Pull Quotes Podcast

Pull Quotes Season 2, Episode 11: A Second Pull Quotes Valentine

Katherine Singh and Jordan Currie join Michal for an exploration of how women’s desire gets talked about in the media. Featured interviews with Laura Hensley of Global News and Jaime Green from the New York Times Review of Books.
Pull Quotes Podcast

Pull Quotes Season 2, Episode 10: Thoughts on the Obit Section (people are dying to get in there)

This week on Pull Quotes, we ask: how are papers rethinking the obituary section?
Pull Quotes Podcast

Pull Quotes Season 2, Episode 9: Where Would We Be Without Student Newspapers?

Journalists and editors from student newspapers across Ontario talk about the big-impact stories their papers broke.
Pull Quotes Podcast

Pull Quotes Season 2, Episode 8: An Existential Search for Jewish Media in Canada

With only one national Canadian Jewish publication remaining, what perspectives aren’t we getting?
Pull Quotes Podcast

Pull Quotes: Season 2, Episode 7 — A Year in (Ryerson) Review

RRJ colleagues bring in their year-in-review Pull Quotes and we talk to Geoff Zochodne about the GM closure.
Pull Quotes Podcast

Pull Quotes: Season 2, Episode 6 – Is journalism failing women?

Notes from the RRJ Unpublished event where six voices from across the industry responded to the question.
Pull Quotes Podcast

Pull Quotes: Season 2, Episode 5 – What we talk about when we (don’t) talk about Indigenous curricula

Julian Brave Noisecat says we’re “just starting to scratch the surface of writing and reporting guidelines” when it comes to talking about Indigenous issues in the context of education. Louise Brown also weighs in.
Pull Quotes Podcast

Pull Quotes: Season 2, Episode 4 – Note to Media: Hire More Trans People

A conversation with Al Donato and Alex Verman
Pull Quotes Podcast

Pull Quotes: Season 2, Episode 3 – 12 years to save the planet

How Canadian journalists have been covering the UN IPCC report
Pull Quotes Podcast

Pull Quotes: Season 2, Episode 2 – A Three-Month Long Civics Lesson

What can we learn from the coverage of a municipal election that was anything but ordinary?