The Mail on Sunday

THE BEST AUDIO SHOWS TO LISTEN TO THIS WEEK

- Struan Robertson

NO SUCH THING AS A FISH Top trivia from the team behind QI’s facts

It’s often said that the real stars behind the BBC’s QI quiz are the researcher­s who find all those quirky facts. Those folks, Andrew Hunter Murray, Dan Schreiber, Anna Ptaszynski and James Harkin, known as the QI Elves, have had a hit podcast on their hands since 2014, and it’s a honeypot for lovers of trivia everywhere. Even the title is an example: although there are many sea creatures, they’re not related. So, says one biologist, there’s no such thing as a fish.

YOU MUST REMEMBER THIS Murky movie madness

Starlets, scandals, abuses of power… this series of forgotten stories from the golden age of cinema is more Hollywood Babylon than reverentia­l homage – though it also denounces the lurid claims of Kenneth Anger’s bestseller. Subjects range from the Louis B. Mayer story, the infamous 1950s blacklist, Disney’s depiction of the Deep South and the horror of the Manson murders. Essential listening for film buffs.

MEDICAL MINEFIELD The health stories that really matter

The Mail on Sunday’s health team, Barney Calman and Eve Simmons (left), partner up in front of the mic to host discussion­s with medical experts on the hot topics of the day. In the latest edition they ask: why are some GPs still refusing to see patients in person, and what are the risks of assessing their ailments over the phone, or even video call? As ever, the debate is informativ­e yet easy on the ear.

THE FALL OF ROME Rome wasn’t destroyed in a day, you know…

Just how did the vast Western empire of the Caesars dissolve into the feuding fiefdoms of the Dark Ages after the sack of Rome in 410 AD? And who were the ‘barbarian hordes’, anyway? Over 33 episodes, historian Patrick Wyman tells in rich detail, yet with a light touch, how, after many generation­s of opportunis­tic immigratio­n and economic collapse, Rome wasn’t destroyed but ‘accidental­ly committed suicide’.

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