The Current

CBC
undefined
Mar 31, 2026 • 16min

Wanna Bet? Prediction markets are coming to Canada.

Imagine a world where you can bet on everything from when the war in Iran will end to how many tweets Elon Musk will post in a week. That world exists in prediction markets, and now those markets are coming to Canada. We talk to Werner Antweiler, an Associate professor at UBC’s Sauder School of Business, and he ran his own not-for-profit prediction market experiment for more than 20 years. 
undefined
Mar 31, 2026 • 20min

The ABCs of the Canada-Alberta MOU

It’s been just over four months since Prime Minister Mark Carney and Alberta Premier Danielle Smith signed a memorandum of understanding giving Alberta special exemptions from federal environmental laws and setting the stage for a new oil pipeline to the west coast. But both sides are set to miss an early deadline on April 1st because of sticking points. Former oil executive Richard Massen and Clean Prosperity President and CEO Michael Bernstein discuss what's at stake if delays continue.
undefined
Mar 30, 2026 • 19min

NDP’s new leader, Avi Lewis, lays out the road ahead

Avi Lewis, newly elected leader of the federal NDP and progressive campaigner, discusses the party’s steep rebuilding task. He talks about why the NDP lost support, cooperation with Liberals, reclaiming working-class voters, and his stance on new oil and gas production with a focus on just transition for workers.
undefined
6 snips
Mar 30, 2026 • 24min

Is This War About to Get Bigger?

Dahlia Shandlin, political analyst in Tel Aviv, explains Israeli public mood and shifting war aims. Robert Pape, UChicago political scientist, outlines escalation dynamics and why deployments risk irreversible ground combat. Arash Azizi, historian reporting on Iranians, describes daily fears, changing public opinion, and political constraints on negotiations. The conversation traces signs of widening conflict and the barriers to a clear off-ramp.
undefined
Mar 30, 2026 • 25min

No joy: when music falls flat for people

Robert Zatorre, a McGill cognitive neuroscientist who studies how music triggers reward, and Bill Weiss, who lives with specific musical anhedonia and feels no pleasure from songs. They describe what it is like to not be moved by music. Conversations cover the brain wiring behind musical reward, survey and scan findings, heritability, and how people find pleasure in other ways.
undefined
Mar 27, 2026 • 26min

Canadian efforts to help the crisis in Cuba

Eddie Garcia, a Cuban tour guide sharing first-hand accounts of shortages and blackouts. Julia Poggle, a CBC documentary reporter covering Canada’s aid efforts. They describe life under rolling blackouts, the logistics of sending medical and food shipments, cancelled flights that disrupted relief, and the long history of Canadian ties and grassroots aid efforts in Cuba.
undefined
Mar 27, 2026 • 16min

Will the Blue Jays make it back to the World Series?

Ben Shulman, radio play-by-play voice for the Blue Jays and son of Dan Shulman, brings a broadcaster's ear. Dan Shulman, long-time TV play-by-play announcer, shares decades of MLB perspective. They trade stories about Opening Day energy, roster upgrades and pitching additions, injury concerns and replacing key hitters, franchise 50th season reflections, and the challenge of getting back to the World Series.
undefined
Mar 27, 2026 • 19min

What's the path forward for the federal NDP?

Pat Atkinson, former Saskatchewan cabinet minister with 25 years in the legislature, and Libby Davies, former long-serving Vancouver MP and interim party leader, debate the NDP's path forward. They discuss leadership contenders Avi Lewis and Heather McPherson. Topics include rebuilding after a poor result, prairie concerns about policy like LEAP, energizing young organizers, and strategies to broaden the party nationally.
undefined
Mar 27, 2026 • 9min

Why Canada wants to launch its own satellites

Brigadier General Christopher Horner, commander of 3 Canadian Space Division, outlines why Canada wants its own launch capability. He talks about space as critical infrastructure and threats to satellites. He explains the need for assured access and resilience, why Nova Scotia is ideal for launches, and what a functional spaceport must include.
undefined
Mar 26, 2026 • 20min

Will the Supreme Court overturn Bill 21?

Eric Adams, a constitutional law professor versed in the Charter and notwithstanding clause. Daniel Beland, a political scientist focused on Quebec politics and secularism. They discuss Quebec laïcité and its roots. They trace how religious symbols became a political flashpoint. They explore potential political fallout and the broader legal stakes before the Supreme Court.

The AI-powered Podcast Player

Save insights by tapping your headphones, chat with episodes, discover the best highlights - and more!
App store bannerPlay store banner
Get the app