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All in a Day
Summary: CBC Radio's All In A Day is Ottawa's number one afternoon drive program. Alan Neal and the All In A Day team offer compelling local stories, as well as regional, national and international reports.
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- Artist: CBC Radio
- Copyright: Copyright © CBC 2018
Podcasts:
The finish line is in sight for all those candidates who have been running in the federal election marathon. Our political panel wraps up the highlights as voters get ready to head to the polls.
Reviewer Robert Fontaine has been to see a new documentary that explores the artistic universe of the Group of Seven. His thoughts, on Painted Land.
Soups from chefs across town are the secret ingredients to a fundraiser for the Debra Dynes Family House this weekend. We get the dish one of them, a mulligatawny soup.
If you spent a lot of time waiting at an advance poll on the weekend, maybe you passed some of it wondering why you can't vote online in 2015. We take a look at why you're stuck with that pencil and paper.
Party platforms have finally surfaced in the second-last week of the federal campaign. But they're competing for attention with the TPP trade agreement, PMO audits of refugee applications and the evolving debate over the niqab. Our political panel is in.
Doing nothing is not a life choice you'd expect to produce a brilliant story. But moments of inaction are the stuff of a sellout Fringe show that's coming back for an encore at Arts Court. Playwright and performer Emily Pearlman tells Alan about it.
The owner of Top Shelf Preserves reaches into her pantry for a jar of tomato salsa. She spills her secrets for the art of canning.
We speak to Bruce McCulloch about bringing 80s Calgary to the screen for the upcoming series, Young Drunk Punk.
We hear the question on the mind of a Pontiac voter who wants to hear from her candidates.
With just over two weeks left in the federal election campaign, the French-language leaders' debate could be a deal-breaker. Our political panel weighs in on what's at stake, at this stage in the game.
The news of the death of two boys in New Brunswick, killed by a python, has stunned people across the country. Guest host Amanda Putz speaks to a reptile zoo owner in Ottawa about the case.
It's a choir that combines chatter, shouting, and imperfect harmonies -- all joyfully so. The Element Choir is in town for Chamberfest -- but first, they brave the elements of our studio.
It's a Canadian tale of an attempted mutiny lead by zombies during World War Two. We hear why an Australian filmmaker is making a documentary about this once-censored, and largely forgetten event in military history.
We hit the greens at Pine View Golf Course, to check out the big damage a small tornado caused to the front nine.
The former Parliamentary Budget Officer lands a new job, dissecting federal government spending AGAIN. We hear from Kevin Page about his career move to the U of O campus.