Episodios

  • Can One Great Idea fix Toronto?
    Nov 11 2025

    Guest: Ed Keenan, Toronto Star city columnist

    Toronto has always been a contradiction; a city people fall in love with and get fed up with, often at the same time.

    This year, the Toronto Star explored those many shades in our Toronto the Better series, digging into the cracks, complexities, and questions around how to actually make the city better.

    Now we want you to join the conversation.

    We're launching One Great Idea — a project asking for your bold, beautiful, or just plain weird ideas to help fix Toronto.

    If you could change one thing about this city, what would it be?

    And what kind of ideas could actually turn Toronto into the place you want it to be?

    In this episode, city columnist Ed Keenan talks about the project, the city's identity crisis, and why even the most frustrated Torontonians show up to cry and cheer together during a Blue Jays playoff run.

    Have a great idea of your own?

    Send it to onegreatidea@thestar.ca in under 200 words or drop it in the comments below. We'll be publishing a selection soon and letting readers choose which ones are worth championing.

    Audio sources: Youtube, CP24

    This episode was produced by Sean Pattendon

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    31 m
  • Listen: Exploring the human behind the hero, Canadian icon Terry Fox
    Nov 7 2025

    Guests: Sean Menard, Toronto-based filmmaker and director of 'Run Terry Run' and Kirsten Fox, a director at the Terry Fox Foundation and Terry Fox's niece.

    Terry Fox is a Canadian institution.

    His crown of thick brown spirals, heathergrey 2.5 inch shorts, 'Marathon of Hope' shirt and prosthetic walking leg he fashioned to support athletic capacity are legendary markers of a truly extraordinary human being.

    But there's so much more to Fox than just these instantly recognizable symbols.

    Terry Fox's Marathon of Hope is an incredible feat that has captivated Canadians young and old for decades, but who was he really when the media vans dispersed and the crowds went home? Sean Menard's newest documentary 'Run Terry Run' aims to show viewers the human behind the hero using 45-year-old footage that hitherto sat unseen in a Fox family storage locker.

    Today on This Matters, we speak with Toronto-based filmmaker and a director at the Terry Fox Foundation, Sean Menard as well as Terry Fox's niece, Kirsten Fox, to discuss Terry's prevailing legacy, the tech-primitive world of the 1980s and what 'Run Terry Run' taught Kirsten about her late uncle.

    This episode was mixed by Paulo Marques

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    29 m
  • Baseball is a game of failure. The Blue Jays and a nation of fans were winners.
    Nov 4 2025

    Guest: Bruce Arthur, Columnist

    The Jays didn't win the world series on Saturday, after an extremely close loss to the LA Dodgers in the 11th inning - and the city is still reeling from a heartbreaking final result. Nearly 11 million Canadians tuned in on Saturday to watch the Jays try and take home the trophy for the first time in thirty-two years.

    Bruce Arthur, sports columnist at the Star, is here today to talk about how luck (destiny?) had a guiding hand in the series, why so many people across the city and country fell in love with this team and find this loss so heavy, and the surest way to get the Jays – and the city – back into the World Series.

    Produced by Julia De Laurentiis Johnston & Sean Pattendon

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    27 m
  • What's the best neighbourhood for Halloween in Toronto? We reveal which parts of the city are spooktacular and which areas you should ghost
    Oct 31 2025

    GUEST: Katie Daubs, Toronto Star reporter

    With Halloween landing on the same night as Game 6 of the World Series — and the Jays in it — Toronto is bracing for one of the busiest Fridays of the year. Whether you're heading out with the kids or planning to squeeze in some trick-or-treating before first pitch, you might be wondering: where are the best neighbourhoods to score big on candy?

    This year, the Toronto Star crunched the numbers. Reporter Katie Daubs and the digital team ranked all 158 city neighbourhoods using actual data—from child density and pedestrian safety to candy sales and local lore—and created a Halloween vibe index. On this episode, we reveal which parts of the city truly deliver Halloween magic and which ones might just be phoning it in with a decorative spider or two.

    This episode was mixed by Paulo Marques

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    23 m
  • How Ontario employers are getting away with $200 million in unpaid wages
    Oct 28 2025

    Guest: Ghada Alsharif, Toronto Star immigration & work reporter

    A new report has revealed that workers in Ontario are being shortchanged by nearly $200 million in unpaid wages. It's called wage theft and, in many cases, workers aren't getting paid even after the province officially orders their employers to do so.

    Less than a quarter of the money sent to Ontario's Ministry of Finance for collection has actually been recovered, leaving tens of thousands of workers still out of pocket.

    In this episode, we speak with Toronto Star reporter Ghada Alsharif about her latest three-part investigation into Ontario's growing wage theft crisis, and how the province's weak enforcement system is allowing employers to avoid accountability, from shell companies to disappearing franchises.

    This episode was mixed by Paulo Marques

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    24 m
  • The Toronto Blue Jays at the World Series, an episode for bandwagoners and die hards
    Oct 24 2025

    Guest: Mike Wilner, baseball columnist & host of Deep Left Field baseball podcast

    For the first time in 32 years, the Blue Jays have a shot at winning the World Series, with Game 1 against the LA Dodgers happening tonight. It's been a long road to get here: waiting for conditions to be just right; to have the right players in place; for hard work and alchemy to strike that optimal balance.

    Whether you've been paying attention to this team for years or just since the start of this crucial round of October playoff baseball, this episode has all the colourful context and fascinating anecdotes you'll need to get up to speed for the big game and the big series ahead.

    Mike Wilner, former Blue Jays broadcaster, Toronto Star baseball columnist and host of baseball podcast Deep Left Field, is the guest on the show today to give you all that inside baseball knowledge before you tune in.

    PLUS: Hero of the moment George Springer has an unsavoury baseball past - do you know about it? Mike Wilner weighs in.

    Produced by Julia De Laurentiis Johnston & Sean Pattendon

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    35 m
  • Listen: Bill C-3 and who qualifies as Canadian
    Oct 21 2025

    Guest: Nicholas Keung, Toronto Star immigration reporter

    A federal bill that could restore citizenship to people born abroad is drawing renewed political debate over who qualifies as Canadian and what rules should apply.

    Bill C-3 was introduced after a court found Canada's two-generation limit on citizenship by descent to be unconstitutional. The proposed legislation would allow Canadians born outside the country to pass citizenship to their children, even if those children are also born abroad, provided certain conditions are met.

    Recent amendments have added new hurdles including language requirements, security checks, and a more restrictive residency test. Supporters argue the bill finally addresses long-standing exclusions faced by so-called "Lost Canadians," while critics warn the changes could either enable Canadian citizenship without meaningful connection or reintroduce unfair barriers under a different form.

    On this episode we break down what's changing, who this affects, and what happens next as the bill moves toward a November deadline to be passed.

    This episode was mixed by Paulo Marques

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    22 m
  • How E-bikes and scooters took over Toronto's streets
    Oct 17 2025

    Guest: Ben Cohen, Toronto Star City Hall reporter

    Electric scooters weaving through sidewalks, e-bikes flying through intersections, and mopeds cutting into bike lanes have become a common sight in Toronto. The city is being rapidly reshaped by the rise of micromobility; fast, electric vehicles that don't require a driver's licence or plates and remain only lightly regulated. The result has been more collisions, rising emergency room visits and growing confusion over who belongs where. While city officials and police have launched enforcement and education campaigns, the rules remain unclear.

    Star reporter Ben Cohen spent an hour watching micro-mobility traffic on Adelaide Street and documented more than 30 unsafe or illegal incidents, offering a glimpse into a city struggling to manage this fast-changing way of moving.

    This episode was mixed by Paulo Marques

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    21 m