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Joseph Planta
Joseph Planta interviews authors, journalists, celebrities and more.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Oct 1, 2024 • 37min
Bill Arnott
The writer Bill Arnott discusses his new book A Perfect Day for a Walk: The History, Cultures, and Communities of Vancouver, On Foot (Arsenal Pulp Press, 2024), with Joseph Planta.
A Perfect Day for a Walk: The History, Cultures, and Communities of Vancouver, On Foot by Bill Arnott (Arsenal Pulp Press, 2024).
Click to buy this book from Amazon.ca: A Perfect Day for a Walk
Text of the introduction by Joseph Planta:
I am Planta: On the Line, in Vancouver, British Columbia, at TheCommentary.ca.
Bill Arnott joins me now. He’s recently published a new book, A Perfect Day for a Walk: The History, Cultures, and Communities of Vancouver, On Foot. It’s part travelogue, and part history. In his observant, inimitable way, he walks parts of the city bringing the reader the sights and even sound, as well as points us to things we might have missed or overlooked, or taken for granted. He offers up hidden gems, as well as fascinating stories and histories of the neighbourhoods he walks through. Whether it’s Kitsilano, where he lives, or Granville Island, or False Creek or the West End, there’s all sorts of things we need to know about and remember. And even places like Yaletown or Chinatown or the Downtown Eastside, where we might have misconceptions about; are seen in a new light through Bill’s gaze. The book is a celebration of an ever-changing city, and there’s no better way to chart the city’s progress than on foot. I’ll ask Bill about why set out to document his walks, the various people he encounters on the way, that he canvasses for their thoughts about the direction of the city. I’ll also ask him about why he kept the journeys within the months of October to March. The book also has archival photos, as well as contemporary ones taken by Mr. Arnott, who joined me from here in Vancouver when we taped this interview nearly a month ago. Bill Arnott is the author of A Season on Vancouver Island, and the award-winning Gone Viking books. He is a fellow of the Royal Geographical Society. This new book is published by Arsenal Pulp Press. Please welcome to the Planta: On the Line program, Bill Arnott; Mr. Arnott, good morning.
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Oct 1, 2024 • 20min
Arash Khakpour
The acclaimed choreographer and performer, co-artistic director of The Biting School Arash Khakpour discusses their latest production Empty-Handed (02-05 October 2024 at the Firehall Arts Centre), with Joseph Planta.
Text of the introduction by Joseph Planta:
I am Planta: On the Line, in Vancouver, British Columbia, at TheCommentary.ca.
Arash Khakpour joins me now. The co-artistic director of The Biting School, he is the choreographer, and one of the performers of Empty-Handed, which begins tomorrow night, 02 October 2024 at the Firehall Arts Centre. The world premiere runs until Saturday (05 October 2024). I’ll ask Arash about the piece, and the themes explored therein: darkness, deception, and greed, all timely themes. It’s a contemporary dance piece. I’ll get Arash to tell us about the music, as well as the way this piece views the world. Visit www.firehallartscentre.ca for tickets and information. And visit www.bitingschool.com for more as well. Arash is joined onstage by the performers Juolin Lee, Marisa Gold, Hayley Gawthorp, and Antonio Somera Jr. We taped this interview last week. Please welcome to the Planta: On the Line program, Arash Khakpour; Mr. Khakpour, good morning.
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Sep 30, 2024 • 38min
Christopher Auchter
The filmmaker Christopher Auchter discusses his new documentary The Stand, which debuts this week at the Vancouver International Film Festival, a feature-length film on the 1985 blockade by the Haida on Lyell Island, with Joseph Planta.
Text of the introduction by Joseph Planta:
I am Planta: On the Line, in Vancouver, British Columbia, at TheCommentary.ca.
Christopher Auchter joins me again. The acclaimed filmmaker has a new film, a full-length feature that will debut this week at the Vancouver International Film Festival. In The Stand, Christopher with archival film and audio, takes the audience back to the fall of 1985 when a small group of Haida blockaded a dirt road on Lyell Island to demand that clear-cut logging stop as it’s been destroying salmon habitat and ravaging the old growth forests. There’s a lot of pressure exerted by the provincial and federal governments, as well as private logging interests, as the RCMP is called in to keep the peace and at times enforce various court orders. We see the court of public opinion form against the Haida, most vocally in the form of talk show host Jack Webster, who talks about the issue regularly on his highly rated BCTV morning program. I’ll ask Christopher about all the archival material he was able to draw upon. There’s radio interviews as well as high quality film shot from the perspective of the Haida, as well as the private logging firm contracted to work the forest. We see what it was like for the RCMP too, as the various points-of-view are featured throughout, almost-moment-to-moment. We see their conversations with the elders who take up the blockade, who also have to arrest them later on. We see Guujaaw on the front line, and how he communicates with others over a radio. Miles Richardson is featured in the film through his appearances with Webster and their vigorous debates, as is then-NDP MP Svend Robinson, also a lawyer, who’s on the front line. As the complex legal process plays out, the obtaining and enforcing of injunctions and the sort, we see what it’s like on the front lines and how with such dignity and grace what compels the Haida to take a stand. There’s a great character in the film, used as a sort of narrator that I’ll ask Chris about, Mouse Woman. Voiced by Delores Churchill, she adds some levity but also poignancy as we see throughout the film, as well as narrative information that provides further context to the events. It’s a powerful film, and one that tells necessary history considering what this critical moment provided as an inflection point for the future of land claims and Indigenous sovereignty. Christopher Auchter has appeared on the program twice to talk about his previous short films 2017’s The Mountains of SGaana, and 2019’s Now is the Time. Christopher Auchter wrote and directed, as well as animated The Stand, which is produced in association with Knowledge Network and the National Film Board of Canada. The film screens at the Vancouver International Film Festival this Thursday, 03 October 2024 at 8.45pm at SFU Woodwards, and Saturday, 05 October 2024 at International Village; at 3.15pm. Chris will be at both screenings. We taped this interview eleven days ago. Please welcome back to the Planta: On the Line program, Christopher Auchter; Mr. Auchter, good morning.
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Sep 26, 2024 • 19min
Kevin Chen
The acclaimed pianist Kevin Chen previews his upcoming performance at the Kay Meek Centre (Saturday, 28 September 2024), the program of Chopin and Liszt, music, and more, with Joseph Planta.
Text of the introduction by Joseph Planta:
I am Planta: On the Line, in Vancouver, British Columbia, at TheCommentary.ca.
The Kay Meek Arts Centre is kicking off its 20th anniversary season. A gala dinner is planned for November 23rd, but this Saturday their Resonate Series begins with a performance by the acclaimed pianist Kevin Chen. Mr. Chen joins me now to talk about his program of Chopin and Liszt, what their music means to him, and what performing them will be like. At 19 years old, Mr. Chen is already a Canadian superstar in the making. The CBC has named him one of the Top 30 Hot Canadian Classical Musicians Under 30, while Maclean’s Magazine had him on a list of 100 Remarkable Canadians. He debuted at the age of seven with the Abbotsford Symphony and has already performed with the Minnesota Orchestra, the Hungarian National Orchestra, Orchestre de la Suisse Romande, the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra, the Taipei Symphony, and the Edmonton Symphony and Calgary Philharmonic. It was in Calgary where he joined me from last week, but he spends most of his time in Hanover, where he studies full time. You can visit https://www.kevinchenpiano.com/ for more information. Tickets for Saturday’s performance at the Kay Meek’s Grosvenor Stage can be had at www.kaymeek.com. Showtime is at 7.30pm, but there’s a pre-concert talk at 6.45pm. Please welcome to the Planta: On the Line program, Kevin Chen; Mr. Chen, good morning.
The post Kevin Chen first appeared on thecommentary.ca.

Sep 25, 2024 • 29min
Carol Off
The broadcaster and author Carol Off discusses her new book At a Loss for Words: Conversations in an Age of Rage (Random House Canada, 2024), with Joseph Planta.
At a Loss for Words: Conversations in an Age of Rage by Carol Off (Random House Canada, 2024).
Click to buy this book from Amazon.ca: At a Loss for Words
Text of introduction by Joseph Planta:
I am Planta: On the Line, in Vancouver, British Columbia, at TheCommentary.ca.
Carol Off joins me again. She’s just published, At a Loss for Words: Conversations in an Age of Rage, and it’s already a bestseller. In the book, she looks at six words that have lost their meaning in recent years: freedom, democracy, truth, woke, choice, and taxes. These are words that have been distorted and weaponised, to the point where their meaning today is often discounted or meant to be derogatory. These are words that were associated with civil rights and social justice, and she works through the book a way to reclaim them. Along the way she looks at how so many people are falling for conspiracy theories, getting hoodwinked by autocrats, and buying into the rage. And Carol noticed this as she was wrapping up her decade and a half as co-host of CBC Radio’s As It Happens. She noticed in the conversations she was having with guests, how polarised the conversations were getting. It’s an engaging book, one that’s informative like when she talks about the Hungarian influence on politics outside of its country, like Canada, as well as how Facebook has been weaponised, using The Philippines as an example, as she shares conversations with Maria Ressa. Carol Off is an award-winning journalist, who before her over fifteen years at As It Happens, covered Canadian and international affairs. Her first bestselling book The Lion, The Fox and The Eagle, was a bestseller and critically acclaimed. She’s written three more award-winning books of narrative nonfiction, including her most recent, which she was on the program with in 2017, All We Leave Behind: A Reporter’s Journey Into the Lives of Others. This new book is published by Random House Canada. We spoke three weeks ago, with Carol joining me from Toronto. Please welcome back to the Planta: On the Line program, Carol Off; Ms. Off, good morning.
The post Carol Off first appeared on thecommentary.ca.

Sep 25, 2024 • 30min
Marion McKinnon Crook
The bestselling author Marion McKinnon Crook discusses her recent memoir Always On Call: Adventures in Nursing, Ranching, and Rural Living (Heritage House, 2024), with Joseph Planta.
Always on Call: Adventures in Nursing, Ranching, and Rural Living by Marion McKinnon Crook (Heritage House, 2024).
Click to buy this book from Amazon.ca: Always on Call
Text of introduction by Joseph Planta:
I am Planta: On the Line, in Vancouver, British Columbia, at TheCommentary.ca.
Marion McKinnon Crook is the author of Always On Call: Adventures in Nursing, Ranching, and Rural Living. It was published this past spring, and has remained on the bestsellers list since. It’s a sequel to Always Pack A Candle, and they’re marvelous insights into the life of a public health nurse in rural British Columbia in the 1970s. Marion joins me now to talk about this book, and about what it was like for her and her family in the Cariboo, a vast rural territory that quickly becomes home to her husband Carl, their three young children, and the many farm animals they have. It’s not without its challenges as we read in the book, as Marion also has to oversee a small staff of rural public health nurses. She encounters runaway patients, needle-phobic hockey players, and stories of abuse and neglect. It’s also the 1970s and we see some social progress, especially for women. Marion McKinnon Crook is a nurse, educator, and author of over twenty-five books. Along with her nursing degree, she has a master’s in liberal arts, and a PhD in education. She is also the author of the British Book Tour mystery series under the name of Emma Dakin. Visit www.marioncrookauthor.com for more. The book is published by Heritage House. We taped this interview in mid June 2024, with Marion joining me from Gibsons, British Columbia. Please welcome to the Planta: On the Line program, Marion McKinnon Crook; Dr. Crook, good morning.
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Sep 23, 2024 • 42min
Jenny Heijun Wills
The award-winning writer and academic Jenny Heijun Wills discusses her new collection of essays Everything and Nothing At All (Knopf, 2024), with Joseph Planta.
Everything and Nothing At All by Jenny Heijun Wills (Knopf, 2024).
Click to buy this book from Amazon.ca: Everything and Nothing At All
Text of introduction by Joseph Planta:
I am Planta: On the Line, in Vancouver, British Columbia, at TheCommentary.ca.
One of the important books of the year is the new collection of essays by Jenny Heijun Wills, Everything and Nothing at All. She writes of herself in the context of the world around her and within her. As a transnational adoptee, she writes of race and ethnicity not only from her perspective, but she looks critically at how others might see her then as now. In her discussions of mental illness, self-harm, queerness, polyamory, and eating disorder, she is frank and honest. Her ability to convey her own feelings as well as invite the reader to think critically of their own on a variety of subjects is so necessary in today’s culture. Take for example how she contends with how she perceived abuse, and how she might have tolerated or rationalised it in the past, and how her view changes because of a myriad of issues, like maturing or being a parent. The wisdom brims in the book, as it’s more than personal history but also literary criticism. Her ability to provide cultural context on a variety of issues is often informative and surprising. Jenny Heijun Wills was born in Seoul, South Korea, and was adopted and raised in a white family in Southern Ontario. She wrote about a lot of her experiences in her critically acclaimed and prize-winning Older Sister, Not Necessarily Related. It was the recipient of the Hilary Weston Writers’ Trust Nonfiction Prize in 2019, and the Manitoba Book Awards Best First Book Prize in 2020. This new book, from Knopf, is already a 2024 finalist for the Weston Writers’ Trust Nonfiction Prize. She is a Fulbright Alum (Harvard), and in 2015 was a visiting Scholar at Stanford University. She holds two BA-Hons degrees, an MA, and a PhD. She currently teaches at the University of Winnipeg. We taped this interview in late August, with Jenny joining me from Toronto. Please welcome to the Planta: On the Line program, Jenny Heijun Wills; Professor Wills, good morning.
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Sep 23, 2024 • 42min
Jon Taylor
The retired fisherman and boat builder Jon Taylor discusses his memoir Fried Eggs and Fish Scales: Tales from a Sointula Troller (Harbour Publishing, 2024), with Joseph Planta.
Fried Eggs and Fish Scales: Tales from a Sointula Troller by Jon Taylor (Harbour Publishing, 2024).
Click to buy this book from Amazon.ca: Fried Eggs and Fish Scales
Text of introduction by Joseph Planta:
I am Planta: On the Line, in Vancouver, British Columbia, at TheCommentary.ca.
We go to Sointula, for this next conversation. I reached Jon Taylor back in June to talk about his memoir, Fried Eggs and Fish Scales: Tales from a Sointula Troller. As you’ll hear, I begin the interview by placing where Sointula is; it’s a place at the northeastern end of Vancouver Island. It’s on Malcolm Island, and Jon’s own family history there extends back to the early part of the twentieth century. His Finnish grandparents had planned to join the other Finns who’d moved there to found their own “workers paradise,” however on seeing the island, they moved back to Cuba. Jon moved there in 1976, and it’s fascinating to read of the lifestyle and what he did to make a living. We read about the rollicking commercial fishery, island life, Jon’s years as a fisherman and boat builder, as well the memorable people that he tells us about throughout the book. It’s a memorable book, as is Jon, whose ability to tell a good story on the page or over the phone are joys to behold. Jon Taylor is a retired fisherman and boat builder. He is a lifelong writer of poetry, memoir, essays and fiction, and he is an avid musician. We taped this interview in early June. The book is from Harbour Publishing. Please welcome to the Planta: On the Line program, Jon Taylor; Mr. Taylor, good morning.
The post Jon Taylor first appeared on thecommentary.ca.

May 31, 2024 • 33min
Davey Calderon
The playwright Davey Calderon discusses UNSCRIPTED: Deep Fried, a new musical in progress that is having a special performance at PL 1422 (1422 William Street) on Sunday, 09 June 2024 at 6pm, with Joseph Planta.
Text of the introduction by Joseph Planta:
I am Planta: On the Line, in Vancouver, British Columbia, at TheCommentary.ca.
Upcoming on Sunday, 09 June 2024, at PL 1422, that’s at 1422 William Street, will be an exciting event from Playwrights Theatre Centre, UNSCRIPTED: Deep Fried. It’s a new musical in progress. It’s timely as it’s Filipino Heritage Month, and will showcase Filipinx Canadian artists in the community. Its author Davey Calderon joins me now to talk about Deep Fried, and how he was inspired to write the piece. I’ll ask him about the central character Toni, their dreams of a music career, and how the show’s setting, a fast-food establishment in the heart of Vancouver’s Joyce Collingwood neighbourhood fosters community and the realisation of one’s aspirations. The neighbourhood, long a central location for members of the Philippine community, is also facing the challenge of gentrification, and that comes into focus in this piece, and the discussion after the show. Davey Calderon is a playwright and the Dramaturg for Playwrights Theatre Centre. He has a BFA in Theatre Performance and Communication from Simon Fraser University, and is the co-founder of New(to)Town Collective. His first written solo show, Big Queer Filipino Karaoke Night! premiered at the 2018 Vancouver Fringe Festival. Visit www.playwrightstheatre.com for more information. Tickets to Deep Fried can be had at www.bit.ly/unscriptedDFtix. Please welcome to the Planta: On the Line program, Davey Calderon; Davey, good morning.
The post Davey Calderon first appeared on thecommentary.ca.

May 30, 2024 • 38min
Nathalie De Los Santos
The writer and a member of the organizing team for the Filipino-Canadian Book Festival Nathalie De Los Santos discusses the 12-14 July 2024 events, her bookstagram PilipinxPages, and more, with Joseph Planta.
Text of the introduction by Joseph Planta:
I am Planta: On the Line, in Vancouver, British Columbia, at TheCommentary.ca.
I’ve been a big fan of Nathalie De Los Santos for a while now. She’s an internet influencer in the best sense of the word. She uses her popular Instagram account, PilipinxPages to showcase books by authors of Philippine heritage. As I mention in the interview, I’ve bought many books because of her posts, and I enjoy it a great deal. But Nathalie, who joins me now, is more than her Instagram handle. Among the many things she does in the community, she is part of the organising team for the Filipino-Canadian Book Festival, which is taking place 12-14 July 2024. As I’ll be on hiatus on the podcast, I’m happy to talk to Nathalie about the impetus of this important event, the planning involved, and what we’ll expect that weekend in July. It’s early days, and even though we taped this interview last week, there are already a number of events planned, and Nathalie will tell us about those shortly. The events will take place at the Joyce Collingwood Neighbourhood House, and Massy Arts Society. It’ll be a great chance to celebrate and amplify the voices of Filipino Canadian authors, artists and creators. Visit their website at https://filcanbookfest.squarespace.com for more information. Between now and July 12th, they’ll be updating it with information. Nathalie De Los Santos is a writer and creative based here in Vancouver. She is also the creator of the podcast Filipino Fairy Tales, Mythology and Folklore, and the author of Hasta Mañana, Alice’s Order; and is working on a Filipino folklore inspired fantasy novel called Diyosa Mata. Visit her own website at www.natdls.com for more. Please welcome to the Planta: On the Line program, Nathalie De Los Santos; Ms. De Los Santos, good morning.
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