Synopsis
The Spectator magazine's flagship podcast featuring discussions and debates on the best features from the week's edition. Presented by Isabel Hardman.
Episodes
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Coffee House Shots: Brexit after Christmas - has anything changed?
03/01/2019 Duration: 11minWith Henry Newman, Director of Open Europe, and Katy Balls.Presented by Lara Prendergast.
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Spectator Books: Ed Vulliamy - how music helps me report from the front line
02/01/2019 Duration: 37minIn this week’s books podcast we’re going to the wars. Sam's guest is Ed Vulliamy, the veteran war correspondent who has written a fascinating memoir called When Words Fail: A Life With Music, War and Peace. In it, Ed talks about how his lifelong love of music — he saw Hendrix at the Isle of Wight — has threaded through his terrifying adventures in conflict zones from Bosnia to Iraq to the Mexican/American border; and of how music really can salve the soul when everything else is broken. He describes his own terrifying experiences with PTSD, snagging the last interview with BB King, and how playing “Kashmir” over and over again while roaring unembedded around a battle-zone led him to a friendship with Led Zeppelin’s Robert Plant.
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Women with Balls: Dame Helena Morrissey
21/12/2018 Duration: 36minJoin Katy Balls as she interviews Dame Helena Morrissey - a financier, a campaigner for more women in the boardrooms, and the mother to nine children. How does she balance kids and a career? Why does she think men and women are fundamentally different? And what is the most effective way to get a raise?
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Spectator Books: conversing with Chris Kraus, author of I Love Dick
19/12/2018 Duration: 21minIn this week’s books podcast Sam talks to Chris Kraus — author of the semi-autobiographical cult novel I Love Dick and the new essay collection Social Practices — about her strange and interesting life in the New York and LA art worlds, about taking Baudrillard to a “happening” in the desert, about ambition and fame, about how art and literature feed into one another — and about why we English should stop sneering at “theory” and learn to love its strangeness and beauty.Presented by Sam Leith.
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The Green Room: Auctions, sculptures, and horse flesh - the best of art exhibitions in 2018
18/12/2018 Duration: 25minDominic talks to the team of crack art critics from The New Criterion: James Panero, Benjamin Riley and Andrew Shea in this review of the best art exhibitions of the year. In between high brow chats on Michelangelo and Sir Alfred Munnings, the panel brings the energy of the New Criterion Christmas party, raging next door, with them. Is Panero coughing because he has TB, or was it induced by the prospect of the Boston MFA’s Toulouse-Lautrec show? Who was in and who was out in the major museums this year? And is Andy Shea really caught using his cellphone in the middle of a podcast?
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Table Talk: with Sophia Money-Coutts
17/12/2018 Duration: 28minSophia Money-Coutts is former features editor at Tatler magazine, and now columnist for the Sunday Telegraph. Her new book, The Plus One, came out earlier this year. In this episode of Table Talk, Lara and Livvy talk to Sophia about how cheese fondue helped her get through her parents' divorce as a child, how an ex-boyfriend berated her poppadom manners, and the best way to juggle a clutch bag and canapés at writers' parties.Presented by Lara Prendergast and Olivia Potts.
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The Spectator Podcast: the Christmas Edition
14/12/2018 Duration: 01h51minSo, it’s the end of the year, and we can safely say 2018 hasn’t been any less loopy than its recent predecessors. In this year’s final Spectator Podcast, we’ll be taking a look at some of the major political and cultural events of the year, with a star-studded cast of commentators and experts, and casting a look forward at 2019. We’ll be talking about Labour – it hasn’t had a great year, but is it closer than ever to government? Plus, what have been the divides splitting Europe, and how has Trump settled in to the second year of his tenure? But before all this, a little bit of Brexit.With James Forsyth, Stephen Bush, Rory Stewart, Katy Balls, Paul Mason, Jess Phillips, Douglas Murray, Anne McElvoy, Freddy Gray, Christopher Meyer, and Kate Andrews.Presented by Lara Prendergast.Produced by Cindy Yu and Alastair Thomas.
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Coffee House Shots: has the next Tory leadership contest started?
13/12/2018 Duration: 10minWith Katy Balls and James Forsyth.Presented by Lara Prendergast.
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Spectator Books: why runners up are more interesting than those who come first
12/12/2018 Duration: 21minIn this week’s books podcast Sam Leith talks to the great trivia expert Mark Mason about his new The Book of Seconds: The Incredible Stories of the Ones Who Didn’t (Quite) Win. Here’s the Christmas present for all the Tory frontbenchers in your life. Who remembers the Christmas number two in the pop charts? Who got silver at the Olympics? Who was the second man to walk on the moon? Mark — my second choice of guest for this week’s podcast — masterfully pulls together the psychological and social implications of not quite cutting the mustard.
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The Green Room: the last interview with Pete Shelley of Buzzcocks
11/12/2018 Duration: 22minPete Shelley of Buzzcocks passed away last week at the age of 63. A long-term fan, Dominic Green talked to Pete in November this year. They talk about experimenting with punk, performing live, and the power of music. This interview was first released as a podcast on November 27 on Spectator USA's The Green Room podcast.
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Coffee House Shots: Brexit vote cancelled - what happened?
10/12/2018 Duration: 10minWith Katy Balls and James Forsyth.Presented by Fraser Nelson.
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Women With Balls: the Liz Truss edition
07/12/2018 Duration: 27minKaty Balls talks to Liz Truss, chief secretary to the Treasury, about her shameful Lib Dem past, why she loves cheese, and how The Thick Of It made her life harder.
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Americano: was George H.W. Bush really that great?
06/12/2018 Duration: 19minWith Daniel McCarthy, Editor of Modern Age.Presented by Freddy Gray.
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The Spectator Podcast: what next in the Brexit cliffhanger?
06/12/2018 Duration: 36minWith just days to go till the meaningful vote, the government looks set to lose it by a humiliating margin. What next for Theresa May? We ask one of the MPs opposing her deal – former universities minister, Sam Gyimah (00:50). And over on the continent, France buckles down for another weekend of riots from the gilet jaunes – can Macron give them what they want (19:05)? And last, has Britain become a country of show-offs (28:35)?With James Forsyth, Sam Gyimah, Gavin Mortimer, Sophie Pedder, Harry Mount, and Cosmo Landesman.Presented by Lara Prendergast.Produced by Cindy Yu and Alastair Thomas.
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Spectator Books: presidential lessons from Lincoln to Trump, with Doris Kearns Goodwin
05/12/2018 Duration: 32minIn this week's books podcast, Sam is speaking to the Pulitzer-prizewinning historian Doris Kearns Goodwin about her new book Leadership: Lessons from the Presidents for Turbulent Times -- in which she describes what Lincoln, two Roosevelts and LBJ had in common, and didn't. Obviously, they talk a bit about that nice Mr Trump -- as well as hearing how Doris had perhaps history's classiest pyjama party at the White House with Hillary Clinton, and how as a young woman she worried at one point that she was going to be #metooed by Lyndon Johnson. Tune in, kids. Doris is remarkable.
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The Green Room: Mick Jagger in Performance, with Jay Glennie
04/12/2018 Duration: 29minDominic Green talks to cinema historian Jay Glennie, author of a definitive account of the legendary and still alarming making of Performance, a 1970 release starring Mick Jagger, Anita Pallenberg, and James Fox.
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Coffee House Shots: after a weekend of PR, is May's Brexit deal any more likely to pass?
03/12/2018 Duration: 12minWith James Forsyth and Katy Balls.Presented by Isabel Hardman.
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Table Talk: the Bryony Gordon Edition
30/11/2018 Duration: 37minLara Prendergast and Olivia Potts talk to Bryony Gordon, columnist at the Telegraph and author of Eat, Drink, Run. They have a frank conversation about Bryony's relationship with food and mental health, and Bryony comes clean about her toddler's metropolitan diet and why dinner parties are not her thing.
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Americano: Michael Cohen pleads guilty - is he going to bring down Trump?
30/11/2018 Duration: 17minWith Jacob Heilbrunn.Presented by Freddy Gray.
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The Spectator Podcast: is Corbyn to blame for a British cash exodus?
29/11/2018 Duration: 38minThis week the Treasury and the Bank of England gave their forecasts for the post-Brexit economy, but is a Jeremy Corbyn government more threatening to economic growth (00:50)? In Italy, growth is a distant memory, as the economy stagnates and youth unemployment is at 35%. The government and the EU are at loggerheads over how to solve it. Is Italy the next Eurosceptic time bomb (19:40)? And last, what is it like to write a biography for somebody who can't stand you (32:45)?With Liam Halligan, Grace Blakeley, Ferdinando Giugliano, Matthew Goodwin, and Richard Bradford.Presented by Lara Prendergast.Produced by Cindy Yu and Alastair Thomas.