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The Central Newfoundland Morning Show from CBC Radio Nfld. and Labrador (Highlights)
Summary: CBC Radio's Leigh Anne Power in Gander hosts the Central Newfoundland Morning Show. The show provides news along with current affairs items and stories of local interest from urban areas and the diverse rural communities surrounding the two towns.
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- Artist: CBC Radio
- Copyright: Copyright © CBC 2018
Podcasts:
The CBC's Martin Jones talks to Botwood's Paulette Pelley and Janice Peyton of Two Friends Shuckin', their weekly online show about shucking oysters.
Older employees are working longer. And younger employees are struggling to find work. We talk about the latest figures from the Canadian labour market with MUN business professor Gordon Cooke.
Gander senior Clyde Burt speaks with the CBC's Leigh Anne Power about how someone stole his snowblower just as he was tuning it up for the winter.
The Resettlement Museum in Centreville-Wareham-Trinity is being resettled. We speak with Kirk White about the plan to bring the artifacts to a wider audience.
For the first time, a lone Black Vulture was recently spotted in Burgeo. Bird-watcher Ken Knowles talks to us about why he made the journey to see it.
The Gander Flyers are off to a hot start this year. We ask the team's general manager, Garry White, how they've gone from worst to first.
We speak with Vaughn Hammond of the Canadian Federation of Independent Business about the province's new policy on pot and if it will benefit entrepreneurs in the province.
Two of Atlantic Canada's most powerful women in music are pairing up for the first time. Erin Costelo and Amelia Curran speak with the CBC's Melissa Tobin about their new music documentary project.
The man alleged to have killed Shawn Briffett and Harold May in February 2015 enters an Alberta court room this week. We speak with Rebecca Briffett, Shawn's mother, about how all this is taking a toll on the family.
The Clay Bank in Conne River has been eroding by several feet each year, but a group in the area have plans to solve the serious problem they think is caused by climate change.
15-year-old Cassidy Rich packs a lot of punch with her voice and a ukulele. The CBC's Melissa Tobin talks to the Lewisporte is in teen about debut EP, Lucky Star.
A pitch by Indigenous groups in this province for a surf clam quota is raising questions about who can win new jobs, but the First Nations applicants say it's great for the whole province. We hear from Shayne McDonald.
CBC's Garrett Barry meets 14-year-old Brett Smith, who has adapted to his cerebral palsy and is now a multi-sport athlete on the Bonavista Peninsula.
Three years ago, he ran across the country dressed as a superhero. This week, Jamie McDonald is back in the province, promoting his new book. He visits our CBC Gander studio.
Locked behind a bolted door in Springdale lies a small museum that once drew visitors from all across the globe. It's owner opens its doors for the first time in years for the CBC's Martin Jones.