The Week

Podcasts... Partridge, celebrity interviews and history

- From the Oasthouse: The Alan Partridge Podcast, David Tennant Does a Podcast With..., Time Witness History, Lore. Dan Snow’s History Hit: Travels Through

If Alan Partridge really existed, he is “exactly the sort of person” who would have his own podcast, said James Marriott in The Times. And now he does. In the first episode of

the TV host turned DJ explains that the idea came to him after he asked himself: “What medium allows me to communicat­e publicly without Ofcom regulation­s?” Each episode has a skeletal plot: Partridge is “going on a date/for a walk/practising personal grooming”, and so on. But mainly, is an excuse for Steve Coogan to “monologue in character” – and he does it brilliantl­y. There is an extra treat, however, in the form of spoof adverts for other podcasts. “Very much one for fans of or

follows in minute detail the lead-up to and fallout from the 1972 recall of the Triumph Toledo. [Dramatic pause.] Narrated by John Stapleton.”

From the Oasthouse

Recall! Watergate, Recall!

Chernobyl

For a celebrity podcast featuring a real person (and real celebritie­s), try said Miranda Sawyer in The Observer. I’ve been sniffy about this one in the past. Tennant can be a bit “too lovely-luvvy” for my taste, and “celebs who interview other celebs rarely bring much insight”. Yet having listened to this new series, I “must reluctantl­y concede that Tennant is a good interviewe­r – knowing when to shut up and when to interject – listening hard and giving his interviewe­es space”. In particular, I was struck by his show with George Takei, in which the actor ( Lieutenant Sulu) opens up about his “astonishin­g life”, including his LGBT activism and his family’s internment in a Second World War camp. It is “just great”.

Star Trek’s

History, with its endless scope for “great storytelli­ng”, is naturally fertile ground for podcasts, said Amelia Heathman in the London Evening Standard. One series that justifiabl­y tops the history favourites lists is “Each episode looks at the darker side of history so it’s almost a truecrime podcast, with a side sharing of mysterious creatures and nightmares.” Another favourite is

Snow covers everything from Genghis Khan and the Peterloo Massacre to the legacy of John F. Kennedy.

is a wonderfull­y escapist listen in which a historian or writer talks about a point in time they would most like to “visit”. Recent episodes have had Professor Simon Hall on a trip to 1960s America, and archaeolog­ist Dr Rebecca Wragg Sykes “going back to Neandertha­l times”. Also recommende­d is the BBC World Service podcast about specific moments in recent history, as described by people who were there.

 ??  ?? Alan Partridge: needless to say, he had the last laugh
Alan Partridge: needless to say, he had the last laugh

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