Episodes
![End Credits #351 - July 24, 2024 (Twisters)](https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog613846/endcreditssq_copy_300x300.jpg)
23 hours ago
End Credits #351 - July 24, 2024 (Twisters)
23 hours ago
23 hours ago
This week on End Credits, we're thinking about stormy weather! About a week after a major storm washed out so many parts of Ontario, including the Pergola Galaxy Cinemas here in Guelph, we're going to take things up a notch with Twisters. And on the subject of weather and the movies, we will talk about some other movies about the weather.
This Wednesday, July 24, at 3 pm, Adam A. Donaldson and Peter Salmon will discuss:
Weather Flap. The movie of the week leads to a rather obvious pre-review discussion. There are a lot of movies about the weather, or movies where the weather has a major influence on the plot, and while it my not be obvious, not all of those movies are based in disasters. That brings us to this week's show, where between the snow, and the rain, and the floods we will talk about our favourite movies inspired by the weather.
Twisters (2024). It shouldn't be surprising that someone would want to make a sequel to Twister, the 1996 smash about tornado chasers in Oklahoma. It's kinda surprising that we're getting it almost 30 years later, but if there's ever been a good time for a tornado movie, it's now! Daisy Edgar-Jones and Glen Powell replace Helen Hunt and Bill Paxton leading a new generation of chasers through tornado ally on a quest for science and thrills. The formula is solid, but can this team catch... (ahem) lightning in a bottle?!
End Credits is on CFRU 93.3 fm and cfru.ca Wednesday at 3 pm.
![GUELPH POLITICAST #428 – The S#!t Disturber (feat. Mike Sullivan)](https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/image-logo/613846/new_politicast_copy_300x300.jpg)
3 days ago
3 days ago
What could have been a small one-day story about disagreements around the table at Stratford city council has become emblematic of a bigger issue. Aside from the fine line between criticism of our civic leaders and outright threatening behaviour, there’s also a question about whether their mayor and council are being as open and transparent as it should be, and one man - famously - has his doubts.
Members from Get Concerned Stratford have appeared on this podcast before. The group itself was born out of concerns around Stratford council’s efforts to approve the construction of a controversial glass plant in the city. But the circumstances that led to the Xinyi controversy lingered, even with a new council, and it all seemed to come together at a council meeting on February 26.
At that meeting, there was a report about the use of closed meeting protocols that showed Stratford council was frequently making decisions in-camera, but attention instead went to a matter of zoning where two delegates - Mike Sullivan and Barb Shaughnessy - were accused of making statements that were allegedly threatening and disrespectful. They both got three-month bans from council and that's where the controversy - and this podcast - really begins!
Sullivan joins us this week to tell us about what happened at the February 26 meeting, how he learned that he was temporarily banned from council and what happened the first time he showed up anyway. He will also tell us about his efforts to learn more about what goes on in closed meetings, the repeatedly failed attempts to get the ban lifted, and where the battle goes now that the ban has expired. Also, where's the fine line between legitimate criticism and an ad hominem attack?
So let's look at what's going on in Stratford with this week's Guelph Politicast!
Some late breaking news at Monday council’s meeting it was unanimously decided that the Respectful Workplace Policy would be reviewed by staff, but only two members of council voted to suspend the policy. You can learn more about Get Concerned Stratford at their website here. You can find links to the videos of council meetings at the City of Stratford at their website.
The host for the Guelph Politicast is Podbean. Find more episodes of the Politicast here, or download them on your favourite podcast app at Apple, TuneIn and Spotify.
Also, when you subscribe to the Guelph Politicast channel and you will also get an episode of Open Sources Guelph every Monday, and an episode of End Credits every Friday.
Photo Courtesy of Get Concerned Stratford Facebook.
![Open Sources Guelph #478 - July 18, 2024](https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog613846/openlogo1copy_300x300.jpg)
5 days ago
Open Sources Guelph #478 - July 18, 2024
5 days ago
5 days ago
This week on Open Sources Guelph, it was a rough one. Looking south of the border these days is a white knuckle ride through all your fears about the future, and it's so bad that we have to dedicate the whole first half of our show to talk about American politics. We will then look closer to home and talk to a member of our local city council about a concern that all of us have these days. You know what we're talking about.
This Thursday, July 18, at 5 pm, Scotty Hertz and Adam A. Donaldson will discuss:
This is America. It's been a wild week in American politics, and that's really saying something in the year of Our Lord 2024 A.D. On the weekend, there was an attempted assassination of Donald Trump, the Republic National Convention began, MAGA-stan J.D. Vance was named Trump's VP nominee, Elon Musk announced he's giving a Trump PAC $45 million a month, and a pro-Trump judge dismissed his classified documents case. Oh, and the Dems are still in disarray. We'll wrap our heads around this in a super-sized news segment.
Klassen Act. This week at Guelph city council, there was a new report about the Guelph Tiny Homes Coalition project. We've now entered the second half of the year, so winter is closer than it was a few months ago when this project first came up, and the pressure is on to get something going. One of the people feeling that pressure is Ward 2 Councillor Carly Klassen, who will join us this week to talk about her thinking on the matter, the ongoing effort at city hall to fight homelessness, and how she's co-ordinating between council and the concerns of Downtown Guelph people.
Open Sources is live on CFRU 93.3 fm and cfru.ca at 5 pm on Thursday.
![End Credits #350 - July 17, 2024 (The 1999 Movie Draft)](https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog613846/endcreditssq_copy_300x300.jpg)
Friday Jul 19, 2024
End Credits #350 - July 17, 2024 (The 1999 Movie Draft)
Friday Jul 19, 2024
Friday Jul 19, 2024
This week on End Credits, we're going back to the turn of the millennium, or do we mean the Willennium? For those of you who remember the turn of the century have we got a treat for you! Remember 1999? A lot of great movies came out that year, and some people think that it might be the one of the best for the breadth and variety of projects, so this week. we'll draft them!
This Wednesday, July 17, at 3 pm, Adam A. Donaldson, Tim Phillips, Candice Lepage and Peter Salmon will discuss:
The 1999 Movie Draft. Now halfway to episode #400, we pause to hold a very special movie draft. Exactly 25 years ago, we were halfway through what's come to be known in some quarters as the "Best Movie Year Ever". This week, the whole gang is here to draft the great films of that year, from a cyberspace dystopia to a Shakespeare comedy in high school to the mockumentary about a scary witch in the forests of Maryland. This week, we're going to party like it's... you-know-what. Cue the Prince!
End Credits is on CFRU 93.3 fm and cfru.ca Wednesday at 3 pm.
![GUELPH POLITICAST #427 – The Squeeze](https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/image-logo/613846/new_politicast_copy_300x300.jpg)
Wednesday Jul 17, 2024
GUELPH POLITICAST #427 – The Squeeze
Wednesday Jul 17, 2024
Wednesday Jul 17, 2024
The housing and affordability issues are massive, and to think that one action at one level of government is going to have a measurable impact is not understand that. This week at city hall, Guelph council will talk about proceeding with a tiny homes encampment, but that's one finger in one hole of a dam that needs a lot of repairs.
Reaching back into the files of Open Sources Guelph, we highlight three interviews that lay out the structural and systemic issues that led to the housing and affordability crises:
All the way back last March, we talked to Dr. Paul Kershaw, the founder, lead researcher and executive chair of Generation Squeeze who told us about what the then-upcoming federal and provincial budgets mean for young people, and others in Canada looking some government relief in an expensive world.
In October, we were joined by Craig Pickthorne from the Ontario Living Wage Network to talk about affordability, the minimum wage hike, and the giant gap in-between. This came before it was announced that the living wage in Guelph and area had gone up to nearly $21 per hour, which is about $5 difference over the current minimum wage.
And from November, we will hear Wellington County councillor and chair of the Social Services Committee David Anderson who’s going to talk about working with the City of Guelph on creating solutions to the great and increasing community need.
So let's talk about the broader issues in fining housing solutions on this week's Guelph Politicast!
You can tune into Open Sources Guelph every Thursday at 5 pm. You can also catch up with the goings on at city council by subscribing the Guelph Politico Tip Sheet newsletter on Substack.
The host for the Guelph Politicast is Podbean. Find more episodes of the Politicast here, or download them on your favourite podcast app at Apple, TuneIn and Spotify.
Also, when you subscribe to the Guelph Politicast channel and you will also get an episode of Open Sources Guelph every Monday, and an episode of End Credits every Friday.
![Open Sources Guelph #477 - July 11, 2024](https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog613846/openlogo1copy_300x300.jpg)
Monday Jul 15, 2024
Open Sources Guelph #477 - July 11, 2024
Monday Jul 15, 2024
Monday Jul 15, 2024
This week on Open Sources Guelph, we're right brained. An ideological shift? Hardly, but there's been a lot of action on the right side of the political spectrum in the last week, meaning that we're going to talk about election outcomes across the Pond, and a bizarre road show that's now rolling across Canada and rallying people to hate. For the interview this week, were going to talk about architecture with someone who knows.
This Thursday, July 11, at 5 pm, Scotty Hertz and Adam A. Donaldson will discuss:
Right Flight. Two elections in two of Europe's biggest countries have re-phrased the global fight against far-right extremism. Labour's landslide victory in the U.K. general election ended 14 years of chaotic Tory rule while the fascist National Front hit a wall in France's snap election thanks to strategic voting. It seems like that right-wing momentum has been stunted, but the struggle is probably still far from over. We will talk about what happens next.
Diago-Gone. Last weekend, residents in the Carp area of Ottawa were a little shocked that the Carp Agricultural Society would rent space to a far-right, racist, neo-Nazi adjacent group - apparently - without knowing who they are. The Diagolons are on a cross-country tour creatively called the "Road Rage Terror Tour" and it may be coming to a town near you, but is the average person on the street aware of who they are, and what they want?
Centre Rage. On Wednesday, Premier Doug Ford said again that the condition of the Ontario Science Centre is so dire that it needed to close, but that's still news to a lot of experts and one of them is Elsa Lam, the editor of Canadian Architect magazine. Lam will join on this week's show to break down those technical concerns, what work will need to be done to make the building secure, and why the Ontario government should just fess up and tell everyone that they got this one wrong.
Open Sources is live on CFRU 93.3 fm and cfru.ca at 5 pm on Thursday.
Photo courtesy of Twitter/X.
![End Credits #349 - July 10, 2024 (Fancy Dance)](https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog613846/endcreditssq_copy_300x300.jpg)
Friday Jul 12, 2024
End Credits #349 - July 10, 2024 (Fancy Dance)
Friday Jul 12, 2024
Friday Jul 12, 2024
This week on End Credits, we dance! Fancy Dance. You may not have heard of this movie, but it's there waiting for you on AppleTV+ and it might just be one of the best movies you will see this year. And, along similar topics, we will dedicate the first part of the show to some of the best movies that we've seen so far in this very fleeting year of 2024 now more than halfway over.
This Wednesday, July 10, at 3 pm, Adam A. Donaldson and Tim Phillips will discuss:
The Best of the Year (So Far...). There's been a lot of anxious talk abut what kind of movie year this has been with the bad box office and the slim pickin's coming out of the strikes last year, but what if it hasn't been a bad movie year? As usual, you can find some diamonds in the rough if you want to go looking for them, and this week we will go looking for them. What are some of the best movies released so far in 2024? We will give you six of them.
REVIEW: Fancy Dance (2024). Lily Gladstone got an Oscar-nomination for her fantastic work in Killers of the Flower Moon, but during the campaign, it was this movie that she really wanted to talk about. Fancy Dance, which is from documentarian Erica Tremblay, follows a woman from the Seneca-Cayuga First Nation as she desperately tries to protect her teenage niece from social workers and the horrible knowledge that her missing mother is probably dead. Sounds dire, but is it possible that Fancy Dance is one of the most heart warming movies of the year?
End Credits is on CFRU 93.3 fm and cfru.ca Wednesday at 3 pm.
![GUELPH POLITICAST #426 – The Year at Committees So Far...](https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/image-logo/613846/new_politicast_copy_300x300.jpg)
Wednesday Jul 10, 2024
GUELPH POLITICAST #426 – The Year at Committees So Far...
Wednesday Jul 10, 2024
Wednesday Jul 10, 2024
There's a lot of work when it comes to the grind of municipal governance and policy development, but it doesn't always start with city council (though it does often end with them). So on this episode of the podcast we're going to try and cram six months of work by eight different committees into 30 minutes of audio, from the retirement of the library's head to the debate over a bus chime to the ongoing issues around housing.
This week we will cover the highlights of the Accessibility Advisory Committee, the Wellington-Dufferin-Guelph Board of Health, the Grand River Conservation Authority, Guelph Police Services Board, the Guelph Public Library Board of Directors, Heritage Guelph, the Joint Social Services and Land Ambulance Committee, and the Transit Advisory Committee between January and June.
This is not an exhaustive list of those committees activities, but it will give you some idea of what they've been up to. Some of this work has already made its way to council like several approved heritage designations, or the move to online voting for the next municipal election, and some of it's coming up in the near future, like a final decision on the Guelph Tiny Homes Coalition proposal. This is a chance to go inside and see how the proverbial sausage is made before it comes to market at city council.
So let's see what the boards and committees have been up to on this week's Guelph Politicast!
There’s a Guelph Police Services Board meeting next week, but for the most part committees are not getting back to business until September. To see full recaps, and committee meeting previews, check out the “Local Boards and Committees” page on the Guelph Politico website.
The host for the Guelph Politicast is Podbean. Find more episodes of the Politicast here, or download them on your favourite podcast app at Apple, TuneIn and Spotify.
Also, when you subscribe to the Guelph Politicast channel and you will also get an episode of Open Sources Guelph every Monday, and an episode of End Credits every Friday.
![Open Sources (Ep. #476) Show Notes for July 4, 2024](https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog613846/openlogo1copy_300x300.jpg)
Monday Jul 08, 2024
Open Sources (Ep. #476) Show Notes for July 4, 2024
Monday Jul 08, 2024
Monday Jul 08, 2024
This week on Open Sources Guelph, we're dealing with disappointment. Was it wrong to hope that an 81-year-old man would find the energy at 9 pm on a weeknight to argue with a sociopath for two hours? Maybe, but then again it's hard for leaders half that age to avoid calls to leave out the side door, at least that is what's going on our own capital. In terms of good news, we're going to talk to a community group that is literally making it a cool summer for low income people in Hamilton.
This Thursday, July 4, at 5 pm, Scotty Hertz and Adam A. Donaldson will discuss:
Grumpy Old Men. To say that there was a lot riding on last Thursday's presidential debate for Joe Biden is an understatement, but despite almost pitifully low expectations, Biden was unable to clear the bar, his raspy voice sometimes vanishing into a dissembling stammer. The post-debate freak out was further compounded on Monday when people were reminded of the stakes of this election as the U.S. Supreme Court decided that presidents have some legal immunity after all. So what happens now?
Tru-don't? Not to be outdone by all the craziness south of the border, the Liberal Party is also allegedly looking to make a change at the top of the proverbial ticket. In the wake of last week's loss in Toronto-St. Paul, there's supposedly some dissatisfaction in the Liberal ranks with Justin Trudeau's leadership, enough, it seems, to make some members want a new leader before next year's election. But is such a move advisable, and who is the new magical leader that can save Liberal fortunes?
Air Force Won. In the wake of a rapidly changing climate, air conditioning is no longer a "nice to have" but a necessity of life, one that people can't easily afford in the midst of compounding affordability crises in housing, food and utilities. In Hamilton, the council there recently approved assisting low income residents get access to air conditioning, and that's to the credit of ACORN Hamilton. This week, we're going to be joined by organizer Taylor Korolenchuk about how they're successfully helping people in need stay cool in the Hammer.
Open Sources is live on CFRU 93.3 fm and cfru.ca at 5 pm on Thursday.
![End Credits #348 - July 3, 2024 (The Greatest Hits)](https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog613846/endcreditssq_copy_300x300.jpg)
Friday Jul 05, 2024
End Credits #348 - July 3, 2024 (The Greatest Hits)
Friday Jul 05, 2024
Friday Jul 05, 2024
This week on End Credits, we see the music! Let's be clear, this is not a music show, but we're still dedicating this episode to the very busy intersection between the movies and music. For the review, we've got a movie called The Greatest Hits, which is about time travel, and speaking of greatest hits were going to revisit an old-fashioned bit of cross promotion called "the soundtrack".
This Wednesday, July 3, at 3 pm, Adam A. Donaldson and Candice Lepage will discuss:
Soundtrack and Vision. Since our movie this week is about music, and since this is a show about movies, why don't we combine the two? Movies and music have gone together since the beginning, although the music part used to be done live, so it makes that we got around to the idea at some point to highlight the movie soundtrack. This week, we draw some of our favourite tracks from our favourite soundtracks.
REVIEW: The Greatest Hits (2024). You know when that one perfect song takes back to a certain moment in time? What if that was literal? That's the conceit of The Greatest Hits, a new romantic fantasy you can stream on Disney+ where Harriet, stricken with grief about the death of her boyfriend two years prior, has the ability to go back in time when she hears a song associated with a certain point in their relationship. And then things get complicated. So is The Greatest Hits a summer smash, or is just another disappointing remix?
End Credits is on CFRU 93.3 fm and cfru.ca Wednesday at 3 pm.
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