Canadian Broadcasting Corporation

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  • Call Letters: http://www.cbc.ca/radio/
  • Frequency: See our website
  • Networks: Love Me

CBC/Radio-Canada is Canada's national public broadcaster and one of its largest cultural institutions. With 28 services offered on radio, television, the internet, satellite radio, digital audio, as well as through its record and music distribution service and wireless WAP and SMS messaging services, CBC/Radio-Canada is available how, where, and when Canadians want.

Series

Caption: Malcolm X  (1964), Credit: Associated Press
3 Pieces

In 1963, when the fight for civil rights was in full force in the United States, Austin Clarke, now an award winning author, traveled to Harlem to find out more about living conditions. He interviewed a wide variety of people: community workers, historians, journalists, and activists such as Malcolm X. What went to air was a two part documentary called 'Harlem in Revolt.' We include a bonus Part Three, which is Clarke's entire unedited interview with Malcom X.

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24 Pieces

If science is neither cookery, nor angelic virtuosity, then what is it?

Caption: Frank Zappa
3 Pieces

A three part series about iconoclast Frank Zappa.

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17 Pieces

Love Me is a podcast about the messiness of human connection and the relationships of the people around you.

Caption: Martin Luther King Jr.
0 Pieces

In November 1967 Martin Luther King Jr. delivered the Massey lectures on CBC Radio. The Masseys are a prestigious annual broadcast in which a noted Canadian or international scholar gives a weeklong series of lectures on a political, cultural or philisophical topic. King's title was "Conscience for Change." In the lectures, he talked about race relations, the war in Vietnam, youth and social action and non-violence as a tactic for social change.

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16 Pieces

​PERSONAL BEST is a humorous podcast that celebrates small ambitions, half-wins and the quiet satisfaction of getting less bad at things.

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42 Pieces

Canada's weekly national science program

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5 Pieces

ReCivilization is a five-part series that examines some of the the biggest challenges facing our world. It charts a path to the future enabled by the revolutions underway in communications, innovation and learning in this new, post-industrial, digital age.

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5 Pieces

Acclaimed journalist Sally Armstrong argues gender inequality comes at too high a cost for all of us.

Caption: Feb. 12, 2009 plane crash near Clarence, N.Y., as photographed by citizen journalist "Traceur Zero" for CNN's iReport, Credit: Courtesy CNN
2 Pieces

For more than a hundred years, the tools of journalistic production – the ability to report, photograph and record events and distribute that material to a mass audience – have resided in the hands of a small group of people who, by convention and by law, have been called journalists. There is much to celebrate about this democratization of the media, but there are also reasons to be concerned about the loss of an independent, professional journalistic filter at a time when everyone can be their own media. Can online communities of "citizen journalists" be counted on to help us make informed choices as citizens and consumers? What's lost, and what's gained when "News 1.0" gives way to "News 2.0?"


Latest Pieces

Caption: James Lovelock
HOW TO THINK ABOUT SCIENCE: Part Six of a documentary by David Cayley, a producer with the CBC Radio program IDEAS. Modern societies have tended to...

  • Added: Oct 23, 2009
  • Length: 53:56
Caption: Ulrich Beck
HOW TO THINK ABOUT SCIENCE: Part Five of a documentary by David Cayley, a producer with CBC Radio’s program IDEAS. Modern societies have tended to ...

  • Added: Oct 23, 2009
  • Length: 53:56
Caption: Ian Hacking
Part Four of a documentary by CBC Radio David Cayley. Modern societies have tended to take science for granted as a way of knowing, ordering and co...

  • Added: Oct 23, 2009
  • Length: 53:56
Caption: Anthropologist Margaret Lock
HOW TO THINK ABOUT SCIENCE: Part Three of a documentary by David Cayley, a producer with the CBC Radio program IDEAS. Modern societies have tended...

  • Added: Oct 23, 2009
  • Length: 53:57
Caption: Lorraine Daston
HOW TO THINK ABOUT SCIENCE: Part Two of a documentary by David Cayley, a producer with the CBC Radio program IDEAS. Society takes science for grant...

  • Added: Oct 23, 2009
  • Length: 53:56
Caption: Leviathan and The Air Pump published by Princeton University Press, 1985.
HOW TO THINK ABOUT SCIENCE: Part One of a documentary by David Cayley, a producer with the CBC Radio program IDEAS. Modern societies have tended to...

Bought by 91.7 WHUS Storrs


  • Added: Oct 23, 2009
  • Length: 53:56
  • Purchases: 1
Caption: Feb. 12, 2009 plane crash near Clarence, N.Y., as photographed by citizen journalist "Traceur Zero" for CNN's iReport, Credit: Courtesy CNN
Two one-hour CBC Radio programs about changes to our understanding of 'journalism' now that anyone can create, report and publish news.

Bought by Louisville Public Media, Connecticut Public (WNPR), KQED, Spokane Public Radio, WTIP and more


  • Added: Sep 29, 2009
  • Length: 53:07
  • Purchases: 7
Caption: Feb. 12, 2009 plane crash near Clarence, N.Y., as photographed by citizen journalist "Traceur Zero" for CNN's iReport, Credit: Courtesy CNN
Two one-hour CBC Radio programs about changes to our understanding of 'journalism' now that anyone can create, report and publish news.

Bought by Louisville Public Media, Connecticut Public (WNPR), KQED, Spokane Public Radio, WTIP and more


  • Added: Sep 29, 2009
  • Length: 52:14
  • Purchases: 7

  • Added: Sep 29, 2009
  • Length: 53:57
  • Purchases: 3

  • Added: Sep 29, 2009
  • Length: 53:56
  • Purchases: 3