Shane Hewitt and The Nightshift

Welcome to Some Good News

9 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio Welcome to Some Good News

Descripción

Good News Tuesday runs on stories sent in by listeners and a text line that keeps the good ones coming, and this week the good news starts with a 139-year-old former church rectory brought back to life one room at a time. Eight months of sanding, painting, and running between renovation work and studio duties finally paid off in the form of two strangers stopping mid-walk to compliment it.   Alongside that, a thrift store windbreaker sparks a full debate over whether a certain hockey team's old logo was actually the best branding in sports, purple duck mask and all, even from someone who does not root for the team wearing it.   The segment leans on a simple idea: sometimes finding the good means putting in the work first and letting the response come to you.   Topics: Good News Tuesday, house renovation, thrifting finds, community stories, hard work   Originally aired on 2026-07-07

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episode Welcome to Some Good News artwork

Welcome to Some Good News

Good News Tuesday runs on stories sent in by listeners and a text line that keeps the good ones coming, and this week the good news starts with a 139-year-old former church rectory brought back to life one room at a time. Eight months of sanding, painting, and running between renovation work and studio duties finally paid off in the form of two strangers stopping mid-walk to compliment it.   Alongside that, a thrift store windbreaker sparks a full debate over whether a certain hockey team's old logo was actually the best branding in sports, purple duck mask and all, even from someone who does not root for the team wearing it.   The segment leans on a simple idea: sometimes finding the good means putting in the work first and letting the response come to you.   Topics: Good News Tuesday, house renovation, thrifting finds, community stories, hard work   Originally aired on 2026-07-07

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episode NEW - A Kid's Haircut Just Became Someone's Good News artwork

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Good News Tuesday runs on stories sent in by listeners through a dedicated text line, and this week starts with Kyle Lowry set to sign a one-day contract so he can officially retire as a Toronto Raptor, with his number 7 headed for the rafters.   From there, a young soccer fan in Saskatchewan set out to copy his favourite player's haircut and ended up donating his hair to a child with cancer instead. The segment also swings through Halifax, where a mural festival is turning blank walls into colour, and a smaller-scale version of the same idea happening right in Merrickville's monthly Art Walk.   Somewhere between a jersey retirement and a kid with clippers, this one makes a case for how small choices turn into someone else's best day.   Topics: Good News Tuesday, Kyle Lowry retirement, hair donation, mural festival, community stories   Originally aired on 2026-07-07

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Canada's submarine procurement finally has a plan, and Matt Gurney explains why getting there will still take most of a decade. He connects the announcement to a defense minister's own words about shared crews and interoperability, and what that reveals about the deal underneath the headline. The conversation tracks Canada's credibility problem after years of underfunding defense, and why the government cannot prove this rearmament worked until long after the current leadership is gone. It contrasts the German-Norwegian option against South Korea's faster production line and names what each choice trades away. It closes on the practical risk still unresolved: a shipbuilding bottleneck shared with Europe, the question of building submarines near Russia instead of far from it, and what Canada would need to build the rest of this fleet at home. Topics: Canadian submarines, defense spending, submarine procurement, military strategy, Read the Line GUEST: Matt Gurney | http://readtheline.ca [http://readtheline.ca] | @‌mattgurney Originally aired on 2026-07-07

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episode NEW - What’s on Your Mind Jim Richards: Sobriety artwork

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episode Thrifting 101: He Paid Four Dollars For A Quarter Million Dollar Jacket artwork

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A Portland teenager pulled Wilt Chamberlain's 1972 NBA Finals warm-up jacket out of a Goodwill bin for four dollars, and it is now headed to Sotheby's with an estimate as high as $250,000. Someone else had already picked it up and put it back before he grabbed it.   That story kicks off a real conversation about why finds like this have gotten so rare. Resale flippers now comb through donation bins looking for anything wearable, and AI shopping tools are starting to personalize secondhand searches before a regular shopper even gets a chance to browse. What used to be a straightforward ten-dollar-and-done errand has turned into something closer to competition.   There is still a way to win at it, though, and it comes down to knowing exactly which neighbourhoods, which shop types, and which days actually turn up the good stuff.   Topics: thrifting tips, Wilt Chamberlain jacket, resale market, thrift store finds, secondhand shopping   Originally aired on 2026-07-07

Ayer9 min