The LRB Podcast

Weekly conversations drawn from the pages of the LRB, with hosts Thomas Jones, Adam Shatz and Malin Hay.

New TV/Old TV

James Meek and Thomas Jones, 17 April 2024

3 January 2024 · 51mins

James Meek joins Tom to talk about a recent book by Peter Biskind on ‘the New TV’, reviewed by James in the latest issue of the paper. They discuss the rise of cable TV in the 1990s, the emergence of the streaming giants, the power of the showrunner and whether the golden age of television drama is really coming to an end.

27 December 2023 · 40mins

Tom Crewe, Patricia Lockwood, Deborah Friedell, John Lanchester, Rosemary Hill and Colm Tóibín talk to Tom about some of their favourite LRB pieces, including Terry Castle’s 1995 essay on Jane Austen's letters, Hilary Mantel’s account of how she became a writer, and Alan Bennett’s uncompromising take on Philip Larkin.

Byron before Byron

Clare Bucknell and Thomas Jones, 17 April 2024

20 December 2023 · 39mins

Byron’s early poems – his so-called ’dark tales’ – have been dismissed by critics as the tawdry, slapdash products of an uninteresting mind. Clare Bucknell talks to Tom about her recent piece in the LRB, which looked past the poet's famous biography to reappraise the youthful Byron’s mind in poems such as The Giaour (1813), The Corsair (1814) and Lara (1814).

Manutius, the Bibliophile’s Bibliophile

Erin Maglaque and Thomas Jones, 17 April 2024

13 December 2023 · 44mins

In Renaissance Venice, Aldus Manutius turned his mid-life crisis into a publishing revolution, printing books that permanently changed the way we read. Erin Maglaque  tells Tom about Aldus’s achievements, his monumental ego and his part in the creation of one of the most bizarre books in publishing history.

Camus in the Americas

Adam Shatz and Thomas Jones, 17 April 2024

6 December 2023 · 45mins

Adam Shatz explains how Albert Camus’s travel diaries shed light on his tumultuous personal life, his conflicted stance on colonialism and where his humanism deviates from his existentialist peers.

Patricia Lockwood on Meeting the Pope

Patricia Lockwood and Thomas Jones, 17 April 2024

29 November 2023 · 51mins

In June, the pope invited dozens of artists to Rome for the 50th anniversary of the Vatican Museum’s contemporary art collection. Patricia Lockwood was one of them. She tells Tom more about the surreal experience and why irony, in the words of Pope Francis, is ‘a marvellous virtue’.

What was Orwell for?

Colin Burrow and Thomas Jones, 17 April 2024

22 November 2023 · 1hr 01min

George Orwell wasn’t afraid to speak against totalitarianism – but what was he for? Colin Burrow joins Tom to unpick the cultural conservatism and crackling violence underpinning Orwell’s writing, to reassess his vision of socialism and to figure out why teenagers love him so much.

The Infected Blood Scandal

Florence Sutcliffe-Braithwaite, Tom Crewe and Malin Hay, 17 April 2024

15 November 2023 · 49mins

In the 1970s and ’80s, thousands of haemophiliacs were infected with HIV and hepatitis C through blood products known to be contaminated. Florence Sutcliffe-Braithwaite and Tom Crewe join Malin to discuss the findings and what they mean for survivors. 

The Giant Crypto Fraud

John Lanchester and Thomas Jones, 17 April 2024

8 November 2023 · 56mins

When Sam Bankman-Fried was found guilty of fraud last week, the only surprise was how quickly the jury reached their verdict. John Lanchester joins Tom to discuss how the former crypto billionaire ended up facing a life sentence, from his early career in finance and embrace of Effective Altruism to the simple but audacious nature of his crime, and why he found himself in a US court, even though US citizens were banned from using his trading company, FTX.

What is British humour anyway?

Jonathan Coe and Malin Hay, 17 April 2024

1 November 2023 · 36mins

Anglophiles abroad love the British sense of humour – but what does that actually mean? Jonathan Coe joins Malin for a serious chat about comedy and its double-edged role in the UK’s political life.

31 October 2023 · 05mins

19th century Britain is often imagined as gloomy and dark, epitomised by Dickensian grime and Queen Victoria’s prolonged state of black-clad mourning. But in reality this period saw an explosion of colour, following a number of scientific discoveries, as shown in Colour Revolution, a new exhibition at the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford. This is a sponsored episode.

Who wrote the dictionary?

Daisy Hay and Thomas Jones, 17 April 2024

25 October 2023 · 36mins

Daisy Hay joins Tom to discuss how contributors and their enthusiasms shaped the Oxford English Dictionary to this day.

 

War in Gaza

Amjad Iraqi, Michael Sfard and Adam Shatz, 17 April 2024

18 October 2023 · 53mins

As the siege on Gaza intensifies, many observers are describing the current Hamas-Israel conflict as a complete overhaul of the region’s status quo. Amjad Iraqi, a senior editor at +972 Magazine, and Michael Sfard, a leading human rights lawyer, join Adam Shatz to discuss the roots and ramifications of the current crisis. 

Wrestling Days

Tom Crewe, 17 April 2024

11 October 2023 · 15mins

Crass, violent, misogynistic, dumb, fake – and irresistible. Tom Crewe reads his 2021 piece unpacking his youthful obsession with pro-wrestling, a sport both ‘hideous’ and ‘Homeric’.

Into the Volcano

Rosemary Hill and Thomas Jones, 17 April 2024

4 October 2023 · 45mins

Rosemary Hill explains how the 19th century’s obsession with Vesuvius spawned scientific disciplines, artistic innovations and nude picnics.