
Wrongspeak
Podcast de Wrongspeak
A podcast about the things we believe to be true but cannot say, by Jonathan Kay and Dr. Debra Soh
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19 episodios
As the Wrongspeak podcast hits pause and we say goodbye to Debra, Jon interviews his mother Barbara Kay for the first time. Barbara is a columnist with Canada's National Post [https://nationalpost.com/author/bkaynp] and a wrongspeaker extraordinaire. They discuss their visions of classical liberalism, how Quebec nationalism gave Barbara "a taste for polemics," Jewish intellectualism and multiculturalism; Jon also calls out Barbara's antifeminism and, for the trollbait pièce de résistance, we find out if one Kay benefited from the other's nepotism. Thank you to Dr. Debra Soh [https://www.instagram.com/drdebrawsoh] for her invaluable contribution to our first series of episodes and to our producers at TNKR Media [https://tnkr.ca/]. You can reach us on Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/wrongspeak], Twitter [https://twitter.com/wrongspeak] or Gmail @wrongspeak.

Jon has a frank conversation with his friend and former colleague at Canada's National Post, Matt Gurney, a Toronto-based political commentator, about the inner workings of AM talk radio, the use of outrage as currency and the limitations of the medium.

In a crossover episode with the new Desiland [https://www.desiland.ca/] podcast, Jon speaks with host Niru Kumar and veteran journalist Balraj Deol, editor of Canada's Khabarnama Punjabi Weekly, on the Khalistan movement promoting a separate Sikh state in India and how its supporters gained so much influence in Canadian politics. Subscribe to Desiland on your favourite podcast platform to hear more from wrongspeaking journalists Terry Glavin and Terry Milewski in Part 2 of Niru's Currying Votes series, as well as the Khalistani argument to come.

Jon speaks with renegade Jewish activist Naftuli Moster. During his childhood, Moster was just another nice Jewish boy at a New York City yeshiva. But he isn't happy about the education he got—and now he's speaking out about it.

We often hear about how political correctness is killing comedy. But for Craig Lauzon and other First Nations performers, that's just part of the challenge. Don't forget to subscribe, rate us and follow on Facebook [https://facebook.com/wrongspeak/] and Twitter [https://twitter.com/wrongspeak/] @Wrongspeak!
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