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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- Copyright: Copyright © CBC 2018
Podcasts:
Alan Neal gets out and about in Ottawa South to find the issues that matter to residents ahead of the provincial by-election.
Historian Tim Cook has just published a paper exploring the supernatural experiences of soldiers in WWI. He shared some of their stories with All in a Day.
A bill that would force unions to publicly disclose salaries and spending was voted down in the Senate today -- a move that frustrated many Conservative MPs. So why did the senate do this? Hear Alan Neal's conversation with Senator Hugh Segal.
East African cooking with Bemnet Abraha of the Hareg Cafe and Variety Store.
The Ottawa business that's been family-run for six decades has been bought by Sporting Life. VP Nathalie Tommy joined All in a Day to explain why she said yes to the sale.
CBC News has been investigating the high costs of policing. Today All in a Day speaks to the mayor of Ganonoque, a town with one of the highest per-capita police spending in the province.
The House has risen and All in a Day's political panel is going on summer break -- but not before discussing Rae's resignation and Baird's own take on vacation.
This weekend in Spencerville, they'll be dining, dueling and dancing like it's 1812. Alan spoke with Marc Meltonville about his workshop on regency recipes.
Why barn swallows have put a stop to the demolition of a bridge in Barrhaven.
Singer Kellylee Evans visits All in a Day as she recovers from a recent lightning strike.
Born in Ghana, now based in Toronto, Kae Sun's middle name Afriyie means "it has happened well." The same could be said of his career, which is on the upward swing with Canada Day performances booked in Canada.
An RCMP investigation, the Senate expenses scandal and Tom Mulcair's "road rage" incident. Our political panel chews over the week's events on the hill.
Every week, you hear our film critic Robert Fontaine rant and rave about a flick. Now Robert has written those rants and raves down in his second collection.
Alan speaks with the man who brought the emergency phone service to Ottawa in the 1980s.
Health Canada documents show at least 23 Canadian women have died while taking two of the most commonly prescribed birth control pills in the world. Alan speaks with Dr. Jennifer Blake about what to consider when choosing oral contraception.