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Estimated from 1 chart position in 1 market.
By chart position
- 🇨🇦CA · Management#11300K to 1M
- Per-Episode Audience
Est. listeners per new episode within ~30 days
90K to 300K🎙 Daily cadence·344 episodes·Last published today - Monthly Reach
Unique listeners across all episodes (30 days)
300K to 1M🇨🇦100% - Active Followers
Loyal subscribers who consistently listen
120K to 400K
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* Data sourced directly from platform APIs and aggregated hourly across all major podcast directories.
On the show
From 11 epsHost
Recent guests
Recent episodes
Self-Made - Tim Moore
Jun 25, 2026
Unknown duration
Dreamers Daughter - Lori Thicke
Jun 18, 2026
Unknown duration
Outspoken - The Betty Baxter Story
Jun 11, 2026
Unknown duration
Opportunity Knocks - Robin Devine
Jun 4, 2026
Unknown duration
The Liar's Playbook - Leslie Bradford-Scott
May 28, 2026
Unknown duration
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| Date | Episode | Topics | Guests | Brands | Places | Keywords | Sponsor | Length | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6/25/26 | ![]() Self-Made - Tim Moore | My guest today is Tim Moore, a serial entrepreneur with immense character. Tim's upbringing included failing a few grades, studying to become a priest, then becoming a teacher and eventually a truck driver. His life changed when he bought a secondhand pickup truck, covered it with a tarp, placed a newspaper ad, and started a moving business charging seven dollars an hour. From there, he built AMJ Campbell into Canada's largest moving company, then Premier Executive Suites and many more ventures across real estate, storage, mortgages, hospitality, and more. But that is his resume. This conversation is about something deeper. Tim talks about fear as a warrior emotion, humility as a superpower, manners as a business strategy, and why the way you treat people is the true measure of success. He understood early that a move is never just boxes and furniture. It is people trusting you with their memories, their stress, their hopes, and their next chapter. Later in the show, Kim Mason, Executive Vice President and Head of Private Banking at RBC, joins me to talk about Tim and what it means to stand beside entrepreneurs not only when things are going well but also when everything is on the line. Tim is a fantastic storyteller with many career and life lessons. To buy Tim's book: How I Made It: Secrets of a Self-Made Multi-Millionaire https://a.co/d/09nD09ot | — | ||||||
| 6/18/26 | ![]() Dreamers Daughter - Lori Thicke | Happy Father's Day. Did your father ever try to bottle liquid manure, only to watch it explode in the sunlight while sitting in a store window display? Did he ever bet the family's fortune on a machine he believed could extract gold from sand? Did he buy horses before figuring out where to keep them, then decide the house would do? Did he lose the rent, the car, the business, and occasionally the plot, but somehow never lose his love for his children? Welcome to the unforgettable world of Dacker. In my Father's Day special, I sit down with Lori Thicke, author of Dreamer's Daughter: Surviving My Childhood and Raising My Father. Lori was only ten when her mother left. From that moment on, she and her younger brother Brad were raised by their father, a war veteran, salesman, dreamer, schemer, serial entrepreneur, and eternal optimist. Dacker's ideas were often outrageous. His timing was questionable. His plans were usually missing a few important pieces. But his love for his children was never in doubt. Lori's story takes us from Kirkland Lake to Paris, from childhood chaos to a life of purpose, including her role in helping create Translators Without Borders. Along the way, she searches for understanding of her father, her mother, her childhood, and ultimately herself. This is a Father's Day episode with houses burning down, a car taking out three brand-new yachts, the Count and Countess of Albania staging a coup from Dacker's kitchen, plenty of humour, and a whole lot of heart. Because sometimes the most imperfect fathers leave behind the most unforgettable stories and the most unquestionable love. And at the end of the episode, I offer a personal tribute to my own dad, and to all fathers, the ones who are here, the ones we miss, and the ones who did their best with what they had. To buy Dreamer's Daughter: https://www.indigo.ca/products/dreamers-daughter-surviving-my-childhood-and-raising-my-father | — | ||||||
| 6/11/26 | ![]() Outspoken - The Betty Baxter Story | Not long ago in Canada, who you loved could cost you everything. Betty Baxter knows this because it happened to her. Betty was an elite athlete, an Olympic captain, a pioneering coach, and one of the rare women leading at the highest levels of international sport. Her athletes trusted her. Her program was working. Her future was bright. Then, on a cold November night in 1981, Betty was told to drive to a roadside motel between Ottawa and Montreal. Inside, three of the most powerful men in Canadian volleyball were waiting. They did not ask about her athletes, her results, or her vision. They asked one question. "There are rumours that you are gay. Do you deny that?" Betty's answer was stunning in its courage. "I am the same person I have always been." Soon after, Betty was pushed out of the sport she loved. But this is not only a story about prejudice, power, and what was taken from her. It is also a story about what Betty did next. She became an activist, a human rights advocate, a builder of community, and a champion for women in coaching, fairness in sport, and every person who has ever been told they do not belong. Betty's story reminds us that Pride began as courage. As risk. As people standing up when standing out could cost them everything. This is Betty Baxter's story - and it matters. And stick around as I then chat with Eric Turner and Isadore Chung about Pride, belonging, representation, and why respect must be more than words on a page. To buy Outspoken - Betty Baxter's book: https://five.libsyn.com/show/episodes/new | — | ||||||
| 6/4/26 | ![]() Opportunity Knocks - Robin Devine | Robin Devine has spent her life knocking on doors, sometimes literally, and finding opportunity on the other side. Raised by her grandmother, Robin learned early that hard work, honesty, courage, and instinct could take you places credentials could not. As a little girl, she sold lilacs and rhubarb door to door. As a young woman, she walked into an advertising agency with no portfolio, no experience, and talked her way into a job. By twenty-three, she was selling Checker automobiles out of a broken-down garage, turning old taxis into reverse status symbols. What follows is a remarkable conversation about grit, reinvention, and seeing value where others see nothing. Her energy and passion are contagious as she shares her life story from advertising to automobiles, from Expo 86 to Canadian Tire, from Russian generals to Bestselling Books, Food banks, Shelters, and a Canada Watch she proudly markets with proceeds helping those in need. This episode is timeless. It is about agency and refusing to wait for permission. You can also help support Canada's Food Banks and Shelters, by purchasing a special edition Canadian Watch. https://www.timeisticking.ca/ | — | ||||||
| 5/28/26 | ![]() The Liar's Playbook - Leslie Bradford-Scott | Leslie Bradford-Scott grew up inside a story so spectacular it felt unreal. Her father drove a Rolls-Royce. A promoter, he brought Pink Floyd and Paul Anka to Hamilton, moved through a world of million-dollar diamonds, and lit up every room he entered. Then the story cracked. At twelve, Leslie came home to the police on the lawn. At fifteen, she had a gun pressed against her arm. At sixteen, she lost her brother, the one person who made her feel less alone. Trying to outrun her father's shadow, Leslie joined the Coast Guard to save lives and fight crime, only to find corruption there, too. Later, she married a man who felt familiar in the worst possible way: charming, dangerous, and destructive. But Leslie kept moving. She wrote screenplays on Post-it notes while selling cars, built a business from a farm, and reinvented herself again and again. Years after his death, her father's 175,000-word prison manuscript surfaced, reopening everything she thought she had buried. Was he a villain, a victim, a con man, a hero, or all of the above? This is a gripping conversation about crime, family myth, buried truth, and what happens when the story that shaped you collapses. Leslie's lesson is unforgettable: where you are born, and whom you are born to, may shape you, but they do not get to define you. As she says, "My entire life, I didn't feel I mattered. And now I know that I matter." And then please stick around for an important announcement about Chatter that Matters. To buy Leslie's book: https://www.amazon.com/Liars-Playbook-Memoir-Family-Crime/dp/1668069393 | — | ||||||
| 5/21/26 | ![]() An unexpected surprise - Bailey Gee | Some episodes entertain. Some inspire. And some remind us what it means to be human. This is one of those episodes. Bailey Gee was born with the most severe form of spina bifida. Her life became a cycle of surgeries, pain, bullying, isolation, a wheelchair, and battles with mental health that often left her wondering if life was worth fighting for. Every day she prayed to be happy. Then one day, happiness found her. A random YouTube search introduced Bailey to Cesar De La Rosa, whose music and stage presence became an unexpected light during one of the darkest periods of her life. What started as fandom became friendship, healing, and hope. In this deeply emotional episode, Bailey shares her journey through disability, loneliness, and resilience. Cesar reflects on the responsibility artists carry when their work touches lives in ways they never imagined. The conversation also features Paralympian Joel Dembe, who challenges us to rethink disability, accessibility, and what it truly means to be seen. And thanks to RBC Avion, Cesar will meet Bailey for the first time. This is a story about pain, music, humanity, and the unexpected angels who help us find the light. | — | ||||||
| 5/14/26 | ![]() Celine Dione - Vito Luprano | Step inside the recording studio to understand more about one of the greatest voices of our time, Celine Dion. My guest is Vito Luprano, the Sony Music executive and creative force who worked on 21 of Celine's albums and helped shape her rise from a shy francophone teenager into an international superstar. Vito found the songs. Fought for the sound. Pushed for the reinvention. And helped Celine move from French-language success to global domination. He shares some of Celine's iconic moments, from "Where Does My Heart Beat Now" to "I Drove All Night," "Taking Chances," "Alone," and the unforgettable story behind "My Heart Will Go On." This is a rare look behind the curtain at one of the world's greatest stars, her journey to the top, her songs, the tension, and her heartbreak when she lost Rene, the love of her life. | — | ||||||
| 5/7/26 | ![]() Write your Own Story - Nick Ferguson✨ | resiliencementorship+3 | Nick Ferguson | CFLNFL | Miami | resiliencementorship+5 | — | 39m 41s | |
| 4/30/26 | ![]() Less is More - Paul Meehan✨ | entrepreneurshipbrand storytelling+3 | Paul Meehan | NUTRL Vodka | Canada | entrepreneurNUTRL Vodka+3 | — | 37m 30s | |
| 4/23/26 | ![]() Tea for the Tillerman - Michael D. Ham✨ | entrepreneurshipwellness+5 | Michael D. Ham | Wild Orchard TeasTea for the Tillerman | — | Michael D. HamCat Stevens+6 | — | 29m 30s | |
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| 4/16/26 | ![]() There is only one Jesse Hirsh✨ | hackingmedia+4 | Jesse Hirsh | RBC | Eastern Ontario | Jesse Hirshhacking+5 | — | 55m 12s | |
| 4/9/26 | ![]() Dancing with Parkinson's - Sarah Robichaud✨ | artdance+4 | Sarah Robichaud | Dancing With Parkinson'sBrain Canada+1 | — | danceParkinson's+5 | — | 36m 03s | |
| 4/2/26 | ![]() Live a Little Better - John Beyer✨ | addictionrecovery+4 | John Beyer | Live a Little Better | — | addictionrecovery+5 | — | 31m 06s | |
| 3/29/26 | ![]() Breaking Barriers, Building Scale. Jaffer, Menard-Shand, Zinaty✨ | women entrepreneurshipchallenges faced by women+3 | Shamira JafferJennifer Menard-Shand+1 | WBE CanadaRBC Canadian Women Entrepreneur Awards | — | women entrepreneursbusiness challenges+3 | — | 37m 40s | |
| 3/26/26 | ![]() Surviving the Silence - Audrey Hyams Romoff✨ | traumagrief+4 | Audrey Hyams Romoff | OverCat CommunicationsThe Ripple Eclipse | Auschwitz | public relationsAuschwitz+5 | — | 29m 24s | |
| 3/19/26 | ![]() Rock to Recovery - Wes Geer✨ | musicaddiction+4 | Wes Geer | Wes BookHead P.E.+3 | — | Wes GeerRock to Recovery+6 | — | 36m 46s | |
| 3/12/26 | ![]() Follow Your Passion - Elysia Racanelli and Jonathan Roy✨ | passionmusic+3 | Elysia RacanelliJonathan Roy | Odience 360FirstUp by RBC X Music+2 | — | passionmusic+5 | — | 39m 20s | |
| 3/5/26 | ![]() Is Sports Fixed? Declan Hill✨ | sports fixingorganized crime+3 | Declan Hill | OxfordThe Fix | — | sports fixinggambling+4 | — | 40m 14s | |
| 2/27/26 | ![]() Mansions to the left of Me, Tents to My Right. | On occasion, I break format, step out of interview mode, and speak directly to you about what I believe matters to you, to me, and to our country. In this episode, I talk about Canada's K economy and the growing, dangerous divide between those who have and those who have very little. I look at the human cost, the impact on our psychology and our society, and five things we can do to rebuild our economy. To grow our way forward, versus borrowing on the backs of future generations just to cover today's bills. I hope you can find ten minutes over the next few days to listen, and to share your thoughts. Thanks for listening to Chatter That Matters. Let's chat soon. | — | ||||||
| 2/26/26 | ![]() Do it Yourself, But Do It. The k3 Sisters Band | This week's podcast is for all who are dealing with the reality that their future will not look like the past. There will be no neatly paved road. No ladder with perfectly placed rungs. Instead, there will be relentless headwinds, industries reshaped by technology and marketplaces rendered by global forces. Jobs will collapse, and new ones will emerge. Which is why I invited The k3 Sisters Band to join me this week. Three sisters who chose to make their destiny a matter of choice, rather than leave it to chance. Homeschooled. Fourth-generation musicians. As children, on a flight home from Disney, they sketched the name of a band that did not yet exist. They kept the drawing, they kept dreaming, and they kept doing. They played in churches, fairs, school cafeterias, and nursing homes across Texas while other kids lined up at lockers. They did not wait for a record label to find an audience. They mastered streaming and social platforms like TikTok. Their songs have been played millions of times, and they have fans in 70 countries. They created a community built on positivity, anti-bullying messages, and songs written in their fans' languages. Fifteen years later, The k3 Sisters Band have released 15 albums, written over 170 songs, and just recorded 24K Gold live with no digital or AI modification. Their philosophy is simple. Do it yourself. But do it. In a culture that often feels dystopian, they chose a utopian view. In an industry obsessed with shortcuts, they chose craft. In a digital world addicted to filters and AI, they chose authenticity. This episode is not just for young people or music fans. It is for parents wondering how to prepare their kids for an uncertain future. And for anyone who feels the ground shifting beneath their feet. I have included some of their fantastic music. To learn more about The K3 Sisters Band: https://www.k3sistersband.com To find out more about RBC Future Launch to support Canadian Youth: https://www.rbc.com/en/future-launch/about/ To find out more about FirstUp by RBCX music, a program dedicated to providing emerging Canadian artists with a platform for exposure, funding, education and mentorship opportunities. https://www.rbc.com/dms/enterprise/music/first-up.html | — | ||||||
| 2/19/26 | ![]() From Darkness Came Light - Carol Lee | Vancouver's Chinatown was never built to be trendy. It was built because people had nowhere else to belong. Shut out of opportunity. Pushed to the margins. Told where they could and could not live. So they built anyway. Store by store. Family by family. A place that began to pulse and then became magnetic to all who lived in and visited Vancouver. And then slowly, the pulse weakened. Rising costs. Aging buildings. Poverty. Then the pandemic. The streets emptied. Businesses struggled to survive. Anti-Asian racism surged. Fear replaced foot traffic. Absence replaced community. This week on Chatter That Matters, you will hear the story of how one woman turned darkness into light. Carol Lee looked at decay and did not see failure. She saw a break in belonging. Carol's approach can be replicated by any struggling community. Joining the conversation are Martin Thibodeau, Regional President of RBC in British Columbia, and Carmen Stossel, Regional Director of Community Marketing and Social Impact at RBC. They share what makes Carol Lee special and why they got involved. If you care about your community and humanity. You will want to hear this conversation. Because sometimes lighting up a neighbourhood is really about lighting up belief. Hit play to Light Up Chinatown. | — | ||||||
| 2/12/26 | ![]() Save the Rage for the Stage - Bif Naked | Some artists find a sound or a look. Others find the truth. Bif Naked found both. In this moving episode of Chatter that Matters, I sit down with the iconic Juno Award-winning artist and activist Bif Naked to unpack "I am who I am." Born in New Delhi. Adopted. Raised across oceans, finding love in words and music. At 21, Bif met her birth mother, a moment that brought her story full circle. But identity is not formed only in comfort. At 36, Bif was diagnosed with breast cancer. Two years later, she suffered a stroke. Those chapters did not silence her. They fed her poetry and clarified what mattered. I loved every second of my time with Bif Naked. We discuss punk, poetry, feminism, and the discipline behind her philosophy: "save the rage for the stage." There is wisdom in that line. Choose where your energy goes. Do not let the noise of the world steal your voice. Channel it. Own it. If you have ever felt different, silenced or enraged. If you have ever had to rebuild or renew. If you believe identity is something you own, not something assigned. This conversation is for you. (And her music and passion roars throughout) | — | ||||||
| 2/5/26 | ![]() What happened to the Truth? - Gordon Pennycook | What happened to the truth? I find myself fixated on a troubling realization. It feels remarkably easy to win over an audience with a slogan, a promise without substance, or blatant mistruths, even when those are wildly disconnected from the audience's reality. And even more surprisingly, they are not only readily accepted but also often repeated and shared. I wanted to understand why. Not from a political or media lens, but from a human one. What is it about human nature that makes us so vulnerable? That question led me to two conversations on Chatter That Matters. What ties them together is a sobering conclusion. Our minds have not fundamentally changed, but the tools used to target them have. Unless we become more intentional about how we think as parents, citizens and individuals navigating the uncertainties and complexities of life, it will remain dangerously easy to sell comforting narratives that drift far from reality. Gordon Pennycook, a highly regarded cognitive scientist whose journey from small-town Saskatchewan to a renowned thought leader at Cornell University gives him a rare lens on how ordinary people reason in extraordinary information environments. Gordon studies why we are so trusting, why misinformation spreads faster than truth, and why most of us are not irrational or malicious, just distracted. His research shows that people do not fail because they cannot think, but because the systems around them reward speed, emotion, and certainty over reflection and accuracy. We discuss why falsehood often outperforms truth online, how social platforms exploit attention rather than intention, why news has become opinionated, and why there is still hope. I then bring in Milos Stojadinovic, a cybersecurity and threat expert at RBC, who thinks like attackers, so the rest of us do not have to. Milos explains how cybercrime has become organized, global, and industrialized, from ransomware-as-a-service to AI-powered scams and nation-state involvement. His insight makes one thing clear. Trust is still our greatest human strength, but it has also become the easiest point of entry for those who want to exploit it. | — | ||||||
| 1/29/26 | ![]() Robyne Hanley-Dafoe - From Broken to Becoming | Robyne was a high school dropout who believed she wasn't worth saving. Then her car plunged through the ice, trapping her 20 feet underwater and changing everything. This is the story of how choosing hope became a strategy for survival and healing. I sit down with Dr. Robyne Hanley-Dafoe, bestselling author and one of the most trusted voices on resilience. As a teenager, Robyne battled addiction, dropped out of school, and was hospitalized in an adult psychiatric ward. At 16, a near-fatal accident gave her a second chance she refused to waste. This is not a glossy comeback story. It is an honest conversation about becoming. Robyn shares why pain does not have to make sense to be real, why recovery is never linear, how stress can be worked with rather than feared, and what everyday resilience actually looks like. This episode is about hope, not as a feeling, but as a practice, and choosing to show up again when life feels overwhelming. To find out more: Discover – Pre-Order 'I Hope So: How to Choose Hope Even When It's Hard' Hope isn't just a feeling – it's the key to rewiring your brain for resiliency and well-being, even in the toughest times. Stay Connected - Subscribe to Dr. Robyne's Newsletter Get exclusive tools, strategies, and Everyday Resiliency—straight to your inbox. | — | ||||||
| 1/22/26 | ![]() Jane Roos - Why am I still here? | What happens when the dream you are chasing, ends in a split second? Only to find a new one awaits. At 19, Jane Roos was chasing Olympic dreams, fast, fearless, and focused. Then, in a single moment, everything changed. A devastating car accident took her best friend's life and ended the future she had trained for. What followed was pain, survivor's guilt, and a question that quietly redefined her life: Why am I still here? From a hospital bed, with no roadmap and no safety net, Jane founded the Canadian Athletes Now Fund, an idea that would grow into one of the most important sources of support for Canada's Olympic and Paralympic athletes. Today, CAN Fund has helped fund thousands of athletes seek their podium dreams, not by chance but by belief. Jane also shares the quieter, equally powerful parts of her journey, including overcoming survivor's guilt, choosing service over fear, and creating community through initiatives like Random Acts of Magic. Her perspective on gratitude, courage, and living fully feels both hard-earned and deeply generous. I then welcome Jacquie Ryan, CEO of the Canadian Olympic Foundation. We explore what it truly takes to get athletes to the starting line and beyond, and why long-term commitment matters. Jacquie reflects on the enduring role of partners like RBC and how investing in athletes is about more than medals; it is about identity, pride, and belief in what Canada can be. If you have ever questioned your path, your purpose, or what is possible after life takes an unexpected turn, Jane's story is a powerful reminder that the worst day can become the greatest gift, and that sometimes the most meaningful victories happen far from the podium. To learn more about the CAN Fund: https://canadianathletesnow.ca | — | ||||||
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Chart Positions
2 placements across 1 market.
Chart Positions
2 placements across 1 market.

























