Online Exclusives

 Canice Leung

Investigating Harvey

Investigating Harvey

Accused of inventing a scandal, Harvey Cashore of the fifth estate stubbornly stuck with the Airbus story for 13 years, flummoxing skeptics who couldn't understand his obsession. Inside the mind of a dogged investigative reporter

On an August night in 2007, Luc Lavoie lounges in the shadows on the back patio behind a Montreal old boys’ club. The then-spokesperson for former prime minister Brian Mulroney cuts an ominous figure in the dark, his face half-illuminated by the glow of the club’s lights. He puffs on a cigarette in one hand […]

 Carla Wintersgill

Everyone’s a reporter

Everyone’s a reporter

Three years and 10 million dollars later, has so-called citizen journalism site NowPublic.com democratized the news gathering process? Not exactly...

After receiving a US $10.6 million windfall of venture capital financing in July 2007, NowPublic.com co-founder and CEO Leonard Brody boldly promised that in 18 months the participatory news site would be “by reach, the largest news agency in the world.” The small Vancouver start-up that began as an experiment in co-founder Michael Tippett’s garage, […]

 Rachel Barsky

Family Affair

Family Affair

The West is the best for publisher Peter Legge and his daughters

Peter Legge is a wildly enthusiastic man. The chairman and CEO of Canada Wide Media Ltd. says he has an “exceptional circulation department,” “exceptional sales people”—just an “exceptional staff” altogether. But he has reason to be optimistic: Canada Wide (CW) is the largest independent magazine publisher in Western Canada. And the 66-year-old’s family-run company now […]

 Jasmyn Burke

Lighting a Spark

Lighting a Spark

The producers of Spark, a weekly show about technology and how it affects culture, have come up with a different way to do radio—they ask listeners for feedback before the program airs. Is that a good idea?

As I pull out my high-tech Sony recorder, the producer, Elizabeth Bowie, startles me. She stares at it and says, “Oh, look at that”—and I thought Nora Young, Dan Misener and Bowie, the people behind the technology-based radio show and podcast Spark would laugh at my two-year-old digital recorder. But of course, the show’s website […]

 Jessica Lockhart

Chemtrails, false flags and 9/11, oh my!

Chemtrails, false flags and 9/11, oh my!

All but ignored by mainstream media, conspiracy theorists search for an alternative audience. These days, fellow "truthers" aren't hard to find

There’s a blizzard outside, but over half of the chairs inside this Queen Street West store are full. The store isn’t just any store in downtown Toronto; it’s Conspiracy Culture, or what co-owner Patrick Whyte calls a “taboo, magic happy place” for people who are interested in everything from alien phenomena to political conspiracies. And […]

 Chris Jancelewicz

The subjectivity of objective music criticism

The subjectivity of objective music criticism

How does one be objective in music criticism without being too subjective? Find out how Toronto's music critics do it (or don't do it).

Riding on the success of their newest self-titled EP, New York indie band, Interpol strolled into Toronto’s Horseshoe Tavern in September 2001. Hailed as the “next big thing,” several newspapers in Toronto decided to send reviewers to cover the show. The Toronto Star music critic Ben Rayner attended, as did NOW magazine’s music critic Sarah […]

 Mimi Szeto

The Immigrant Experience

The Immigrant Experience

With a quarter of a million immigrants arriving in Canada every year, publishers—big and small—believe this really is a land of opportunity

It’s three in the morning on a sweet April day in 2003, and Naeem “Nick” Noorani wakes up in his Vancouver home. Despite having left Dubai five years earlier with his family, he still finds something strange about this country. “Everyone says Canada is a country of immigrants,” he says. “There are magazines on wilting […]

 Nina Boccia

What’s in it for us, though?

What’s in it for us, though?

There's no shortage of Canadian media coverage of United States presidential candidates Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, John McCain and even Mike Huckabee. And why not—some of the horses are running neck and neck. But left in the dust is what each of these candidates might actually mean for Canada

The Globe and Mail’s Washington bureau correspondent John Ibbitson vividly remembers the first time he saw U.S. Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama speak in person. On an early December 2007 day in Columbia, S.C., he was standing in a press pool 12 to 15 metres from the stage, listening intently. Obama spoke and paced the […]

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