The Guardian (USA)

Best podcasts of the week: From Spice Girls to Sugababes, how Britain’s girlbands conquered the world

- Alexi Duggins, Hollie Richardson, Hannah Verdier and Rachel Aroesti

look at historical figures through a fresh lens in this new podcast. Upcoming episodes feature Nina Simone’s contributi­on to civil rights and the “should Picasso be cancelled?” debate. Hannah Verdier

Sue Perkins Presents: Carrie Jade Does Not ExistWidel­y available, episodes every Tuesday and ThursdayPe­rky and positive TikTok influencer Carrie Jade Williams built a supportive community by sharing her life with Huntington’s disease. But, as Sue Perkins and Katherine Denkinson document in this addictive and wellpaced podcast, she lied about her identity and spun a viral yarn about a nonexisten­t ableist Airbnb host. HV

There’s a podcast for that

This week, Rachel Aroesti chooses five of the best underrated podcasts from a high-budget foodie affair to a comedy imagining what would happen if Britain brought back capital punishment. Til Death Do Us BlartIt is, admittedly, rather hard to build up a head of steam popularity-wise when you only release one episode a year, but, alas, that’s a key part of the premise of this single-minded and giddily in-jokey podcast from the makers of the popular comedy advice pod My Brother, My Brother and Me. Since 2015, the trio – plus New Zealand comedians Tim Batt and Guy Montgomery – have spent Thanksgivi­ng rewatching Paul Blart: Mall Cop 2, Paul Blart: Mall Cop’s even less illustriou­s sequel, before reconvenin­g to (re)discuss the intricacie­s and idiocies of one of the most derided films of the century.

GastropodP­resented by two accomplish­ed journalist­s – Cynthia Graber and The New Yorker’s Nicola Twilley – this dense, fact-saturated and incredibly slick series is far more reminiscen­t of a high-budget audio documentar­y. Focusing on the science and history of food, each episode delves into a different gastronomi­cal subject with the help of extensive interviews, on-theground reportage and intellectu­al but accessible insight from our extremely well-read hosts. Covering everything from individual foodstuffs – caviar, pineapples, ketchup – to wider trends (plant-based meat, edibles), there is no topic these two can’t turn into mindblowin­g brain food.

Artists on Artists on Artists on ArtistsA disorienta­ting title and an incredibly specific conceit – each episode sees a team of comics improvise a roundtable set in the world of a particular media niche (food stylists, in-flight safety video directors, difficult actors, celebrity apology mastermind­s, you get the idea) – might have limited this podcast’s appeal, but anyone willing to overcome these obstacles will be rewarded with one of the most hilarious shows on the market. Working as both a pitch-perfect satire of the entertainm­ent world and as a vessel for intense, corpsing-punctuated silliness, it is proof that when improv is this good, there’s nothing better.

CapitalDid you know that one of the best British sitcoms of the past decade is actually a podcast? Helmed by comedy writer Freddy Syborn and starring Liam Williams, Charlotte Ritchie and Harry Enfield, Capital is set in an alternativ­e universe in which the people of this country have decided to bring back capital punishment via a controvers­ial referendum (yes, it’s a Brexit satire). We follow the hapless and terrifying­ly inexperien­ced civil servants tasked with orchestrat­ing the big comeback of capital punishment as they quarrel and crisis-manage their way through this horrendous task. The end result is like a surreal, millennial­authored, doom-times version of The Thick Of It. In other words: incredible.

BudpodYou probably think the last thing you need at this stage is yet another podcast featuring two male stand-ups shooting the proverbial, but if you do have room for just one more, consider this offering from Phil Wang and Pierre Novellie. Instead of dealing in straightfo­rward British banter – despite both establishi­ng their careers over here, Novellie was born in South African and Wang grew up in Malaysia – the pair come across as simultaneo­usly more erudite and more scatologic­al than their peers, cracking wise about anything and everything with profession­al-grade wit and an eye for the grotesque.

Why not try …

Love-Bombed, in which Vicky Pattison heads home to north-east England to investigat­e how a man maintained a relationsh­ip with a woman he met online while secretly still living with his wife and three children.

The team behind Radio 4’s series Sliced Bread brings you Toast, a study of wonder products and businesses that ended up failing.

Film critic Wendy Lloyd investigat­es how we talk about movies, who gets to do it and why it matters with fellow critics and social commentato­rs in Open to Criticism.

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 ?? ?? The Spice Girls in Paris, 1996. Photograph: Tim Roney/Getty Images
The Spice Girls in Paris, 1996. Photograph: Tim Roney/Getty Images
 ?? ?? Afua Hirsch, one half of the new Legacy podcast. Photograph: Suki Dhanda/The Observer
Afua Hirsch, one half of the new Legacy podcast. Photograph: Suki Dhanda/The Observer

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