From Tanya Byron’s How Did We Get Here? to The Rachman Review: This week’s top podcasts

From Tanya Byron and Claudia Winkleman on How Did We Get Here? to The Now Show and The Rachman Review, this week’s top podcasts

How Did We Get Here?

For better or worse, the pandemic has sent many of us back to our family units, and this podcast could be a lifeline to those looking to detoxify dynamics at home. 

Each week in this uplifting podcast psychologist Tanya Byron meets someone struggling with a relationship and then discusses her interview with friend Claudia Winkleman (both above)

Each week psychologist Tanya Byron meets someone who is struggling with a relationship, including a woman whose husband wants to transition, and a man who feels rejected by his dad. 

As the conversation unfolds, Byron’s friend Claudia Winkleman listens in another room, and they discuss the interview afterwards. The podcast is an uplifting reminder of how much we can learn about ourselves from others.

 

The Now Show

Controversial view klaxon: I’ve always found Radio 4’s The Now Show pretty grating, largely because of the quantity and volume of audience laughter that erupts at jokes that deserve a titter at best. 

But now that the programme is being recorded from comedians’ homes, with no pesky audience interaction allowed, it has become more intimate and distinctively podcast-like. The format, however, hasn’t changed and is as perfect as ever, comprising jokes about the news (also known as Covid-19), interspersed with sketches, songs and jolly anecdotes.

 

The Rachman Review

This podcast from the FT’s foreign affairs heavyweight, Gideon Rachman, has become one of my weekly must-listens. Each week for about 20 minutes he talks to leading academics and decision-makers about stories that are unfolding abroad. 

This podcast from the FT’s foreign affairs heavyweight, Gideon Rachman (above), has become one of my weekly must-listens

This podcast from the FT’s foreign affairs heavyweight, Gideon Rachman (above), has become one of my weekly must-listens

His recent conversation with writer Anne Applebaum about how Viktor Orban is using coronavirus to clamp down on dissent in Hungary is fascinating.