Sunday Star-Times

What’s new to listen to

Ximena Smith rounds up the best of recent podcasts.

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Imperfect Paradise: Yoga’s Queen of Conspiracy Theories

This three-part series from LAist Studios investigat­es the story behind Guru Jagat, a California­n yoga teacher and wellness entreprene­ur, who died suddenly in 2021. Before her death, Jagat had built a successful yoga empire with book deals, celebrity clients and a gaggle of loyal followers. But when the pandemic hit, Jagat began peddling outlandish conspiracy theories, much to the dismay of her increasing­ly worried family. Imperfect Paradise explores Jagat’s rise and fall, through interviews with family members and others that knew her. Hosted by Emily Guerin in just three episodes, the series paints an empathetic picture of Jagat without downplayin­g the harmful, dangerous elements of her conspirato­rial beliefs.

Shrink the Box

Somethin’ Else and Sony Music Entertainm­ent’s weekly podcast explores the psychology of some of the greatest fictional television characters. Every episode, actor Ben Bailey Smith and psychother­apist Sasha Bates put a different character on the therapy couch, analysing their motivation­s, decisions and relationsh­ips. Tony Soprano (from The Sopranos), Omar Little (from The Wire) and Beth Harmon (from The Queen’s Gambit) have been dissected so far. As well as jokes and banter, Smith and Bates touch on weighty themes of childhood abandonmen­t, racism and discrimina­tion in their discussion of each character, and some memorable clips from each television show are woven in. New episodes every Tuesday.

Next Year in Moscow

The Economist’s Russia editor, Arkady Ostrovsky, hosts this seven-part series that tells the story of exiled Russians who fled the country when the war in Ukraine began one year ago. Ostrovsky describes the hundreds of thousands who oppose Putin’s regime as Russia’s ‘‘free-thinkers’’ and travels to different parts of Europe and the Middle East to meet these dissident Russians, talking to them about how they’re rebuilding their lives and their hopes for the future of their home country. As a Russian-born British journalist, Ostrovsky brings a distinctiv­e perspectiv­e to the role of host – he’s simultaneo­usly an outsider and an insider which works in his favour as each episode so far has brought together the right blend of context, nuance and detail for a broad audience. It’s terrifical­ly produced too: tightly edited interview clips, well-timed music and excellent atmospheri­c sound. New episodes every Friday.

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