Tony Robinson's Cunningcast Zinc Media Group
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- History
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Tony Robinson is best-known for playing turnip-brained Baldrick who always had 'a cunning plan' in the iconic TV show Blackadder. He's presented countless documentaries throughout his 50-year career, including 20-years on Channel 4's Time Team, inspired by his passion for history and for digging deep into the past to understand more about the present. That's his thing!
In his cunningly curated history podcast, Tony is delving into the weird and wonderful stories that grab him and make him want to know more about the world around us. He’s asking: Why was Stonehenge built? What did the past smell like, was it horrible? Why were pies invented? Why do our dogs love us so much? When did tattoos stop being taboo? What do bones tell us about past humanity? Amongst other intriguing questions...
Along the way, Tony is joined by experts and special guests, including Miriam Margolyes, Stephen Fry, Raksha Dave, John Lloyd, Alice Roberts, Grace Neutral and David Mitchell who help provide some answers.
So join Tony Robinson as he hosts his cunningly curated history podcast. New episodes drop Thursdays.
Tony Robinson's Cunningcast is part of the Acast Creator Network and is available on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
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@Cunningcastpod
Sir Tony Robinson
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If you enjoyed my podcast, please follow the show and leave us a rating or review.
Thank you, Love Tony x
A Zinc Media Group production
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A Totally Tremendous History of the TURNIP (Baldrick’s Favourite Vegetable)
20 years after playing Baldrick, Tony is still stopped in the street and asked where my turnip is! Turnips made him famous, so today Tony is talking turnips in history: have they always been so unloved, a food fit only for animals and peasants like Baldrick, or is this a recent British bugbear? And when did the potato steal their veggie crown? Tony’s guests today are food historians Rebecca Earle and Serin Quinn alongside a chef for all seasons who loves to cook with turnips, Oliver Rowe.
Hosted by Sir Tony Robinson
X | Instagram
With
Professor Rebecca Earle | www.rebeccaearle.co.uk
An historian of food at the University of Warwick, Rebecca is interested in how ordinary, every-day activities such as eating or dressing shape how we think about the world and how others view us.
https://warwick.ac.uk/fac/arts/history/people/staff_index/earle
Oliver Rowe | www.oliver-rowe.co.uk/ | IG: @oliver_rowe_london
Chef and author whose work focuses on local and seasonal food. Oliver’s book, Food for All Seasons, a personal wander through the food year is published by Faber and available online and from all good bookshops.
Serin Quinn
PhD student in the Department of History at the University of Warwick, interested in all things vegetable!
https://theconversation.com/turnips-how-britain-fell-out-of-love-with-the-much-maligned-vegetable-201007
Follow the Show:
X @cunningcastpod
Instagram @cunningcastpod
YouTube @cunningcast
Credits:
Series Producer: Melissa FitzGerald X @melissafitzg
Executive Producer: Dominic de Terville
Cover Art: The Brightside
A Zinc Media Group production
If you enjoyed my podcast, please leave us a rating or review.
Thank you, Love Tony x
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. -
HOWARD GOODALL | Blackadder: The Lost Pilot
Today Tony is talking to the composer Howard Goodall CBE, who wrote the now iconic Blackadder theme tune. Howard is one of Britain’s best-known composers of choral music, stage musicals, TV and film scores. He wrote the themes tunes for many hit comedy shows including Red Dwarf, Mr. Bean, The Vicar of Dibley, The Catherine Tate Show, 2point4 Children and Q.I. but like so many of the talent who worked on the show, it all started with Blackadder.
Last year Blackadder turned 40, to mark the occasion, Tony made a TV show in which he tracked down the lost Blackadder pilot to discover the truth of Blackadder's beginnings. You are hearing Tony’s unedited, behind the scenes chat with Howard Goodall recorded for the programme. The show is called Blackadder: The Lost Pilot and you can watch it on Sky, Virgin & Now
Hosted by Sir Tony Robinson
X | Instagram
With
Howard Goodall CBE | www.howardgoodall.co.uk | @Howard_Goodall
Credits:
Series Producer: Melissa FitzGerald X @melissafitzg
Executive Producer: Dominic de Terville
Blackadder: The Lost Pilot is produced by Red Sauce
A Zinc Media Group production
Follow:
X @cunningcastpod
Instagram @cunningcastpod
YouTube @cunningcast
If you enjoyed my podcast, please leave us a rating or review.
Thank you, Love Tony x
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. -
Building The Wall: An Enthusiast’s Guide to HADRIAN’S WALL
Marching 73 miles from coast to coast across the narrowest neck of England, Hadrian’s Wall was the north-west frontier of the Roman Empire for nearly 300 years and yet there is still so much we don’t know about it: only 5% of the wall has been excavated and 7% is viable today. Tony is joined by leading archaeologist Richard Hingley and Collections Curator for Hadrian's Wall and the North East at English Heritage, Frances McIntosh, to give him the low down on how and why Hadrian’s Wall was built, by whom and what it means to us today.
Hosted by Sir Tony Robinson
X | Instagram
With
Prof. Richard Hingley | https://richardhingley1.wordpress.com/
Professor Emeritus in Archaeology at Durham University. An expert on Hadrian’s Wall, Richard is the author of Conquering the Ocean: The Roman Conquest of Britain (Oxford University Press) and Hadrian’s Wall: A life, (Oxford University Press). https://global.oup.com/academic/product/conquering-the-ocean-9780190937416?cc=gb&lang=en& | https://academic.oup.com/book/27846.
Dr. Frances McIntosh | @englishHeritage | @wallcurator
Collections Curator for Hadrian's Wall and the North East at English Heritage. An archaeologist by training, Frances specialises in Roman small finds, having completed her PhD on the Clayton Collection material, on display at Chesters.
Follow the Show:
X @cunningcastpod
Instagram @cunningcastpod
YouTube @cunningcast
Credits:
Series Producer: Melissa FitzGerald X @melissafitzg
Executive Producer: Dominic de Terville
Cover Art: The Brightside
A Zinc Media Group production
If you enjoyed my podcast, please leave us a rating or review.
Thank you, Love Tony x
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. -
BLETCHLEY PARK: Codebreaking Then and Now
Passwords and codes are something we take for granted in the digital age, but this is such a new development and today Tony is going back to a time when making and breaking codes was an almost exclusively high-level military activity: most famously done behind closed doors by the brains at Bletchley Park. He is joined by two people who are giving him the long view on codes and codebreaking: the Bletchley Park military historian David Kenyon and the Chief Information Security Officer at the BBC, Helen Rabe.
Hosted by Sir Tony Robinson
X | Instagram
With
Dr David Kenyon
David is responsible for historical research in support of all public content at Bletchley Park, the Second World War code-breaking site in Buckinghamshire, now a museum. He has published two books on BP; Bletchley Park and D-Day in 2019, and Arctic Convoys, Bletchley Park and the War for the Seas in 2023.
https://bletchleypark.org.uk/ | X @bletchleypark | IG @bletchleyparkuk
Helen Rabe
Chief Information Security Officer at the BBC, Helen has a proven track record of developing, executing, and maturing bespoke ISMS strategies. She has managed successful high performing teams to mitigate risk, counter threats and deliver world-class security & data privacy management solutions across varied industry sectors ranging from financial services, life sciences & more recently, broadcasting & media.
Cover photo courtesy of the Bletchley Park Trust
Follow the show:
X @cunningcastpod
Instagram @cunningcastpod
YouTube @Cunningcast
Credits:
Series Producer: Melissa FitzGerald X @melissafitzg
Executive Producer: Dominic de Terville
A Zinc Media Group production X @zinc_media
If you enjoyed my podcast, please follow the show and leave us a rating or review.
Thank you, Love Tony x
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. -
A Fan-tash-tic History of FACIAL HAIR
Men’s facial hair is very prone to fashions: moustaches and beards are back in, but why is that and what sparks bread trends and facial hair fashions? To help him find out, Tony has invited ‘beard’ historian Alun Withey and male grooming influencer Robin James | Man For Himself. They discuss 17th Century notions of facial hair as a waste product; through barber-surgeons and early shaving practices; powdered wigs; the Victorian beard movement; King Camp Gillett’s safely razor; the First World War military moustache; film star fashion icons to the rising popularity of men’s hair products and male grooming.
Hosted by Sir Tony Robinson
X | Instagram
With
Robin James | Man For Himself
www.ManForHimself.com and IG @ManForHimself
Exploring men’s hair, grooming, fragrance and lifestyle.
Dr Alun Withey | Historian
http://humanities.exeter.ac.uk/history/staff/withey/
Historian of early modern medicine and senior lecturer in History at the University of Exeter. Alun's major research project ‘Do Beards Matter?’, funded by the Wellcome Trust forms the basis of his book Concerning Beards: Facial Hair, Health and Practice in England, 1650-1900 (London: Bloomsbury, 2021).
Follow the show:
X @cunningcastpod
Instagram @cunningcastpod
YouTube @Cunningcast
Credits:
Series Producer: Melissa FitzGerald X @melissafitzg
Executive Producer: Dominic de Terville
Cover Art: The Brightside
A Zinc Media Group production
If you enjoyed my podcast, please leave us a rating or review.
Thank you, Love Tony x
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. -
RICHARD CURTIS | Blackadder: The Lost Pilot
Today Tony is talking to his old friend and collaborator, the screenwriter Richard Curtis. They share memories of making Blackadder from the early years to how it all ended. Along the way, they discuss Richard’s comedy roots and how he became a top comedy screenwriter: meeting Rowan Atkinson at Oxford Uni; working on Not The Nine O’Clock News; the influence of Fawlty Towers and plans for a Blackadder series set in the 1960s that never happened. Plus, they read lines from the Blackadder pilot script and discover where Baldrick’s ‘cunning plan’ catch-phrase comes from.
Last year Blackadder turned 40, to mark the occasion, Tony made a TV show in which he tracked down the lost Blackadder pilot to discover the truth of Blackadder's beginnings. For the show, Tony interviewed many old friends and people who are central to making Blackadder the success it was, as well as Blackadder superfan David Mitchell, who is featured in Cunningcast Series 2, Episode 4. You are hearing Tony’s unedited, behind the scenes chat with Richard Curtis recorded for the TV programme. The show is called Blackadder: The Lost Pilot and you can watch it on Sky, Virgin & Now.
Richard Curtis was Blackadder’s mastermind and writer, alongside Ben Elton. He’s one of Britain's most successful screenwriters and producers, with credits including Four Weddings and a Funeral, Notting Hill, Mr Bean, The Vicar of Dibley, Love Actually, Bridget Jones’s Diary and Yesterday. He’s also the co-founder of Comic Relief.
Hosted by Sir Tony Robinson
X | Instagram
With
Richard Curtis
Credits:
Series Producer: Melissa FitzGerald X @melissafitzg
Executive Producer: Dominic de Terville
Blackadder: The Lost Pilot is produced by Red Sauce
A Zinc Media Group production
Follow:
X @cunningcastpod
Instagram @cunningcastpod
YouTube @cunningcast
If you enjoyed my podcast, please leave us a rating or review.
Thank you, Love Tony x
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Customer Reviews
Fantastic
Love the subjects in this podcast, love national Treasure Sir Tony and love the fact he asks what might be deemed by other “celebrity” interviewers as a daft or embarrassing question, buts it’s exactly the one you’re thinking yourself. Asked not for his lack of understanding, but that his natural affinity with his audience; which helps us along; a sure sign of his thoughtful intelligence. His recognisably warm and funny tone is something to treasure indeed.
A Broadcasting Hero !
The great thing about this Pod is the variety of subjects covered , including some you don’t think are for you, but end up being really fascinating
Tony is ( obviously) great , and his banter with Producer Melissa at the beginning of each pod is also a highlight
All that said , the History and Archeology based episodes are my favourites particularly the Stonehenge one from Season 1 , and the fabulous Alice Roberts feature from Season 2
Highly recommended !
Alice Robert’s episode
This particular episode was one of the best pods I’ve ever listened too. Two people who love what they are discussing, who are fascinated by archaeology but are also fantastic communicators. You can really feel their enthusiasm for what they are talking about, as a listener you feel that you just happen to be sat with them chatting, ear wigging on their conversation. Please please do make a tv show with Tony and Alice talking about anything it will be joyous.