The Bunker – News without the nonsense - podcast cover

The Bunker – News without the nonsense

Podmasterslinktr.ee
News without the nonsense, every weekday morning. In episodes that fit your commute, The Bunker cuts through the noise to make sense of what’s really going on in news, current affairs, politics, economics and culture. We bring you smart explainers, interviews, fresh perspectives and under-reported stories to as a refreshing alternative to repetitive Punch and Judy news coverage. It’s the only way to start the day. From the producers of Oh God, What Now? Our regulars include: Gavin Esler • Ros Taylor • Alex von Tunzelmann • Andrew Harrison • Zing Tsjeng • Jacob Jarvis • Emma Kennedy • Rafael Behr • Seth Thévoz. • Sign up to support the podcast and get episodes ad-free and early: patreon.com/bunkercast • Apple users: Get all of our core shows ad-free and early with the Podmasters Originals super-subscription. The Bunker is a Podmasters production.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Last refreshed:
Download Metacast podcast app
Podcasts are better in Metacast mobile app
Don't just listen to podcasts. Learn from them with transcripts, summaries, and chapters for every episode. Skim, search, and bookmark insights. Learn more

Episodes

COP26: Untold Tales from The Edge of Climate Science

Climate change is the existential challenge of our time – but do we fully understand the depth and complexity of human influence over the planet’s temperature? In today’s COP26 special, Dr ELLA GILBERT , climate scientist from the University of Reading, takes Justin Quirk into the aspects of global heating that the media seldom foreground, from the cataclysmic impact of the cement industry to the strange and puzzling meaning of… clouds? “The non-CO2 impacts of aviation may be up to twice as harm...

Nov 01, 202125 minSeason 1Ep. 441

COP26: What You Need to Know

As COP26 kicks off in Glasgow, what do you need to know about a summit that’s being described as the “last chance” for global action on climate change? New Scientist chief reporter Adam Vaughan joins Andrew Harrison to talk all about Britain’s biggest event since the Olympics, from the key players and attendees, to the thorny issues and major sticking points. “COP is very different from other diplomatic meetings like the G7, they are quite chaotic affairs” “We’re currently have pledges just unde...

Oct 31, 202123 minSeason 1Ep. 439

Culture Bunker: Guest BILLY BRAGG plus Last Night In Soho, The War On Drugs, French psychedelic pop

Hear all the music on our podcasts in full on our rolling playlist : https://bit.ly/CultBunk Original Essex Man BILLY BRAGG joins us to discuss how the pandemic changed pop, politics and his haircut, on the very day his new album The Million Things That Never Happened comes out. Plus film critic Linda Marric joins us to look at Edgar Wright’s bizarre West End horrorfest LAST NIGHT IN SOHO, new music from THE WAR ON DRUGS, well-aged psychedelic pop from France, and more. Presented by Siân Pattend...

Oct 30, 20211 hr 2 minSeason 1Ep. 438

Daily: Steven Pinker on the Rationality Trap

As the human race reaches new heights of scientific understanding, why then does it seem to be losing its mind? Are humans inherently irrational beings? Professor Steven Pinker, cognitive scientist and author of the new book Rationality: What It Is, Why It Seems Scarce, Why It Matters, talks to Alex Andreou about how irrationality occurs within our society, and why we need to embrace the notion that humans are naturally rational. “I wanted to explain why a species as rational as ours is vulnerab...

Oct 28, 202127 minSeason 1Ep. 437

Daily: Inside the ‘Data-Demic’ with Professor David Spiegelhalter

The COVID pandemic has seen us bombarded with statistics like never before, - case numbers, excess deaths and vaccination rates. But behind the numbers, is there another story waiting to be told? Professor David Spiegelhalter joins Ros Taylor to talk about his new book COVID By Numbers, which shines a new light on the pandemic from the hardest hit countries, to the benefits of different vaccines, and the effect of lockdown on our mental health and the economy. “Statisticians try to make sense of...

Oct 27, 202125 minSeason 1Ep. 436

Mislaid Plans and Anti-Social Media

Is Plan B really happening or what? Does the Government grasp the magnitude of the NHS crisis that’s coming? And is there any way to get the performatively unmasked to mask up again? Plus, as the wheels continue to fall off Facebook, is there any fixing social media? And we look at next year’s Unboxed event, the rebadged, don’t-mention-leaving-the-EU Festival of Brexit. Special guest ZOE WILLIAMS of The Guardian to dig into this week’s political misery. • “The row over GPs is completely confecte...

Oct 26, 202148 minSeason 1Ep. 435

The Effluent Society: Budgets, Beaches and Plan B – Start Your Week with Alex Andreou

Metaphor time! Rishi Sunak strains over a painful Budget while Conservative MPs are hammered for voting to allow raw sewage to be released into the sea. What’s coming in the Budget and will Johnson’s aversion to bad news push Plan B back – meaning that, yet again, the Government acts too late on a rising COVID wave? Alex Andreou starts your week. “Imagine if raw sewage became the defining issue of your government…” “Boris Johnson has become invisible, which indicates the Budget will not be a goo...

Oct 25, 202123 minSeason 1Ep. 434

Daily: The Bored Middle Class that's Destroying Democracy from Within

t’s often said that the crisis in Western democracy is caused by those left-behind, but is the greatest threat to security actually a bored middle-class? University Professor and author of Our Own Worst Enemy Tom Nichols talks to Arthur Snell about why unchecked narcissism is to blame for rising illiberalism, which factors are accelerating our democratic demise, and why building coalitions is our only way out. “We’ve become used to being hyper-connected to each other, which turns out to be a pre...

Oct 24, 202126 minSeason 1Ep. 433

Culture Bunker: Special guest STEVE DAVIS, Dune, Self Esteem, French Dispatch, Beatles

Hear all the music on our podcasts in full on our rolling playlist : https://bit.ly/CultBunk This week: Snooker star turned cosmic DJ STEVE DAVIS tells about his love for out-there avant garde rock and the time he took Frank Warren to see Magma. We review spice’n’sandals epic DUNE and Wes Anderson’s paean to the golden age of magazines, THE FRENCH DISPATCH – and speak to star LÉA SEYDOUX. John Harris explains why ‘Let It Be’ is THE BEATLES’ least-understood record. And a thrilling new album from...

Oct 23, 20211 hr 10 minSeason 1Ep. 432

Daily: Plan B panic stations on COVID

It’s COVID Groundhog Day with cases spiking, the Government dithering and the NHS under critical pressure all over again. As Sajid Javid warns of 100,000 cases a day soon, health commentator Roy Lilley tells us why the Government’s“ Plan B” is in disarray. How fast should they move to tighter restrictions? And can they make it stick with a population that believes the pandemic is done? “What is it going to take for someone in the cabinet to say ‘ Yes, we need Plan B ’ ?.” “Sajid Javid standing u...

Oct 22, 202124 minSeason 1Ep. 431

Daily: Gene Genius? The pros and cons of DNA modification

Is gene-editing – replacing sections of DNA to make plants and animals more fertile or resistant to disease – really our escape route from the threats of climate change and population growth? Since Brexit the British Government has been tearing up tight EU legislation on the practice, with DEFRA now allowing it for crops. But do we really understand the difference between gene editing and modification (GMO), or its complex environmental and social implications? Alex Andreou chews over gene editi...

Oct 21, 202135 minSeason 1Ep. 429

Are MPs Safe?

The horrific murder of Sir David Amess has put MPs’ personal security into sharp relief. But should the Government tighten rules for online speech which, however ugly, seems to have little to do with this outrage? Plus, climate change deniers the Global Warming Policy Forum rebrand as Net Zero Watch. Will claiming that carbon reduction is too expensive succeed where denying it outright failed? And why can’t Britain stop harping on about the Blitz Spirit? “Two MPs have been killed in last five ye...

Oct 21, 202154 minSeason 1Ep. 428

Daily: The Kids Aren’t Alright – Why children need a post-COVID plan

Children lost an average of 115 days of schooling under last year’s lockdowns, but that doesn’t capture the scale of trauma and dislocation caused to children by the Government’s bungled handling of the pandemic. Former Children’s Commissioner for England Anne Longfield tells Ros Taylor about the hidden consequences of COVID policy for kids – how the pandemic was an opportunity to exploiters including county lines drug dealers – and why we have to stop seeing the pandemic through the adult-centr...

Oct 21, 202124 minSeason 1Ep. 430

The Killing of Sir David Amess MP – Start Your Week with Ros Taylor

A second MP in five years is killed during the performance of constituency duties. Will the death of Sir David Amess change the temperature of political debate? Plus Dominic Raab’s plan to overrule independent courts, the brewing PCR test scandal , and coal-funded senator Joe Manchin destroys Joe Biden’s clean energy programme. Ros Taylor starts your week. “Police protection at surgeries is all very well, but marginalised people can be very afraid of the police – with good reason.” “People will ...

Oct 18, 202121 minSeason 1Ep. 427

Daily: 660 AD and All That: The Anglo-Saxon Mystique

The Anglo-Saxons represent one of the most vital and important periods in English history, but then why do we know so very little about them? Marc Morris , historian and author of The Anglo-Saxons: A History of the Beginnings of England , takes Nick Cohen on a journey though one of England’s most fascinating chapters, and how their influence is still felt today. “We’re taught about the Anglo-Saxons as young children, which means we only learn about them in basic terms.” “Only by the 18th century...

Oct 17, 202126 minSeason 1Ep. 426

Culture Bunker: Succession Series 3, Duran Duran, Chilean horror on Netflix

We’ve got a bit less music on this week’s podcast than we’d like but you can hear it in full on our rolling playlist : https://bit.ly/CultBunk This week: As the third season of dynastic epic Succession begins on Sky, what makes it the most compelling thing on TV? After 40 years in the game, Duran Duran make a genuinely fantastic album: we listen to Future Past. And a real find on Netflix in unreal Chilean horror movie Fever Dream . Entertainment Weekly’s Clark Collis is our guest. Presented by S...

Oct 16, 20211 hr 2 minSeason 1Ep. 425

Daily: The city that never sleeps? – Waking up urban spaces after COVID

Cities are slowly coming back to life after COVID. But has the pandemic permanently changed our urban spaces, and how we live within them? Co-author of Survival of the City and Harvard University Professor Edward L. Glaeser talks to Ros Taylor about how commuting has always been defined by class divides, whether fifteen minute cities could work…and why we need a “NATO of healthcare”. “Once we’re healthy again, there’s little chance cities will atomise.” “There's no Democratic or Republican way t...

Oct 14, 202121 minSeason 1Ep. 424

Daily: Supervillain Billionaire – Peter Thiel wants to reshape the world

Enigmatic Californian tech investor and libertarian Peter Thiel is best known for his controversial ‘spy tech’ company Palantir and for enabling Hulk Hogan to sue gossip site Gawker out of business. But as new book The Contrarian shows, Thiel has always had bigger ambitions to use tech to sideline government itself. Author Max Chafkin tells Andrew Harrison about the Randian ideas that propelled Thiel from the “Paypal Mafia” to Trump’s White House – and why we should worry about ‘Thielism’. “Thie...

Oct 13, 202128 minSeason 1Ep. 423

No Raabs Before Marbs – or, Where In The World Is Boris Johnson?

As Britain surges forward into the 1950s, the Prime Minister goes on holiday – again. Will fuel costs, supply chains, staff shortages and reskilling just, you know, sort themselves out? Or do we need to reacquaint ourselves with stagflation ? Plus, can the fallout from the sentencing of Sarah Everard’s murderer and the increasing focus on misogyny in society really become a moment of change? Special guest Emma Kennedy joins us to gaze into this week’s political abyss. “We’re culling perfectly go...

Oct 12, 202159 minSeason 1Ep. 422

Sausage War II, Spies and Polexit – Start Your Week with Arthur Snell

Unelected Brexit panjandrum David Frost gets ready to blow up the Northern Ireland deal that he and Johnson sold to the public. Is Poland really shaping up to leave the EU? The first ‘Covid: Lessons Learned’ report looms into view. Plus bizarre elections in the Czech Republic, Facebook in the dock and an old-fashioned nuclear spy scandal. Arthur Snell starts your week. “Frost and Johnson ’ s strategy has been to pretend it ’ s someone else ’ s deal and that it needs to be renegotiated." “From a ...

Oct 11, 202129 minSeason 1Ep. 421

Daily: Bond On The Run – Does Britain still need 007?

DANGER, SPOILERS! James Bond finally returns to cinemas in a world where questions about sexism, racism and Britishness have seldom been more pointed. Is there a place for a suave, womanising emissary of British power in the modern world? Is it time to reassess the role of Bond in British culture? Regulars and Bond fiends Ros Taylor and Arthur Snell talk to Ian Kinane , editor of the International Journal of James Bond Studies and a senior lecturer in English literature, about their first Bonds ...

Oct 10, 202131 minSeason 1Ep. 420

Culture Bunker: Squid Game, Beatles in India and more with Public Service Broadcasting’s J Willgoose

Remember you can hear the music from every Culture Bunker in full on our rolling playlist . Joining us for this week’s tour de pop culture are guests J. Willgoose, leader of avant pop band Public Service Broadcasting , and author Jenny Colgan. On the agenda: Could you play the Squid Game ? We look at the Netflix breakout hit. Does new documentary The Beatles And India turn the tablas on our ideas of Western pop? And new music from Mancunian electro explorers W.H. Lung . Produced and presented by...

Oct 09, 20211 hr 5 minSeason 1Ep. 419

Daily: Jews and the Left – Why antisemitism isn’t over

Antisemitism remains one of the Labour Party’s most painful problems. It’s an issue with deep roots, dragged up by Corbyn, and left to Starmer to deal with. Trade unionist Daniel Randall , author of Confronting Antisemitism on the Left, and sociologist Keith Kahn-Harris , join Dorian Lynskey to discuss what distinguishes left from right wing anti-Jewish racism, and what can be done about it. “The 2007 financial crisis brought antisemitism on the left to the fore.” - Daniel Randall “Gaslighting a...

Oct 07, 202135 minSeason 1Ep. 418

Daily: Why public schools warp children’s futures — and ours

Should we feel more compassion towards men who are send to public schools? And what do boarding school books reveal about the emotions of society’s elites? With fellow students like Boris Johnson and David Cameron, Richard Beard ’s latest book, Sad Little Men, explores his time at school. He tells Ros Taylor why private school only gives kids a partial education, how sexist attitudes linger beyond the school gates…and why years of emotional suppression makes private school boys very good spies. ...

Oct 06, 202120 minSeason 1Ep. 417

From Panic Buying to Panic Lying

Britain staggers into another Winter of Discontent but the atmosphere in the Conservative Party Conference is serenely unworried, says our woman on the spot Marie le Conte. Can anything penetrate Boris Johnson’s reality-distortion field? Plus special guest Annette Dittert , London bureau chief of Germany’s TV channel ARD, explains what the German elections really mean – and how Germany thinks Brexit is going. And is the BBC’s schmaltzy Ridley Road really the best way to dramatise real political ...

Oct 05, 20211 hrSeason 1Ep. 416

Manchester, So Much To Answer For – Start Your Week with Naomi Smith

As the Conservatives convene for their Manchester conference, are there sufficient supplies of Churchillian cosplay, blather about levelling up and performative woke-bashing to cover up their failings on supply lines, fuel, COVID and the economy? Will anyone dare mention the “B” word? Plus the Pandora Papers lift the lid on big money chicanery, anger over police misogyny grows, and who will win the Nobel Peace Prize? Naomi Smith starts your week. “There's petrol in Kabul, but there’s no petrol i...

Oct 04, 202122 minSeason 1Ep. 415

Daily: The Artificial Brain and What It Means

In a groundbreaking study, a team of scientists at the University of Dusseldorf have grown mini brains , each with their own sets of “eyes” that can detect light. Dr Jay Gopalakrishnan , the leader of the project, spoke to Alex Andreou about the extraordinary research going on the field of these “ organoids ”, miniature versions of organs that scientists can grow in the lab from stem cells, and where this remarkable study could lead us in the years ahead. “ In the last 10 years my lab has made b...

Oct 03, 202121 minSeason 1Ep. 414

Culture Bunker: John Cooper Clarke, Foundation, Y: The Last Man, Trunk Records, Shep Pettibone’s 80s bangers

Remember you can hear the music from every Culture Bunker in full on our rolling playlist . On this week’s pop culture roundtable we meet John Cooper Clarke , the William Blake of Salford, on the occasion of his new collection of poems – and he reads us one too. Plus, have Apple TV+ successfully filmed the unfilmable with their adaptation of Isaac Asimov’s Foundation ? Is “all the men are dead” comic book adaptation Y: The Last Man any good? The genius of 80s remixer Shep Pettibone . And Jonny T...

Oct 02, 20211 hr 1 minSeason 1Ep. 413

Daily: Road-trip to the Red Wall – Sebastian Payne and Nick Cohen on Labour’s lost direction

The Red Wall has been the backbone of Labour's vote in the Midlands and the North of England. But in 2019, it dramatically turned blue for the first time in living memory. So what do we get wrong about the Red Wall? Nick Cohen talks to the Financial Times’ Sebastian Payne about his new book, Broken Heartlands, his time in ten constituencies across the North, and what Labour needs to do to recover regional electoral support. “The collapse of the Red Wall has been gradual, then sudden.” “Brexit br...

Sep 30, 202128 minSeason 1Ep. 412

Daily: Why “Hobby Politics” is failing us all

For many of us, politics is a hobby. We soak in the gossip, eat up the statistics and tweet our outrage when an unpopular decision is made. But if we want to make change, should we get off our sofas and start to mobilise? Tufts University politics professor and author of Politics Is for Power, Eitan Hersh tells Ros Taylor why we should stop treating politics like entertainment, and the steps we can take for more effective political participation. “For decades we’ve seen the decline of in-person ...

Sep 29, 202124 minSeason 1Ep. 411
For the best experience, listen in Metacast app for iOS or Android