Summary

This year the Review of Journalism turns forty. Join us for our 40th anniversary podcast, Review-ed. Hosts, Mariana, Sahaana and Lidia will review Canada’s “watchdog on the watchdogs.” They'll revisit past stories and explore how Review alumni, journalism and storytelling has changed. After four decades on assignment, it’s time for the Review to be Review-ed.

This episode, hosts Lidia Rajcan and Sahaana Ranganathan speak with Eternity Martis, assistant professor in the School of Journalism at Toronto Metropolitan University, award-winning Toronto-based journalist, editor, and author of “They Said This Would Be Fun: Race, Campus Life, and Growing Up.” 

She joins us to talk about her time on the Review of Journalism masthead and her articles, “Collateral Damage” and “A Capital Idea” published in the Spring 2016 edition of the Review of Journalism. 

To read more about “Collateral Damage” you can go to https://rrj.ca/collateral-damage/. To read more about “A Capital Idea,” you can go to https://rrj.ca/a-capital-idea/.

About the author

+ posts

Sahaana Ranganathan is a second-year Master of Journalism student at Toronto Metropolitan University. She’s produced segments for TVO’s the Agenda with Steve Paikin, does research for the Investigative Journalism Bureau and is the Art Director for The Otter. She’s passionate about combining arts, culture with social justice.

+ posts

Lidia is a second-year MJ student. She has interned at TVO, producing weekly segments for The Agenda with Steve Paikin. She is the Copy Editor for The Otter. She has a keen interest in unraveling socio-economic and systemic issues, and bringing a voice to those often underrepresented.

+ posts

Mariana Schuetze is a fourth-year undergraduate journalism student at Toronto Metropolitan University. She is the Editor-in-Chief of CanCulture Magazine and works at TMU’s radio station, Met Radio as the Collective Coordinator – so she spends most of her time looking over other people’s work and replying to emails. In her work, she loves to talk about arts, culture and their importance to society.

Sign Up for Our Newsletters

Keep up to date with the latest stories from our newsroom.