Education
After initially dropping out of university to work for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, Couture went back to school later in life. He received his Bachelor of Arts degree in Sociology in 2010.
After initially dropping out of university to work for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, Couture went back to school later in life. He received his Bachelor of Arts degree in Sociology in 2010.
Couture began working for the Canadian Broadcasting Company’s radio program IDEAS in 1994. His first assignment was to investigate a police investigation into the gay community in his hometown of London, Ontario. His work on the project was the subject of a feature-length "analysis" piece called the "Kiddie Porn Ring That Wasn’t" in the Globe and Mail on March 11, 1995 by then Ryerson journalism instructor Gerald Hannon.
The piece reported on how Couture had uncovered the fact that the London police were using the guise of a child pornography ring to harass the gay community in London and throughout the province of Ontario.
Hannon’s piece also reported on the extensive harassment of Couture by the local constabulary. Such persecution of a Canadian journalist was unprecedented at the time and Couture was granted the Hellman-Hammett Award from the prestigious group Human Rights Watch in New York in 1996.
The award is named after the famed American writers Lillian Hellman and Dashiell Hammett who left their estates in trust to be given to writers around the world who have faced political persecution for their work, as they had in their own lives. So unusual were the circumstances, news of his award was published in the New York Times and as far away as Africa.
He was also twice nominated by the Canadian Association of Journalists for awards in investigative journalism for his work.
Hannon’s piece in the Globe provoked such a public outcry on both sides, that both Hannon and Couture were named amongst the top newsmakers of the year. Couture eventually went on to work for Canadian Broadcasting Company television as an investigative reporter for their flagship program "the fifth estate". He also worked for the programs Witness and Newsworld before leaving for a freelance career as a writer in 1998.
Couture has written for numerous newspapers and magazines in both Canada and the United States, including the National Post and the Globe and Mail.
In recent years, he has been a regular freelance columnist for his home town newspaper,the London Free Press. He published his first book, "Peek: Inside the Private World of Public Sex" in 2008 under the imprint of New York publisher Haworth Press.
The book was surprisingly successful for the subject matter and made it onto the Amazon best-seller list in Canada, the United States, Australia and the United Kingdom He offers regular commentary on the issue of public sex whenever called upon by the media to do so and has appeared in Esquire Magazine, The Advocate, The New York Post and the National Post, amongst others