500 episodes

Home to the Spectator's best podcasts on everything from politics to religion, literature to food and drink, and more. A new podcast every day from writers worth listening to.

Best of the Spectator The Spectator

    • News
    • 4.4 • 92 Ratings

Home to the Spectator's best podcasts on everything from politics to religion, literature to food and drink, and more. A new podcast every day from writers worth listening to.

    The Book Club: Kathryn Hughes

    The Book Club: Kathryn Hughes

    My guest in this week’s Book Club podcast is the author and historian Kathryn Hughes, whose new book Catland tells the story of how we learned to love pusskins. Content warning: contains Kipling, Edward Lear, some stinking carts of offal, and the troubled life and weird art of the extraordinary Louis Wain.

    • 40 min
    Table Talk: Joel Golby

    Table Talk: Joel Golby

    Joel Golby is a journalist who has written for – among others – Vice and the Guardian, where he has a regular column, the watcher, reviewing television. He has since translated his skill for wry observations and self-reflection into the new book Four Stars: A life reviewed which hilariously grapples with our fascination with opinions

    On the podcast Joel tells Lara about his appreciation for square sponge and pink custard, why Mum's roast is always the best roast and where a pint is best enjoyed.

    • 39 min
    Americano: what Trump’s ‘hush money’ trial tells us about the American legal system

    Americano: what Trump’s ‘hush money’ trial tells us about the American legal system

    Freddy Gray is joined Alan Dershowitz, American lawyer and author of Get Trump: the threat to civil liberties, due process, and our constitutional rule of law. They discuss Trump’s ‘hush money’ trial, what it means for the election and what it tells us about the flaws in the American legal system. 

    • 21 min
    Spectator Out Loud: Svitlana Morenets, Mary Wakefield, Max Jeffery, Sam Leith and Richard Bratby

    Spectator Out Loud: Svitlana Morenets, Mary Wakefield, Max Jeffery, Sam Leith and Richard Bratby

    On this week’s Spectator Out Loud: In light of the help Israel received, Svitlana Morenets issues a challenge to the West to help Ukraine (1:15); Mary Wakefield questions the slow response to the Ministry of Defence being daubed in paint (7:33);  Max Jeffery discusses the aims and tactics of the group responsible for the protest, Youth Demand (13:25); Sam Leith reviews Salman Rushdie's new book (18:59); and Richard Bratby pays tribute to Michael Tanner, The Spectator critic who died earlier this month (27:34).

    Produced and presented by Patrick Gibbons.

    • 34 min
    Americano: is the criticism of Biden's Middle East policy fair?

    Americano: is the criticism of Biden's Middle East policy fair?

    Freddy speaks to the diplomat and author Dennis B Ross, who worked under presidents George H W Bush and Bill Clinton. He was a special advisor on the Persian Gulf. They discuss the escalation of tensions in the Middle East and the flak that Joe Biden has come under for his response. Can the US still claim to be able to shape events in the Middle East? And what comes next? 

    • 28 min
    The Edition: the dangers of political prosecution

    The Edition: the dangers of political prosecution

    This week: the usual targets

    First: Trump is on trial again – and America is bored rather than scandalised. This is his 91st criminal charge and his supporters see this as politicised prosecution. As an American, Kate Andrews has seen how the law can be used as a political weapon – so why, she asks, is Britain importing the same system? In less than 18 months, the police have been sent to investigate Rishi Sunak for his seat-belt, Nicola Sturgeon for campaign funds, and Angela Rayner over her electoral registry: each time, the complainant is political and the process is the punishment. Kate joins the podcast alongside The Spectator’s editor Fraser Nelson to discuss. (01:34)

    Then: Confessions of a defecting Starmtrooper. Katy Balls speaks to Jamie Driscoll, the former Labour North of Tyne mayor, who failed Keir Starmer’s selection process to be mayor of the soon-to-be-created North East metro mayoralty. He’s now running as an independent, backed by Andy Burnham, while half of the Labour council groups are refusing to endorse the official Labour candidate. ‘I know people who have left the Labour party who describe it as leaving an abusive relationship,’ he says. You can read the full interview in the magazine, but we have a short extract of their discussion on the podcast. (13:44)

    And finally: Our reporter Max Jeffery gatecrashed a party of the Extinction Rebellion youth offshoot Youth Demand!, whose stunts have included targeting MPs’ houses and dousing the Ministry of Defence in red ink. ‘I’m so ketty!’ one of the partygoers told him (referring to the drugs she was on). ‘They wrote ideas on big sheets of paper and left them lying at the back of the bar while they celebrated. “Rishi Sunak pool/pond – dyeing it red – pool party?” someone wrote. “CEOs’ houses”; “water (Thames)”; “Planes/private jets”; “Eton”; “Transgressive stuff”.’ Max joins the podcast alongside Youth Demand! spokesperson Ella Ward. (24:18)

    Hosted by Lara Prendergast and Gus Carter. 

    Produced by Oscar Edmondson. 

    • 31 min

Customer Reviews

4.4 out of 5
92 Ratings

92 Ratings

Melbasy ,

One of the better podcasts

Always well moderated, intelligent and informed guest commentators, and easily the most accessible & rational overview of the current American primaries. I listen as soon as I see a new episode has dropped.

joazn ,

The Voice

Good analysis. Yes, both YES and NO despair at the ongoing clash of cultures in remote areas. Living as virtual museum pieces, on country, cannot be the way forward for Aboriginal people in an ongoing clash of cultures. Colonialism is often touted as the bogey man but it’s about a clash with modernism. Australian referendum have only passed eight out of 44 times and need bipartisan support. The 1967 referendum passed with 90% approval and that related to a fair go for Aboriginals. Mr Albanese has a lot to answer for. The question he tells us is about an “advisory” body but we can never predict what the High Court may say when, not if, the powers of this body challenged by activist lawyers. I don’t want the High Court interpreting in a way that makes law. The words do not say it is an advisory body.

jenny switz ,

Outstanding

The best podcast on politics, books and current affairs in the world. Always sound in style and substance.

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