Five podcasts for the weekend: 4 November 2011
Thinking Allowed's Laurie Taylor
The preamble
As last week I've picked out a selection of the currently available Radio 4 podcasts. You can listen online or download to keep, or put onto your phone or MP3 player. There are many more available on the Radio 4 podcast page.
Some podcasts are available for only seven days (eg Comedy of the Week; Friday Night Comedy) but others do have a huge archive you can download at any time (eg Desert Island Discs; In Our Time). If you haven't used podcasts from the Ö÷²¥´óÐã before there's some podcast help here.
The selection
1. Lives in a Landscape
All of the current series where award-winning presenter Alan Dein goes in search of original stories from around the country is now available as a podcast.
More programme info
Download the podcast
2. Thinking Allowed: Kissing men - Decline of violence in history
Laurie Taylor explores Professor Steven Pinker's notion of a decline in human violence as well an apparent rise in heterosexual men kissing other men.
More programme info
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3. Four Thought: Dreda Say Mitchell
Crime novelist Dreda Say Mitchell argues that the importance of the family, faith and community has been ignored in the debate about social mobility.
More programme info
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4. Warhorses of Letters
Stephen Fry stars as Napoleon's horse and Daniel Rigby stars as Wellington's horse in a love story of two horses sundered by war told through their letters to each other.
More programme info
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5. Desert Island Discs: John Peel Archive Special
Sue Lawley's castaway is broadcaster John Peel. This episode has been made available to mark the broadcast of the first John Peel Lecture on 6 Music.
More programme info
Download the podcast
Paul Murphy is the editor of the Radio 4 blog
Comment number 1.
At 5th Nov 2011, newlach wrote:I would recommend the the Thinking Allowed podcast. It was a delight listening to Steven Pinker demolish Anthony O'Hear's arguments (O'Hear believes in the concept of Original Sin) that:
1. The 18th century Enlightenment led to Communism, and;
2. Christian thinkers of the 18th century should be given credit for the decline in violence.
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Comment number 2.
At 6th Nov 2011, Shaun D Wilson wrote:Fantastic news that Lives in a Landscape is now available as a podcast. More documentary and comedy strands please!
Complain about this comment (Comment number 2)