Best of the Spectator

The Spectator
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Nov 16, 2023 • 45min

The Edition: back to the future

Westminster controversies, Supreme Court ruling on Rwanda scheme, war in Ukraine, and the decline of quality TV in the streaming era are discussed in this podcast.
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Nov 15, 2023 • 34min

The Book Club: Terry Hayes

In this week's Book Club podcast my guest is Terry Hayes, author of the squillion-selling thriller I Am Pilgrim. He tells me about invisible submarines, taking advice on crucifixion from Mel Gibson, and why it took him ten years to follow up that first novel with his new book The Year of the Locust.
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Nov 14, 2023 • 35min

Chinese Whispers: how China's 'underground historians' battle the state narrative

Controlling history is key to the Chinese Communist Party’s control of the country. Whether it’s playing up the ‘century of humiliation’, or whitewashing past mistakes like the Great Leap Forward or the Tiananmen Protests, the Party expends huge effort and resources on controlling the narrative.That’s why it’s so important and interesting to look at those Chinese people who are documenting the bits of history that the Party doesn’t want you to know about. They interview survivors from Communist labour camps, or keep their own memoirs of the Cultural Revolution, and try to keep the memory of past horrors alive through film, magazines and paintings.A new book called Sparks documents their work. Its author is Ian Johnson, a Pulitzer-Prize winning writer and long time China journalist. Ian calls these people the ‘underground historians’. He joins this episode of Chinese Whispers.Visit https://minjian-danganguan.org/ to see some of their work documented, in an upcoming website founded by Ian and others.Produced by Cindy Yu and Patrick Gibbons.
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Nov 13, 2023 • 16min

Holy Smoke: how light filled the first Roman Churches

When I was in Rome last month, I watched the 'synod on synodality' fizzle out while the Marko Rupnik sex scandal took another sinister turn (and various Catholic journalists shamefully tried to suppress the story). But don't worry: this episode of Holy Smoke is devoted to more uplifting matters. I visited the ancient little church of Saints Cosmas and Damian on the edge of the Forum, which incorporates the remains of a pagan temple and a secular Roman basilica or meeting place. The contrast between the darkness of one and the light of the other had powerful theological significance for those Roman Christians who were encouraged to build their first official churches by Constantine. And I was lucky to have it explained to me by one of the world's leading architectural historians, Dr Elizabeth Lev. We spoke, sometimes sotto voce, inside the little church, with tour guides and visitors swirling around us. So, apologies for the inevitable background noise, but I hope you'll agree that it doesn't get in the way of Liz's gripping narrative. 
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Nov 12, 2023 • 19min

Spectator Out Loud: Michael Simmons, Christopher Howse and Melissa Kite

Michael Simmons analyzes the flawed graph justifying the second lockdown. Christopher Howse explores the decline of received pronunciation and the rise of estuary English. Melissa Kite wonders if Surrey's busybodies have followed her to Cork.
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Nov 10, 2023 • 34min

Women With Balls: Arlene Phillips

Arlene Phillips was born in Lancashire, but moved to London to pursue her love for dance. She started age 3 and by the age of 20 she became a dance teacher. From here she formed the dance troupe Hot Gossip and made regular appearances on the Kenny Everett show, catapulting her into the public eye. She went on to be involved with some of the biggest productions on West End – including Grease, Guys and Dolls and the Sound of Music. She’s also choreographed films such as 1982’s Annie and has worked with some of the stars like Freddie Mercury and Tina Turner.In 2004 Arlene was on the original judging panel for Strictly Come Dancing – now one of the nation’s favourite shows. Arlene has no shortage of awards and most recently received royal praise, being awarded a Damehood in the 2021 Birthday Honours.
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Nov 9, 2023 • 40min

The Edition: keeping the peace

On the podcast:In his cover piece for The Spectator Ian Acheson discusses the potential disruption to Armistice Day proceedings in London this weekend. He says that Metropolitan Police Chief Mark Rowley is right to let the pro-Palestine protests go ahead, if his officers can assertively enforce the law. He joins the podcast alongside Baroness Claire Fox to discuss the problems of policing protest. Next: are smartphones making us care less about humanity? This is the question that Mary Wakefield grapples with in her column in The Spectator. She says it’s no wonder that Gen Z lack empathy when they spend most of their lives on social media. She is joined by Gaia Bernstein, author of Unwired: Gaining Control over Addictive Technologies.And finally:Alan Hollinghurst writes this week about Ronald Firbank, the innovative but little known English author who has recently been awarded a blue plaque. In the magazine he sets out the reasons why he is so deserving and is joined alongside The Spectator's literary editor Sam Leith, to discuss further. Hosted by William Moore and Lara Prendergast. Produced by Oscar Edmondson. 
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Nov 8, 2023 • 49min

The Book Club: Jonathan Lethem

In this week's Book Club podcast, I'm joined by the novelist Jonathan Lethem. Two decades after his breakthrough book The Fortress of Solitude crowned Lethem the literary laureate of Brooklyn, he returns to the borough's never-quite-gentrified streets with the new Brooklyn Crime Novel. He tells me why he felt the need to go back, and talks about race, intimacy, realism, the 'non-fiction novel' – and why he regrets his beef with the critic James Wood.
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Nov 7, 2023 • 30min

Table Talk with Victoria Hislop

Victoria Hislop is a bestselling author and a lover of all things Mediterranean. Victoria’s first book 'The Island', came out in 2005 and became an immediate international best-seller. Victoria’s subsequent novels have explored the Spanish Civil War, Cyprus and the Greek islands, and she’s celebrated for cleverly combining history, culture, family, time and place into fascinating stories. Her latest book ‘The Figurine’, is out now and it deals with the contentious subject of acquiring cultural treasures. Now an honorary Greek citizen, Victoria divides her time between Kent and Athens.Presented by Lara Prendergast.Produced by Linden Kemkaran.
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Nov 6, 2023 • 31min

Innovator of the Year Awards: Business Services and AI

Every year, The Spectator travels the country in search of the best and boldest new companies that are disrupting their respective industries. In a series of five podcasts, we will tell you about the finalists for 2023's Innovator of the Year Awards, sponsored by Investec. The awards winners will be announced in a prize ceremony in November.Listeners will have heard businesses in all sorts of fields – from consumer goods to health technology, from sustainability to the cutting edge of British engineering. But what about the companies that make these businesses work? The behind-the-scenes, boiler room people who offer services to businesses themselves. These days, with advancement in artificial intelligence, their work has been made more effective than ever before. Britain, after all, brought us Alan Turing and Tim Berners-Lee.Martin Vander Weyer, The Spectator's business editor, judges the awards and hosts this podcast along with three other judges: Melissa Readman, partner and investor director at ESM Investments, a fund which invests in early stage companies; Caroline Theobald CBE, an entrepreneur and co-owner of FIRST, which provides enterprise training to young people and business leaders; and Michelle White, co-head of Investec's private office.The finalists in this category are:Igloo Vision, which creates immersive spaces using virtual reality for companies and organisations.Synthesia, an AI video creation platform that produces videos quickly and cheaply.ComplyAdvantage, which uses AI and machine learning to carry out financial due diligence for corporate clients.SoPost, which uses a digital platform to help streamline supply chains for retailers.Good-Loop, which converts clicks on online ads into revenue for partnership charities.Yoti, which provides digital IDs for identity verification.Exclaimer, which provides email signature solutions for the marketing and other needs of businesses.LegalVision, which provides legal advice on an affordable, subscription basis.Finboot, which uses blockchain to help businesses track the environmental impact of their supply chains.Huboo Technologies Ltd, which takes care of the storage and shipping needs of e-commerce businesses that don't have their own warehouses.

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