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Chapter 1:
-The 2018 Winter Olympics in South Korea is officially Canada’s most successful Winter Games ever, after hauling in 27 medals, surpassing previous benchmark set at the 2010 Vancouver Olympics.
Chapter 2:
-Outrage is spreading across Vancouver Island and online after a pig that was adopted from the BC SPCA was killed and eaten by the people who adopted her. Molly, a three-year-old Vietnamese potbelly pig, came to the SPCA’s Cowichan & District branch as part of a cruelty investigation. She was taken care of and nursed back to health by the staff and was finally adopted by a couple in Duncan on Jan. 19. Then it was discovered that on Feb. 16, Molly had been killed and eaten.
Chapter 3:
-Former Canuck Roberto Luongo gave an emotional speech last night about the shooting in Parkland, Florida. Luongo lives in Parkland and shared his own feelings about the day of the shooting.
Chapter 4:
-”John Horgan blinked.” says Alberta Premier Rachel Notley. BC will now ask courts to say whether it has the power to restrict bitumen shipments through federally regulated pipelines and ports. The Alberta premier is confident that BC has no chance of prevailing in court. The Vancouver Sun's Vaughn Palmer is here with his take on the day's headlines.
Chapter 5:
-It took a single post from a high profile celebrity to put a $1.3 Billion dip in the stock of Snap Chat. Tim Dickert has the tech report.
Chapter 6:
-How prepared is Translink for today’s predicted snowfall? The snowfall warning has been expanded. Environment Canada says anywhere from 10-20cms of snow is expected this morning.
Chapter 7:
-More snow is coming to the Lower Mainland, and Surrey could cop the brunt of it.
Chapter 8:
-The B.C. wine industry is raising a glass Thursday night as the Alberta border is reopened to its product. Alberta Premier Rachel Notley announced earlier in the day that she would instruct the Alberta Gaming and Liquor Commission (AGLC) to begin restocking B.C. vintages. The move came after B.C. Premier John Horgan stepped back from plans to ban increased shipments of diluted bitumen through the province, saying B.C. would refer its case to the courts to decide.
Chapter 9:
-Outrage is spreading across Vancouver Island and online after a pig that was adopted from the BC SPCA was killed and eaten by the people who adopted her. Molly, a three-year-old Vietnamese potbelly pig, came to the SPCA’s Cowichan & District branch as part of a cruelty investigation. She was taken care of and nursed back to health by the staff and was finally adopted by a couple in Duncan on Jan. 19. Then it was discovered that on Feb. 16, Molly had been killed and eaten.
Chapter 10:
-Looking to Jazz up your life? There is a winterfest Jazz festival happening at Granville Island.
Chapter 11:
-Donald Trump has raised the idea of arming teachers in classrooms - saying it’ll prevent further mass shootings.
Chapter 12:
-On Tuesday, Bruce spoke about the demise of the guitar. With Gibson fretting about bankruptcy, how much of a reality is this?
By Curiouscast
Chapter 1:
-The 2018 Winter Olympics in South Korea is officially Canada’s most successful Winter Games ever, after hauling in 27 medals, surpassing previous benchmark set at the 2010 Vancouver Olympics.
Chapter 2:
-Outrage is spreading across Vancouver Island and online after a pig that was adopted from the BC SPCA was killed and eaten by the people who adopted her. Molly, a three-year-old Vietnamese potbelly pig, came to the SPCA’s Cowichan & District branch as part of a cruelty investigation. She was taken care of and nursed back to health by the staff and was finally adopted by a couple in Duncan on Jan. 19. Then it was discovered that on Feb. 16, Molly had been killed and eaten.
Chapter 3:
-Former Canuck Roberto Luongo gave an emotional speech last night about the shooting in Parkland, Florida. Luongo lives in Parkland and shared his own feelings about the day of the shooting.
Chapter 4:
-”John Horgan blinked.” says Alberta Premier Rachel Notley. BC will now ask courts to say whether it has the power to restrict bitumen shipments through federally regulated pipelines and ports. The Alberta premier is confident that BC has no chance of prevailing in court. The Vancouver Sun's Vaughn Palmer is here with his take on the day's headlines.
Chapter 5:
-It took a single post from a high profile celebrity to put a $1.3 Billion dip in the stock of Snap Chat. Tim Dickert has the tech report.
Chapter 6:
-How prepared is Translink for today’s predicted snowfall? The snowfall warning has been expanded. Environment Canada says anywhere from 10-20cms of snow is expected this morning.
Chapter 7:
-More snow is coming to the Lower Mainland, and Surrey could cop the brunt of it.
Chapter 8:
-The B.C. wine industry is raising a glass Thursday night as the Alberta border is reopened to its product. Alberta Premier Rachel Notley announced earlier in the day that she would instruct the Alberta Gaming and Liquor Commission (AGLC) to begin restocking B.C. vintages. The move came after B.C. Premier John Horgan stepped back from plans to ban increased shipments of diluted bitumen through the province, saying B.C. would refer its case to the courts to decide.
Chapter 9:
-Outrage is spreading across Vancouver Island and online after a pig that was adopted from the BC SPCA was killed and eaten by the people who adopted her. Molly, a three-year-old Vietnamese potbelly pig, came to the SPCA’s Cowichan & District branch as part of a cruelty investigation. She was taken care of and nursed back to health by the staff and was finally adopted by a couple in Duncan on Jan. 19. Then it was discovered that on Feb. 16, Molly had been killed and eaten.
Chapter 10:
-Looking to Jazz up your life? There is a winterfest Jazz festival happening at Granville Island.
Chapter 11:
-Donald Trump has raised the idea of arming teachers in classrooms - saying it’ll prevent further mass shootings.
Chapter 12:
-On Tuesday, Bruce spoke about the demise of the guitar. With Gibson fretting about bankruptcy, how much of a reality is this?