For @torontolifemag.bsky.social, I wrote about the city’s vicious tow-truck wars—a world of violence, arson, shifting allegiances, and paranoia. torontolife.com/deep-dives/t...
For @torontolifemag.bsky.social, I wrote about the city’s vicious tow-truck wars—a world of violence, arson, shifting allegiances, and paranoia. torontolife.com/deep-dives/t...
I talked to Shaye Ganam, on QR in Calgary & 880 CHED in Edmonton, about how safety culture is making childhood less active and less exciting. Shaye and I were both amateur bomb makers as kids. We still remember the recipe for gunpowder. Listen here: pdst.fm/e/traffic.me...
@thewalrus.ca
Here's my latest essay for @thewalrus.ca. As a parent, I understand the impulse to protect kids. Danger is real. And on the other side of danger? Unimaginable loss. But safety, I've come to believe, is inversely correlated with freedom—which, for kids, is sacrosanct. thewalrus.ca/is-it-danger...
At 5 pm, I'll be on CBC's Here and Now talking with host Farrah Merali about Ryan Wedding, Canada's most famous (former) fugitive, who was arrested yesterday in Mexico City. For a primer on this crazy story, read my Toronto Life feature from last year: torontolife.com/deep-dives/b...
I spoke today with Jayme Poisson on CBC's Front Burner podcast, where I defended an old-fashion idea: institutional neutrality. Should universities have opinions? I vote no. Opinions are for students and professors and instructors, not administrators.
www.cbc.ca/radio/frontb...
Yeah, I take that point. I'd add that even an officially "neutral" university can still hire large cadres of professors dedicated to studying—and finding ways to reduce—gender-based violence. This scholarly work is probably more impactful than institutional statement making.
Thanks, Kathryn! And thanks for reading.
If you only read one piece on the life of Ryan Wedding, this should be it. Brilliantly done.
Wow. Brilliant writing, and impressive research! I feel like I just watched the film. Wow. I had no idea he was this infamous. Or evil.
Ryan Wedding—the Olympic snowboarder turned drug kingpin turned celebrity fugitive—is back in the news today. If you want a primer on the darkest, wildest, most Vince Gilligan-y story in Canada right now, give my @torontolifemag.bsky.social feature on Wedding a read.
torontolife.com/deep-dives/b...
I take critiques of neutrality seriously. I'm unconvinced that there's some kind of perfect neutral state humans can attain. But I think neutrality is important as a guiding principle. If I were accused of a crime, I'd want to be tried in a court that strives, however imperfectly, for neutrality.
I trained in the positivist tradition, in which, to the extent possible, one is to leave one's values at the door. Institutional neutrality reflects this paradigm.
However, it also comes with a lot of baggage about what objectivity looks like and who is capable of it.
macleans.ca/longforms/th...
"Institutional neutrality on campus isn’t about renouncing social progress; it’s about protecting the intellectual conditions that make such progress possible" —me. @macleans.bsky.social
Should universities serve as engines of social justice or spaces of independent inquiry? Can they be both? https://macleans.ca/longforms/the-battle-for-the-soul-of-the-university/
I wrote an essay for @macleans.bsky.social. It's a defence of institutional neutrality on campus. If university administrators value the work that students and professors do, they should get out of the way and let them do it. macleans.ca/longforms/th...
An essay I wrote three years ago is, for the moment, the number one trending piece at @thewalrus.ca. The largest art heist in Canadian history happened in 1972. In a world obsessed with art crime, why did Canadians basically shrug the whole thing off? thewalrus.ca/canadas-bigg...
What a devastating loss. This man gave us three absolutely perfect records.
pitchfork.com/news/dangelo...
This piece is still the one I'm most proud of in my career. (And @chloeellingson.bsky.social's photos are gorgeous.)
From the #LocalArchives: The Annex is shrinking. The towers of Crescent Town are exploding. @simonlewsen.bsky.social on a tale of two cities, and how the uneven, illogical densification pattern of the last 50 years created today’s Toronto. thelocal.to/density-the-...
My piece on the death (and possible rebirth) of humanities education has been re-printed by @thelineca.bsky.social, one of the best places on the internet for lively writing and independent thought.
www.readtheline.ca/p/simon-lews...
These words from @cherilucasrowlands.com made me happy:
"After reading a series of articles lamenting the death of higher education and critical thinking in the age of ChatGPT, I tempered my despair with Simon Lewsen’s somewhat hopeful essay on the humanities"
longreads.com/2025/09/10/d...
"I didn’t expect any of this, and I’m unsure what to make of it. But I wonder if the emerging threat of AI is restoring a sense of vitality to the humanistic mission."
@simonlewsen.bsky.social for @thelocal.to: thelocal.to/humanities-i...
For my Designlines column, I visited Biidaasige—the new adventure playground at the foot of the Don River—and let my toddler guide me around. She was ecstatic. Children need risky play. Long live Biidaasige.
@waterfrontoronto.bsky.social
www.designlinesmagazine.com/biidaasige-p...
The humanities have been in crisis for the entirety of @simonlewsen.bsky.social's career. But despite apocalyptic declarations about the death of the liberal arts, in his own classroom he sees signs of life. thelocal.to/humanities-i...
So, @thelocal.to is rolling out its Higher Education issue today. I wrote an essay about the supposed death of the humanities. Are the humanities really dying, though? In my own classroom at the University of Toronto, I see surprising signs of life.
thelocal.to/humanities-i...
The federal government is seeking to punish the City of Toronto for failing to legalize sixplexes. My hot take: When it comes to housing, the feds should throw their weight around even more. My latest column instalment for Designlines.
www.designlinesmagazine.com/sixplexes-in...
I'm jazzed to be included in the Sunday Long Read's 500th weekly edition—an essential round-up of the best long-form journalism.
mailchi.mp/sundaylongre...
In 2002, Ryan Wedding was a rising-star athlete. Today, he's an international drug lord running a billion-dollar enterprise. In @torontolifemag.bsky.social, I tell the story of how a cherubic kid from Thunder Bay, ON, became one of the world's most-wanted fugitives.
torontolife.com/deep-dives/b...
For @thestar.com, I interviewed Meghan Daum—personal essayist turned heterodox podcaster—about her new book, the LA fires, the fertility crisis, what JD Vance gets right and wrong about family policy, and whether we've passed peak wokeness.
www.thestar.com/opinion/cont...
My City Beat Column—on art, architecture, and urbanism—for Designlines magazine is a finalist for a Digital Publishing Awards (Best Column). And that's a nice little nod for a column in its first year.