Skip to content

July 9, 2026

Winnipeg
19° C, Clear

Full Forecast

    • Media Literacy and Learning Contact
    • Contact Us
    • Advertising Contact
    • Send a Letter to the Editor
    • Staff biographies
    • Submit a News Tip
    • Subscribe to Newsletters
    • Notifications
    • My Account
    • Log Out
    • Log in
    • Create Account
    • Grid View
    • List View
    • Compact View
    • Text Size
    • Translate
    • Dark Mode
    • Light Mode
    • System Default
Manage Subscription
Log in Create Account
E-Edition
  • Home
  • About
  • The Student Press
  • PressKid
  • Free Press 101
  • Events
  • Newsstand
  • Browse news by subject
  • Contact Us

© 2026 Winnipeg Free Press

Close
  • Quick Links

    • Free Press 101: How we practise journalism
    • Reader Bridge
    • Home
    • Local
    • Canada
    • World
    • Community Connect
    • Classifieds
    • Newsletters
    • Obituaries
    • Photo and Book Store
    • Copyright and Licensing Requests
    • Archives
    • Contests
    • Publications
    • Sponsored Content
    • Privacy Policy
    • Employee Code of Conduct Policy
    • Supplier Code of Conduct Policy
    • Report on Forced Labour and Child Labour in Supply Chains

    Ways to support us

    • Become a Patron
    • Pay it Forward program
    • Subscribe
    • Support Faith coverage
    • Support Arts coverage
  • Replica E-Edition

    • About the E-Edition
    • Winnipeg Free Press
    • Community Review East
    • Community Review West

    Business

    • All Business
    • Agriculture
    • Personal Finance
  • Arts & Life

    • All Arts & Life
    • The Arts
    • Autos
    • Books
    • Cannabis
    • Celebrities
    • Diversions
    • Puzzles
    • Environment
    • Events
    • Faith
    • Food & Drink
    • Health
    • Life & Style
    • Movies
    • Music
    • Science & Technology
    • TV
    • Travel
  • Sports

    • All Sports
    • Amateur
    • Auto Racing
    • Blue Bombers
    • Curling
    • Football
    • Goldeyes
    • Golf
    • Grey Cup
    • High School
    • Hockey
    • Horse Racing
    • Winnipeg Jets
    • Manitoba Moose
    • Manitoba Open
    • MLB
    • NBA
    • Olympics
    • Soccer
  • Opinion

    • All Opinion
    • Analysis
    • Columnists
    • Editorials
    • Editorial Cartoon
    • Letters to the Editor
    • Send a Letter to the Editor

    Media

    • All Media
    • Photo Galleries
    • Video

    Homes

    • Property Listings
    • Featured News
    • Renovation and design
    • New homes
    • Resale homes
  • Canstar Community news

    • All Free Press Community Review News
    • East Edition
    • West Edition
    • Sports
    • Events
    • Contact Us
    • E-Editions
  • About Us

    • About Us
    • Media Kit
    • Contact Us
    • Carrier Positions & Retailer Requests
    • FP Newspapers Inc.
    • History
    • Internships
    • Job Opportunities
    • Privacy Policy
    • Retail Locations
    • Staff Biographies
    • Terms and Conditions
Manage Subscription
Log in Create Account
E-Edition
Winnipeg Free Press Logo Media Literacy & Learning
    • Media Literacy and Learning Contact
    • Contact Us
    • Advertising Contact
    • Send a Letter to the Editor
    • Staff biographies
    • Submit a News Tip
    • Subscribe to Newsletters
    • Notifications
    • My Account
    • Log Out
    • Log in
    • Create Account
    • Grid View
    • List View
    • Compact View
    • Text Size
    • Translate
    • Dark Mode
    • Light Mode
    • System Default
  • Menu
  • Home
  • About
  • The Student Press
  • PressKid
  • Free Press 101
  • Events
  • Newsstand
  • Browse news by subject
  • Contact Us
    • My Account
    • Log Out
    • Log in
    • Create Account
    • Grid View
    • List View
    • Compact View
    • Text Size
    • Translate
    • Dark Mode
    • Light Mode
    • System Default
The Free Press Media Literacy & Learning Search
WEATHER ALERT

Advanced Search

Education Subjects
Media Literacy Topics
Clear filters

Search Results

Please review each article prior to use: grade-level applicability and curricular alignment might not be obvious from the headline alone.

Alex Brandon / The Associated Press
                                U.S. President Donald Trump speaks as he signs executive orders in the Oval Office of the White House on April 17, as Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick listens.

Little pictures, big ears, and bad examples

Jordan Laidlaw 4 minute read Preview

Little pictures, big ears, and bad examples

Jordan Laidlaw 4 minute read Monday, Apr. 28, 2025

One of the pillars of a thriving democratic society is exemplified through the civil conduct of our elected political leaders. The ethos of honesty, humility, and empathy are becoming increasingly relinquished in lieu of posturing public vitriol and moral indifference.

Read
Monday, Apr. 28, 2025
An AI deepfake video (Facebook)

Increasingly sophisticated deepfake AI-generated political ads threaten to unravel Canada’s social order

Jen Zoratti 12 minute read Preview

Increasingly sophisticated deepfake AI-generated political ads threaten to unravel Canada’s social order

Jen Zoratti 12 minute read Friday, Apr. 25, 2025

Increasingly sophisticated deepfake AI-generated internet political ads threaten to unravel Canada’s social order, experts warn, pointing to the successful war on truth U.S. President Donald Trump is waging south of the border.

Read
Friday, Apr. 25, 2025
MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS FILES
                                Tangi Bell, spokesperson with environmental group Our Line in the Sand, which plans to present a petition of nearly 600 signatures to the NDP government calling for improvements to its “antiquated” oversight process.
No Subscription Required

Province’s mine assessment ‘shoddy,’ environmental group says

Carol Sanders 4 minute read Preview
No Subscription Required

Province’s mine assessment ‘shoddy,’ environmental group says

Carol Sanders 4 minute read Tuesday, Apr. 22, 2025

A group that opposed a sand mine ultimately nixed by the NDP government says the environmental assessment of an open pit mine that has been approved near Hollow Water First Nation is “shoddy.”

Read
Tuesday, Apr. 22, 2025
BROOK JONES / FREE PRESS
                                Incumbent Conservative candidate Marty Morantz (left) holds a large re-elect campaign sign with his campaign manager Michael Kowalson while the duo are pictured alongside Portage Avenue in Winnipeg, Man., Thursday, April 17, 2025. Morantz, who is a two-term Conservative incumbent, is running in the federal riding of Winnipeg West.

Despite ease of digital media, candidates still rely on old-fashioned campaign lawn signs

Malak Abas 10 minute read Preview

Despite ease of digital media, candidates still rely on old-fashioned campaign lawn signs

Malak Abas 10 minute read Tuesday, Apr. 22, 2025

When the federal election was called last month, candidates across Canada quickly arranged to have lawn signs printed and placed in willing supporters’ yards. Does all of the the planning, care and consideration that go into such an old-fashioned aspect of the democratic process pay off in the end?

Read
Tuesday, Apr. 22, 2025
Marta Guerrero photo
                                Mancy et Farzaneh Rezaei, sœurs et artistes
                                Supplied
                                Farzaneh and Mancy Rezaei
No Subscription Required

Échos croisés: le projet des sœurs Rezaei

Marie Wielgocki 3 minute read Preview
No Subscription Required

Échos croisés: le projet des sœurs Rezaei

Marie Wielgocki 3 minute read Saturday, Apr. 19, 2025

L’exposition Échos croisés, proposée par Mancy et Farzaneh Rezaei a pris place, le 27 mars dernier, dans la galerie contemporaine de la maison des artistes visuels francophones.

Dans l’art comme dans la vie, Farzaneh et Mancy sont sœurs. Basées aujourd’hui à Montréal, les deux artistes sont originaires d’Iran. “Nous nous sommes installées au Canada il y a 11 ans,” explique Farzaneh, tout en précisant que ce choix fut motivé par l’envie de découvrir d’autres arts et d’avoir de nouvelles inspirations. C’est la quatrième fois que les deux artistes exposent en duo. Un tandem artistique qui existe depuis toujours, et qui a commencé à présenter leurs œuvres ensemble en 2018.

À travers “Échos croisés,” les sœurs offrent des propositions aussi différentes que complémentaires. C’est la première fois que les deux artistes, en parallèle de leur métier de médiatrices au Musée des beaux-arts de Montréal, exposent en dehors du Québec. Dans cette exposition, elles explorent le féminisme et la migration, des thématiques auxquelles elles ont pu être confrontées dans leurs parcours personnels. L’exposition composée d’une trentaine d’œuvres est ouverte aux visiteurs jusqu’au 10 mai.

Corps féminin

Read
Saturday, Apr. 19, 2025
FILE - The Los Angeles Times building is seen in downtown Los Angeles on Feb. 7, 2018. (AP Photo/Richard Vogel, File)

Don’t like a columnist’s opinion? Los Angeles Times offers an AI-generated opposing viewpoint

David Bauder, The Associated Press 6 minute read Preview

Don’t like a columnist’s opinion? Los Angeles Times offers an AI-generated opposing viewpoint

David Bauder, The Associated Press 6 minute read Sunday, Sep. 21, 2025

In a colorful commentary for the Los Angeles Times, Matt K. Lewis argued that callousness is a central feature of the second Trump administration, particularly its policies of deportation and bureaucratic cutbacks. “Once you normalize cruelty,” Lewis concluded in the piece, “the hammer eventually swings for everyone. Even the ones who thought they were swinging it.”

Lewis' word wasn't the last, however. As they have with opinion pieces the past several weeks, Times online readers had the option to click on a button labeled “Insights,” which judged the column politically as “center-left.” Then it offers an AI-generated synopsis — a CliffsNotes version of the column — and a similarly-produced opposing viewpoint.

One dissenting argument reads: “Restricting birthright citizenship and refugee admissions is framed as correcting alleged exploitation of immigration loopholes, with proponents arguing these steps protect American workers and resources.”

The feature symbolizes changes to opinion coverage ordered over the past six months by Times owner Dr. Patrick Soon-Shiong, who's said he wants the famously liberal opinion pages to reflect different points of view. Critics accuse him of trying to curry favor with President Donald Trump.

Read
Sunday, Sep. 21, 2025
Gracieuseté
                                La Maison Hourie, à Portage-la-Prairie.
                                Supplied
                                La Maison Hourie de Portage-la-Prairie
No Subscription Required

Sauver la Maison Hourie, le vote est ouvert

Marie Wielgocki 4 minute read Preview
No Subscription Required

Sauver la Maison Hourie, le vote est ouvert

Marie Wielgocki 4 minute read Saturday, Apr. 12, 2025

Organisée par la Fiducie nationale du Canada, la compétition Next Great Save offre un financement et de la visibilité aux lieux historiques menacés partout dans le pays. Cette année, la maison Hourie de Portage-la-Prairie fait partie des douze finalistes. Les gagnants sont choisis par vote du public, qui est ouvert jusqu’au 17 avril.

Sauver l’un des bâtiments emblématiques de l’histoire du Manitoba. Voilà l’objectif du musée de Fort la Reine à Portage-la-Prairie, qui a inscrit au concours l’une de ses bâtisses: la Maison Hourie. C’est sur le site nextgreatsave.ca que le public, seul juge de la finale de cette compétition nationale, est invité à voter pour sauver son patrimoine favori. Parmi les finalistes, la Maison Hourie est le seul édifice situé au Manitoba.

Restaurer la maison Hourie

Les règles sont simples: pour sauver son patrimoine, chaque finaliste mène sa campagne de sensibilisation pour récolter le maximum de soutien. Parrainé par Ecclesiastical Insurance, ce concours s’inscrit dans les missions de la Fiducie nationale du Canada, créée en 1973. Principal organisme de bienfaisance national, la Fiducie a contribué depuis sa création à la protection de plus de 835 lieux partout au Canada.

Read
Saturday, Apr. 12, 2025
Female gorilla Fatou, the oldest of Berlin's zoo and also believed to be the world's oldest gorilla, enjoys her birthday basket with a

Fatou, the world’s oldest gorilla in a zoo, is celebrating her 68th birthday in Berlin

The Associated Press 1 minute read Preview

Fatou, the world’s oldest gorilla in a zoo, is celebrating her 68th birthday in Berlin

The Associated Press 1 minute read Monday, May. 4, 2026

BERLIN (AP) — Fatou, the oldest gorilla living in captivity worldwide, is getting ready for her 68th birthday in style.

The Berlin zoo on Friday presented Fatou with a basket of fruit and vegetables ahead of her official birthday, which falls on Sunday.

Fatou was born in 1957 and came to the zoo in what was then West Berlin in 1959.

Since she no longer has teeth, keepers ensure that her food is soft and easy to eat. Vet André Schüle said that “Fatou gets the best possible care here.”

Read
Monday, May. 4, 2026
(Terje Sollie / Pexels)

Truth, lies and videotape

Judy Waytiuk 4 minute read Preview

Truth, lies and videotape

Judy Waytiuk 4 minute read Friday, Apr. 11, 2025

As an old warhorse journalist whose biases have always skewed toward rabid dislike of anyone who tries to control the media, my biases are working overtime right now.

Read
Friday, Apr. 11, 2025
MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS
                                The $13 million in provincial funding announced Thursday will match $13.5 million pledged by industry.

‘Time is now’ for new Cereals Canada HQ

Gabrielle Piché 4 minute read Preview

‘Time is now’ for new Cereals Canada HQ

Gabrielle Piché 4 minute read Thursday, Apr. 10, 2025

Scientists have baked bread, created noodles and processed flour in a tower above the iconic Portage and Main intersection for years.

However, Cereals Canada has been calling for a new, modernized research facility for nearly two decades. As of Thursday, the long-sought project is one step closer: the Manitoba government injected $13 million as a “down payment.”

“If all goes well, we’re going to be there for one-third of this,” Premier Wab Kinew promised.

He stood inside Cereals Canada’s 11th-floor pilot bakery. Delegates from Japan, Britain and Italy, among other countries, have walked through the site, observing how Canadian cereal grain crops could work in their products.

Read
Thursday, Apr. 10, 2025
Tyra the Tyrannosaurus, the lovable landmark that towers over the Drumheller skyline in the heart of the Canadian Badlands, is facing an extinction-level event and is pictured in Drumheller, Alta., Tuesday, April 1, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jeff McIntosh

‘Special to the world’: Supporters hope to save beloved Drumheller dinosaur

Bill Graveland, The Canadian Press 4 minute read Preview

‘Special to the world’: Supporters hope to save beloved Drumheller dinosaur

Bill Graveland, The Canadian Press 4 minute read Monday, Sep. 22, 2025

DRUMHELLER - A plan to send Tyra the tyrannosaurus, the popular tourist attraction that towers over the skyline in Drumheller, Alta., into proverbial extinction has sparked demands that she be spared.

The town of 8,400 northeast of Calgary bills itself as the Dinosaur Capital of the World. Home to the famed Royal Tyrrell Museum, the community also has statues of dinosaurs that look like they've crawled out of "The Flintstones" cartoon greeting people on the streets.

There's an extinct reptile riding a motorcycle. A triceratops in a frilly dress sits on a bus bench. Another dinosaur wearing a fireman's hat and holding a hose is poised outside a fire station.

The biggest is Tyra, standing across from the intersection of Gorgosaurus Street and Tyrannosaurus Drive near a visitor information centre. A nearby ice cream stand offers fossils, T-shirts and dino toys.

Read
Monday, Sep. 22, 2025
No Subscription Required

The modernization of the Senate

Paul G. Thomas 5 minute read Saturday, Apr. 5, 2025

Senate reform and ongoing modernization of its operations will not be a prominent issue in the current election. However, the outcome of the election will have significant consequences for the role of the Senate in the national policy process and for the dynamics of its internal decision-making.

No Subscription Required

How quickly a friendly frontier can become a barrier

Rebecca Chambers 4 minute read Saturday, Apr. 5, 2025

I’m sitting in a small room with my best friend, watching through a one-way window as American border officers search our car and belongings.

Marta Guerrero
                                Roland Gagné s’occupe de l’érablière de Saint-Pierre-Jolys depuis près de 14 ans.
No Subscription Required

Sirop d’érable, le trésor de Saint-Pierre-Jolys

Lucille Dourlens 5 minute read Preview
No Subscription Required

Sirop d’érable, le trésor de Saint-Pierre-Jolys

Lucille Dourlens 5 minute read Saturday, Apr. 5, 2025

L’incontournable Festival du Temps des sucres se prépare à revenir au village de Saint-Pierre-Jolys les 5 et 6 avril. Prenant place dans la Cabane à sucre, une extension du musée, les visiteurs pourront festoyer et célébrer ce fameux sirop local aux teintes ambrées.

Le temps se fait plus doux dans le village de Saint-Pierre-Jolys où les récoltes de sirop d’érable ont doucement commencé depuis la semaine du 17 mars.

En effet, des gelées la nuit combinées à des températures plus élevées le jour créent les conditions propices à la saison des récoltes. Ce type de météo permet d’exercer une pression à l’intérieur de l’arbre favorisant ensuite l’écoulement de “l’eau sucrée” comme aime l’appeler Roland Gagné, le gérant de la Cabane à sucre du village.

“Grâce à Mère Nature, l’eau remonte des racines jusqu’en haut de l’arbre. Ça permet de nettoyer les veines de l’érable et ensuite le liquide s’écoule.”

Read
Saturday, Apr. 5, 2025
BROOK JONES/FREE PRESS
                                Voices alumni and dress designer Brittany-Morgan Erb paints a garbage bag dress for the Voices: Manitoba’s Youth in Care Network fundraiser.
No Subscription Required

Runway show focuses on treasures, not trash

Conrad Sweatman 5 minute read Preview
No Subscription Required

Runway show focuses on treasures, not trash

Conrad Sweatman 5 minute read Thursday, Apr. 3, 2025

Some of Manitoba’s best-known public figures — including radio host Ace Burpee, activist Mitch Bourbonniere and politician Nahanni Fontaine — walk the catwalk in a fashion show at 109 Higgins Ave. tonight.

Read
Thursday, Apr. 3, 2025
File
                                The internet is bringing hate into homes.

Global extremism, as close as your keyboard

Editorial 4 minute read Preview

Global extremism, as close as your keyboard

Editorial 4 minute read Monday, Mar. 31, 2025

An arrest in Winnipeg has provided yet another reminder of just how much extremist attitudes have spread across the world.

Read
Monday, Mar. 31, 2025
Marta Guerrero photo
                                L’équipe La verdure violente du Collège Louis-Riel. De gauche à droite: Vincent Gagné, Nathan Perkins, Carine Roy, Gabrielle Pagé, Stella Brin-Morgan et Claudie Smith.
No Subscription Required

Impro: Une finale époustouflante

Lucille Dourlens 5 minute read Preview
No Subscription Required

Impro: Une finale époustouflante

Lucille Dourlens 5 minute read Saturday, Mar. 29, 2025

La finale de la Ligue d’improvisation du secondaire tellement époustouflante (LISTE) de la Division scolaire franco-manitobaine s’est déroulée dans une ambiance festive le 18 mars dernier. Une soirée qui a vu l’équipe La verdure violente du Collège Louis-Riel l’emporter au bout de deux heures de match.

Comme à l’accoutumée, la compétition s’est tenue dans la bonne humeur au Centre culturel franco-manitobain (CCFM), dans la salle Pauline-Boutal.

Les gradins étaient remplis de parents, frères, sœurs et amis venus soutenir leurs participants favoris.

L’équipe Citrus improbus (maillot rouge) du Centre scolaire Léo-Rémillard entraînée par Roger Durand a affronté l’équipe La verdure violente (maillot vert) du Collège Louis-Riel, entraînée par Carine Roy. À l’issue de la soirée, l’équipe Piste de chameau, de l’école Pointe-des-Chênes, s’est aussi vu remettre le prix spécial époustouflant qui récompense leur esprit sportif.

Read
Saturday, Mar. 29, 2025
Ruth Bonneville / Free Pres
                                Gabriel Nanacowop (left) and Kendrah Sinclair finish preparing lunch with their 
classmates for guests at Wiisinin Diner.
No Subscription Required

Red River course focuses on Indigenous cooking techniques, ingredients

Eva Wasney 5 minute read Preview
No Subscription Required

Red River course focuses on Indigenous cooking techniques, ingredients

Eva Wasney 5 minute read Wednesday, Mar. 26, 2025

With the lunch rush over, the kitchen takes a collective sigh of relief. Jokes are cracked while the flattop is scraped clean and smiles float around the room as prep stations are tidied for the next day’s service.

Gabriel Nanacowop, who had some nerves about overseeing Wiisinin Diner as chef-of-the-day, is feeling particularly satisfied.

“It was good, fast-paced,” says Nanacowop, one of 11 students enrolled in Red River College Polytechnic’s Indigenous Culinary Skills program.

Red River has been offering the yearlong certificate program for nearly a decade. In it, Indigenous students are given a crash course on food preparation, kitchen safety and business basics, with a focus on cultural ingredients and cooking techniques.

Read
Wednesday, Mar. 26, 2025
JOHN WOODS / FREE PRESS
                                Taiv co-founders Noah Palansky (right) and Jordan Davis in the company’s Winnipeg office. Taiv uses AI to customize in-house advertising on televisions in bars and restaurants.

Winnipeg TV content delivery firm Taiv acquires potential Ontario rival Local Reach

Aaron Epp 4 minute read Preview

Winnipeg TV content delivery firm Taiv acquires potential Ontario rival Local Reach

Aaron Epp 4 minute read Tuesday, Mar. 25, 2025

A Winnipeg advertising technology company is one step closer to launching its product in Canada after acquiring a startup based in Kingston, Ont.

Taiv Inc. purchased Local Reach in a deal that closed last month. The terms of the deal were not disclosed.

Local Reach co-founders Evan Ferreira and Joseph Liao, who created the startup while studying at Queen’s University in Kingston, will move to Winnipeg and join Taiv’s staff. Taiv acquired some of the startup’s tech as part of the cash-and-stock transaction.

It’s Taiv’s first acquisition and a big milestone for the six-year-old company, according to co-founder and CEO Noah Palansky.

Read
Tuesday, Mar. 25, 2025
Tim Smith / The Brandon Sun files
                                Manitoba Hydro has to think more carefully about new power sources for this province.
No Subscription Required

Locally produced renewable energy is the right call

Jessica Kelly 4 minute read Preview
No Subscription Required

Locally produced renewable energy is the right call

Jessica Kelly 4 minute read Tuesday, Mar. 25, 2025

At the start of Premier Wab Kinew’s government’s mandate, it signalled it would work to get Manitoba to a net-zero electricity grid by 2035. With 99 per cent of the province’s electricity already emissions-free, it is a small, but important gap to bridge.

Read
Tuesday, Mar. 25, 2025
  • First
  • Previous
  • 1
  • 2
  • …
  • 117
  • 118
  • 119
  • 120
  • 121
  • 122
  • 123
  • …
  • 136
  • 137
  • Next
  • Last
Winnipeg Free Press Logo
Links
Replica E-Edition Front Page Arts & Life Business Canada Local Opinion Sports World Reader Bridge
WFP Events Free Press 101: How we practise journalism Media Kit About Us Archives Free Press Community Review Community Connect Classifieds Contests
FP Features Homes Newsletters Obituaries Podcasts Puzzles Photo and Book Store Become a Free Press Patron Privacy Policy
    • Media Literacy and Learning Contact
    • Contact Us
    • Advertising Contact
    • Send a Letter to the Editor
    • Staff biographies
    • Submit a News Tip
    • Subscribe to Newsletters
    • Notifications
    • My Account
    • Log Out
    • Log in
    • Create Account
    • Grid View
    • List View
    • Compact View
    • Text Size
    • Translate
    • Dark Mode
    • Light Mode
    • System Default
©2026 Winnipeg Free Press