The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/12/19 at 09:00 EST
Episode Date: December 19, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/12/19 at 09:00 EST...
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Okay, so there's this new play about the Rogers family and their battle for control over the gigantic telecom empire, and I cannot stop thinking about it.
I'm Alameen Abdul-Mahmoud. I host a pop culture show called Commotion. This week, we're talking about Rogers v. Rogers, and on the show, we'll get into what this corporate story actually tells us about our national mythology and why Canadian theater audiences are craving more and more homegrown stories.
Find and follow Commotion on YouTube or wherever you get your podcasts.
From CBC News, the world is sour.
I'm Neil Kumar.
Today is the deadline for the U.S. Department of Justice
to release its files on the late convicted sex offender, Jeffrey Epstein.
Years of criminal investigations have amassed a vast amount of documents and other evidence.
As Willie Lowry reports, the release could have big implications for the Trump administration.
Jeffrey Epstein killed himself while in custody in 2019,
but his life, social network, and crimes have continued to occupy an outsized space in the American consciousness.
Last month, Congress voted in favor of the Epstein-Files Transparency Act,
despite pressure from President Trump to vote against it.
Trump ultimately signed that bill into law.
Republican Representative Thomas Massey played a key role in pushing the bill through Congress.
He expects there to be roughly 20 names released in documents of people,
who are accused of committing crimes.
If we get a large production and it does not contain a single name of any male who's
accused of a sex crime or sex trafficking or rape or any of these things, then we know
they haven't produced all the documents.
It's that simple.
Many of Epstein's victims campaigned tirelessly for the release of these documents,
Willie Lowry, CBC News, Washington.
The U.S. authorities say they found the body of the body of the police.
the suspect in last Saturday's mass shooting at Brown University.
Investigators also linked the 48-year-old to the killing of an MIT professor two days later.
Massachusetts U.S. Attorney Leah Foley says police discovered the body in a storage facility.
At approximately 9 p.m., federal agents breached a storage locker in Salem, New Hampshire,
in search of Claudio Neves Valenti, a Portuguese national, we believed, shot and killed
two Brown University students and an MIT professor in Brookline, Massachusetts.
Federal agents found Nies Valenti dead from a self-inflicted gunshot wound.
That facility sits about 120 kilometers from the Brown University campus in Providence.
Police trace Niz Valenti's rental car to the site,
and while he attended the school as a grad student in 2000,
officials say he had no current ties to the university.
Investigators are still searching for motive in the attack that left two people dead
and nine others wounded.
The European Union is lending Ukraine
90 billion euros, the equivalent of
$145 billion Canadian.
Instead of using frozen Russian assets,
the EU is boring against its own budget.
Ukraine would not have to pay back the money
until it gets reparations from Russia.
Hungarian President Victor Orban is calling the loan
lost money.
His country, plus Slovakia and the Czech Republic
have opted out of the plan.
A new study is shown
an Ontario policy implemented
during the COVID-19 pandemic
has saved dozens of lives.
The research looked at an air conditioning mandate put in place in 2021, spurred by CBC News,
and the difference had made in health outcomes of seniors in long-term care homes.
Lisa Zhang reports.
It was a necessary undertaking.
Geriatrician Nathan Stahl on investigating the effects of Ontario's decision to mandate air conditioning
in all residents' rooms in long-term care homes.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, residents were not able to congregate.
During the pandemic in 2021, CBC News was the first to ask Ontario Premier Doug Ford why AC wasn't mandatory in nursing home rooms, resulting in the province requiring it be installed by spring of 2023.
Stahl's subsequent study found residents in homes without AC had an 8% higher odds of dying on extreme heat days compared with residents of homes with AC.
York University Professor Emeritus Pat Armstrong and long-term care research.
says other provinces need to pay attention.
You can die from the heat as well as you can die from the cold.
She says a clear indication.
Air conditioning is no longer a luxury.
Lisa Xing, CBC News, Toronto.
And that is The World Is Sour.
Remember, you can listen to us wherever you get your podcast.
The World Is Sour is updated every hour, seven days a week.
For CBC News, I'm Neil Kumar.
Thank you.
