Why I’m changing my online profiles to say I live in Lheidli T’enneh, and why you might want to, too.
Compete in a race without training, deliver a speech without practicing. What’s the worst that could happen?
This can’t be the end of radio…. can it?
Some other interesting thoughts on bike riding and car culture.
2015 is a big year for the City of Prince George. The city will be celebrating its 100th birthday, the Canada Winter Games arrives, and the University of Northern BC turns 25.
When an SUV swerved to hit me, I realized riding a bike in a car-dominated culture is an inherantly political act.
1.25 million people die on the roads every year, and yet we accept that number without much question. It doesn’t need to be this way says road safety expert Ian Johnston.
Not every tragic death gets a headline.
In this special series, Daybreak goes inside one of the most notorious neighbourhoods in British Columbia to get the stories behind the statistics.
We aren’t conditioned to think of the world in terms of audio, and even if we do it’s expensive and difficult to share it.
Tricking myself into doing something big by setting a bunch of little goals.
Driving is a convenience, but it comes with a real cost.
Yesterday I released an audio trailer for “At Home in the Hood: Stories from Prince George’s VLA Neighbourhood.” It’s a small radio series I’m doing within my regular job at Daybreak North. It’s the first series I’ve ever done, and I’m pretty nervous about it.
I resolve to make resolutions whenever I damn well please, starting with this.
The pieces of writing, radio, and miscellania that I am most proud of in 2013.
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