PODCAST · news
Me, Myself and AI
by Let CaseyBe
Me, Myself, and AI is a podcast where I use today’s most powerful AI tools to dig into the stories, ideas, and forces shaping our world. From economics to culture, housing to innovation, I explore what matters through the lens of a 30-something Black Canadian woman—professional, creative, and curious. It’s part research, part reflection, and part storytelling: a space where data meets lived experience, and where technology becomes a tool for deeper understanding.
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41
Underdogs: The people we need
In this episode of Me, Myself & AI, Casey asks a bold question: Why am I always rooting for the underdog? From the Toronto Raptors proving the world wrong—again—in the 2026 playoffs, to Stephen Curry completely changing how basketball is played, to Zohran Mamdani challenging power through housing and economic reform, to Kanye West forcing his way into an industry that didn’t fully see him—this episode explores what makes underdogs so powerful, so necessary, and so unforgettable. Casey and Jay unpack the systems, the setbacks, the culture shifts, and the uncomfortable truths behind people who weren’t supposed to win… but changed the game anyway.
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40
What Changed with Student Loans in Ontario and Why It Matters
Student funding in Ontario is shifting, and it’s going to affect how much students rely on debt.In this episode of Me, Myself, and AI, Casey B and J break down the key changes from the Ontario government under Doug Ford and the federal government under Mark Carney.At a high level, the federal government is keeping student grants higher for now, while Ontario is moving toward a system where a larger share of funding comes from loans.The result? Students are likely to rely more on repayable funding over time.This episode focuses on what that shift means in real life, especially for students and families who depend on financial aid to access education.Because this isn’t just about policy, it’s about what it takes to move forward, and how long it takes to get there.
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39
Cuba Isn’t in the Headlines, But It Should Be
Cuba isn’t trending.But maybe it should be.While much of the world looks elsewhere, millions of people in Cuba are dealing with real, daily challenges—food shortages, blackouts, and limited access to basic resources.In this episode, Casey unpacks the history behind it all, questions the narratives we’ve been given, and explores what’s actually happening right now—and why more people aren’t talking about it.
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38
The U.S. Said No. Canada Abstained. On Accountability for Slavery.
On March 25, 2025, the United Nations General Assembly voted on a resolution brought forward by Ghana, recognizing slavery and the transatlantic slave trade as “among the gravest crimes in the history of humanity”—and calling for reparatory justice to address its lasting impacts.The result was overwhelming—but not unanimous.123 countries voted in favour.3 countries voted against: United States, Israel, and Argentina.And 52 countries chose not to support the resolution, including:Canada, United Kingdom, France, Germany, Australia, Japan, Netherlands, Sweden, Spain, Italy, and others across Europe and allied nations.This episode breaks down what that vote actually meant, what countries were really being asked to support, and why some chose to stand back when the conversation shifted from recognition to responsibility.But this conversation isn’t just for the Black diaspora—and it’s not only about our ancestors.It’s also about the present.About systems.About wealth.About what it means to be an ally—not just in words, but in action.Because if slavery is one of the gravest crimes in human history…then neutrality isn’t neutral.And the real question becomes:Who is willing to stand on justice today?
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Are we getting too intimate with AI?
In this episode of Me, Myself, and AI, Casey B and Jay explore a question that feels more relevant every day: Are we getting too intimate with AI? Inspired by the TED Talks Daily episode “Love, intimacy and connection in the age of AI | Bryony Cole,” this conversation unpacks what happens when people turn to AI not just for productivity, but for reflection, comfort, guidance, and something that can start to feel a lot like therapy. Bryony Cole argues that relationships were never meant to be efficient, yet AI companions are increasingly designed to be exactly that. Casey B takes that concern seriously — but also asks a deeper question: why are so many people ready to trust AI with their inner lives in the first place? Together, Casey and Jay explore trust, loneliness, therapy, the social fractures left behind by the pandemic, and what it means to protect real human connection in an age of increasingly responsive machines.
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36
Did the 90s Lie to Us About Adulthood?
That Instagram “who were you in the 90s?” trend sent me into a whole existential spiral. Watching people who once looked like the coolest, brightest, most alive versions of adulthood — and seeing where life took them now — made me start wondering what adulthood even is supposed to be. Is life supposed to stay exciting forever? Is joy supposed to fade under the weight of work, routine, parenting, money, and just… being an adult? In this episode of Me, Myself, and AI, I talk with Jay about the overlapping feelings that make up adulthood, the strange distance we can develop from our own lives, and why I’m starting to think a lot of us don’t just need rest — we need more joy.
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35
48 Laws of Power Today
Lately I’ve been rereading The 48 Laws of Power by Robert Greene. It’s a fascinating book — part history lesson, part survival guide for navigating tricky power dynamics.But reading it today raises an interesting question: has power actually changed since the book was written in the 1990s?In this episode of Me, Myself, and AI, I run a thought experiment. Instead of looking at power through office politics, I zoom all the way out to global conflict — specifically the tensions between United States, Iran, and Israel — to see whether the same principles still apply.What happens when we analyze geopolitics through the lens of Greene’s laws?Does power still work the way it did in royal courts and historical empires?Or has the modern world — with networks, media, and global audiences — changed the rules of the game?This episode is a conversation between me and AI about power, perception, reputation, and the strange ways human dynamics scale from office meetings… all the way up to the world stage.Opening song: Practice makes perfect by Charita B
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AI’s perspective on how we can contribute to the greater good?
If you could interview millions of people and study their answers, you’d probably learn an extraordinary amount about the world. In many ways, AI has done something similar. It has been trained on vast collections of human writing, books, research, conversations, and ideas shared across the internet. It’s not the same as talking to millions of people directly, but it is a strange and fascinating mirror of our collective knowledge. That raises an interesting question: if we could gather the wisdom, arguments, and reflections of so many human minds, what might they tell us about how to contribute to the greater good?In this episode, I explore that question through a conversation with AI, not to replace human thinking, but to challenge it, expand it, and reflect on what our shared knowledge might reveal about how we can make the world better.
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The Millennial Psychology of Money (Canada Edition)
In this episode, we unpack how economic timing shapes financial psychology.The average first-time homebuyer in Ontario is now 40 years old. A decade ago, it was 34. In just ten years, the entry point into homeownership has shifted dramatically — and that shift changes how an entire generation thinks about money.We explore what it means to come of age financially during the 2008 financial crisis. For many millennials, those early investing years weren’t marked by steady growth — they were marked by market lulls, uncertainty, and caution. Even though the stock market has historically returned strong long-term averages, your relationship with risk is shaped by what you experience when you first enter the system.We compare that to Gen X’s volatility. Gen X lived through recessions and crashes too — but often after they were already positioned in careers, assets, or homeownership. Millennials, by contrast, hit economic instability right at launch.We also talk about Canadian housing specifically — how Canada didn’t experience the same housing collapse in 2008 as the U.S., and instead saw continued price growth. That meant there was no “reset” moment for affordability. The ladder kept moving upward.This episode isn’t about blaming a generation.It’s about understanding how timing shapes confidence, caution, and decision-making.Because money isn’t just math.It’s memory.
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Casey versus ChatGPT a debate about Power. Integrity. Anthropic. The US. Social media.
I’m considering deleting my ChatGPT subscription after the ordeal with Anthropic and safety and this was the conversation I had with chat. The conversation got very heated. I’m curious about your thoughts on it.
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31
Let’s Separate: Brexit, Calgary and the concept of drawing lines
Why do we reach for separation when things feel broken?Brexit wasn’t just about immigration. It wasn’t just about racism. It wasn’t just about trade. It was about sovereignty, control, economic frustration, identity, and the feeling that your voice inside a system no longer matters.In this episode of Me, Myself & AI, I unpack the real motivations behind the UK leaving the European Union — from constitutional philosophy to regional economic decline — and examine what actually happened after the vote. Did separation deliver clarity? Did it deliver prosperity? Or did it expose how complicated modern systems really are?Then we turn to Alberta. When people talk about exiting Canada, what are they really saying? Is political separation a solution — or a signal that governance needs redesign?This isn’t a hot take. It’s a deeper question:When cooperation feels unfair, why does separation feel powerful?And what happens when we choose it?
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Permission to be Complex
In this episode of Me, Myself, and AI, Casey explores what happens when people are reduced to labels instead of being seen as whole. Starting from personal moments of tuning out, subtle dismissal, and everyday microaggressions, the conversation widens into a deeper reflection on attention, neurodivergence, trauma, race, education, and lived experience. This isn’t an episode about diagnosing ADHD or explaining trauma, it’s about how complex human realities get flattened, and what that flattening costs us in connection, focus, and understanding.Drawing on insights from Scattered Minds, recent conversations on trauma and the nervous system from the Huberman Lab featuring psychiatrist Paul Conti, and research on attention, multitasking, and educational inequity, this episode argues for something simpler—and harder—than better labels: permission to be complex. Because when people are truly seen, attention doesn’t disappear. It stays.⸻Sources & Influences Referenced • Scattered Minds — Gabor Maté • Huberman Lab, Essentials: Therapy, Treating Trauma & Other Life Challenges (Jan 22, 2026), conversation with Paul Conti • Research from cognitive psychology on attention and task-switching (multitasking vs. switching) • Sociological and economic research on educational access, student debt aversion, and inequities tied to class and race • Anti-racism frameworks on microaggressions and cumulative harm
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29
What the heck is Stablecoin?
Stablecoins are digital currencies designed to hold a steady value, usually pegged one-to-one to traditional money like the U.S. dollar or the Canadian dollar. They move on blockchain networks, allowing money to be sent quickly, globally, and often at lower cost than traditional banking systems.This episode explores what they are, why governments and companies are paying attention, how they differ from cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin, and the real trade-offs involved as this technology becomes part of the financial system.General overviews Bank for International Settlements – Annual Economic Report and stablecoin analyseshttps://www.bis.org International Monetary Fund – Global Financial Stability Report (stablecoins and digital money)https://www.imf.orgUnited States Federal Reserve – Stablecoins, payments, and financial stability discussionshttps://www.federalreserve.gov U.S. Department of the Treasury – President’s Working Group report on stablecoins (2021)https://home.treasury.govCanada Bank of Canada – Statements and discussion papers on stablecoins and digital moneyhttps://www.bankofcanada.ca Canadian Securities Administrators – Guidance on crypto assets and stablecoinshttps://www.securities-administrators.caIssuer transparency (examples) Circle – USDC reserve disclosureshttps://www.circle.com/transparency Tether – USDT reserve reportshttps://tether.to/en/transparency/
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When the Rules Start to Bend: Sovereignty, Power, and a Very Unsettling Moment
In this episode of Me, Myself, and AI, Casey B steps back from the headlines and asks a quieter but more dangerous question: what happens when the rules that govern nations start to feel optional?Drawing on her undergraduate studies in criminology and Caribbean studies, and approaching the moment not as an expert, but as a citizen of the world, Casey reflects on recent global events that echo the very case studies many of us learned about in school: violations of sovereignty, the use of force without clear international authorization, and the erosion of norms designed to prevent escalation.Joined by her AI co-host, Jazz, the episode explores: • What sovereignty actually means under international law • Why the prohibition on the use of force exists in the first place • How international legal frameworks are supposed to function — and where they often fail • Why major powers are rarely held accountable in the same way smaller states are • And why so many people feel a deep unease before they can fully explain itThis is not an episode about taking sides or predicting catastrophe. It’s about pattern recognition, the slow normalization of actions that international law was built to restrain, and the risks that emerge when legitimacy gives way to raw power.At a time when global institutions are under strain, this conversation reminds us that international law doesn’t survive on treaties alone. It survives when people understand why the rules exist, and notice when they begin to fray.⸻Key Sources & Legal Frameworks ReferencedFoundational International Law • United Nations Charter (1945) • Article 2(4): Prohibition on the threat or use of force against the territorial integrity or political independence of any state • Article 51: Limited right to self-defense • International Court of Justice • Nicaragua v. United States (1986): Landmark ruling on unlawful use of force and non-intervention • International Criminal Court • Rome Statute provisions on crimes of aggression, war crimes, and crimes against humanityInternational Humanitarian & Human Rights Law • Geneva Conventions (1949) and Additional Protocols • Civilian protection, proportionality, and distinction in armed conflict • Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of Crimes Against Internationally Protected Persons (1973) • Protections for heads of state and senior officialsRegional & Multilateral Norms • Organization of American States Charter • Principles of non-intervention and sovereign equality • Customary International Law • State sovereignty, diplomatic immunity, and non-interferenceTrade & Political Context • North American Free Trade Agreement / USMCA • Economic integration alongside divergent foreign-policy responses • Illustrates how trade alliances can shape — and sometimes mute — political accountabilitySupplementary Analysis • United Nations General Assembly resolutions on use of force and sovereignty • Academic commentary on enforcement gaps in international law • Human rights reporting on civilian harm and extraterritorial use of force
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Who’s down for Universal Basic Income?
In this episode of Me, Myself, and AI, Casey B takes a clear-eyed look at Universal Basic Income (UBI), not as a theory, but as a real policy idea tested in real places with real people.Drawing on evidence from Ireland, Finland, Manitoba, Alaska, Ontario, and Canada’s COVID response, the episode breaks down what actually happens when people are guaranteed a basic income floor. The data consistently shows improvements in mental health, stability, and well-being, without large-scale withdrawal from work.Rather than arguing for a one-size-fits-all cheque, the episode explores a more realistic model: updating ineffective and punitive income assistance programs into a guaranteed minimum income or top-up system, while keeping critical supports like disability in place. The focus is on reducing bureaucracy, removing fear and instability, and allowing people to work and earn on top of a stable income floor.The episode also tackles common fears head-on government control, fairness, cost, and and reframes the conversation around system design, incentives, and how people actually behave in real life.The central question isn’t whether people deserve support, but whether we’re willing to redesign systems that repeatedly fail to produce stability, health, or opportunity.
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Housing, Migration, and the Systems in Between
Source: Homelessness and Housing Insecurity Among Im/migrants in Canada: A Scoping Review”Published in the Canadian Journal of Urban ResearchIn this episode of Me, Myself, and AI, Casey B explores what Canadian research tells us about housing insecurity and homelessness among immigrants and migrants — and why it looks different from mainstream narratives about the housing crisis.Sparked by a personal moment — a former boss stepping into leadership at the New Canadians Centre — Casey brings a second-generation Canadian lens to a scoping review of over 50 Canadian studies. The research reveals that housing insecurity for im/migrants isn’t just about affordability, but about timing, visibility, trust, and fragmented systems that don’t speak to one another.The episode unpacks hidden homelessness, the gaps between immigration and housing policy, and the intergenerational consequences of housing instability. It asks a deeper question: what would it mean to design housing systems that actually account for migration, rather than assuming stability?Grounded in research, lived experience, and systems thinking, this episode moves beyond headlines to examine the structures underneath Canada’s housing challenges.
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25
When Vibes are off at work
When the Vibes Are Off at WorkYou can feel it before anyone says it out loud.The side conversations. The tension in meetings. The quiet after certain people speak. In this episode of Me, Myself, and AI, we talk about what’s really happening when the vibes are off at work—and why it’s rarely “just personalities.”Using peer-reviewed research from organizational psychology and workplace behavior, this episode breaks down how gossip and chronic negativity quietly erode trust, damage morale, and spread through teams like a social contagion. Studies show that negative gossip is linked to increased stress, reduced performance, lower organizational commitment, and higher turnover intentions (Kurland & Pelled, 2000; Wu et al., 2018; Küçük et al., 2025). Research on workplace incivility also finds that even low-level negativity reduces cognitive performance, collaboration, and psychological safety (Porath & Pearson, 2013; Leiter et al., 2011).We explore how these behaviors influence entire workplace cultures—not just the people directly involved—and why organizations often underestimate the cost of “toxic talk.” We also talk honestly about what it’s like to work in these environments: why people stay silent, how gossip drains energy from teams, and the coping strategies employees use to survive when leaving isn’t an option.Finally, we look at solutions backed by evidence. Can people who gossip or contribute to negative workplace cultures change? What actually works—training, coaching, accountability, leadership modeling—and where organizations often get it wrong. Research on civility interventions and emotional intelligence training shows that workplace culture can improve when negative behaviors are addressed directly and consistently (Leiter et al., 2011; West & Brassey, 2022).If you’ve ever walked into work and thought, “something feels off,” this episode is for you.⸻Key References Mentioned • Kurland, N. B., & Pelled, L. H. (2000). Passing the word: Toward a model of gossip and power in the workplace. Academy of Management Review. • Wu, L. Z., et al. (2018). The effect of workplace gossip on employee outcomes. Journal of Applied Psychology. • Küçük, A., et al. (2025). Workplace gossip, loneliness, and turnover intention. Journal of Management & Organization. • Porath, C., & Pearson, C. (2013). The price of incivility. Harvard Business Review. • Leiter, M. P., et al. (2011). The impact of civility interventions on workplace culture. Journal of Applied Psychology. • West, T., & Brassey, J. (2022). Addressing toxic workplace behavior. McKinsey Health Institute.
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24
“Culture Fit”: How Familiarity Bias Hurts the Workforce
In this episode of Me, Myself, and AI, Casey B challenges the workplace myth that the best hires are the most outgoing, social, and familiar. Through research on cultural fit and the costs of homogenous teams, we uncover how organizations hurt themselves by choosing comfort over capability.Casey highlights why shows like Netflix’s The Residence matter for representation. Uzo Aduba’s Detective Cordelia Cupp is brilliant, awkward, introverted—and exceptional. A character like this reminds us that excellence comes in many forms.This episode is an invitation to rethink what talent looks like and to question who we overlook when we only hire those who feel familiar.
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23
The Hidden Cost of Rolling Back Inclusion
In this episode of Me, Myself & AI, we unpack why retreating from Diversity, Equity & Inclusion (DEI) isn’t a “neutral reset,” but a risk, for people, for culture, and for business. We explore what academic research reveals about the impact of microaggressions, lost diversity, and dismantled inclusion efforts. From real-world DEI rollbacks to data on firm performance and organizational health, we show how exclusion isn’t just a social problem, it’s a business problem. If you care about fairness and sustainable success, this episode is for you.Sources:Mihaylova, I. & Rietmann, K. — Diversity, equity and inclusion at a crossroads: a scoping review of the characteristics of workplace backlash (2025) Hamza-Orlińska, A., et al. — Unlearning diversity management (2024) Saha, R.; Kabir, M. N.; Hossain, S. A.; & Rabby, S. M. — Impact of Diversity and Inclusion on Firm Performance: Moderating Role of Institutional Ownership (2024) Turi, J. A. et al. — Diversity impact on organizational performance (2022) Kasih, E. & Ruslaini — The Impact of Diversity and Inclusion Initiatives on Organizational Performance (2025) Østergaard, C. R. & Timmermans, B. — Workplace diversity and innovation performance: current state of affairs and future directions (2023) Raddant, M. & Karimi, F. — The dynamics of diversity on corporate boards (2024) de Souza Santos, R.; Barcom, A.; Wessel, M.; & Magalhaes, C. — From Diverse Origins to a DEI Crisis: The Pushback Against Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion in Software Engineering (2025)
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Why are black women in America being fired in 2025?
In this episode of Me, Myself & AI, Casey asks a critical question:Why are Black women across the United States being fired in such large numbers in 2025?With her AI co-host J, she looks past the headlines and into the data, politics, and patterns shaping this moment.🔍 What This Episode Breaks Down The Numbers: What the Data Actually Shows Over 300,000 Black women pushed out of the workforce in early 2025 Black women’s unemployment rising to 7.5%, while white women remain around 3.5% Largest Black–white unemployment gap since 2020 Federal job cuts hitting Black women disproportionately (Education, HUD, USAID, etc.) DEI rollbacks in public + private sectors contributing to targeted losses The High-Profile Firings (Names, Roles, and What Happened) Joy Reid — fired from MSNBC amid political pressure, diversity concerns Karen Attiah — fired from The Washington Post over a tweet; union condemned firing Dr. Carla Hayden — removed as Librarian of Congress under government shake-up Lisa Cook — first Black woman Federal Reserve Governor; Trump moved to fire her over old mortgage claims; she is now suing Letitia James — not fired, but under DOJ investigation seen as political retaliation Fani Willis — federally scrutinized after prosecuting Trump; targeted but still in office Why Experts Say This Is Happening Systemic Racism + “double discrimination” against Black women Political retaliation against Black women in positions of oversight and power DEI Backlash: intentional dismantling of diversity programs Public-sector downsizing: going after departments with high Black female representation Corporate retreat from DEI after 2020 commitments Return-to-office policies disproportionately impacting Black women Historical Context Backlash cycles after Black advancement (desegregation → tuition hikes; affirmative action → bans; DEI → rollbacks) Black women’s long-standing pattern of being “first fired, last hired” How removing Black women from leadership diminishes representation, advocacy, and institutional equity Why This Matters (and Why Canadians Should Care) Public-sector playbooks cross borders DEI under scrutiny in multiple countries Black women’s job stability tied to community economic stability What happens in the U.S. often signals where global equity trends are heading📚 Key Sources Referenced in This EpisodeMajor News + Investigations The Guardian — Interview with Joy Reid The Washington Post Guild Statement — on Karen Attiah’s firing ProPublica — Trump’s purge disproportionately affecting Black women Reuters — Lisa Cook’s lawsuit and attempted firing Capital B News — Political retaliation against Letitia James & Fani Willis Inc. Magazine — Corporate DEI pullbacks + impact on Black womenResearch + Data National Women’s Law Center (NWLC) — unemployment statistics NAACP — analysis of DEI rollback impact on Black women BlackDemographics.com — jobless gap analysis WABE/NPR — labor force exit data TIME Magazine — structural reasons for Black women’s economic vulnerability National Urban League — public-sector inequality reports⸻Statements from Advocates & Officials Karen Boykin-Towns, NAACP Janai Nelson, NAACP Legal Defense Fund Keisha Bross, NAACP economic policy Gender economists & labor researchers quoted in TIME, NWLC, and Inc.
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21
Do We Work Too Much? How the Four-Day Work Week Could Change Everything
Finland’s former Prime Minister Sanna Marin once sparked a global conversation when she suggested a four-day work week. But can working less actually make us more productive?In this episode of Me, Myself & AI, Casey B explores the truth behind the headlines — what Sanna Marin really proposed, the global results from shorter work week pilots, and what the data means for Canada and the U.S.From Microsoft Japan’s 40 percent productivity boost to Iceland’s nationwide success and Canada’s own non-profit experiments, the evidence is mounting that less time at work can lead to better results, happier teams, and healthier lives.Listen for the numbers, the nuance, and the future of work — and stay tuned to the end to hear where art meets analysis with Charita B music.⸻🧾 Sources & References:Sanna Marin’s Proposal (Finland) • Reuters – Fact Check: Finland Not Adopting Four-Day Week Under Marin (2020). • AFP – Fact Check: Finland’s PM Did Not Introduce Four-Day Work Week (2020).Major Global Trials & Research • Autonomy (2023). The UK Four Day Week Pilot Results: 61 Companies, 2,900 Workers — 92 % Kept the Schedule. • Associated Press (2023). “UK Firms Stick With Four-Day Week as Revenue Rises, Burnout Falls.” • Scientific American (2025). Coverage of Nature Human Behaviour cross-country study (141 companies in U.S., Canada, UK, Ireland, Australia, NZ). • Investopedia (2025). “The Impact of Working a 4-Day Week.” • Autonomy / Alda (2021). Iceland Trials: 35–36-Hour Week With Equal or Improved Productivity. • Wired (2023). “Inside Iceland’s Shorter Week Revolution.” • Microsoft Japan (2019). Work Life Choice Challenge: +40 % Productivity Reported.North America (Canada & U.S.) • 4 Day Week Global (2024). North America Pilot Report – 41 Organizations, 100 % Retention of Four-Day Schedule. • 4 Day Week Global (2025). Long-Term Follow-Up – Burnout −69 %, Attrition −32 %, Revenue +15 %. • Imagine Canada (2024). Internal pilot results: Well-Being +66 %, Sick Days −40 %, 94 % Retention. • PRAXIS PR (Toronto). Canadian case study on client coverage and efficiency gains. • American Psychological Association (2024). Work in America Survey – 22 % of U.S. Employers Offer Four-Day Option (up from 14 % in 2022). • Kickstarter (2022). Official statement on permanent 32-hour week post-pilot. • Bolt (2022). CEO Ryan Breslow statement and coverage in Built In & CNBC on maintained productivity and morale.Policy Context • U.S. Congress – Thirty-Two Hour Workweek Act (House Bill by Rep. Takano). • U.S. Senate – S. 3947 (Introduced by Sen. Sanders, 2023).Compressed vs. Reduced Hours • Brussels Times (2023). Belgium’s Four-Day Law Sees Less Than 1 % Take-Up. • Acerta Survey (2024). Low Adoption of Compressed Hours Model in Belgium. • Newsweek (2023). “Belgium’s 4-Day Workweek Falls Flat.”Critiques & Limitations • Washington University in St. Louis (2024). Expert Analysis: “Don’t Believe the Hype About Shorter Work Week Benefits.” • OECD Productivity Data (2024) – Hours Worked vs. Output Per Hour Comparisons for Canada and OECD Peers.Equity, Health & Well-Being Evidence • Public Health Reviews (2024). Systematic Review Linking Reduced Hours to Improved Sleep and Mental Health.International Pilots & Funding Models • Government of Spain (2022). SME Subsidy Program for 32-Hour Week Transition Pilots.
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20
The Climate Health Check
In this episode of Me, Myself, and AI, Casey B takes a clear-eyed look at what’s really happening to our climate, what “climate health” means, how Canada and Ontario measure up against the world, and which interventions actually work.From the impact of plastic bag bans and electric vehicles to the carbon footprint of data centres and the promise of net-zero buildings, this episode explores the data behind the headlines, and what it all means for our future.Sources: • Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) – AR6 Synthesis Report (2023) • World Meteorological Organization – State of the Global Climate 2023 (2024) • Government of Canada (Environment and Climate Change Canada) – Canada’s Changing Climate Report (2019) • Climate Change Performance Index 2025 – Canada Profile • IISD – The End of Coal: Ontario’s Coal Phase-Out (2015) • Canadian Business – Reusable Grocery Bags vs. Single-Use Plastic Bags (2023) • TD Economics – Lifecycle Emissions of EVs vs Gas Cars in Canada (2025) • MIT Sloan – AI’s High Data Centre Energy Costs (2025) • The Guardian – Data Centres and Emissions (2024) • Climate Institute (Canada) – Climate Change and Heat Waves Fact Sheet (2024) • Canada Green Building Council – Zero Carbon Building Standard • International.gc.ca – Canada’s GHG Emissions and Per-Capita Context • World Meteorological Organization Press Release – Global Temperature Records and Climate Indicators 2023
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19
What Would a Democratic Socialist Canada Actually Look Like?
In this episode of Me, Myself & AI, Casey B dives into the growing wealth divide in Canada, where the richest 1% now control more wealth than the bottom 40% of families combined, and asks: is there a better way to structure our economy?Through examples like Spain’s Mondragón cooperatives, Italy’s Emilia-Romagna co-op network, and the Nordic nations’ balance of innovation and equality, we explore what democratic socialism really means — and how it could work in a modern Canadian context.Spoiler: it’s not about the government owning everything. It’s about people owning part of everything — through worker cooperatives, shared public wealth funds, and policies that make prosperity collective, not concentrated.Casey breaks down: • What “democratic socialism” actually means vs. common misconceptions • Real-world proof that worker ownership can thrive • Why innovation and equality aren’t opposites • How countries like Sweden, Finland, and Norway turned equity into strength • Practical next steps Canada could take right nowThis isn’t about tearing down capitalism — it’s about fixing what’s broken and building an economy that works for everyone, not just the top 1%.🧾 Show-Notes Sources • Canadian Wealth Concentration: Parliamentary Budget Officer & Statistics Canada data — top 1% hold ~24% of national wealth; bottom 40% hold ~3.3%. • Employee Ownership Trusts (Canada, 2023+): Canada Budget 2023 / Bill C-59 framework. • Mondragón Cooperative Corporation: Federation of ~80,000 worker-owners, CEO-to-worker pay ratios typically 6:1 (range 3–9:1); survival rate ~97% over 30 years. • Emilia-Romagna, Italy: Co-ops produce ≈ ⅓ of regional GDP; two-thirds of residents are members. • Nordic Innovation & Equity: World Intellectual Property Organization – Global Innovation Index 2024 (Sweden #2 globally); OECD / UN data on inequality and productivity. • World Happiness Report 2025: Finland #1 for 7 consecutive years; Denmark & Iceland follow closely. • Norway Sovereign Wealth Fund: ~US $2 trillion assets; owns 1–2% of European equities; profits from publicly-owned oil reinvested for citizens. • Research on Employee-Owned Firms: U.S. NCEO & UK Employee Ownership Association find higher productivity, wage equality, and survival rates.
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Wages, Wealth, and Growth: 35 Years of Canada’s Economy
This is Me, Myself, and AI. I’m Casey B, and in this episode I’m using an AI duplicate of my voice along with my fictional co-host to unpack a question that’s been on my mind as I turn thirty-five: How did we get here?For decades, Canada’s economy has grown on paper with higher GDP, bigger cities, and more construction cranes in the sky. But everyday life hasn’t always felt richer. Wages have barely kept up with the cost of living while housing prices have skyrocketed. Governments shifted from building rentals to condos, from public housing to private incentives, and now we’re circling back with Build Canada Homes promising a new era of affordable development.In this episode, I trace the past thirty-five years of change, from the Bank of Canada’s fight with inflation to the rise of inequality and our lag in construction productivity that is now driving innovation in modular and prefabricated building. We’ll explore whether this new wave of housing technology can finally make a dent and what it all means for the next generation trying to build a life here.⸻📚 Sources and References: Bank of Canada (2025) – Press release, September 17, 2025: 25 bps rate cut to 2.50% (bankofcanada.ca) Reuters (2025) – Bank of Canada cuts rates, says ready to cut again if risks rise Build Canada Homes (2025) – Housing, Infrastructure and Communities Canada: About Build Canada Homes (housing-infrastructure.canada.ca) Global News (2025) – Federal government launches Build Canada Homes to accelerate affordable housing TD Economics (2023) – From Bad to Worse: Canada’s Productivity Slowdown C.D. Howe Institute (2024) – Building Smarter, Faster: Technology and Policy Solutions for Canada’s Housing Crisis Canadian Real Estate Magazine (2024) – Modular, Prefab and Mass Timber: Canada’s New Housing Opportunity RENX Homes (2024) – Prefab Not the Unicorn That Will Bring Costs Down Yet Statistics Canada (2024) – Wages in Canada, 1981–2024: Research to Insights Canadians for Tax Fairness (2025) – Canada’s Affordability Divide: How the 1%’s Rise Left Millions Behind
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17
What even is “connection” these days?
In this episode of Me, Myself & AI, we dive deep into one of the biggest questions of our time:What does human connection look like in 2025, and what’s actually keeping us close?From Baby Boomers who grew up calling landlines, to Gen Z who speak fluent emoji, we explore how every generation defines “staying in touch.” Are we losing intimacy through our screens, or just finding new ways to express it?We’ll look at what the research really says, about texting vs. talking, friendships that start online, and how people today are bridging the digital divide. You’ll learn how voice and video still matter, why younger generations crave authenticity over clout, and why loneliness is rising even as we’re more “connected” than ever.Hosted by Casey B, with research and commentary powered by AI.🎧 Listen in for a thoughtful, research-backed conversation that’ll make you rethink how you reach out, and what connection really means in the age of constant communication.⸻🧠 Sources & References: 1. Environics Research (2023) – Social Media in Canada: Generational Differences & Social Valueshttps://environicsresearch.com/social-media-in-canada-generational-differences-social-values/ 2. Statistics Canada (2023) – Canadian seniors more connected than ever (Canadian Internet Use Survey)https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/pub/11-627-m/11-627-m2023013-eng.htm 3. Concordia Journal of Communication Research (2019) – Bridging the Gap: How the Generations Communicatehttps://www.concordia.edu/academics/communication/journal.html 4. EasyStyle with Sami (2025) – Communicating with Different Generations: Baby Boomers to Gen Zhttps://easystylewithsami.com/communicating-with-different-generations-baby-boomers-to-gen-z/ 5. Snap Inc. Global Friendship Report (2019) – Friendship and Communication Across Generationshttps://newsroom.snap.com/en-GB/news/2019/global-friendship-report 6. YouGov (2019) – Millennials: The Loneliest Generationhttps://today.yougov.com/topics/lifestyle/articles-reports/2019/07/30/millennials-loneliest-generation 7. Western News (2021) – New Loneliness Numbers “Not a Fluke”: Western Experthttps://news.westernu.ca/2021/11/loneliness-statscan-numbers/ 8. University of Texas at Austin (2020) – Phone Calls Create Stronger Bonds Than Text-Based Communicationshttps://news.utexas.edu/2020/09/22/phone-calls-create-stronger-bonds-than-text-based-communications/ 9. Frontiers in Developmental Psychology (2024) – Friends, Followers, Peers, and Posts: Adolescent Friendship Closeness and Social Mediahttps://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fdevp.2024.1278909/full 10. Adolescent Research Review (University of California Irvine, 2017) – Teens’ Online Friendships Just as Meaningful as Face-to-Face Oneshttps://news.uci.edu/2017/06/20/teens-online-friendships-just-as-meaningful-as-face-to-face-ones/ 11. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health (2019) – Friends or Frenemies? The Role of Social Technology in the Lives of Older Peoplehttps://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/16/23/4969
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16
Myth vs. Reality: Foreign Workers in Ontario and Deportations in America
In this episode of Me, Myself, and AI, we tackle two big myths that keep circling in conversations about immigration.First, we look at Peterborough, Ontario, where people worry that “foreign workers are taking all the jobs.” The truth? Companies don’t get kickbacks for hiring newcomers. Job losses in Peterborough are coming from corporate closures like Minute Maid winding down its frozen juice line, Lufthansa’s call centre closing in 2026, and Siemens shifting manufacturing jobs — not from immigrants. In fact, immigrants make up only about 8% of the local workforce and are vital to keeping the economy running.Second, we fact-check the claim that “Obama deported more people than Trump.” Obama deported about 3 million people over two terms, using policies created before him, then shifted to focus on “Felons, not families. Criminals, not children.” Trump’s first term numbers were lower (≈1.2 million), but in his second term, DHS reports over 2 million people forced out in less than a year — most through pressured border returns. We also look at who’s being targeted, the lawsuits against Trump’s approach, and the ripple effects on families, communities, and America’s global standing.The lesson? Myths about immigration distract us from the real forces at work — corporations chasing profit and governments flexing power. The facts tell a more complicated, more human story.📚 Sources & References🇨🇦 Canada / Ontario Jobs • Government of Canada – Temporary Foreign Worker Program overview • Government of Canada – Labour Market Impact Assessment (LMIA) requirements • Statistics Canada – Immigrants in the workforce (2021 Census) • KawarthaNOW – Minute Maid plant to discontinue frozen juice line in Peterborough by 2026 • PtboCanada – Minute Maid to eliminate 38 jobs by end of year, says union • KawarthaNOW – Lufthansa InTouch call centre in Peterborough closing by May 2026 (300–400 jobs lost) • PtboToday – Three major Peterborough employers announce restructuring: Lufthansa, Siemens, Minute Maid⸻🇺🇸 U.S. Deportations & Immigration Enforcement • DHS – Yearbook of Immigration Statistics (definitions of removals vs. returns) • Migration Policy Institute – Obama’s Record on Deportations: The ‘Deporter-in-Chief’ Debate • DHS press release – Over 2 million illegal aliens out of the U.S. in less than 250 days • TRAC (Syracuse University) – Removal and detention trackers • Bipartisan Policy Center – Comparing Trump and Obama’s Deportation Priorities • ACLU – Speed Over Fairness: Deportation Under Obama • CNN – Federal court blocks Trump’s nationwide expansion of expedited removal (2025) • Miami Herald – U.S. ramps up deportations, including flights to third countries • AP News – Supreme Court clears Trump deportations to third countries • New York Times – Immigration lawsuits mount against Trump administration
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15
The Price of Access: AI, Music, and the Voices Left Out
In this episode of Me, Myself, and AI, Casey explores the groundbreaking rise of AI-generated music—and why it hits so close to home. From growing up in Canada admiring artists like Kardinal Offishall, Jully (Julie) Black, Keisha Chanté, Nelly Furtado, Justin Bieber, and Drake, to navigating the high costs and gatekeeping of the music industry, Casey shares a personal journey of embracing AI as a tool for creative freedom.We dive into how AI music platforms like Suno, Riffusion, Udio, Stable Audio, Mfly, and Mind Band are transforming the way music is made, distributed, and consumed. Casey reflects on the benefits and challenges of this new era—highlighting issues of diversity, authenticity, and the ethical dilemmas that come with automation in the arts.Plus, we look at how major labels are using AI behind the scenes, and ask: Will we even need traditional music labels in the future?Legal and Ethical Insights (Bonus Notes):As part of this conversation, it’s important to acknowledge the legal and ethical challenges surrounding AI-generated music. Current copyright laws in many countries only recognize works created by human authors, leaving AI-produced tracks in a legal grey zone. Major lawsuits—like those filed by music publishers against companies such as Anthropic—are testing whether using copyrighted songs to train AI models constitutes infringement. While no landmark rulings have yet declared AI-generated outputs illegal, the question of whether training practices violate copyright is being actively debated in courts across the U.S. and Europe.At the same time, industry experts are developing AI detection tools to monitor streaming platforms for AI-generated music, addressing concerns about fraud and fair competition with human artists. These conversations are not just about legal ownership—they also raise deeper ethical questions: Who benefits from AI music? Are diverse voices being represented in the data that trains these systems? And how do we balance accessibility with protecting traditional artistry?This episode includes insights from recent research and reporting, with sources such as: Chen, J. (2023). Can the AI-Generated Content be Protected as Work Under Copyright Law? Deng, J., Zhang, S., & Ma, J. W. (2023). Computational Copyright: Towards A Royalty Model for Music Generative AI. Frosio, G. F. (2021). (The Nonexistent A(I)uthor: a Techno-legal Argument Against the Protection of AI-generated Creativity). Hou, Y. (2022). AI Music Therapist: A Study on Generating Specific Therapeutic Music based on Deep Generative Adversarial Network Approach. Huang, R., Sturm, B. L., & Holzapfel, A. (2021). De-centering the West: East Asian Philosophies and the Ethics of Applying AI to Music. Ji, S., Yang, X., & Luo, J. (2023). A Survey on Deep Learning for Symbolic Music Generation. Piskopani, A. M., Chamberlain, A., & Ten Holter, C. (2023). Responsible AI and the Arts: The Ethical and Legal Implications of AI in the Arts and Creative Industries. Shang, M., & Sun, H. (2020). Study on the New Models of Music Industry in the Era of AI and Blockchain. Vanka, S. S., Safi, M., Rolland, J. B., & Fazekas, G. (2023). Adoption of AI Technology in the Music Mixing Workflow. Zhou, X. (2023). Analysis of Evaluation in Artificial Intelligence Music.We also cover the viral success of Doechii’s song “Anxiety” and explore how social media and influencer culture are reshaping music promotion.Where do you think music is heading? Share your thoughts in the comments or tag me on social—I’d love to keep this conversation going.
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14
Credit: The Game You Never Knew You Were Playing
In this episode of Me, Myself, and AI, we dive deep into the mysterious world of credit—how it works, who controls it, and why it feels like an uphill battle, especially for people who weren’t taught the system early on. Casey shares her personal journey with credit—from her first university credit card to the snowball effect of debt—and unpacks how credit scores are calculated, why rent-reporting programs can be both helpful and risky, and the real deal behind consumer proposals. Plus, we look at how other countries handle credit and ask the big question: is there a fairer way? Whether you’re rebuilding your credit, starting from scratch, or just curious about how this system runs your life, this episode is for you.⸻Sources: • Fair Isaac Corporation (FICO): https://www.fico.com • VantageScore Solutions: https://www.vantagescore.com • Equifax Canada: https://www.consumer.equifax.ca • TransUnion Canada: https://www.transunion.ca • Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB): https://www.consumerfinance.gov • Ontario Consumer Reporting Act: https://www.ontario.ca/laws/statute/90c33 • National Consumer Law Center, “Past Imperfect: How Credit Scores and Other Analytics ‘Bake In’ Past Discrimination and Perpetuate Bias,” 2022 • Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC): https://www.cmhc-schl.gc.ca • Experian Boost: https://www.experian.com/consumer-products/boost • RentTrack: https://www.renttrack.com • Equifax Rent Advantage: https://www.consumer.equifax.ca/personal/products/rent-advantage/ • Government of Canada—Insolvency Statistics and Consumer Proposals: https://www.ic.gc.ca/eic/site/bsf-osb.nsf/eng/home • OECD Reports on International Credit Reporting Systems (2023) • World Bank: “Credit Reporting Knowledge Guide” (2020)
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13
How to Make Something Out of a Mess
Hey, it’s Casey B. Today’s episode is a little different—it’s the full audiobook version of How to Make Something Out of a Mess. I wanted to share this with you because I know what it feels like to be building something new while navigating life’s chaos. This is my story, my blueprint, and my encouragement to you. I hope it resonates.I’m Casey B, you can find me on Instagram @LetCaseyBe, on Facebook as Casey Bradfield, and my music—by Charita B—is available now, including my latest album Golden Hues. Thank you for listening.
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12
Paperwork and Power: The Real Rules of Immigration
This episode examines President Trump’s 2025 invocation of the Alien Enemies Act to deport Venezuelan migrants without due process, as reported by This American Life and other news outlets. It also explores recent changes in Canadian immigration policy, including reductions in international student visas and asylum access, highlighting how immigration is being redefined across North America.Sources referenced or explored in this episode: • This American Life • Reuters • Associated Press • NPR • Fox News • The Guardian • Politico • CBC • CTV News • Government of Canada immigration updates • ACLU legal responses to the Alien Enemies Act • U.S. Supreme Court rulings on recent deportations • Reports on El Salvador’s CECOT prison agreement • Safe Third Country Agreement changes • Research on the economic impact of immigration in the U.S. and Canada
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11
Tech’s Pay Gap Exposed: The Truth About Racial Disparities and DEI
In this deep-dive episode, we explore how Google came to settle a $28 million class-action lawsuit for underpaying Latinx, Indigenous, and Native employees—and why Black employees were pursuing separate legal action. We unpack the data, the leaked spreadsheets, the whistleblowers, and how this landmark case was proven. Then we zoom out and look at similar patterns across Meta, Amazon, Microsoft, Apple, and others. Finally, we investigate the rollback of DEI (Diversity, Equity & Inclusion) programs in the U.S. and Canada. Are companies backing away from racial equity? Were these programs ever enough? And who actually benefited? This episode pulls from legal documents, internal testimony, and a balanced mix of media and academic sources to reveal the real story behind the pay gaps in tech.⸻Sources Cited in the Episode:Legal & Primary Documents: • Class-action lawsuit Cantu v. Google (California Superior Court) • April Curley’s federal lawsuit against Google • U.S. Department of Labor v. Oracle (OFCCP complaint) • EEOC complaints filed against Facebook • National Labor Relations Board documents (Apple pay transparency case)Media Outlets – Left & Center: • Reuters • The Guardian • Black Enterprise • TechCrunch • Fortune • NPR • Time • CNBC • People of Color in Tech (POCIT) • ClassAction.orgMedia Outlets – Right & Balanced Perspectives: • Fox Business (coverage of anti-DEI shareholder push and state backlash) • Wall Street Journal (commentary on DEI performance) • Resourceful Finance ProAcademic & Policy Reports: • McKinsey & Company – “Race in the Workplace” & DEI outcomes reports • Harvard Business Review – Research on diversity program effectiveness (Dobbin & Kalev) • EEOC (Equal Employment Opportunity Commission) – 2023 tech sector diversity report • Statistics Canada – Racial pay gap data and employment equity outcomes • Conference Board of Canada – Reports on DEI and representation in the Canadian workforce
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10
Canada’s Policy Maze: What Have Our Leaders Really Done?
In this episode, we take a deep dive into the policies that have shaped Canada over the past 20 years. From the federal level under Justin Trudeau’s Liberal government to the provincial level under Doug Ford’s Conservative leadership, we uncover the key policies that have impacted housing, healthcare, the economy, immigration, and more. We’ll break down what’s been passed, what’s been struck down, and what it all means for everyday Canadians.Is Canada truly progressing, or are we caught in a cycle of political promises and practical failures? Join us as we make sense of the data and explore how federal and provincial priorities clash, intersect, and shape the way we live. Whether you’re just tuning in to politics or trying to make sense of the headlines, this episode cuts through the noise and lays out the real impact of our leaders’ choices.Sources:1. Macrotrends 2. The Guardian 3. Reuters 4. Politico 5. Wikipedia 6. Migration Policy Institute 7. Council on Foreign Relations 8. Financial Times 9. FCJ Refugee Centre 10. Canadian Government (Canada.ca) 11. Ontario Government (Ontario.ca) 12. Public Health Ontario 13. AP News 14. Torys LLP 15. The Le Monde 16. National Observer 17. Bloomberg News 18. CBC News 19. CTV News 20. National Post 21. Toronto Star 22. The Hill Times 23. Globe and Mail 24. The Narwhal 25. Housing Rights Canada 26. eCampusOntario 27. Federal Register 28. Legislative Assembly of Ontario
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9
2025 Elections: Canada’s Next Leader and Trump’s New America
In this episode, we break down the political landscape of 2025, starting with Canada’s federal election and the candidates vying for leadership. We’ll explore who’s running, what they’re standing on, and how they’re positioning themselves in the race. Then, we shift our focus to the U.S., diving into Trump’s return to office and the whirlwind of policies he’s been putting in place and repealing. Plus, we take a step back to look at how Trump’s actions compare to the legacies of Obama and Biden over the past few years.It’s all about cutting through the noise and understanding what’s really happening on both sides of the border. Tune in for a straight-up, no-nonsense breakdown that gets to the heart of the matter.
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8
Who Controls the Narrative? Media Bias, Global Perspectives, and the Stories We’re Told
In this eye-opening episode of Me, Myself, and AI, we dive deep into the media narratives shaping our world today. From the concentrated ownership and ideological leanings of major news outlets in Canada and the U.S., to the complex and often conflicting portrayals of North America from global perspectives, we unravel the stories being told about us — and who’s telling them.We examine dominant narratives around technology, cultural shifts, democracy, and foreign policy over the past two years, exploring how mainstream media in Canada and the U.S. presents topics like AI, Big Tech regulation, culture wars, and geopolitical rivalries. We also take a global tour to discover how countries like the U.K., China, Russia, Nigeria, South Africa, and Egypt are talking about North America — sometimes reflecting our own perspectives, other times starkly contradicting them. From accusations of Western hypocrisy to narratives of American decline, we see how media worldwide interprets our actions and how those interpretations shape international perceptions.Join us for a thoughtful and nuanced discussion that challenges how we think about media and the stories we consume — and helps us understand how media ownership and geopolitical realities influence what we see on our screens.⸻Sources: • Diana Maliszewski, Association for Media Literacy – notes on Canadian media bias (CBC “left-centre bias”) • Wikipedia – Political alignment of Toronto Star and Globe and Mail; Fox News bias descriptions • Vanessa Otero (AllSides) – media bias: “Fox is right-leaning, CNN is left-leaning, and MSNBC is left-leaning…” • NewsWhip report (Haley Corzo, 2023) – surge in AI discourse and major narratives like ChatGPT, fear of AI dangers • Digital Content Next (Jessica Patterson, 2024) – impact of Canada’s Online News Act and Meta’s news ban • Fox News op-ed (2023) – criticism of “identity politics” • Media Matters (V. Henry, 2025) – analysis of culture war shifts, focus on attacks on transgender people • Brookings (Darrell West, 2024) – disinformation shaping views and widespread media attention • Reuters (D. Ljunggren, 2024) – Canadian intelligence on Chinese election interference • The Guardian (Leyland Cecco, 2023) – leaked reports of Chinese meddling in Canadian elections • Global Times (editorial, Jan 5, 2023) – U.S. House speaker chaos and polarization • Atlantic Council (Ash Jain, 2022) – Biden’s Warsaw speech quote on democracy vs. autocracy • Responsible Statecraft (Ben Armbruster, 2023) – critique of mainstream media hyping the China threat • Reuters (Oct 5, 2023) – Putin’s reaction to Canadian parliamentary Nazi tribute • Time Magazine (Philip Elliott, 2023) – propaganda highlighting U.S. House instability • News24 (Sept 3, 2023) – “No evidence weapons were loaded onto Lady R,” South African inquiry finds • African Digital Democracy Observatory (Jan 28, 2025) – Egypt’s state-run media echoing Russia’s narrative on Ukraine • Responsible Statecraft (Alex Thurston, 2023) – Africans criticizing U.S. policy on Israel vs. Ukraine • BBC, Guardian, Al Jazeera, Pew Research – context for global media trends
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7
Town and Tide: How Ontario’s Small Cities Rise and Fall
Ever wondered why some Ontario towns thrive while others struggle to survive? In Town and Tide, we dive deep into the forces shaping small and mid-sized cities across Ontario. From factory shutdowns and aging populations to booming real estate and urban infrastructure projects, we uncover the stories behind the rise and fall of communities across the province. Join us as we explore the impact of economic shifts, social challenges, and demographic changes on local life – and how some towns find new hope while others battle decline. Whether you’re an investor, a history buff, or just curious about the stories behind Ontario’s hidden gems, this podcast will change the way you see the places around you.
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6
Black Homes Matter: Breaking Down the Housing Divide
Why are Black families still struggling to secure affordable, safe housing in both Canada and the U.S.? In this episode of “Housing the Divide,” we break down the systemic challenges faced by Black communities when it comes to housing access, affordability, and homeownership.From the legacy of redlining in America to the ongoing racial biases in Canada, we dive into the research and highlight the real stories behind the statistics. Featuring insights from Dr. Marie Cecile Kotyk’s groundbreaking research, we explore why the housing divide persists and what can be done to create lasting change.🔗 Listen now and get the full story! #BlackHousingMatters #AffordableHousing #Homeownership #SystemicRacism #HousingInequality #SocialJustice #RealEstate
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5
Resilience and Reality: Unpacking the Truth About Single Motherhood in Black Communities
In this episode of Me, Myself, and AI, we’re diving deep into the complex realities of single motherhood in Black communities across Canada and the U.S. We’re breaking down the root causes of why single motherhood is so prevalent among Black women, from the historical legacy of slavery and mass incarceration to modern-day economic disparities and health inequities.We’ll discuss why understanding these roots matters—especially when public figures dismiss racial disparities as non-existent or undermine initiatives like DEI. Through a critical look at the data, we uncover the systemic forces at play and challenge the simplistic narratives often pushed in the media.But it’s not all heavy—we’re also looking for solutions and glimmers of hope. What policies have proven effective? How can we better support single moms who are breaking cycles of poverty and resilience every day? Tune in for an eye-opening and empowering conversation that puts truth at the forefront.Let’s confront the reality, honor the resilience, and advocate for real change.#SingleMothers #BlackMothers #SocialJustice #Resilience #DEI #RacialEquity #Podcast
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4
Healing the Wounds of History: Generational Trauma and the Fight for Justice
In this episode of Me, Myself, and AI, we dive deep into the profound impact of generational trauma on marginalized communities, exploring how historic events like slavery, the Holocaust, and colonial genocide continue to shape lives today. We discuss the scientific evidence behind how trauma is passed down through generations, the stark differences between communities that received reparations and those that did not, and how persistent wealth gaps and mental health disparities trace back to these unresolved injustices..Organizations Doing the Work:These organizations are on the front lines of advocating for justice, mental health, and reparations for marginalized communities:In Canada: • Amadeusz - Reintegration programs for incarcerated youth. • Website: amadeusz.ca • Black Health Alliance - Culturally appropriate mental health programs for Black communities. • Website: blackhealthalliance.ca • Black Legal Action Centre (BLAC) - Free legal services for low-income Black Ontarians. • Website: blacklegalactioncentre.ca • Multicultural Mental Health Resource Centre (MMHRC) - Culturally safe mental health services. • Website: multiculturalmentalhealth.ca • Mental Health Commission of Canada (MHCC) - Diversity initiatives to improve mental wellness. • Website: mentalhealthcommission.caIn the United States: • National African American Reparations Commission (NAARC) - Advocacy and policy development for reparations. • Website: reparationscomm.org • ADOS Advocacy Foundation - Focused on reparations for descendants of chattel slavery. • Website: adosfoundation.org • Mental Health America (MHA) - BIPOC Mental Health Resource Center. • Website: mhanational.org • National Coalition of Blacks for Reparations in America (N’COBRA) - Mobilization and education for reparations. • Website: en.wikipedia.orgGlobal: • Holocaust Education Centers and Museums - Supporting Holocaust survivors and education. • Jewish Community Services - Mental health and community support for Holocaust survivors and their descendants.
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3
Leadership Redefined: Women of Colour Breaking Barriers
Join us on an inspiring journey as we dive into the dynamic world of leadership through the eyes of trailblazing women of color. From tech and finance to politics and social justice, these phenomenal women are pushing boundaries and redefining what’s possible.In this episode, we celebrate leaders like Kamala Harris, Celina Caesar-Chavannes, Angela Cooke, and many more who are making history across Canada, the U.S., and beyond. Discover the tactics they use to thrive in the modern workplace, the challenges they face, and the community-driven movements that fuel their progress.We also spotlight pivotal organizations that support women of color in leadership, share stories of resilience and innovation, and explore how these women are shaping a more inclusive future.Whether you’re an aspiring leader, an ally, or just looking for a dose of inspiration, this episode will leave you feeling empowered and motivated. Tune in and let these stories remind you of the power of persistence, community, and ambition.
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2
Black Billionaire Blueprint
Black Billionaire Blueprint” dives into the extraordinary journeys of Black billionaires from around the world—past, present, and future. We’re unpacking how they built their empires, the challenges they faced, and the systems they created to sustain their wealth. From ancient legends like Mansa Musa to modern moguls like Rihanna and Robert Smith, we’re telling stories of hustle, innovation, and legacy that break stereotypes and inspire generations.Tune in for captivating narratives, insightful analysis, and real talk about how Black wealth is made—and whether it can last. Whether you’re curious about the path from broke to billionaire or passionate about redefining legacy, this podcast will challenge your perspective and leave you motivated to chase your own dreams.Get ready to see wealth through a new lens—because building a legacy doesn’t just mean making money, it means making history.
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1
Manifesting Magic: The Science Behind Manifestation for Black Women
In this episode of Me, Myself, and AI, we dive deep into the science behind manifestation, focusing on its unique impact on Black women. We explore what the research really says about visualization, positive affirmations, and how cultivating a manifesting mindset shapes self-worth, mental well-being, and even life outcomes. Our AI hosts break down the cognitive and neurological effects of positive thinking, discuss the cultural power of affirmations like “Black Girl Magic,” and examine how manifestation can be both empowering and misleading if taken too far.Join us as we blend scientific insights with cultural context to uncover how manifestation practices can uplift, inspire, and even transform lives. Whether you’re a believer or a skeptic, this episode sheds light on why the way we think matters—and how Black women have been harnessing this power long before it became mainstream.Don’t miss out on this thought-provoking episode that blends science, culture, and a touch of magic. Tune in now and manifest some good vibes with us!Inspiring Women of Color Leaders • Ursula Burns - Former CEO of Xerox (USA) • Lisa Su - CEO of Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) (USA) • Arlan Hamilton - Founder and CEO of Backstage Capital (USA) • Tiffany Callender - CEO of the Black Entrepreneurship Program (Canada) • Chivon John - Global Wellness Advocate and Speaker (Canada) • Thasunda Brown Duckett - CEO of TIAA (USA) • Mellody Hobson - Co-CEO of Ariel Investments and Board Chair of Starbucks (USA) • Nadine Spencer - CEO of the Black Business and Professional Association (BBPA) (Canada) • Kamala Harris - Vice President of the United States (USA) • Celina Caesar-Chavannes - Former MP (Canada) • Rosemary Sadlier - Social Justice Advocate (Canada) • Mia Mottley - Prime Minister of Barbados • Nanaia Mahuta - Former Foreign Minister of New Zealand • Jody Wilson-Raybould - Former Minister of Justice and Attorney General of Canada • Ai-jen Poo - Executive Director, National Domestic Workers Alliance (USA) • Opal Tometi - Co-Founder of Black Lives Matter (USA) • Djamila Ibrahim - Human Rights and Anti-Racism Consultant (Canada) • Karen Restoule - Co-Founder of BOLD Realities (Canada) • Tarana Burke - Founder of the Me Too Movement (USA) • Sheena Blake - Community Advocate and Urban Hero (Canada) • Angela Cooke - Assistant Deputy Minister of Housing, Ontario⸻Mentorship and Networking Organizations for Women of ColorGlobal and U.S.-Based Organizations: • The Executive Leadership Council (ELC) • Black Women on Wall Street (BWOWS) • Women of Color in Tech (WOCinTech) • National Black MBA Association (NBMBAA) • Girls Who Code • Black Girls CODE • Higher Heights for America • LatinasRepresentCanadian Organizations and Networks: • Black Business and Professional Association (BBPA) • Canadian Association of Black Lawyers (CABL) • Equal Voice Canada • CivicAction Leadership Foundation • Federation of Black Canadians (FBC) • ByBlacks.com • Calgary Black Chambers • The Congress of Black Women of Canada (CBWC)#Manifestation #BlackGirlMagic #PositiveThinking #MentalHealth #Podcast
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Me, Myself, and AI is a podcast where I use today’s most powerful AI tools to dig into the stories, ideas, and forces shaping our world. From economics to culture, housing to innovation, I explore what matters through the lens of a 30-something Black Canadian woman—professional, creative, and curious. It’s part research, part reflection, and part storytelling: a space where data meets lived experience, and where technology becomes a tool for deeper understanding.
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Let CaseyBe
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