Jonathan Goldsbie is a Canadian journalist, and currently the news editor for Canadaland. He has previously worked as a performance artist and as columnist at The National Post, NOW Newspaper and Torontoist.
Goldsbie was previously a member of Toronto's Public Space Committee,[1] and has worked as a columnist for The National Post, NOW Newspaper[2][3] and Torontoist.[4] At Now Newspaper, Goldsbie was the chair of Unifor union-led employee bargaining committee.[5]
He is well known for his Twitter account @goldsbie, where he Tweets about Toronto politics.[3] In 2012, Goldsbie organized the performance art piece Route 501 Revisited as part the Free Fall theatre festival, in which he rented a street car and invited anyone to take Toronto's 501 Streetcar Route, in silence, but with Twitter conversation.[3][6]
In 2022, Goldsbie discovered and Tweeted about 2015 to 2021 homophobic social media posts by newly appointed Toronto City CouncillorRosemarie Bryan, resulting in her resignation the same day.[7]
Goldsbie is the news editor of Canadaland[8] and was part of a team that received an honourable mention, after being a finalist at the Digital Publishing Award for their coverage of the WE Charity scandal in 2021.[9][10] He received a Bucham Grove Press award for his Wag The Doug podcast work.[11] In 2021, he was part of the team that won gold at the National Magazine Awards as the producer of Cool Mules podcast about Vice (magazine) editor Slava Pastuk's cocaine smuggling.[12]
^"Police laud surveillance cameras, critics not so sure." The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, 21 May 2009. Gale In Context: Biography, link.gale.com/apps/doc/A200262518/BIC?u=wikipedia&sid=bookmark-BIC&xid=a21242fc. Accessed 10 July 2022.
^Filion, J. (2015). The Only Average Guy: Inside the Uncommon World of Rob Ford. Canada: Random House Canada. p140, 263, 301, 342
^Sayej, Nadja. "The 'est' of them all." Globe & Mail, 20 Dec. 2008, p. M3. Gale In Context: Biography, link.gale.com/apps/doc/A190875840/BIC?u=wikipedia&sid=bookmark-BIC&xid=d3d3f192. Accessed 10 July 2022.
^"Labour strife escalates concern for future of Toronto weekly." Globe & Mail, 11 Aug. 2016, p. B3. Gale In Context: Biography, link.gale.com/apps/doc/A460449529/BIC?u=wikipedia&sid=bookmark-BIC&xid=d0f7bf2d. Accessed 10 July 2022.