

Radio Oldie
Radio Oldie
The Oldie magazine’s podcast featuring discussion and debate around the lead features in the latest magazine, plus live recordings from our famous Literary Lunches. Presented by Harry Mount.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Nov 7, 2019 • 13min
A Sparrow's Life as Sweet as Ours
John McEwen and Carry Akroyd talk about the bird-infested history of the Douglas Home family, the sex life of the Great Bustard and how best to portray birds in art.

Nov 7, 2019 • 17min
What were the three traumas of London's history?
Simon Jenkins speaks at the Oldie Literary Lunch about the three traumas of London's history, how London was shaped by the free market and the city corporation and the importance of separating money from power.

Oct 23, 2019 • 22min
Troy – the cradle of a thousand heroes and heroines
The Oldie's Editor Harry Mount talks to Times and Telegraph regular Hannah Betts about Troy, Homer and the mixed legacy of Heinrich Schliemann, who rediscovered it.
Troy: Myth and Reality is on at the British Museum between 21st November and 8th March 2020

Oct 16, 2019 • 16min
34: Gamesmanship and other Potterisms
Welcome to the Oldie podcast with Harry Mount, the editor of The Oldie.
This month we have a fantastic piece by Damian Thompson in the magazine about Stephen Potter, the inventor of Gamesmanship.
Damian is a senior journalist who has worked at the Telegraph and the Catholic Herald, and is the associate editor of the Spectator.

Oct 10, 2019 • 49min
Wiliam Dalrymple – The Anarchy: The Relentless Rise of the East India Company
Historian, travel-writer and bestselling author William Dalrymple, talks to the Oldie's Editorial Assistant Ferdie Rous about the rise of The East India Company, corporate violence and imperial nostalgia.
Dalrymple's new book, The Anarchy: The Relentless Rise of the East India Company, is published by Bloomsbury.
The book tells two stories: the rise of the East India Company and the fall of the Mughal Empire. The latter had dominated the subcontinent for over three centuries by the time that the company arrived on Indian shores.
Note: the Diwani, referenced at (22:45), later known as the Treaty of Allahabad, was a permit granted by Shah Alam, in 1764, to the East India Company that allowed them to tax the provinces of Bengal, Bihar and Orissa.

Oct 10, 2019 • 17min
Was Maggie Thatcher a prude? asks Charles Moore
Charles Moore talks about the third and last part of his biography of Margaret Thatcher at the Oldie's October lunch.
Moore talked about Thatcher's innocence of matters sexual, her run in with Monty Python and her meeting with Nelson Mandela.

Oct 10, 2019 • 9min
A N Wilson on the man who saved the Monarchy
A N Wilson talks about Prince Albert: The Man Who Saved The Monarchy at the Oldie's October lunch.
We don't appreciate how much Britain owes Albert. From Albertopolis to the Great Exhibition and beyond, Wilson gives a fascinating insight into this short-lived royal.

Sep 20, 2019 • 37min
33: Peter Hitchens: we won the war, or did we?
Welcome to this edition of the Oldie podcast.
Ferdie Rous, The Oldie's Editorial Assistant, speaks to author, commentator and Mail on Sunday columnist, Peter Hitchens, about his new book, The Phoney Victory: The World War II Delusion, which challenges some of our most deeply held beliefs about the Second World War, which began 80 years ago this month.

Sep 12, 2019 • 31min
32: October Issue: Abbey Road – The Beatles's Best Studio Album?
Welcome to the Oldie’s October podcast.
50 years ago, on the 26th September, The Beatles’s Abbey Road album was first released. Today, we are joined by veteran-journalist and the Beatles’s only authorised biographer, Hunter Davies, who shadowed the Beatles as they wrote and recorded what many consider to be their best studio album.

Sep 10, 2019 • 13min
31: October Issue: Dominic Green's Downton Abbey Suit
Oldie Editor, Harry Mount, speaks to Dominic Green – Life & Arts Editor at the Spectator USA and regular contributor to The Oldie's Letter from America Column – about his new suit, which made from the same material used for Lord Grantham's valet in the new Downton Abbey film.