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Weekly Quiz: Strategic Romance, Buying “Canadian,” and AI Pricing - How closely have you been reading our online stories this week? Take The Walrus Weekly Quiz to find out—released every Saturday.
Greenland Is on the Brink. Canada Is Nowhere in Sight - As NATO allies mobilize to deter Trump, Ottawa remains conspicuously absent
Weekly Quiz: Strategic Romance, Buying “Canadian,” and AI Pricing - How closely have you been reading our online stories this week? Take The Walrus Weekly Quiz to find out—released every Saturday.
Greenland Is on the Brink. Canada Is Nowhere in Sight - As NATO allies mobilize to deter Trump, Ottawa remains conspicuously absent
Everything Costs More Because the Algorithm Says So - Tariffs and inflation dominate headlines, but personalized pricing is the real affordability crisis
Evan Solomon Wants Canada to Trust AI. Can We Trust Evan Solomon? - The journalist-turned-minister says the tech will make us richer and regulation should be “light”
The End of the Legault Era - The premier leaves with the worst numbers of any Quebec leader—and a party facing a brutal election year
Inside the Stunning Collapse of the Quebec Liberal Party - And it’s happening just as the province heads into a potentially historic election
This week on What Happened Next, host Nathan Whitlock is joined by National Magazine Award–winning journalist and author Bonny Reichert. Her first book, the memoir How to Share an Egg: A True Story of Hunger, Love, and Plenty, was published by Penguin Random House Canada’s Appetite imprint in 2025. Bonny talks to Nathan about her initial resistance to writing the book that became How to Share an Egg, about how publishing a very revealing memoir can lead readers to demand that authors reveal even more about themselves, and about her newest work in progress, a work of fiction, which she is finding both difficult and a relief.
Canada is racing to build the infrastructure that will shape its economic and political future. But moving faster means little unless the systems guiding that development are strong enough to be trusted. Independent lawyer and consultant Jesse McCormick argues that making any meaningful progress with Canada’s major projects will require building trust with First Nations by prioritizing their consent and establishing regulatory systems that put First Nations behind the wheel. McCormick spoke at The Walrus Talks Sovereign Canada in Toronto on October 28, 2025.
A new podcast from Mount Pleasant Group and The Walrus Lab exploring what happens when you die—how to prepare, the costs of death care, sustainable burial options, and how professionals like embalmers navigate a death-centered industry. Through expert guests and candid conversations, Sorry for Your Loss pulls back the veil on dying and death, offering a sensitive and informative look at what lies ahead.
The End of the Legault Era - The premier leaves with the worst numbers of any Quebec leader—and a party facing a brutal election year
Evan Solomon Wants Canada to Trust AI. Can We Trust Evan Solomon? - The journalist-turned-minister says the tech will make us richer and regulation should be “light”
Is Everyone Else Grinding Their Teeth Too? - I thought stress was behind my tense jaw. Turns out it’s only part of the answer
Anyone Could Be Anyone - The basic premise of our twenty-five-year friendship is that we’re the same, kin among enemies. We had no experience in being opposites






























