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Received today — 13 December 2025

Comedian Robin Ince quits Radio 4 show, claiming BBC found his views ‘problematic’

13 December 2025 at 09:15

Ince says he resigned as co-host of Infinite Monkey Cage because of what he described as his lack of ‘obedience’

The comedian and author Robin Ince has resigned from his role as co-host of the long-running BBC Radio 4 podcast The Infinite Monkey Cage after a fallout with BBC executives over “problematic” opinions and what he described as a lack of “obedience”.

Ince, who has co-presented the popular science show alongside Prof Brian Cox for 16 years, posted on social media that his personal views, aired outside the BBC, “have been considered problematic for some time” and he “felt he had no choice but to resign”.

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© Photograph: Keith Morris/Hay Ffotos/Alamy

© Photograph: Keith Morris/Hay Ffotos/Alamy

© Photograph: Keith Morris/Hay Ffotos/Alamy

The Katie Miller Podcast: an aggressively vibeless curriculum for the Maga mom

13 December 2025 at 08:00

The wife of the Trump adviser aims to entice conservative women into Maga – but like much of the rest of the movement, her sales pitch is fundamentally lacking

When Katie Miller, the wife of Donald Trump’s powerful adviser Stephen Miller, interviewed Pete Hegseth on her podcast last week, she didn’t ask him about whether the war secretary had ordered the US military to kill the shipwrecked survivors of an airstrike. She didn’t ask him about the settlement he paid a woman who accused him of sexually assaulting her. Nor did she ask about allegations of alcohol abuse, or the accusation that he had made his ex-wife so terrified that she hid in a closet.

Instead, when Hegseth and his wife, Jennifer Rauchet, appeared on the Katie Miller Podcast, the titular host asked questions like: “If you could write one Hegseth family rule on that whiteboard, what is that?”

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© Composite: Guardian Design/Screenshot via The Katie Miller Podcast

© Composite: Guardian Design/Screenshot via The Katie Miller Podcast

© Composite: Guardian Design/Screenshot via The Katie Miller Podcast

Received before yesterday

‘It becomes like Zoolander’: the podcast making you think differently about clothes

11 December 2025 at 05:00

Avery Trufelman is the New York-based radio producer behind Articles of Interest, a fashion podcast that has non-fashion people gripped in their millions

Did you know that the zipper only came about because a Swedish-born engineer named Gideon Sundback fell in love with a factory owner’s daughter? Or that it took longer for it to be developed than it took for the Wright brothers to invent the aeroplane? You probably know that pockets have become a symbol of gender privilege – but were you aware that in the 18th century, women’s pockets were big enough to hold tools for writing, a small diary and a snack for later? Perhaps most surprising is that layering, which has made Uniqlo one of the biggest brands in the world, was in effect invented in the 1940s by a man named Georges Doriot, who was also famous for inventing venture capital.

All these nuggets and more are included in Articles of Interest, a podcast by 34-year-old Avery Trufelman. Listeners tune in for the smarts but also her disarming sense of fun. Not to mention her low, husky voice, which seems made for podcasting. “I don’t take care of it, if that’s what you’re asking,” she says over video call from her apartment in New York.

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© Photograph: Tif Ng

© Photograph: Tif Ng

© Photograph: Tif Ng

Tell us your favourite new podcast of 2025

10 December 2025 at 05:07

We would like to hear about your favourite new podcast you’ve been listening to this year and why

We would like to hear about your favourite new podcast you’ve been listening to in 2025 and why. Let us know and we’ll run a selection of your recommendations. Tell us your favourite using the form below.

If you’re having trouble using the form click here. Read terms of service here and privacy policy here.

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© Photograph: Antonio Guillem Fernández/Alamy

© Photograph: Antonio Guillem Fernández/Alamy

© Photograph: Antonio Guillem Fernández/Alamy

‘After almost destroying the world, our families are friends’: the thrilling podcast from JFK and Khrushchev’s relatives

9 December 2025 at 07:57

Their relatives might have been on opposite sides of near-nuclear war, but the US and Soviet leader’s descendants have teamed up for an intimate BBC podcast. They talk humanity, hate – and why Trump is a ‘very limited’ man

In October 1962, the world came closer to destruction than at any other point in modern times. After a US surveillance plane discovered that Soviet nuclear missile sites were being built in Cuba, less than 100 miles from the US mainland, President John F Kennedy responded by ordering the US Navy’s Sixth Fleet to impose a naval blockade around the island. Almost two weeks of impossible tension followed.

The threat was clear. If Kennedy, or his Soviet counterpart, Nikita Khrushchev, fired on their enemy, a chain reaction of global nuclear strikes and counterstrikes would have followed, plunging humanity into all-out ruination.

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© Photograph: INTERFOTO/AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: INTERFOTO/AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: INTERFOTO/AFP/Getty Images

Conan O’Brien serves up a Beatles geekfest: best podcasts of the week

The big-name US talkshow host goes all Fab Four superfan in this historical take on the lives of John, Paul, George and Ringo. Plus, Naomi Fry delivers a rich deep dive into The Doors’ legacy

The popular show’s two-part special on the Fab Four has, bizarrely, prompted its Beatles sceptic co-host Dominic Sandbrook to refuse to appear. But his mega-starry replacement is Conan O’Brien, in for an engaging chat with Tom Holland through the career of John, Paul, George and Ringo. Their USP? Says Holland: “We’re a history podcast rather than a music podcast so we need to make the case that the Beatles are significant historically.” Alexi Duggins
Widely available

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© Photograph: PR

© Photograph: PR

© Photograph: PR

OWASP Top 10 for 2025: What’s New and Why It Matters

17 November 2025 at 00:00

In this episode, we discuss the newly released OWASP Top 10 for 2025. Join hosts Tom Eston, Scott Wright, and Kevin Johnson as they explore the changes, the continuity, and the significance of the update for application security. Learn about the importance of getting involved with the release candidate to provide feedback and suggestions. The […]

The post OWASP Top 10 for 2025: What’s New and Why It Matters appeared first on Shared Security Podcast.

The post OWASP Top 10 for 2025: What’s New and Why It Matters appeared first on Security Boulevard.

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Meet NEO 1X: The Robot That Does Chores and Spies on You?

10 November 2025 at 00:00

The future of home robotics is here — and it’s a little awkward. Meet the NEO 1X humanoid robot, designed to help with chores but raising huge cybersecurity and privacy questions. We discuss what it can actually do, the risks of having an always-connected humanoid in your home, and why it’s definitely not the “Robot […]

The post Meet NEO 1X: The Robot That Does Chores and Spies on You? appeared first on Shared Security Podcast.

The post Meet NEO 1X: The Robot That Does Chores and Spies on You? appeared first on Security Boulevard.

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OpenAI’s ChatGPT Atlas: What It Means for Cybersecurity and Privacy

3 November 2025 at 00:00

In this episode, we explore OpenAI’s groundbreaking release GPT Atlas, the AI-powered browser that remembers your activities and acts on your behalf. Discover its features, implications for enterprise security, and the risks it poses to privacy. Join hosts Tom Eston and Scott Wright as they discuss everything from the browser’s memory function to vulnerabilities like […]

The post OpenAI’s ChatGPT Atlas: What It Means for Cybersecurity and Privacy appeared first on Shared Security Podcast.

The post OpenAI’s ChatGPT Atlas: What It Means for Cybersecurity and Privacy appeared first on Security Boulevard.

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It’s Always DNS: Lessons from the AWS Outage

27 October 2025 at 00:00

In episode 404 (no pun intended!) we discuss the recurring issue of DNS outages, the recent Amazon AWS disruption, and what this reveals about our dependency on cloud services. The conversation touches on the need for tested business continuity plans, the implications of DNS failures, and the misconceptions around cloud infrastructure’s automatic failover capabilities. ** […]

The post It’s Always DNS: Lessons from the AWS Outage appeared first on Shared Security Podcast.

The post It’s Always DNS: Lessons from the AWS Outage appeared first on Security Boulevard.

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