Toronto Mike'd: The Official Toronto Mike Podcast - Susan Fleming: Toronto Mike'd #1418
Episode Date: January 26, 2024In this 1418th episode of Toronto Mike'd, Mike chats with nature documentary director and producer Susan Fleming about racoons, coywolves, crows, moose and the beautiful and fast-flowing Magpie rive...r in Northern Quebec becoming Canada’s first natural phenomenon to be granted legal personhood. Toronto Mike'd is proudly brought to you by Great Lakes Brewery, Palma Pasta, Ridley Funeral Home, The Advantaged Investor podcast from Raymond James Canada and Electronic Products Recycling Association.
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Welcome to episode 1418 of Toronto Mic'd.
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The Advantage'd Investor Podcast from Raymond James Canada, valuable
perspective for Canadian investors who want to remain knowledgeable, informed and focused
on long-term success, and Ridley Funeral Home, pillars of the community since 1921. Today making her Toronto Mike debut is nature documentary director
and producer Susan Fleming. Welcome to Toronto Mike, Susan.
Hi, great to be here. So you're here literally I'm gonna read the sentence
that hooked me. This is a lovely lady named Jill who sends me notes
periodically about what's happening in the zeitgeist
and what should happen on Toronto Mike.
And I'm gonna read you the sentence.
And this is gonna be a teaser.
We'll revisit this later after we get to know
a little more about you
and some of your awesome nature projects.
Here's a sentence.
The beautiful and fast flowing Magpie River
in Northern Quebec has become Canada's
first natural phenomenon to be granted legal personhood.
That's quite the sentence.
It's pretty amazing, isn't it?
It's so amazing.
So here, that I'm going to just let the listenership know.
We're going to dive deep into that and we're going to talk about I Am The Magpie River,
which airs, so we're recording on Friday January 26 this airs
on Thursday February 1st on the nature of things 9 p.m. CBC and on CBC gem okay
good for you how many of your projects have aired on CBC is the nature of
things oh boy that's a test I would say your homework at least six I would say your homework there. At least six I would say six
Final answer final answer six. That's incorrect. No, how would I know? I trust you?
Okay, so we're gonna get to know you a little bit. But firstly, it's tough to Google you
You know why there and of course, you know, it's your name, but there's a Susan Fleming who was married to Harpo Marx
This is Groucho Chicoico, Zeppo and Gummo.
It's their sister-in-law.
And she, this actress named Susan Fleming,
was known as the girl with the million dollar legs.
Are you familiar with this, Susan Fleming?
It is a problem,
because my legs are not as good as hers.
So I'm very jealous.
I'm gonna check under the table here.
I'll be the judge of that here.
It is the first thing that comes up,
and it's hard to Google me or because I am on no social
media.
I haven't been for years.
I had this death scrolling moment on Instagram at midnight about five years ago and I thought,
what are you doing?
Read a book.
So I am not on anything.
So yeah, I am not really so findable, which I kind of like.
Well, okay, it's just pros and cons, right? Like the pros as less, you don't have to
worry about, I don't know if there's any anxiety around the trolls on what the app
formerly known as Twitter or just people being dinks. And, you know, this whole
interesting sentence, I will repeat one more time because I like the sentence so
much. The beautiful and fast flowing magpie river
in Northern Quebec has become
Canada's first natural phenomenon
to be granted legal personhood.
You don't have to deal with any,
I don't know, any trolls trying to pick a fight
about that sentence or whatnot
because you're not on social media.
But at the same time, when you're coming on Toronto Mic'd,
I'm gonna have to get to know you by talking
to you.
Oh, it was worth the drive.
Okay.
And you're a Windsor girl, right?
I am born and raised.
So what baseball did you even care about baseball before I ask you?
But like, are you raised a tiger fan?
How does it work in Windsor?
You are a tiger fan.
You're a Detroit fan of everything when you're raised in Windsor.
I literally grew up 15 minutes from the border. And so we would, you know, that was where you went
on a Saturday night and, uh, yeah, Detroit was very fun. When I was really young, uh,
Diana Ross would play in the parks in Windsor. They would do these Motown tours. So Spokie
Robinson, Diana Ross would literally play in a, in a park. So it was a great place to
grow up.
Okay. Shout out to the Tigers. Uh, There was a Disney movie when I was growing up called
Tiger Town. We had Disney at like Sundays at six or something. And it was called Tiger
Town and it was like this aging veteran lost his mojo playing for the Detroit Tigers. But
there's like a little kid who believed in him or something and he would do this thing
where he like closed his eyes and like prayed almost and then suddenly this aging veteran found his mojo again.
It's quite the movie for me.
I love Disney at six o'clock on Sunday nights.
We always watched it.
Do you know Disney used to make nature films.
So some of those Sunday nights weren't just cartoons and these kind of heartwarming stories.
They also had nature films when I was growing up and that might've been what got me hooked.
Well, there you go. I want your origin story here because I'm going to talk to you before
we talk about the Magpie River and I got to know I won't read it again, but we're going
to talk about that and this, you know, February 1st, the nature of things episode. I am the
Magpie River that you, you, you directed, February 1st, the Nature of Things episode, I Am the Magpie River that you directed, you produced it.
Co-produced, directed and co-wrote.
Hey, look at you, many talents here.
Okay, I want to let the listenership know
that I'm gonna talk to you a little bit about raccoons,
koi wolves, crows, moose,
get a little backstory and all that,
but first, what's your origin story?
Like what made you wanna become a nature filmmaker?
So I started out, I went to journalism school and then I went to radio and
television at Ryerson and I wanted to be the next Barbara from, and the year I
graduated 6,000 people were laid off from the CBC, uh, from radio and
television at Ryerson.
And so that was a real wake up call.
6,000.
No, 3000. Sorry. Okay. We cut call. Six thousand. That's her defendant.
No, three thousand.
Sorry, mistake.
Okay, we cut it.
It looks like it's getting better the longer we talk.
But it was still an insane amount of qualified people who went out into the workforce.
And so I decided that I always loved film and so I started to do research and thought
I'm going to be, I'd love to be a documentary filmmaker.
And at the time I was, I wait just my way through a university cause I switched
major so many times.
I went to school for seven years to get a bachelor of arts.
Lots of people go to school for seven years.
They're called doctors.
I am not bachelor of arts.
So that was, that was a feat.
Um, but, um, so I ended up wanting to do this, but I made a lot of money waitressing.
So I had this option. I thought, what am I going to do this, but I made a lot of money waitressing. So I had this option. I thought,
what am I going to do? I don't want to just give it up, make $125 a week was literally what you
made back then. Um, so I started interviewing filmmakers and I said, I'll work for you for free,
but I have to be, I have to leave at five so I can go to the dinner shift. I waitressed every
night work for free. And it was amazing. I got mentored by like Laszlo Barna and the folks
at Rhombus and it was really an incredible
education and ended up just really falling in
love with documentary film.
And after a few years of doing that, um, probably
about 10, I, I really had moved to a farm in the
country in Uxbridge and I really loved, I've always
loved the outdoors and I really got, I've always loved the outdoors.
And I really got tired of people lying to me.
Like people have their own agendas.
Even when you're on camera,
they're trying to spin it their way.
It was really frustrating.
And I thought, I'm making films on animals.
They're true.
Like they are what they are.
They don't lie to you.
And if they do, you know,
it's just a fascinating deception as opposed to this,
which is just pissing me off
So I started making films on animals
The first was a series that lasted for ten years called the secret world of gardens
Which I just still love and was just a dream to make because I made it all you know around my backyard
I built gardens. We traveled all over filming
Where does this air the secret life of gardens? Secret world of gardens.
Girl, yeah, that's right.
It aired on Discovery and on HGTV.
Okay, amazing.
Okay, back to Uxbridge for a moment.
I once got a, like I mentioned, I get these pitches
and I actually completely ignore the vast majority
of pitches, although you're here today
because I really, really was intrigued
by the Magpie River.
But I had one like a few years ago and it was like come to Uxbridge
because Victor Newman is going to be here because of the railroad thing. Like there's
a railway, there's a railway thing in Uxbridge and Victor Newman, who's a soap opera star,
I think that's the character's name. I didn't watch this soap, but I don't think that's
even the actor's name. I think it's like Eric Braden or something. But this was the pitch.
And looking back, it's like, how did I resist? Really? Yeah. Like there's this, I don't know,
like Victor Newman's going to be at a railroad thing in Uxbridge. Like that's worth the drive,
right? What do you think? Would you, would you bite on that pitch?
I live in Uxbridge and I didn't even know about that.
Okay. I'm just here to let you know my Uxbridge connections.
All right. Well, that's, that's a good one. Although the railroad just declared bankruptcy
this week. Is that right?
Yeah. Really? Yeah. I want to see the doc on that. I can't believe it Victor couldn't save the railroad. Okay, so quick also you mentioned CBC
So we'll do these little tangents and we'll always get back here, but you mentioned CBC radio just yesterday
I was on the the NFB website
Great documentaries on the NFB website and they had a classic documentary on
CBC radio was like filmed in the late 80s and I gotta say I love this
documentary. This is just it's free on the National Film Board website and it's
about CBC radio in the late 80s and you got Peter Zowski and all these cats and
it's fascinating this to be a fly on the wall as they pieced all that together on
on Jarvis Street. That was great radio time boy. That was incredible. You say that like the late 1980s was so long ago.
I know I'm that much older than you.
My first documentary was for the NFB in the late 1980s.
No, listen, I was in high school in the eight late 80s. So I mean, I'm not I'm not too young but
Just to see this is a little fun fact
I learned because then I'm diving into because, but just to see, this is a little fun fact I learned because then I'm
diving into because Peter Zowsky died in 2002, I want to say.
And he lived up by me in Oxbridge.
He lived on the island.
Yeah, just outside Port Perry.
So like right in my neck of the woods.
Amazing.
Okay.
So near here, I do a daily ride on the waterfront trail and there's a park called Sir Kashmir Gazowski Park and I always like oh there's this Kashmir Zowski and then of
course there's Peter Zowski we all know from CBC radio but then I was yesterday
just learned that this is like the great-grandfather of Peter Zowski like
this is his great-grandfather in cash sir Kazmir Zowski and what was his claim
to fame that he got a park?
He was like an architect, like a prominent Toronto architect
back in the day, and he got a park.
Cool.
So there you go.
All right.
So you're into filming nature.
And so there's one on raccoons?
Yes.
So there's one on raccoons that aired on the CBC and all over the world because
we despise them but everybody else in the world is completely fascinated by raccoon.
It's called Raccoon Nation and that was so many all-nighters.
Oh my god, I must have stayed awake 200 nights to make that film.
But it was, what was really the coolest thing for me was we were on Newcastle Island, which
is just off Nanaimo in BC and there were raccoons every morning in the tidal pools searching
for clams and oh, the dexterity in their hands is incredible.
Oh, that's how they get into the green bin.
But you know, we think of them as the green bin, so it's so much more dignified when
they're searching for clams and mussels.
But they can get into anything.
I know we've, in Toronto at least, I'm sure other places have done the same thing, but
now if you have that angle, you're being at a certain angle for it to unlock like this
so that the trucks can get it unlocked, but the raccoons can't.
But I feel like there's evidence that maybe they've even figured this out.
You know, if we knock it against the wall or something
I can get in there, but it's quite quite amazing what they can get into these raccoons
Incredibly smart and they learn like that's one of the things we explore in the film is how they learn to get into things and
They have they have sequential thought which is quite an incredible thing
We don't have it till we're about three or four
Where you can put one piece onto another and add to another bit of knowledge to get to the end.
Right.
But one, you want to know the trick about the raccoon bins about garbage bins?
If you hang them on a hook, so you just have to hang them on a hook like a foot off the
ground like the back and then they can't topple them over.
They can't tip them the right way.
It's literally just a dollar hook from the hardware store is the answer to all raccoon bin
Questions you are you are welcome. Okay. Listen, this is I'm glad you're here because now we all have that
Hot tip from somebody who knows raccoons. So in your right here in Toronto
Sometimes they call this raccoon city or whatever
there's just
and I find it interesting sometimes it'll be like dusk or something and it'll be like
And I find it interesting. Sometimes it'll be like dusk or something
and it'll be like 7 p.m. or 6 p.m.
And you got these raccoons who are like our early risers,
I guess, like they're out and about.
And I'm always, I always yell at them to go back to bed.
Like this is too early.
Now they've been out all night.
They've been out, but all day.
They're going to bed soon.
Oh yeah, but this is like dusk, right?
So it's not, you're right.
Don't, yeah.
So, but at dusk they've been sleeping, no?
And then they get up early.
Okay.
Just get back to bed raccoons here.
Okay.
And last night, quick tangent here too, is Pamela Wallin wrote a book on cats.
Oh, okay.
I know.
It's like, it just sounds like, oh, okay.
Like Senator Wallin, former, you know, media person in this marketplace, wrote a book about cats because she had a cat named Kitty that
like changed her life and inspired her. So it's kind of its nature I guess cats.
Anyway I went to meet her, so Pamela's been on this program but she was in
Saskatchewan because she lives on a lake in Saskatchewan.
And I met her yesterday at this book launch in the junction
and I'm biking home and it's late because it's like I don't know 8.30 at night,
nine o'clock at night and I'm biking through a local park called Colonel
Samuel Smith Park and I pass a coyote and then I was thinking about koi wolves
and you tell me what is a koi wolf so a koi wolf is it's basically an Eastern
coyote which is a hybrid cross which is where the coy koi wolf name comes from a
geneticist coined that term Bradley White who um, who's an incredible man.
And so coy wolf is because they're part dog or part, um,
coyote part wolf. The whole story is explored in meet the coy wolf,
which is still on CBC gem. And, uh,
it's a really fascinating story because their origin story starts now Gonquin
Park. And it was when the coyotes were so perc... It's a really fascinating story because the origin story starts now Gonquin Park and it
was when the coyotes were so perse- or the wolves were so persecuted there weren't enough
mates to be found and they started to go towards coyotes and that's where the coy wolf origins
come from.
But the fascinating thing is when you see eastern coyotes or coy wolves and you think
they're so huge most of it is just fur.
They weigh like 35 pounds.
I have a bouffier, he weighs 100 pounds.
Like these things look so big because they puff up and they have long legs but it's really
all fur.
And when they are higher like 50 pounds, they tend to have more dog in them because it's
the dog gene that actually adds the weight on. Okay, wild. And I know, okay, so we can see this koi, what's the name again?
Koi wolf.
But what's the name of the dock?
Oh, meet the koi wolf.
Meet the koi wolf. You can see it on Jam like today. We can pause this podcast and go watch
that. Where do we see the raccoons dock before I go beyond the raccoons?
I don't know that it's available in Canada anymore. Okay, so go find that.
Go find that.
Go find that.
I'm sure it's illegally up on the web somewhere.
It's called Raccoon Nation.
Raccoon Nation.
As I get tired of pulling them all down, it takes so much time.
But I really try.
Okay, you put in the effort for that.
Okay.
Now the koi wolves that we can watch on on on jam.
Any in the GTA? Am I going to find a koi wolf?
Gosh, are you kidding?
We filmed a lot in the GTA.
I haven't seen it yet.
Like like an idiot.
I'm going to watch it though.
Oh, you know what?
I actually am really proud of that one.
I think it's, I think you will be fascinated because they travel a lot.
They come into Toronto and a lot of big cities along the rail lines.
That's their big transit route.
It's like a highway.
And there are so many, if you play golf, on golf courses early in the morning, they're out there trying to hunt
rabbits and geese and ducks. And there are a lot in Toronto, like there's at least two
packs in High Park alone. No, there's a lot in Toronto.
I was in High Park last night. That's how I got back from the junction.
Well, it's really interesting. If you wait in High Park or any actually park in Toronto
and you wait for a siren to go by, they answer the sirens all the time. Well it's really interesting if you wait in High Park or any actually park in Toronto and you wait for a siren to go by they answer
the sirens all the time so they start howling in response to the sirens. It's
quite comical and people think oh those dogs are barking it's like no that's not
a dog. You know in Sam Smith Park I heard like this is like again like I don't
know nine o'clock last night or something I heard barking like as if dogs and then shortly thereafter is when I passed the coyote.
Hey, honestly, where have you been all my life?
Come on here.
Okay.
And the coy wolf's fascinating.
Is it just like, I mean, what I do with coyotes is I leave them alone.
Like I very smart because the worst thing we've done and we blame them and I get calls all the time to speak to this and
I just sort of I
Don't know. I feel like I'm not the scientist but I spent
250 nights filming them
so we spent a lot of time with them and I spent a lot of time with scientists who study them and
For for coyotes, it's or coy wolves. It's that us feeding them is the problem
You know they get trained to us feeding them is the problem.
They get trained to people feeding them,
and then we are so shocked that they follow people.
And it's our fault.
So if you leave them alone, they'll leave you alone.
That's my best practice.
And I tell my kids, leave them alone,
get away, go away, and there's signs everywhere too.
But I mean, I didn't need the signs to tell me that.
Yeah, but a lot, you would be shocked
by how many people feed them. It is really like,'s just such a no-no not just for you but for all your
neighbors like you're teaching them to come to you for food. 100% let me know these people I'm
gonna have a stern chat with these these individuals feeding the coyote wolves. How do you know exactly
so how do you know it's a coyote wolf or a coyote is size? Well most of the- But you said the dog makes it big, okay.
Dog makes it big, but most of the coyotes we have here are eastern coyotes and so they
are coy wolves.
They're the coyote-wolf hybrid.
That's an eastern coyote.
The western coyotes that you see, you know, in BC or they're a lot smaller, like literally,
you know, this big versus this big like hugely smaller so
what what you mainly see here predominantly see here is gonna be a
coy wolf or an Eastern coyote. Okay good to know on the live stream so live.TorontoMike.com
Jeremy is telling us that there's lots of course there's lots of coyotes
through the ravine system here in the city but he hears them howling through
the East Dawn quite often.
Yes, that's a huge thoroughfare.
And I filmed a lot in cemeteries,
and the reason is that there are large open spaces
without a lot of people.
And so, you know, rabbits and a lot of things
gravitate to those areas, and so they have free domain.
So we filmed a lot in cemeteries,
but the ravine system, which Toronto is amazing
for our ravine system
Is a huge huge thoroughfare for coyotes and in fact in many ways. There's more
I know this as a fact
There's more per acre in cities than there are in the countryside because they're really persecuted in the countryside
Which is I try to educate the farmers around me that it really the best thing you can be is a bad shot
Because you want to teach those that coyote pair that don't come near the
barn this is a bad space and then they're going to clear all the vermin out
around the your fields and everywhere you don't want them but if you kill a
coyote pair they're literally built so that they can reproduce when persecuted
so they'll up there not only will they increase their litter sizes, the females go into estrus earlier.
So they will have more young by more females and then new ones will move in. They split up the territory.
You actually are creating as a farmer, you're creating a problem for yourself if you start picking off coyotes.
So it's um, it's really they're incredibly smart. They're going to be around long after us.
It's going to be the rats and the coyotes, man.
See, I understand 100% why you're focusing on nature.
First of all, nature's amazing.
Oh yeah.
So yeah, I mean, if you need help, I don't know, somebody to carry like a camera or something.
Remember those 250 all-nighters though.
Be careful what you volunteer for.
Yeah, but think of what, yeah, you're looking out for raccoons and koi wolves and amazing.
By the way, I have a couple more animals I want to ask you about before we get to the
river, but how do you decide what you're going to cover for a documentary?
Like do you have to pitch the idea and sell it first before you can film it or do you
film it first?
Like how does it work?
So long are the days of triple, you know triple mortgaging my house to make a film.
That was just so silly.
But now I come up with the idea, you write the treatment, you pitch it to broadcasters,
and you get them on board, and you get your funding, and then you start.
That is the sane way, and remember I'm saying this, it is the sane way to make a film.
Because it takes two years at least to make a nature film.
You know, you have to put in a tremendous amount of time and you want to be paid.
You want to be able to eat and pay your mortgage and all of those things.
So the funding first, funding first.
He's saying Alan Zweig was just here and he often, you know, he likes to complain about
things.
I like him.
He's got even got a he's got a documentary called I curmudgeon.
Okay. He lives the role, but you know,
he'll pitch some idea to the CBC and he'll be like,
why are they saying no to that?
And then he'll see that they said yes to something else
that he thinks is ridiculous.
And he's always trying to like, try to understand like,
why is CBC like funding this thing, this piece of crap,
when they said no to my thing, that was a much better better idea Yeah, it's probably a common problem in documentary filmmakers
Have you ever had a like a a subject you wanted to dive into but could not get the funding so you couldn't do it?
Because you didn't want a triple mortgage that home. Oh
Several several like now now. Okay, let's before we get to the crows and the moose here, can you share any of these topics?
Oh, no, because they're in that wish list of someday I will get this made.
So who's finding that?
So I know we're talking about CBC because they make the nature of things which we love.
We love CBC.
I know.
Absolutely.
And they're going to be on February 1st at nine.
I don't know if you know this Susan, February 1st at nine p.m. they're going to air I am
the Magpie River on nature of things.
I'm going to watch
appointment viewing for all FOTN listening. And I've got it in
my calendar. And we're going to talk more about that very, very
soon. But I guess you don't want to reveal these the wishlist
because somebody listening will steal that idea. Somebody will
rich person will just say, I don't need to triple mortgage my
home, I will pay for this myself and do it. Oh god. What a dream. Um, I
Doubt that that rich person is a documentary filmmaker
No, you know you need you need a rich person to be like I like the cut of your jib Susan and I love nature and you're
a great
nature documentary filmmaker
You know, I won't miss this grant this money
I give you this money to go do your thing
so the world can be educated.
Put the word out there.
We're doing it right now, okay?
But first, if this really rich person likes nature,
but they probably also like Toronto Mike.
So hit me up too, I need some funding first
and then we'll get Susan some funding.
Oh, there's a cut coming, I can tell.
Where are these rich people?
Okay, okay.
So they didn't get rich by giving away their money, Susan. That's what happened. It's true, I can tell. Where are these rich people? Okay, okay. So that's, you know, they didn't get rich
by giving away their money, Susan.
That's what it's true.
So, okay, so raccoons, koi wolves, crows.
Tell me about why you wanted to make a movie about crows.
What's the movie called?
Can we see that one?
It is called A Murder of Crows,
and it is sort of an examination of crow intelligence
and how much we underestimate these bird brains and how you really should have a
lot more respect for them and I got the idea for the film I was sitting on my
deck with my dog one morning having my coffee and literally a baby crow just
dropped out of the sky I've always had nesting pairs right by my deck every year.
They tend to come back to the same areas again and again.
And it dropped down right in front of us.
And the dog was sleeping and just looked up.
And because it didn't move, he didn't even react.
But it had bright blue eyes.
And I didn't know that crows had bright blue eyes.
And then when I started to research it, it's when they're young, they have bright blue eyes and they turn't know that crows had bright blue eyes and then when I started to research it it's when they're young they have bright blue eyes and they
turn black as they get older at about the three-month mark I think don't quote
me on that one but part of it is it it lets other because they live in like
larger groups and that's the other members of the group know I'm a baby
please don't beat me up I don't know what I'm doing but it was such an
interesting observation. It's like baby on board for crows. Exactly that's so cool and so I thought if I don't beat me up, I don't know what I'm doing. But it was such an interesting observation. It's like baby on board for crows.
Exactly, that's so cool.
And so I thought, if I don't know that about crows,
what else do I don't know?
And so I started researching it
and became completely fascinated.
So in the film, one of the big things we follow
is an experiment happening in Seattle
where a scientist and his team moved through a park
wearing Dick Cheneyy masks of all things
and they captured crows in nets and they just captured them and then released them.
And the whole objective of the research was to understand how knowledge is passed
and if the crows would react. And literally we took him back to this park, he wore the dick-chainy
mask among hundreds of people walking through this park and we did it on campus. And he walked through and the crows dive bombed him, not
one other person.
I actually believe I've seen this. Probably it's older now. I remember now like a city
setting and the masks and the dive bombing of the crows. Like I 100% remember watching this. Oh good.
Where did it air again? It was on CBC Nature Things and on PBS Nature and I don't know like
I've seen this. I was watching this and I'm like this is I was just channel flipping or whatever
and I saw it and I stuck around because I found it fascinating. I have seen a murder of crows.
Who decided like who decided we need a name for this group of crows and we don't want to use flock. We're tired of using flock.
Let's call it a murder. What's the, do you have that intel?
Well, that's very much kind of indicative of our view of these crows. We've been scared of our
fearful of crows for centuries. And so the whole Hitchcock before Hitchcock, he just, you know,
took that up. Um, and so that's where the murder came from but do you know what a group
of Ravens is called I don't but let me think on it actually I don't know a
kindness of Ravens I did not you know what that's a I'm gonna drop that one on
my seven-year-old tonight it'll blow his mind and this a kindness of Ravens which
really speaks to you know why are Ravens a kindness and crows are a murder when they're in a group?
Better PR.
Well, because crows, you know, picked on the dead and, you know, on the battlefield and
they'll get a meal wherever they can.
So you know, we've, we've had this sort of idea of crows being creepy for millennia.
Somebody not me made a joke about like the difference difference between a rat and a squirrel was like the
stylist.
If you remove that big fluffy tail from the squirrel, I think we're all creeped out by
this thing running around our backyards.
Absolutely.
Yeah, yeah.
They need a better PR agent.
Right.
So that's what the crows need.
They need Jill.
Yeah, Jill.
Jill, can you help out the crows, okay?
And the rats. Because the ravens have figured it out. And I don't even know if I... If you gave me a like, okay, that's what the Joe, Jill, can you help out the crows? Okay.
And the ravens have figured it out.
And I don't even know if I, if you gave me like, okay, can I tell the difference between
a raven and a crow?
Like I know you can.
I can.
Um, so there's a couple of big things, but most people can't, uh, Raven is about 25%
bigger, which of course you'll recognize right away.
Um, I, I remember square crow.
So squares, uh, crowsows tail feathers are in a square
and ravens are in a pie. Okay. And their beaks are different. Crows have longer beaks and ravens have
more stocky thick beaks. Reminds me of like, okay, is that a rabbit or a hair? Like there's a there's
these subtle differences. And then I made a film on rabbits and hairs. Yes. What was that called?
It was called gosh darn it. Um,
you can't remember the name of your own film. Yes. Isn't that
bad. I'm worried about you. I know. Let's do a documentary
about this. Oh my gosh. It was two films ago. Um, that recent
I can Google it for you. It's on cbc. It's on rabbits and uh,
my goodness gracious. Gosh darn it. Oh, that's sad. This is
age. Um, is it called rabbits and hairs? No, but it's, it's called
I don't remember. That's okay. This is the thrilling part. Is it called, uh,
I don't know. Remarkable rabbit remarkable rabbits. That is what it's called. Versus hairs.
Yeah, no remarkable rabbits. Okay. Just remarkable. Yes. I see here season two, episode 13, the nature
of thingies. It can't be season two
It's just a couple of years ago. Anyway, see be it doesn't matter. That's gotta be like season 62
Well, we're gonna get to all that too
Because there's a new host and there's lots going on with the nature of things and we're gonna get there very very soon
But okay, Markable rabbit side is so bad. I forgot that nice alliteration there. Come on
I can see the boardroom now. We need a we need a name. I like alliteration there. Come on. Thank you very much. I can see the boardroom now.
We need a name.
I like alliteration.
What do we got here?
Well, what starts with R?
Radical rabbits?
No.
You know that boardroom is my kitchen table.
Right.
Well, I often talk about the team here at Toronto Wagt.
And I just, it's me, myself and I,
just, you know, we sound bigger
if we talk about the team here.
Okay.
I'm enjoying this very much. When I think just, you know, we sound bigger. We talked about the team here. Okay. I'm enjoying this very much.
When I think of, and again, I am Canadian.
I was born here in, I was born in Parkdale in Toronto
here at St. Joe's and born and raised
in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
And now you and I, when I think of Canada,
I think of like, I think of moose and beaver.
Like these are the two animals I think of,
even though I've actually never seen,
I don't know what this says about me.
I've never seen a moose in the wild. You're kidding says about me. I've never seen a moose in the wild.
You're kidding.
I don't think I've seen a moose in the wild.
I want to just because you mentioned earlier cemeteries.
So this is a quick tangent and we're going to get back to moose.
There's not a lot of moose in cemeteries.
I'm curious how you link those two.
The way I link it is I just remember when you were talking about, you know, cemeteries
and you can see the nature that I, especially during the pandemic, I would do a lot of bike rides to park lawn cemetery here in Etobicoke and, uh, lots of deer. Like
there was lots of deer in park lawn cemetery and I used to see them by the Humber river.
I do the Humber trail a lot and I used to see deer down there and it was quite amazing.
But so many, so many, so much deer, so many deers, deers, deer. Yeah. Moose is plural
as moose, but deers plural is deers.
No, I think it's just deer.
Okay.
I should know these things.
Okay.
I'm an English major.
Leave me alone here.
Okay.
But, uh, absolutely, uh, can't mention a cemetery without saying shout out to Ridley Funeral
Home.
You move the, uh, lasagna box, but there is a, yeah, that's it.
So I know that green thing in your hand right now is a measuring tape and that's courtesy
of Ridley Funeral Home.
So if you're, I don't know, you're maybe you're filming rabbits and you need to measure them
to see if they're a hair or not.
You can use the Ridley Funeral Home measuring tape.
Actually, what I need to do is I have mini donkeys and I thought this rain, I need to,
I need to get them coats.
You're burying the lead here.
You have like, like you live in Oxbridge and you have donkeys?
I have a horse farm and I have miniature donkeys on it
and they are so adorable.
And I need to measure their body for a coat
because all this rain is a problem.
So thank you, I will use this.
Shout out to Raley Funeral.
The big ones actually scare them, the metal ones.
Hey, so okay, so we're talking about animals that get mistaken for each other. So there's rabbits and hairs and there's
ravens and crows and of course alligators and crocodiles. You got a nose and everything.
And I think I was in caribou moose and caribou, but also like these, uh, what are they called?
Baby donkeys? Do people think they're ponies? Uh, well mine are to see these things. Oh,
they look like ponies. I will show you pictures later. All right. They're... I have to see these things. Oh, there's... Do they look like ponies at all? Okay, I will show you pictures later.
All right.
There...
I have miniature ones.
Large ones can look like horses.
Okay.
Like there are some that are called jacks that are about the size of a horse.
How tall are these guys?
Mine are about 32 inches.
And shout out to Ruby and Bullet.
And they are...
I hope they're listening right now.
So cute.
They're just absolutely...
They have my heart. They're really lovely. Play this episode episode for Ruby and what's the other one's name bullet bullet. Okay, I like that
Okay, so very much bullet like trigger. Yeah, I get it. It was very clever
Okay, so Ridley funeral home proud sponsor of the program before we get to the moose. Do you enjoy Italian food?
I do I love a time pause hoping you'd say yes, who the heck doesn't like Italian food. I do. I love Italian food. Pause hoping you'd say yes, because who the heck doesn't like Italian food? I have a large
lasagna in my freezer right now that you could take back to Uxbridge with you.
Thank you.
That should cover the gas expense there. Okay. So it's delicious. You'll say thank you to
me, but really it's thank you, Palma pasta. And all listeners should know if you want
authentic Italian food, the Petrucci family
own and operate Palma Pasta.
They have locations in Mississauga and Oakville.
We often have Toronto Mike listener experiences at the Palma's Kitchen location in Mississauga.
And they will feed us at TMLX 15, which is going to take place June 27 from 6 to 9 p.m. at Great Lakes Brewery in Southern Etobicoke.
So shout out to Great Lakes Brewery. I have some fresh craft beer that you can take home.
Wow, this is like a score. Nobody gives me stuff.
No, that's what Tom Wilson from Junkhouse, he came over and said, I do these,
he does a lot of CBC stuff. He's like, they don't give you anything. He goes,
he comes here, he gets a nice lasagna. That's very nice. Thank you. You're welcome. Did
you know you were getting such a, such a swag? I had no idea. Okay. Jill buried the lead
on that one herself. Okay. So the beer is going home with you. You got the lasagna,
you got the measuring tape. If you have old electronics or cables in your farm there,
it's basically a farm, right? You live in a farm.
Amazing.
You know, you don't throw that in the garbage
because the chemicals end up in our landfill.
You go to recyclemyelectronics.ca.
The EPRA is accredited locations near you
where you can drop that off and have it properly recycled
to keep the chemicals out of our landfill.
So thank you, recyclemyelectronics.ca. Got that got that one. We'll do a documentary on that one day and I your investments. You
don't have the triple mortgage that farm anymore to make these movies. We'll get you the funding.
If there's anything left over, you could learn a lot about investing from the advantaged
investor podcast from Raymond James Canada valuable
insight from professionals Chris Cooksey does a great job hosting it I highly recommend it the
advantaged investor from Raymond James Canada talk to me we're gonna get to the river I tease that
magpie river it's coming soon but you know I need to hear a little more about moose. Not moose grumpy for the FOTM listening, but like actual moose.
Moose are so cool. They really look like they're built by a committee because they've got these
long legs and necks and these stupid do-flaps and they have all these things that come together,
but it actually all is necessary for the environments they move through. So for a year in the life
of a twig eater, which is another doc that I made for CBC and PBS and Arte or BBC and
the BBC, they, we followed a year in the life of a newborn moose calf in the Rocky Mountains.
And we were there within hours of it dropping and we followed it on foot through every season for a full
year until its mother shunned it at the end of the year when she was pregnant with a new
baby.
And it was an incredible adventure because it is really hard to track in five feet of
snow, snowshoeing.
And we just found them and kept going
with them. And we, we, uh, camped out and we also had a place in Jasper that we would
go back to. And, uh, it was a big team and it was an incredible year and a half adventure
filming and then another year and a half of putting it together. So, um, amazing film,
a year in the life of a twig eater. I'm I'm really, I feel so lucky I got to make that film.
Just to spend that much time in the Rockies, it's such an incredible part of the world.
And to get to know Moose up close and personal, like, it was incredible.
You have the best life.
Like, you've, your job is to film and learn about nature in this beautiful country of
ours.
I'm so envious of this livelihood of yours.
And film all over the world, like for, you know, we were-
Not just Canada, like I'm limiting you to Canada.
Where have you been?
No, well, for raccoons, we were in Japan.
We spent a lot of time in the US.
We spent a lot of time for rabbits.
We were in Europe a lot.
We're all over the world.
And we were in, for crows, we were in New Caledonia, which is just off of Australia. We're all over the world and we were in for crows. We were in us. We were in New Caledonia, which is just off of Australia. We're everywhere.
I've been everywhere. Susan, I've been everywhere. Amazing. Okay. So we're going to get to the
majestic. Oh, thank God. Magpie river. Imagine we just didn't remand at a time. I'm like,
ah, we didn't get to the magpie river in northern Quebec. We're going to get there right now, but I have a piece of audio to help us segue over. So let's listen to this.
If you just protect the human right to water, you are not protecting the river. But if you protect
the river, you protect at the same time the human right to water. You are protecting the whole ecosystem. We're not going to have a vibrant living planet
for us or anything else if we don't change our mindset and our law. We can
change laws. I mean a hundred years ago in this country the Elections Act said
no woman idiot lunatic or child shall vote you know like we can change. Talk to me first, tell me about the Magpie River.
Well, first I'll tell you about the clip. So the first speaker is an incredible lawyer
called Yenny Vega Cardenas. And she was the powerhouse behind getting the Magpie River
legal personhood. Her and her team worked really closely
with the Innu and with local non-Indigenous people to push this
through. And the second clip was by Maude Barlow, the incredible Maude Barlow who
is just a force of nature. She's so inspiring. She's just got so much passion
for the environment. I really have enjoyed getting to know her so much. So though both of those people are featured in the film and uh, they're the kind of people
you meet that make a difference in your life. Like they're inspiring. I want to be a better
person because I've been able to hang out with both of them.
Okay. I'm so intrigued. So tell me, tell me more in great detail. Like tell me about the
magpie river and then we have to dive into
like why would you like, why would you grant? What are the benefits of exactly specifically
of granting legal personhood to like a part of nature? Like nature is not people, right?
How do you like I am so intrigued by this all.
Well, before I tell you about the Magpie, I'll just say that, you know, legal personhood
is a legal construct. And so, you know, we have, you know know legal personhood is a legal construct and so, you know, we have you know
Legal personhood but corporations have legal personhood. Um
Charities have legal personhood ships have legal personhood. So if Walmart can have legal personhood, why can a river or forest?
It's just a misnomer, right? You just need to rebrand this thing
We really do it just means that you have rights under the law, that you can have a voice in our courts.
So by the Magpie River gaining legal personhood, it has a voice in our court system.
And for good or for bad, everything in this country and in most, you know, first world countries runs by a court system.
So it just seems like an idea that time has come that the natural world should be able to speak up for itself
or have guardians that speak up for itself or have guardians
that speak up for itself to say, Hey, you don't get to damn me or you don't get to build a garbage,
you know, dump in the middle of my trees. And so it really is one of those things that once you
start to wrap your head around makes perfect sense. Well, later in this conversation, after I get a
better understanding of, you know, the glory
of the majestic glory of the Magpie River and a little bit more about the actual river itself,
I have, it was sent to me by Jill actually, that I have these nine rights. These are the nine rights
the Magpie River was granted with legal personhood. And maybe we can can walk just walk through them at the end of this
convo but first for the ignorant Torontonians who are like I don't know
where or what the Magpie River is let's educate these ignoramuses most people
don't know where the Magpie River I feel better now I was yesterday I had a guy
he wonderful guy named Sean Burns who lives in Winnipeg. And he's really into
what's called like lost country, he calls it. It's the country musicians and songs that
seem to be lost to history, like no one, they're so obscure in this country, like specifically
to Canada. So we did this deep dive into lost country and he would drop names that aren't
like, Oh, these are not lost country musicians. Everybody knows these people. And he dropped a name, like a huge name
that like a literally of an artist who performed on tears
are not enough, the charity single in 1985.
And I heard the name and I was like, I don't know this name.
Like it just never, it didn't resonate with me at all.
Like I am so, I felt such shame
for not knowing Carol Baker, for example.
How do I not know Carol Baker?
Like how do you not know Carole Baker?
I know, I know Anne Murray.
Yeah.
It's firstly, it starts by like not having any interest
in country music.
So when you're exposed, like unlike when I saw the dive,
the crows dive bombing in that city,
Seattle, I got to stick around and learn more.
I'm intrigued.
But when I'm channel surfing or on the radio or anywhere and there's a country song
I'm gone. Like I just flip away. See I like country. That's how I know. Okay
I just feel terrible that this artist literally is singing with like I think with Randy Backman
I'm not sure yeah, but they're on tears are not enough and I did not know Carol Baker
So I feel that shame of being such so ignorant and then when I learned the Magpie River, I'm like, I don't know the Magpie River.
Maybe I'll pretend like some dumb listeners don't know the Magpie River and then she'll
explain it to me and I'll know.
But now you're telling me a lot of people don't know the Magpie River.
And you know, that whole section, the whole North Shore of Quebec is not something that
even Quebecers know a lot about.
It's huge swaths of wilderness, without roads through a lot of it,
so it's difficult to get to.
I mean, this was, so the Magpie River runs,
it's just incredible.
It's one of the last free-flowing wild rivers
in Northern Quebec,
an area that has many, many,
or had many, many wild, long, wild rivers.
But so many of them have been dammed
for hydroelectric power.
So the magpie runs from the headwaters are at the border of Labrador in Quebec.
So all the way up there in the north and it tumbles all the way down through this incredible
shield and waterfalls and the granite cliffs.
Yes, super like they're, you know, like skyscrapers all around you.
And through pristine boreal forests,
and it comes out at the Gulf of St. Lawrence.
So it's almost 300 kilometers long,
and it starts in Tundra,
and then goes through boreal forest.
It has a really diverse habitat all around it.
And most people don't know about it,
because in order to get to travel the Magpie River,
you have to helicopter in or float
Plane in it's thick forest. You can't move through there's only one way down which is on the river which is class
You know three four and five. It's really big rapids
And I've done it twice. It is tough
And so a lot of people don't know about it
But they should because this whole area is just it's part of the largest boreal forest
On the planet. We're not talking just Canada. We're talking on the planet
It's this contiguous boreal forest that runs all the way from BC to Labrador
it is full of links and osprey and bear and
Woodland caribou which are endangered like so many beautiful animals in the water is
just incredibly cold and bubbling because it's moving over rocks at a high speed.
There's these huge speckled trout in it which I've never seen such colorful fish in my life.
It is really an incredible part of the world.
And the Inu who live in that area are called the Innu of Ukunichit. That's
the community. And they have been fighting for over 20 years to protect this river. They
don't it's for them, it's really sacred and they don't want to see it be damned by Hydro-Quebec,
which has it's been threatened to be damned.
That's like it means two things being damned.
It does. And almost like the same thing synonymously.
They have been fighting as have the local population, but for the Innu, the rocks are
ancestors.
Like they've traveled this river for millennia.
This is part of their territorial lands and they're very protective of them, rightly so.
So it was really incredible, one, to be able to get their permission to come on these lands
and to make this film,
to learn more about how they view the river and their long history with the river, how
they get medicine, like they call it their pharmacy. There's medicines they collect
all along the river, it's their grocery store. They've, for family after family, have traveled
up this river every summer and then traveled back down to have supplies for
the winter. And so it was really special to be able to spend time with them and on this river
because I've never been near anything like it. Like it's so loud. How long did you spend on the
the magpie? We probably spent two months on the river just a go, but then we went up for, I probably
have been on it for like 10 day trips besides that for eight times, so six months at least,
maybe seven, and all through the season.
So in the middle of winter went, oh my God, we were at the headwaters of the mag pie in February. It was negative 40, the
helicopter land and landed. And I thought I was
ready to jump out, which is what we normally do.
You know, you jump out, you have to have your
snow shoes on and make yourself as big as
possible because you're just going to drop like
six feet into snow and digging out is exhausting.
So you try to make yourself big so you don't
drop too far into the snow.
Well, we just got out and we were on rock.
I thought it was gonna be just complete snow cover.
It is just ancient rock up there.
40 kilometer, no, 140, like we couldn't stand up.
The wind was so strong and just the reason
there was no snow is it's moving all that snow
over the rocks.
We, you would get frostbite if your skin was exposed for more than a minute.
We were literally the camera system and I are throwing our bodies in front of
the tripod so the cameraman can film because what's the matter?
Oh, no, no, I'm listening to you.
Okay. Um, because that's my, uh, fascinating story face.
You did with the wind was so strong. He couldn't get purchase on the rocks. That's my fascinating story face.
The wind was so strong he couldn't get purchase on the rocks.
And yet at the same time it was magical.
I've never been anywhere like that and I've been all over the world.
So it was really incredible filming up there and we've done it all through the seasons.
We were there in the heart of winter several times. Um, we were there for spring, which is just
this incredible fresh at the melt where all the
waters off the headway and all through the lands
come down into the river at points.
The river grows a hundred feet.
I mean, it's just rushing.
Everything's melting.
It's incredible.
Um, and in summer, there are so many black flies. Um,
it's just, I'm canceling my trip here. I was on my phone booking my trip to the magpie.
You know what? Go in late. There's the last two weeks of August and September.
Unbelievable. Not a black fly in sight. First time I went was August. I did not know
there were that many black flies. When I went back in July, I almost died. Um,
you know, Gordon Lightfoot could have had a song Black Flies in July.
Yes, very Canadian. So yeah it's an incredible part of the world. It's really,
you know National Geographic named it one of the top five paddling destinations in the world.
I'll bet.
So it's amazing.
The Magpie River. So Susan I'm listening to you talk about the Magpie River. I love
listening to you talk. I can't imagine that we get to see this footage on February 1st
on CBC or CBC Gem. It's amazing. We have to protect the Magpie.
We do. And so many other things. We have to protect the Magpie. We have to protect forests.
We have to protect the breeding grounds for the orca in BC. There's just so many things we need to protect in this new legal precedent.
This idea of rights of nature and legal personhood for natural phenomena is something we need
to embrace.
It's really going to be a game changer for conservation groups around the world and in
Canada.
Absolutely.
It allows you to formally recognize the inherent value of nature, which is amazing.
And I was reading in the notes that other countries have done this.
So Chile and Australia, Bolivia and New Zealand, for example, have done this and now the Magpie
River.
So when did this happen?
When did this designation, when did this happen for the Magpie?
When did they get granted the right of legal personhood? It happened in 2021 through sister resolutions from the Inu of Okonichit,
the Council of the Inu of Okonichit and the local county of Manganee in Quebec, which
is the size of Ireland. We're not talking about a small place. Like it's a huge area that
is administered by the Mungani Council or County. And so those two sister resolutions
went forward and because of the Indigenous support and participation, further protection
is gained by the UN Council on Indigenous rights. So that puts kind of a world protection on it. But you know nothing is ever secure. The battle, like this is an incredible accomplishment and took
years and years of work and I'm so inspired by everyone who put their energies into it.
But they have to keep fighting. You know Hydro-Québec is very strong. They continually want to
develop the magpie among other rivers but it's one of the last big rivers like this
So they still have their sights on it. And so, you know, this is an important accomplishment, but the fight is definitely not over
No, no, that's I'm glad you're shining the light on this
So where in this process did you decide that you would seek funding to make this film?
Like is it when you did you open up the paper one day and see oh the the Magpie River is being granted the right of legal
personhood. We should explore that like where did you get this idea? That's
exactly it. I read it and I thought what is this idea of legal personhood for a
river? I've never heard of that and I started doing the research and read
about the Wanganui River in New Zealand and how that was protected
and about Bolivia and in Ecuador.
And I just thought this is incredible that this is possible.
And so the more I read about it, the more I thought, I want to go see this river.
I want to meet the people who fought so hard for this and who came up with this brilliant
idea.
And then I realized it's been around since the 1970s. A BC lawyer named Stone came up with this brilliant idea and then I realized it's been around since the 1970s, you know,
a BC lawyer named Stone came up with this idea.
And so it's been around for a long time.
That's a perfect name for like an environment lawyer.
It's true.
Stone.
But you know what's interesting?
It's just starting to catch on.
Like it's really gaining strength.
And so, and what I love about the magpie is it's the first natural phenomena in the world that's
gained legal personhood through joint efforts from indigenous and non-indigenous people.
Everything else has been put forward by indigenous people.
And so this idea that we can all join together to make this kind of massive change for our
community and our world, I find that really exciting.
No, this is, I'm very excited.
Okay.
I can't fake excitement on this show. This is all real now
You explained earlier you don't want to triple mortgage your home to make these things
So you had the idea after you know, you're always on the lookout for these interesting
subjects to to to make films about and you learn about the magpie River and then you're like I want to do this and
You do whatever so then do you go to CBC and say I would like to do this I need this much funding to make
it happen is that essentially how it works? Well you have to kind of figure
out your concepts and how you're going to approach it and this was a little
different because it's not a cute animal with a face and ears that people are
gonna fall in love with right so it's a big picture Sal and much to my incredible
amazement and forever appreciation I
went to Sue Dando who's the commissioning editor of CBC's The Nature
Things and she got it like we've worked together quite a lot that doesn't mean
she's gonna say yes in any way and she really got it and saw the long-term
effects of this kind of legislation and how it can change our world and she was
our champion and she really helped push this through
We got tele Quebec on board. We got ZDF in Germany and Arte in France
and my co-producers who are Terra in you productions in in
Quebec and so all of us, you know just joined together to make make this happen
You know, I'm just a regular guy here in my basement chatting you up but I think this
is more impressive than the girl with the million dollar legs.
I just want to say that Susan Fleming not interested in the girl with the million dollar
legs.
I'm more interested in learning about the Magpie River here.
Okay and I mentioned I teased earlier I had the the nine rights which we're gonna get
to in a moment I'm
just going to read to you some real-time comments on the live stream is at live
dot toronto mic com sounds like an incredible journey makes me want to
watch the doc that's the whole point right Susan yeah and stream it on I feel
like they don't know like there's no mechanism to say that you know somebody
watched you know unless somebody watched, you
know, unless you're carrying one of those PBM devices, which very few people have, they
don't know when you watch, but they do, they do.
I feel they have metrics for streaming.
Like I think it's better for you that they stream it on gem because they can actually
see, Oh, there's a unique stream happening from this IP address.
You see, they can't track that on television.
It's true. I mean there is
like I'm just thinking about your benefiting you like hey there's we got lots of we need to do more of this.
I'll take it any which way you can watch it. I really will. Watch it both. Watch it both.
And I think when you stream it you have to leave it on for a certain amount of time. I don't know.
How long is this dog? It's an hour right? It's an hour. Yeah yeah and the nature of things and uh
who's the current uh I know the answer, but who is the current host of The Nature
of Things?
Well, there's two.
There's Surika Kalas Suzuki, who is the narrator of this film, and she did a really great
job and really impressed.
That's quite the last name, Suzuki.
Where have I heard that before?
But she's a marine biologist, so she was really into it.
Because one of the things we really explore in the doc is this idea of freshwater and
the importance of fresh water.
I think it's gonna be the next oil,
especially for Canada, because it's a resource
that is not infinite and it is so critical
to human health and life, and we have an abundance
and we're taking it for granted.
And one of the things we really explore in the film
is the importance of fresh water
that comes from things like the river.
Like the oceans get fed by the rivers.
Like everybody's on ocean conservation
and no one's on river conservation.
I think this is gonna be the next big cause
that we need to embrace.
Well, you, you know, creating awareness
by, you know, producing this documentary
that will premiere on CBC's The Nature of Things
Thursday, February 1st
at 9 p.m. Eastern.
You can send me the check later, Jill,
that was quite the sell.
But this is creating awareness.
I didn't know about the Magpie River.
I didn't know about this.
We're gonna talk about the nine rights right now.
I like the fact she's a Suzuki,
there's a marine biologist,
because I always think that when George Costanza
would tell people he was a marine biologist, right? That was not true. Suzuki is a marine biologist. She is indeed. Okay.
That was a good episode of Seinfeld. Okay. So let's walk through this before I find out and
prepping you for this, Susan, like I'm going to want to know at least a clue of like what will
the next you probably already working on it, but what's the next project going to know? You got
to read the nine rights. Don't, don't dissuade from that. This is the tease. But what's the next project going to be? No, no, you got to read the nine rights. Don't dissuade from that.
This is the tease. Like that's coming up after the nine rights. We're doing the nine rights
right now. You ready? And I'll do it one at a time. Maybe I'll just do them all. Okay.
The nine rights the Magpie River was granted with legal personhood. Number one, the right
to live, to exist, and to flow.
I like that.
It's great.
That's great.
Okay.
So the right to live, to exist, and to flow.
Okay.
Number two.
And live.
So you're recognizing it as an entity with life.
Right.
Love this.
And I love that this precedent gets set with the Magpie River and like there's so many
applications on the live stream.
There was some hope that we protect our Toronto watershed and headwaters more in the
future.
Oh, so important.
Maybe that's the next doc.
We'll talk about that in a moment.
Okay.
Number two, the right to the Reese to the respect for its natural cycles.
That's awkward as I read it.
The right to the respect for it to respect for its natural.
Okay.
There's a typo in my notes. I'm sorry
I'm gonna blame Jill for this gel. You've ruined everything delete. Okay the right to respect its natural cycles
So the fresh at in the spring where the big melt happens
So, you know as the seasons go through the river changes
Excellent number three the right to evolve naturally, to be protected and preserved
speaks for itself. Very important. Okay. Number four, I feel like David Letterman now number
four, the right to maintain its natural biodiversity, which is huge. I mean, cause if you start
putting chemicals into a river, you affect all the diversity. And we see that even with damming, like damming changes the water temperature,
it changes the flow of nutrients. So animals can't rely on the river anymore. In fact,
in some instances, it becomes poisonous for them. Natural diversity also involves things
like nesting sites, like if you change or reroute rivers, which they do when they damn,
they flood over areas that are natural nesting.
You're messing with a natural ecosystem.
Completely messing with it.
And unpredictably, which makes it an impossible environment
for animals to live in.
Look, you can't say it on the nature of things.
I'm gonna say right now, that would be bullshit.
Okay, I'm just gonna throw it out there.
Okay.
Well, what is bullshit? Hold on.
Is that your next documentary?
No.
No, to mess with a natural ecosystem.
Oh, okay.
Like if you start damming this, damn the damming of the magpie river. Okay number five
The right to perform its essential functions within its ecosystem
Which is everything from being able to do the big melt to flow into the Gulf of st. Lawrence
So it's it's just it has to be able to go through everything it's
gone through for millennia. And there's so many ways outside of dams that we can affect
that that we need to be cognizant of.
Number six, the right to maintain its integrity.
Yes, which is part of the whole thing of legal personhood is recognizing that things like
rivers or forests have a value outside of what they can do for us
That they have inherent value unto themselves
And I think that is a big paradigm shift that once you really start to think about it and young people get it
They say of course but people of my age, you know
It's a it's a real concept to embrace and and it's a struggle, but you really if you start to think about it
It makes perfect sense
Number seven this also makes perfect sense the right to be free from pollution
All right number eight the right to regenerate and be restored
Yes, so I mean the whole regeneration actually speaks not just to the river
But all the area around the river like the river gets its water from the runoff,
um, from snowmelt and you know, global warming is really affecting that snowmelt.
So this speaks to a much bigger issue.
And here, I think this is one, we're going to need some more Susan on the end of
this one, but this is kind of everything here. The right to sue.
This is the biggie. This is the teeth and the right to sue comes through legal guardians
who are appointed by the indigenous and non-indigenous community who put this measure forward and
got legal personhood. So they are going to appoint a couple of guardians. Usually it's
three who speak for the river in court And they already have people on the ground who are monitoring the river,
making sure that everything is going as it should, so who will report back if
there's changes or pollution or projects where,
you know, anything like that damming. Because it's so remote, you need local
people who are going to keep their eye on this river, and it's 300 kilometers
long. I mean, it's not an easy thing to keep their eye on this river and it's 300 kilometers long. I mean it's not an easy thing to keep your eye on and so these guardians will represent
the river in court and that's really the bite because if you don't have the right
to sue a corporation has the right to sue if you do something to Walmart
Walmart's gonna take you to court guess what you think about it before you do
something to Walmart well you should have to think about it before you do
something to the magpie. Absolutely, Absolutely. The right to sue is the bite there. That's
everything here. Now, this air is February 1. So hopefully people jump on this episode of Toronto
Miked. Maybe they catch up on the weekend and then they're all set to go to CBC Jam or watch CBC on
February 1st and they can see it. They can learn more.
Amazing. I'm so glad you dropped by to tell me about this.
But do you know what your next project is going to be about?
They do, but I never tell anyone.
So, OK, obviously, you don't want to show your cards here,
but maybe you give us like a like a clue.
Are we back to animals?
Yes. Back to us because we left animals for a river.
But now we're back to animals. I will give you one clue. OK. back to animals. So because we left animals for a river, but now we're back to animals.
I will give you one clue.
Okay.
Beep beep.
Okay.
It's a road runner.
Okay.
That clue is, I thought you were going to be like a real subtle thing.
Like it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's,
it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's,
it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's,
it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's,
it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's,
it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, thinking like, Oh yeah, maybe, uh, okay, very interesting. I'll start thinking on it.
Okay, so I might as well tell you it's beep beep the true story of Roadrunners
Okay, don't forget the title like you forgot the poor rabbit title here, but Susan
How was this experience for you making your trauma debut? That's a long drive you made from uxbridge
Well worth it. Well worth it. This was fantastic for the las lasagna? Is that why? No, for you and the lasagna.
Well thanks for telling us about, hey, it's just, again, I'm going to borrow from the
live stream because the people in the live stream are more eloquent than I am, but incredible
that a river has legal rights.
Thanks for going through these.
This is like mind blows and fun facts and there's gonna be so much more in the doc that we
can all see on CBC gem or on CBC on February 1st and I really appreciate you
telling me all about it and thank you Jill for that line that hooked me you
want to hear the line again before we say goodbye?
Thank you Jill.
This is the truth and Cam Gording can attest to this because he was in
PR and he used to pitch me on all these things and I did this thing with him which is rude.
I completely ignored it because I get so many.
And Jill's sentence that got me was, the beautiful and fast flowing Magpie River in northern
Quebec has become Canada's first natural phenomenon to be granted legal personhood.
So A, I didn't know about this magpie river.
I had no idea that some piece of nature, some natural phenomenon could be granted legal
personhood like as you said, like a corporation or a boat or whatever. Like this was a mind
blow to me. And then when I learned the subject matter expert would drive from Uxbridge and tell me about it. And I'd get some bonus fun facts
about crows and raccoons and moose. I said you had me at hello, Jill. Let's make this
happen. So thank you, Jill. Thank you, Susan. I hope that this documentary, I am the Magpie
River is a huge success. Thank you. And thank you for this today. And that brings us to the end of our 1,418th show.
You can follow me on Twitter and Blue Sky and at Toronto Mike.
We've already learned you're not on social media, Susan,
but is there any website we can go to to learn about what's going on with your
filmmaking anywhere you want to send us?
Nowhere. OK, you just got to go to episode 1418 to learn everything about Susan Fleming.
It's all right here.
Much love to all who made this possible.
That's Great Lakes Brewery, Palm Apostas, don't leave without your lasagna, Recycle
My Electronics, Raymond James Canada, and Ridley Funeral Home.
See you all Monday.
It's the return of
Brother Bill. He's back on the radio in Edmonton. We're gonna talk about what's
new with Brother Bill aka Neil Morrison. That's happening Monday. See you all then. every day. But I wonder who, yeah,
I wonder who,
maybe the one who doesn't realize
there's a thousand shades
of gray.
Cause I know that's true,
yes I do,
I know it's true, yeah,
I know it's true,
how about you?
I'll have picking up trash and then putting down rogues. I know it's true, how about you?
They're picking up trash and they're putting down ropes
And they're brokering stocks, the class struggle explodes
And I'll play this guitar just the best that I can