The Audio Long Read
The Audio Long Read podcast is a selection of the Guardian’s long reads, giving you the opportunity to get on with your day while listening to some of the finest longform journalism the Guardian has to offer, including in-depth writing from around the world on current affairs, climate change, global warming, immigration, crime, business, the arts and much more. The podcast explores a range of subjects and news across business, global politics (including Trump, Israel, Palestine and Gaza), money, philosophy, science, internet culture, modern life, war, climate change, current affairs, music and trends, and seeks to answer key questions around them through in depth interviews explainers, and analysis with quality Guardian reporting. Through first person accounts, narrative audio storytelling and investigative reporting, the Audio Long Read seeks to dive deep, debunk myths and uncover hidden histories. In previous episodes we have asked questions like: do we need a new theory of evolution? Whether Trump can win the US presidency or not? Why can't we stop quantifying our lives? Why have our nuclear fears faded? Why do so many bikes end up underwater? How did Germany get hooked on Russian energy? Are we all prisoners of geography? How was London's Olympic legacy sold out? Who owns Einstein? Is free will an illusion? What lies beghind the Arctic's Indigenous suicide crisis? What is the mystery of India's deadly exam scam? Who is the man who built his own cathedral? And, how did the world get hooked on palm oil? Other topics range from: history including empire to politics, conflict, Ukraine, Russia, Israel, Gaza, philosophy, science, psychology, health and finance. Audio Long Read journalists include Samira Shackle, Tom Lamont, Sophie Elmhirst, Samanth Subramanian, Imogen West-Knights, Sirin Kale, Daniel Trilling and Giles Tremlett.
Latest Episode
Previous Episodes
- ‘Scamming became the new farming’: inside India’s cybercrime villages
- Money talks: the deep ties between Twitter and Saudi Arabia
- From the archive: how we lost our sensory connection with food – and how to restore it
- The Pushkin job: unmasking the thieves behind an international rare books heist
- ‘The jobless should lead the attack’: a radical Jamaican journalist in 1920s London
- From the archive: ‘We are so divided now’: how China controls thought and speech beyond its borders
- Special Edition: Behind the scenes at the Long Read
- Counting down to zero: the final warning from a climate diplomat
- Extremely offline: what happened when a Pacific island was cut off from the internet
- From the archive: A drowning world: Kenya’s quiet slide underwater
- ‘Americans are democracy’s equivalent of second-generation wealth’: a Chinese journalist on the US under Trump
- The human stain remover: what Britain’s greatest extreme cleaner learned from 25 years on the job
- From the archive: The queen of crime-solving
- A critique of pure stupidity: understanding Trump 2.0
- ‘Resistance is when I put an end to what I don’t like’: The rise and fall of the Baader-Meinhof gang
- From the archive: Who owns Einstein? The battle for the world’s most famous face
- The origins of today’s conflict between American Jews over Israel
- ‘I have to do it’: why one of the world’s most brilliant AI scientists left the US for China
- From the archive: ‘Infertility stung me’: Black motherhood and me
- ‘What reconciliation? What forgiveness?’: Syria’s deadly reckoning
Other podcasts
-
The Stay or Go Podcast for Women Considering Divorce
-
Why Theory
-
The Louis Theroux Podcast
-
LIONS | In The Making
-
Dubai Stars - Rise To The Top
-
Switched on Pop
-
The Cinematologists Podcast
-
The Land of the Rising Fun Podcast
-
Serpentine Podcast
-
The Cocktail Scene
-
The Empire Film Podcast
-
Moncrieff
-
Theology Applied
-
Pitter Patter...: A Thinking-Person’s Guide to Letterkenny
-
Marianna in Conspiracyland
-
I Used to be Somebody
-
Mostly Nitpicking
-
Highest Self Podcast®
