View Transcript
Episode Description
The Globe and Mail’s editorial board calls the initial reporting on Kamloops residential school graves a “failure of journalism.”
Five years later, debate continues over small errors in the language used to report on the preliminary findings of an investigation into unmarked graves.
Is the Globe’s decision to address these issues productive or will it fuel denial of the impact of residential schools on Indigenous communities?
Host: Jesse Brown
Credits: James Nicholson (Producer), Kallan Lyons(Associate Producer and Fact Checking), Caleb Thompson (Mixing and Mastering), max collins (Director of Audio), Jesse Brown (Editor)
Guest: Harrison Lowman
Further reading:
- There is no reconciliation without truth - The Globe and Mail
- #786 Digging For Doubt - CANADALAND [Podcast]
- #1362 The Truth About Residential School Graves - CANADALAND [Podcast]
- The search for graves at Tk’emlups, five years on - The Decibel [YouTube]
- Kamloops residential school survivors recall students going missing, digging of graves in orchard - CBC [YouTube]
- ‘Horrible History’: Mass Grave of Indigenous Children Reported in Canada - The New York Times
- SAY WHAT?: Ranking the Top Ten most painful English speakers in Canadian politics - Western Standard
- Tim Hortons to dial back use of Temporary Foreign Worker program, aims to hire 10,000 locally - The Globe and Mail
- 'Where’s the melt?' Tim Hortons customers complain of unmelted grilled cheese sandwiches - National Post
Sponsors:
Squarespace: Check out Squarespace.com/canadaland for a free trial, and when you’re ready to launch use code canadaland to save 10% off your first purchase of a website or domain.
oxio: Head over to canadaland.oxio.ca and use code CANADALAND for your first month free!
Taskrabbit: Get fifteen dollars off your first task RIGHT NOW with promo code CANADALAND at Taskrabbit.ca or with the Taskrabbit app.
If you value this podcast, Support us! You’ll get premium access to all our shows ad free, including early releases and bonus content. You’ll also get our exclusive newsletter, discounts on merch at our store, tickets to our live and virtual events, and more than anything, you’ll be a part of the solution to Canada’s journalism crisis, you’ll be keeping our work free and accessible to everybody.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.