m not here just for the […]

 Joe Rayment

The Case for George

To the surprise of many, Strombo is still on the air. Sometimes he even has depth

Eight thirty p.m.: the crunching sound of a key working a lock. George Stroumboulopoulos opens the door to his Queen West home in Toronto and throws his keys on the coffee table. He sits down with a plate of pasta to watch the Canadiens game. He’s reading The Guardian online when Jennifer Dettman, executive producer […]

 Aaron Broverman

Crippled!

If journalism's job is to afflict the comfortable, then why is disability media so focused on comforting the afflicted?

Most of us remember Vancouver mayor Sam Sullivan accepting the flag at the closing ceremonies of the Turin Winter Olympics in February 2006. The flag slotted perfectly at Sullivan’s side as he spun his wheelchair eight times to a roaring standing ovation. That moment in the spotlight made Sullivan a darling of international media. They […]

 Jennifer Paterson

Sitting Pretty

How a quintessential Canadian outsider became the ultimate American insider—and rediscovered his inner Spy

Condé Nast is one of the world’s largest magazine publishers and its home is a 48-storey office tower in Times Square, the heart of New York City. Near the top, Graydon Carter, the Canadian-born editor of Vanity Fair – among the most successful magazines in the Condé Nast portfolio – has a bird’s eye view […]

 Diana Cina

Humourist-In-Chief

Eight Canadian funny men and women on Jon Stewart, the Air Farce, South Park, Playboy, Tim Hortons and the effect extreme cold has on the genitals:a miscellany

Tucked away in the folds of glossy magazine pages, below the fold in newspapers’ lifestyle sections, you will find them. They have the wit, the sarcasm and the good sense to make you laugh about war, politics and celebrity – if and when they ever get the chance to crack wise. With few venues, and […]