The Yukon; from a travel story I did for enRoute.

The Yukon; from a travel story I did for enRoute.

Here is a non-chronological smattering of links to my magazine, newspaper, and radio work:

Law Commission of Canada/Canadian Bar Association Journalism Fellowship: In 2025, I got a cool fellowship to spend a year researching and writing stories about the law. The first one just appeared in The Walrus, and it’s on how AI is poised to upset Canadian courtrooms (through deepfake evidence as well as AI’s fundamental lack of transparency). Three other stories from this fellowship should be out in 2026. I was also interviewed about the AI piece on Shaye Ganam’s Global News radio show (January 26th, 2026).

CBC “Love Me” podcast episode on how it turns out my preschool was, er, a laboratory where they studied me from behind two-way mirrors.

THE GUARDIAN on political apology culture; and on libraries where you can get risotto and wine.

THE ATLANTIC why captions generated by YouTube’s speech-recognition software inspired Deaf activists to create the #NoMoreCraptions campaign.

THE GLOBE & MAIL “near misses”—why what doesn’t happen can be as instructive as what does. Also this piece on why people on Instagram are obsessed with mattresses. And this one on Freud, the naso-genital corridor, and rhinoplasty trends for 2019. Parks, eclipses, and why I kind of like duty and obligation, personally.

MACLEAN’S on wealthy millennials giving their money away for social justice. Also awesome flower sculptures. And Quebec’s Bill 21 and possibly unconstitutional obsession with secularism.

THE WALRUS on Cree immersion schooling; also on cochlear implant debates in Montreal’s Deaf communities.

HAZLITT on writer residencies and the economics of cultural production and also cake. Also on the business of marriage slash the love lives of canonical economists. Also my personal antipathy for the number five.

REAL LIFE on the debatable value of “open debate”; on the off-peak lifestyle and why time’s bargain bins are overflowing with Tuesdays; on meal kits and the history of TV dinners.

AZURE on why women leave architecture; also what German architects learned about housing refugees.