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Every week from Friday to Sunday night, you've likely noticed The Tyee with a new look and feel. It's our new culture section, the Weekender. Because we're now devoting weekends to showcasing creative ingenuity in Vancouver and across the region.

The Tyee has long run culture stories, but having a place to showcase them puts a new emphasis on the importance of these pieces in our lives, building a meeting place for a diverse and intergenerational audience.

Our hope is that the Weekender will act as a new space for readers to connect with the creative community, and for creatives to connect with our readers.

You can expect to see an exciting range of work by Tyee staff writers as well as new voices taking the Weekender stage. If you'd like to be a part of it, reach out to us with a pitch.

Thanks to our featured sponsor for our Oct. 3 edition: “An Evening with Louise Penny” at the Chan Centre.

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After Charlie Kirk

Since right-wing firebrand and Trump loyalist Charlie Kirk was shot to death at a Utah university event on Sept. 10, there’s been a crackdown against criticism of his views and legacy — and some dark gaslighting from U.S. President Donald Trump.

In Canada, vigils were held for Kirk in Alberta. Just a few MPs have distanced themselves from a standing ovation for Kirk in the House of Commons. A journalist has been targeted and threatened.

Kirk’s killing, which roundly and rightly drew condemnations of political violence, turned up the heat on an already volatile American scene, testing Christian principles against the rise of Christian nationalism that Kirk helped champion.

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Support Award-Winning Journalism

For the third year in a row, The Tyee’s northern B.C. reporter, Amanda Follett Hosgood, has won a Canadian Association of Journalists award.

On May 31, Follett Hosgood won the silver award for her piece, “BC Illegally Collected Personal Info Tied to the Wet’suwet’en Conflict,” in the Freedom of Information Journalism category.

Follett Hosgood uncovered a B.C. government privacy breach that occurred leading up to the last big police enforcement on Wet’suwet’en territory during the conflict over the Coastal GasLink pipeline. In her associated piece, “BC’s Secretive Plan to Tighten Protest Response,” she dove into the province’s subsequent attempt to overhaul and beef up police responses related to land disputes through a secretive Civil Disobedience Work Plan.

Our in-depth, award-winning journalism is made possible by Tyee Builders. Join us here.


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The Next Economy

From Alaska to California, people are pouring their smarts and hearts into successful enterprises that are low carbon and locally rooted. They’re employing and training, producing and sustaining.

So The Tyee created a whole new section to tell their stories and share best practices for a healthy bioregion. We call it What Works. It’s where you’ll find regular reports on the business of creating what works for a better future.

Interested in this project? Read more about What Works or contact us to be involved.

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Deep Dive

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The Evolving World of Work

Labour laws, rights and organizing have changed significantly in the last half century, and even more so since the height of the COVID-19 pandemic and the increased intrusion of AI into our lives and work.

Led by Local Journalism Initiative labour reporter Isaac Phan Nay, The Tyee’s coverage of this rapidly transforming world of work has included airline workers, miners, library workers, Amazon warehouse employees, BC Ferries workers, university custodial staff, forestry workers, posties, lab workers, seafarers and gig workers. It’s all a reminder of how much labour undergirds and relates to every facet of our lives.

Read some of our stories from this year on the emerging struggles and questions for labour across B.C. This reporting is supported by our Builder members. You can join them here.

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Tilting at Airships?
(read related story)

“Over 40 years ago Scientific American had an article about the practicality of enormous dirigibles. They proposed them for several specific purposes. One was international freight hauling utilizing the jet stream for fuel. Another was for selective logging, thereby avoiding the ecological damage required to facilitate truck logging, the invasive damage to remote ecosystems by building roads, culverts, etc.


I spoke with a local retired logger who was familiar with the idea and said it had been tried but amazingly the main obstacle was not the construction and maintenance of the ships, it was from firearms owners using the dirigibles as targets. Unfortunately I no longer have the issue that included this piece.”

Dick

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