Show overview
This is Montreal has been publishing since 2024, and across the 2 years since has built a catalogue of 107 episodes, alongside 2 trailers or bonus episodes. That works out to roughly 40 hours of audio in total. Releases follow a weekly cadence.
Episodes typically run twenty to thirty-five minutes — most land between 18 min and 23 min — and the run-time is fairly consistent across the catalogue. None of the episodes are flagged explicit by the publisher. It is catalogued as a EN-CA-language News show.
The show is actively publishing — the most recent episode landed 5 days ago, with 25 episodes already out so far this year. Published by CBC.
From the publisher
Dive into the Montreal stories you’re curious about and the issues you want to understand. From Laval to Longueuil and across the island, host Ainslie MacLellan explores the complexities of our colourful, vibrant and sometimes frustrating, but always interesting city. Every Thursday.
Latest Episodes
View all 107 episodesWeekend Listen: The messy end of session marathon at the National Assembly
Who do public spaces belong to? Montreal or Montrealers?
How can Montrealers use less water this summer?
Moving out?? In this economy?
Why some Montreal strippers are on strike during F1 weekend
Burnt out: How fire displaces Montreal tenants
Montreal’s Habs fever is about more than hockey
Is Montreal seeing more fires?
Will fake maple syrup harm the reputation of Quebec’s favourite sweet treat?
Christine Fréchette faces an uphill battle as Quebec’s new premier
How to know if your rent increase is legit
Rent increases notices have gone out over the past few weeks and Montreal renters are deciding how to respond. This year, landlords and renters will be working with a new formula from Quebec’s Housing Tribunal that redefines what costs can be passed onto tenants. We’ll break down what’s changing and get answers to some of your questions about rent increases.
How Montreal-based GardaWorld is profiting off ICE detention centres
CBC reporter Ben Shingler looks at how Montreal-based security company GardaWorld, a company backed by Quebec public funds, is involved in the expansion of U.S. immigration detention through its U.S. subsidiary, prompting criticism from some Quebec organizations that say governments should be paying closer attention to what Quebec corporations do abroad.
Quebec’s secularism law Bill 21 is tested at Canada’s top court
The legal challenge of Quebec’s secularism law, Bill 21, before the Supreme Court of Canada has evolved from a fight over whether teachers can wear hijabs in the classroom into a debate over who should get the final say when deciding questions of rights and freedoms in Canada: courts or elected legislatures? Reporter Steve Rukavina breaks down the arguments and explains why the outcome of this case will have implications across the country.
Fixing Quebec roads will cost tens of billions. Not fixing them will cost more.
When a massive hole opened up in the Sauvagine bridge in Chateauguay, it didn’t just provide a clear view of the frozen river below, it arguably gave us a pretty clear picture of the challenges facing Quebec's road infrastructure. By some measures, more than 40 per cent of the province’s roads aren’t in good shape. With the provincial budget coming, engineers and economists are calling for better investments in road maintenance. But with a maintenance deficit in the tens of billions of dollars, is it a budget hole we can actually patch?
How Montreal’s ice storm chasers hope to improve our weather forecasts
When the rest of us head inside, a crew of researchers from McGill and UQAM gear up and brave the freezing rain, to try to better understand the wildly unpredictable cocktail of precipitation that can happen when the temperature hovers around zero. The goal is to help cities and citizens be better prepared when an ice storm is looming. But just capturing that data can be a big challenge.
That time Britain hid its fortune in a Montreal basement
In the spring of 1940, Nazi Germany had gone on the offensive. France and other European countries had been invaded and Britain could be next. So Britain devised a plan to secretly ship its wealth out of the country to keep it from Nazi hands and help finance the war. A top secret plan was born and one downtown Montreal basement would play a starring role. Producer Craig Desson brings us this story.
Montreal hopes to get more affordable housing built, by requiring less of it
The city of Montreal’s new administration is promising to do more to accelerate the pace of building affordable rentals, even as it softens the requirements for private developers to invest in or build social housing. Host Ainslie MacLellan sat down with Caroline Braun, executive committee member in charge of housing for the city at the end of January to hear more about her administration's vision for how to get housing built.
How a Montreal-area kid who wasn't allowed to play changed Canadian women's hockey forever
If Canada’s women’s hockey team has developed to where it is today, and if professional women’s hockey in Montreal has become a reality, it’s in large part due to Daniele Sauvageau. CBC journalist Melinda Dalton traces Sauvageau’s journey from a hockey-loving kid in Deux-Montagnes who wasn’t allowed to play, to being inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame. Watch the video documentary here.
Are bike paths being made ‘the bogeyman’ with Montreal’s planned review?
The City of Montreal is planning to review some bike paths across the city, following through on a campaign promise by Mayor Soraya Martinez Ferrada. The mayor says the goal is to evaluate mobility and safety for all and that, at this point, the city isn’t removing any bike paths. But some are skeptical that this review is the right focus when it comes to road safety in Montreal.
Why downhill skiing disappeared from Mount Royal
Throughout most of the 20th century, you could find downhill ski runs on and around Mount Royal, complete with tow ropes, T-bars and even a 100-ft long ski jump! More than 100 years ago, ski-jumping competitions in the city would draw crowds of thousands of people. In this episode from the archives, we hear why downhill skiing disappeared from the heart of Montreal, and why not everyone agrees over whether it should come back. This episode was first released March 6, 2025.
