
Best of the Spectator The Edition: 'Boring twenties', population decline & happy new year
10 snips
Jan 2, 2026 Rupert Hawksley, Opinion editor and co-author of 'The Boring Twenties', shares insights on the cultural stagnation of the current decade, driven by the high cost of living. Michael Simmons, Economics editor, highlights the worrying trends of population decline and its implications. Philip Hensher, author and academic, critiques the monetization of leisure activities and discusses the generational gap in theatre audiences. The panel also humorously debates theatre etiquette and explores quirky alternatives like speakeasies and trendy BuzzBallz drinks.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
The 'Boring Twenties' Thesis
- Rupert Hawksley and Gus Carter label the 2020s the “boring twenties” driven by higher costs and homogenised leisure.
- They argue taxes, private equity and health-and-safety have drained everyday fun from British life.
Gambling Taxes Threaten Horse Racing
- Raising gambling taxes can indirectly damage horse racing despite race-specific exemptions.
- Rupert warns that weaker bookmakers threaten the sport's commercial ecosystem and future existence.
Monetisation And Over-Cautiousness Kills Play
- Philip Hensher links monetisation and safety culture to the loss of informal, low-cost play and fun.
- He suggests restoring confidence and tolerance for risk would revive spontaneous, inexpensive leisure.



