Part 1 - Jamie Ellerton: I'm a Moody Tipper and Here's Why
Tipping culture debate forces impossible decisions before you taste a single sip. The screen rotates. Three glowing percentages stare back. Your order hasn't been made. The barista hasn't smiled. But you're already choosing whether to look generous or cheap. Lindsay calls it creepy—tipping before service creates fear about what happens to your latte if you refuse.
Jamie confesses he's a moody tipper: a buck fifty on a good day, zero at a sandwich counter, always 15% for his stylist (20% on holidays). He argues the entire system is broken—abolish tipping, pay workers properly, set prices accordingly. Shane introduces his standing rule: if he's vertical while ordering, the tip isn't happening. The discussion reveals how servers share tips with management, kitchen staff, and bartenders, often keeping only 9-10% of what customers intended. Lindsay questions why customers assume financial superiority over service workers.
Learn why Jamie tips a single dollar to send a message about terrible service. Discover how ego drives tipping assumptions. Understand what separates counter service from table service.
Part 2 - A Leadership Vacuum: Bonnie Crombie and Francois Legault Quit the Same Day
Canadian political resignations hit twice in one day when two provincial leaders walked away. Bonnie Crombie pulled the pin on Ontario's Liberal leadership. François Legault quit as Quebec Premier. You're watching a recasting of who stands at the podium—and the timing isn't coincidence. It's wallet issues, healthcare crises, and voters demanding adults in the room.
Jamie explains Legault's resignation as waving the white flag after his fight with Quebec doctors made him toxic. Polling shows him matching Trudeau's pre-resignation numbers, with the Parti Québécois poised to win. Crombie's departure was different—she'd already quit in practice, MIA from Queen's Park since fall, drawing party salary while the Ontario Liberals stayed broke and leaderless. Lindsay argues voters want localized leadership focused on municipal realities, not broad platforms. Shane questions why Canada can't find leaders who actually lead. The conversation shifts to Trump's Greenland threats and CUSMA bluster while Mark Carney negotiates in China.
Discover why Jamie says take Trump seriously without taking him literally. Learn what Crombie's absence from Queen's Park revealed. Understand how auto sector economics connect Canadian and American workers.
GUEST: Jamie Ellerton, Lindsay Broadhead | conaptus.com, broadheadcomms.ca
Originally aired on 2026-01-05

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