Then and Now

Workers in revolt, unpaid wages, revolving-door management: inside five chaotic, difficult, tumultuous, teetering years at Now magazine

Cultures of Abuse

Sports journalism used to be the “toy department.” Now it’s an investigative unit

The Reporter’s Gaze

When journalists “parachute” into communities, what does that mean for the people they cover?
The CBC Toronto building as seen from one of the higher floors.

Forever Temporary

They work hard. They stick around. And yet many of them are never offered jobs. How CBC treats its temporary workers—and how some are fighting back.
A portrait of Elwood Friday with images of St. Philip’s Residential School in Saskatchewan, which he attended from 1951 to 1953.

Behind the Frame

Photojournalism has an exploitation problem. Three journalists are finding ways to solve it.
A sign for the former Toronto Star offices at 1 Yonge Street.

Star-Struck

For generations, the Toronto Star has had a reputation as a progressive paper. But does its newsroom culture live up to its own ideals?
image for tara de boer's story, phone on red background. a woman is in the phoe screen, and multiple mouse cursors are pointing towards her.

Trolling Night in Canada

Female sports journalists are living their dreams—except for the hate, threats, and online harassment

Old Questions, New World

Today’s advice columnists resist clear answers and moral authority. Their embrace of life’s chaos is changing the genre for good
Part of the national post logo with a red picket sign with a fist in the air

Post Mortem

The inside story of how five racialized reporters’ anger over a Rex Murphy column led to the unionization of Canada’s most conservative national daily newspaper
A comic style illustration of a black man sitting at a laptop and then looking out the window to see two black police officers. He goes outside and has a conversation with the officers and appears to be assaulted before laying on the ground with the officers looking down on him.

COVID Crackdown

Pandemic measures in South Africa are impacting press freedoms and revealing a threatening relationship between the police and the press