Q with Tom Power

CBC
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Feb 16, 2026 • 39min

Natalie MacMaster on family, love and Cape Breton fiddle music

Natalie MacMaster is a virtuoso Canadian fiddle player from Cape Breton who’s brought traditional East Coast music to the rest of the world. She was nine when she got her first fiddle, but she felt like she already had nine years of experience at that point because she had been surrounded by fiddle music from the time she was born. Now, Natalie has released a new memoir, I Have a Love Story, which traces her incredible life in music. Last fall, she sat down with Tom Power to talk about her first fiddle, the advice Santana gave her when she broke a string on stage, and how to get your kids to practice music at home (she has seven children herself).
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Feb 13, 2026 • 38min

Nirvanna the Band the Show the Movie the Q Interview

Lifelong best friends and creative partners Jay McCarrol and Matt Johnson began their careers making the viral web series-turned-TV show Nirvanna the Band the Show. Now, they’ve adapted that project into a feature film, fittingly titled Nirvanna the Band the Show the Movie. During the Toronto International Film Festival back in September, Jay and Matt sat down with Tom Power to discuss the film, their friendship, the perils of fame and how they convincingly staged a wild stunt to jump off the CN Tower and parachute into the SkyDome.
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Feb 12, 2026 • 24min

Joan Chen is embracing her second act

Joan Chen, veteran actor and director known for The Last Emperor and Twin Peaks, talks about her new role in Montréal, ma belle and her career reinvention. She discusses playing a repressed immigrant mother who finds transformation. She reflects on performing in French, being discovered during the Cultural Revolution, early fame in China, and changing opportunities for Asian American roles.
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Feb 12, 2026 • 25min

Before stand-up, Wally Baram wanted to be a cowgirl

Wally Barham, comedian, TV writer and actor who’s written for What We Do in the Shadows and Shrinking, talks starting stand-up as a teen and dreaming of being a cowgirl. She shares how her eccentric Mexican-Syrian family fuels her material. Conversation covers writer’s rooms, transitioning into acting, and how personal storytelling shapes her comedy.
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Feb 11, 2026 • 35min

Aquakultre’s 1783 album celebrates Black history in Nova Scotia

This week, Canadian R&B musician Aquakultre (a.k.a. Lance Sampson) releases his new album, 1783. The title refers to a pivotal year for Afro-Nova Scotians: after the American War of Independence ended, thousands of Black Loyalists arrived in Nova Scotia seeking new homes. Lance traces his own family lineage back to those early settlers. He joins guest host Garvia Bailey to discuss the stories behind the record — and how that history continues to reverberate today.
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Feb 11, 2026 • 14min

Teagan Johnston turned her imposter syndrome into art

About a decade ago, Canadian musician Teagan Johnston was just getting her start in Toronto’s music scene. As her career began to gain momentum and her circle of musician friends grew, she found herself wrestling with some unexpected emotions. She was thrilled to see her peers succeed, but she also started to wonder whether she truly belonged, and if it would ever be her turn. Those conflicting feelings became the inspiration for her latest single, Neon Schoolgirl. Teagan joins guest host Garvia Bailey in the Q studio to tell us how writing the song helped her confront and overcome her imposter syndrome.
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Feb 10, 2026 • 24min

How Katherine LaNasa turned a hard year into an Emmy win

After more than 30 years on screen, Katherine LaNasa is finally having a breakout moment with her Emmy-winning role on The Pitt. But the road wasn't easy. As she was preparing to take on the hit medical drama, she was also undergoing treatment for breast cancer. Katherine sits down with guest host Garvia Bailey in the Q studio to talk about that health scare, her hard-fought early years as an actor, and what it means to reach a new level of recognition at this stage of her career.
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Feb 10, 2026 • 20min

RAAHiiM left church behind, but he’s still moved by the spirit

On his new album Pray for Me, Toronto-based R&B singer RAAHiiM straddles the line between his religious upbringing and a musical style that feels true to who he is. He talks to guest host Garvia Bailey about the breakout year he’s had since being named Apple Music Canada’s Up Next Artist, and how he honours both his family roots and his creative identity through his music.
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Feb 9, 2026 • 25min

Akinola Davies Jr. turned a childhood memory into an acclaimed film

Last year, a movie called My Father’s Shadow made history when it became the first Nigerian film to be officially selected for the Cannes Film Festival. Set over the course of a single day in Lagos in 1993 (a day that happens to be one of the most catastrophic in Nigerian history), the film follows two young boys who join their father on a trip to the city so he can collect his paycheck. The story is semi-autobiographical, based on director Akinola Davies Jr.’s own family experiences. During the 2025 Toronto International Film Festival, Akinola sat down with Tom Power to talk about memory, Nigeria’s lesser known history, and the stuff you learn about your parents after they're gone.
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Feb 9, 2026 • 23min

The wild story behind Canada’s cult classic Project Grizzly

Thirty years ago, a modest Canadian documentary called Project Grizzly turned into an unlikely cult classic, winning over high-profile admirers such as Quentin Tarantino. Directed by Peter Lynch, the film follows Troy Hurtubise — an unconventional metalworker and amateur inventor who survived a near-fatal grizzly bear attack as a young man. Determined to face a grizzly again, Troy sets out to build a bear-proof suit of armour from a mix of scrap metal, rubber, hockey equipment and duct tape. But what Peter ultimately captures on film is something more complicated: a portrait of a man whose bold dream slowly becomes an all-consuming obsession. Three decades later, Peter sits down with guest host Talia Schlanger in the Q studio to look back on the film and its enduring legacy.

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