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Late Night Live - Separate stories podcast

Australian Broadcasting Corporation

Late Night Live - Separate stories podcast

A daily Society, Culture and News podcast featuring Phillip Adams
Good podcast? Give it some love!
Late Night Live - Separate stories podcast

Australian Broadcasting Corporation

Late Night Live - Separate stories podcast

Episodes
Late Night Live - Separate stories podcast

Australian Broadcasting Corporation

Late Night Live - Separate stories podcast

A daily Society, Culture and News podcast featuring Phillip Adams
Good podcast? Give it some love!
Rate Podcast

Episodes of Late Night Live

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Climate scientist Rob Jackson travelled the world in search of climate solutions and explains what he found and how we can feasibly return the atmosphere to pre-industrial times.   Guests; Rob Jackson: Prof. of Earth Sciences Stanford Universi
Besides launching rockets at Israel after Israel attacked its embassy in Damascus, Iran has shown remarkable restraint when it comes to intervening in the war on Gaza. Ali Ansari argues that apart from some notable - and extreme - exceptions,
Phillip Adams takes a look back through the history of philosophy to understand why it’s become one of the most male dominated areas of the humanities. Guest: Regan Penaluna is the Brooklyn-based author of How to Think Like a Woman: Four Women
For 40 years, Amit Shah has been Narendra Modi’s right-hand man. Today, Amit Shah is India’s second-most powerful figure, so why don’t we know anything about him? Guest: Atul Dev - fellow at Columbia Journalism School in New York who wrote thi
It thrived in the age of the dinosaur but today only a small isolated colony exists. How is the Wollemi Pine coping with its exposure to modernity and what is the future for this ancient species?Berin Mackenzie: Research Scientist, NSW Dept. o
Mexico elected climate scientist and left wing Claudia Sheinbaum in a landslide victory to become the first female President. Professor Guadalupe Correa-Cabrera is a Mexican political analyst at the Schar School of Policy and Government at Geo
Could the Tories pull off a 5th successive election win or will they be given the boot? Meanwhile a revamped Labour party is quietly confident it will form government for the first time in 14 years. Ian Dunt assesses the first 2 weeks of the e
The history of 50 years of activism, from marriage reform and women's refuges, to AIDS and HIV funding, and even the Mens Shed movement is the subject of a new book: Personal Politics: Sexuality, Gender and the Remaking of Citizenship in Austr
Immigration Minister Andrew Giles is under further pressure after having to admit the government is not in fact using drones to surveil former detainees. A proposed seat distribution in Victoria had some Liberals hoping Josh Frydenburg would r
At the end of the Greek civil war 12,000 communists were secretly evacuated from Albania to the USSR and resettled in Tashkent, Uzbekistan. Stalin orchestrated the move to hide them in freighters where they were forbidden from coming up for ai
Anne Applebaum makes the argument that there is a global campaign by autocratic countries like Russia and China to discredit democracy and liberalism. MAGA supporters are also being influenced by propaganda campaigns on issues like Ukraine and
Bob Rogers landed his first job in radio as a panel operator in Melbourne in 1942. He became an announcer at 7HO in Hobart in 1949 and he's still behind the microphone in 2012, now as the morning presenter on Sydney radio station 2CH. He talks
In the 1960's Jane Goodall became a household name for her groundbreaking work with chimpanzees in Tanzania. Now, at 90 years old, she has travelled to Australia to inspire people to take action to slow down climate change. Guest: Dr Jane Good
It's now 30 years since the Rwandan genocide that saw almost one million citizens die in just 100 days in likely the fastest genocide in history.  Soon Rwandans return to the polls where it's almost guaranteed that President Paul Kagame, the l
Author and pro-democracy activist Ma Thida was imprisoned by the military junta in Myanmar for daring to oppose the regime. Her latest book is a rare glimpse inside the murky world of a country where the internet is frequently cut off and diss
A US Supreme Court judge had the American flag flying upside down outside his house. What does this signify and does it threaten the integrity of the Supreme Court?Guest: Bruce Shapiro, contributing editor with The Nation magazine; Executive D
Clive Hamilton says the privileges enjoyed by the rich and powerful in Australia are not only unfair but cause widespread harm, from the everyday slights and humiliations visited on those lower down the scale to distortions in the labour marke
In the first reconciliation week since the failure of the referendum, the government needs to re-build trust with the Aboriginal community and manage those Australians who didn't vote for recognition. Attorney-General Mary Dreyfus will present
Philosopher A.C. Grayling joined Phillip in the studio to explain why he's turned his gaze to the moon. In his 32nd book - Who Owns the Moon: In Defence of Humanity’s Common Interests in Space - Grayling urges us to think of the new space race
Millions of Palestinians live in Jordan, where rage about the suffering in Gaza has reached a boiling point.Guest: Lebanese/Australian journalist Rania Abouzeid reports on the unrest in the Middle East from Beirut, Lebanon.
Aaron Bateman traces the development and vulnerabilities of the technologies that connect us, from undersea cables first laid in 1858 to shortwave radio and then to a new generation of satellites in the 21st century.
Since 2018, journalist Alisa Sopova and photographer Anastasia Taylor-Lind have documented everyday life near the conflict zone in Ukraine, capturing the lives lost or interrupted as the war escalates. They join Phillip in person to talk about
French/Algerian journalist Nabila Ramdani analyses why France is in turmoil in 2024, and how it could remedy its current problems, in her new book “Fixing France: How to Repair a Broken Republic” published by Hurst. 
Two UK high court judges have granted Julian Assange the right to a fresh appeal against the decision to extradite him to the USA to face 17 charges of espionage. The judges were not convinced by the assurances lawyers for the US government ga
Britain is well and truly in election mode with major speeches and events from both the government and opposition . Ian Dunt offers his assessment.  Ian Dunt: iNews columnist and regular LNL commentator
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