The Europeans | |
---|---|
Presentation | |
Hosted by | Katy Lee and Dominic Kraemer |
Genre | News magazine |
Updates | Weekly |
Length | 30 mins |
Production | |
Theme music composed by | Jim Barne |
No. of episodes | 155 (as of May 2021 [update] ) |
Publication | |
Original release | 28 November 2017 |
Related | |
Website | europeanspodcast |
The Europeans is a weekly independent podcast focusing on the "often overlooked news items affecting Europe". [1] It is produced and presented by Katy Lee, a journalist based in Paris, and Dominic Kraemer, an opera singer based in Amsterdam. [2] [3] In May 2018 the podcast was the Dutch national nominee for the European Charlemagne Youth Prize , [4] and in 2019 was a winner of the European Commission's Altiero Spinelli Prize for Outreach, for "works that aimed to enhance young peoples' understanding of the European Union, with a focus on participation in EU democratic processes." [5] Also in 2019, and in the context of that year's European Parliament elections, the podcast received a grant from the European Cultural Foundation [6] to produce the three-part series Bursting the bubble to "explain how the E.U. actually works without boring you to death." [7]
Lee and Kraemer, both originally from England, intended for the show "to make Europe cool again" [8] and consequently it "proudly announces itself [as a] Brexit free zone". [9] Alongside other regular segments, each episode features an interview. Past guests include: Igor Levit, [10] Christoph Niemann, [11] Rokhaya Diallo, [12] Emma Holten, [13] Akbar Ahmed, [14] [15] Patrick Gathara, [16] Jacek Dehnel, [17] Darach Ó Séaghdha, [18] Actress, [19] and Joris Luyendijk. [20]
"We were both British expats, we had a much closer connection to life on the continent than a lot of Brits living on the island, and we wanted to rectify that. We wanted to make a podcast that was going to treat Europe as something that was really interesting and varied, but that could feel very inaccessible to many people because of the way we speak about Europe."
– Katy Lee, 2019 [21]
Each regular episode features the segments "good week; bad week", "happy ending" and at least one interview. The list of episodes, publication date, interviewee(s) and description of the interview topic are as follows:
No. | Title | Guest(s) | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "Katy smells the money" | Frank Zeller and Ania Jakubek | 28 November 2017 | |
German politics and Frida Kahlo in Poland | ||||
2 | "C'est too much" | Claire Sergent and A Couple of Men | 5 December 2017 | |
The French language and gay travel | ||||
3 | "National Hallydays" | Anousha Nzume and Ania Jakubek | 12 December 2017 | |
Zwarte Piet and Polish politics | ||||
4 | "O Come All Ye Phosphateful" | Jonah Lamers and Ryan Heath | 19 December 2017 | |
Trans terminology and "EU-so-white" |
No. | Title | Guest(s) | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|
5 | "The Dumbest Farmer Finds The Biggest Potatoes" | Nina Lamparski and Georgi Gotev | 9 January 2018 | |
Luxembourgish and the Bulgarian presidency of the Council of the European Union | ||||
6 | "Translating Trump, Defending Deneuve" | Franz Kubaczyk, Leonie Wagener and Agnès Poirier | 16 January 2018 | |
Translating Trump for German TV and #MeToo in France | ||||
7 | "Fake snus" | Juliane von Reppert-Bismarck and Christopher Snowdon | 23 January 2018 | |
News literacy and snus | ||||
8 | "Trawlin', Ballin', Fallin'" | Matthias Brandstetter and Pavel Klinckhamers | 30 January 2018 | |
Viennese balls and controversial fishing techniques | ||||
9 | "Build your own Europe, baby" | Sarah Fager and Andrea Venzon | 6 February 2018 | |
IKEA designer and political party Volt Europa | ||||
10 | "Mi kidney, su kidney" | Ania Jakubek and Greg Moorlock | 13 February 2018 | |
Polish Holocaust law and organ donation | ||||
11 | "Olympic gold, Dominic is old, Katy has a cold" | Andrew MacDowall and Oona Kauste | 20 February 2018 | |
Kosovan independence and Winter Olympics | ||||
12 | "Making peace with the wolves" | Alexandra Pascalidou and Max Rossberg | 27 February 2018 | |
Neo-Nazis and wolves in Europe | ||||
13 | "Bonus episode: Alexandra Pascalidou" | Alexandra Pascalidou | 1 March 2018 | |
Extended conversation about Europe, forgiveness and Multiculturalism | ||||
14 | "Don't put salt on every snail" | Eckard Helmers and Marko Modiano | 6 March 2018 | |
Diesel cars and the English language | ||||
15 | "The best place for our little sprouts" | Jennifer Pettersson and Asmund Asdal | 16 March 2018 | |
Raising children and the Global Seed Vault | ||||
16 | "Suzy Menkes and the Beer-Brewing Monks" | Suzy Menkes | 20 March 2018 | |
French designer Hubert de Givenchy | ||||
17 | "French Burgers, Danish Pizza" | Christian Puglisi | 27 March 2018 | |
Scandinavian Pizza | ||||
18 | "Trash islands and rainbow homes" | Naomi O'Leary and Daniel Martinović | 3 April 2018 | |
Plastic and Croatian rainbow families | ||||
19 | "Liberté, Egalité, Difficultés" | Rokhaya Diallo | 10 April 2018 | |
Attitudes towards race in France | ||||
20 | "Once Upon A Time In Hungary" | Zselyke Csaky and Mick ter Reehorst | 17 April 2018 | |
Viktor Orbán and Are We Europe | ||||
21 | "Keep your bitcoin close and your botany closer" | Agata Szafraniuk and Oliver Gee | 24 April 2018 | |
Polish primeval forest and Parisian podcasting | ||||
22 | "Sticks and stones and dandruff" | Wenzel Michalski and Andy Buchanan | 1 May 2018 | |
Anti-semitism in Germany and the European Stacking Championships | ||||
23 | "Eurovision. EUROVISION!!!!!" | Dan Gould and Brigitte Vasallo | 8 May 2018 | |
Eurovision and #MeToo in Spain | ||||
24 | "The winner takes it all, the loser takes a selfie" | Farah Abdi and MaJiKer | 15 May 2018 | |
LGBT refugees in Europe and Eurovision songwriting | ||||
25 | "Hello, new listeners!" | – | 19 May 2018 | |
[Updated trailer] | ||||
26 | "A wedding and no funeral" | Marit Higraff and Kieran Hodgson | 22 May 2018 | |
True crime podcasting and making a comedy show about Britain joining the EU | ||||
27 | "Five Stars, Ireland" | Giuseppe Porcaro and Florian Tirnovan | 29 May 2018 | |
EU Sci-Fi and a European talent show for deaf people | ||||
28 | "Changing PMs at 103 BPMs" | Akbar Ahmed | 5 June 2018 | |
Islam in Europe | ||||
29 | "Bonus episode: Akbar Ahmed on Islam in Europe" | Akbar Ahmed | 8 June 2018 | |
Extended conversation about Islam's role in Europe | ||||
30 | "Waxy smiles" | Aljaž Pengov Bitenc | 12 June 2018 | |
Elections in Slovenia | ||||
31 | "HEAT" | Dicle Akar and Patrick Galey | 31 July 2018 | |
Turkish identity in Germany and extreme weather | ||||
32 | "Piss and Populism" | Adrian Murphy and Timo Lochoki | 7 August 2018 | |
Europeana and populism in Europe | ||||
33 | "The traces they leave" | Deborah Cole | 14 August 2018 | |
Collecting memories of elderly Germans | ||||
34 | "The G-Spot of Europe" | Dimi Dimitrov and Agneta Ladek | 21 August 2018 | |
Regulating the internet in Europe and an eye-catching Vilnius tourism campaign | ||||
35 | "Greece and Fabrice" | Nick Malkoutzis and Fabrice Pothier | 28 August 2018 | |
The situation in Greece and cycling through Europe | ||||
36 | "Nation Branding, Robot Dancing" | Charlotte Bostrom | 4 September 2018 | |
Sweden's national branding | ||||
37 | "The Future Library" | Anne Beate Hovind | 11 September 2018 | |
Burying books in the woods | ||||
38 | "Welcome To Europe, Here Are Four Walls" | Alice Pittini | 18 September 2018 | |
Housing for refugees and asylum seekers | ||||
39 | "WEB OF LIES" | Mikey Stothard and Kyrill Hartog | 25 September 2018 | |
A Spanish plagiarism scandal and Are We Europe | ||||
40 | "Wall, Rocket, Bottle, Horse" | Monique van de Abeel and Alexander Hurst | 2 October 2018 | |
Guide horses and Americans in Europe | ||||
41 | "Macedo, Macedon't" | Emil Atanasovski and Kevin Sachs | 9 October 2018 | |
Renaming Macedonia and Netflix in Europe | ||||
42 | "The Unlucky Passport" | Thana Faroq and Bram Hilkens | 16 October 2018 | |
A photography project about passports and European hip hop | ||||
43 | "Big continent, mini episode" | – | 23 October 2018 | |
Bacteria and cathedral thinking | ||||
44 | "Everyone's free to vote (and wear sunscreen)" | Frank Piplat and Sally Eshun | 30 October 2018 | |
The European Parliament and hate speech in Europe | ||||
45 | "Watching Over The Night Watch" | Taco Dibbits and Marjorie H. Morgan | 6 November 2018 | |
Restoring Rembrandt and being black in Europe | ||||
46 | "The black soldier's lament" | Christian Koller | 13 November 2018 | |
African and Asian soldiers who fought for European powers in World War I | ||||
47 | "Why doesn't Europe have a Silicon Valley?" | Sarah Donnolly and Marton Barcza | 20 November 2018 | |
Opening for Louis CK and tech in Europe | ||||
48 | "Picasso, Poland & Pedagogy" | Juliette Perchais | 27 November 2018 | |
Teaching in tough schools | ||||
49 | "Flavia and the Machine (anniversary episode)" | Andrea Chalupa and Flavia Kleiner | 4 December 2018 | |
A Welsh journalist in Ukraine and fighting rightwing populism in Switzerland | ||||
50 | "Freedom" | Paulita Pappel and Marta Pardavi | 11 December 2018 | |
Feminist porn and defending Hungarian rights | ||||
51 | "The Bee Word" | Joris Luyendijk | 18 December 2018 | |
Europe in 2019 |
No. | Title | Guest(s) | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|
52 | "It's that damn bear again" | Teemu Roos and Ania Jakubek | 22 January 2019 | |
Training Finland in AI and a Polish wartime bear | ||||
53 | "Kraemer vs Kraemer" | Daniel Kraemer | 29 January 2019 | |
Weirdness of the British parliament | ||||
54 | "Stick it to the grown-ups" | Lilly Platt and Laure Brillaud | 5 February 2019 | |
School striking and Golden visas | ||||
55 | "The skies over Skopje" | Aleksandar Dimishkovski | 12 February 2019 | |
The most polluted city in Europe | ||||
56 | "The most isolated place on Earth" | Meganne Christian | 19 February 2019 | |
French-Italian research base in the Antarctic | ||||
57 | "The brands that Karl built" | Fiachra Gibbons | 26 February 2019 | |
The flaws, quirks and legacy of Karl Lagerfeld | ||||
58 | "They / Them / Theirs" | CN Lester and Mick ter Reehorst | 5 March 2019 | |
Transgender rights in Europe and getting the youth vote out #ProveThemWrong | ||||
59 | "A taste of the nuclear apocalypse" | Julie McDowall | 12 March 2019 | |
How Europe prepared for nuclear war | ||||
60 | "MEGALITHS!!!!" | Bettina Schulz Paulsson | 19 March 2019 | |
Unlocking the mystery of megalithic monuments | ||||
61 | "Political Tinder" | Sebastian Horn | 26 March 2019 | |
A project bringing Europeans from across the political spectrum together | ||||
62 | "Nice One, Slovakia" | Mimi Billing | 9 April 2019 | |
Microchipping humans | ||||
63 | "Disinformation Wars" | Jules Darmanin | 16 April 2019 | |
Continent-wide fact-checking | ||||
64 | "Lyra" | Susan McKay | 23 April 2019 | |
The murder of Lyra McKee | ||||
65 | "Happy Birthday Bauhaus!" | Henry Isaacs and Kurt Overbergh | 30 April 2019 | |
Anniversary of Bauhaus and new sounds in Brussels | ||||
66 | "Bananadrama" | Martyn Poliakoff | 7 May 2019 | |
Turning the periodic table upside down | ||||
67 | "Syria, Kosovo, Brussels and the mountain" | AJ Naddaff and Maxime Caligaro | 14 May 2019 | |
Kosovo repatriating ISIS fighters and a crime novel set in Brussels | ||||
68 | "Special episode: Bursting the Bubble, Part 1" | – | 21 May 2019 | |
Special episode explaining what the European Parliament actually does | ||||
69 | "The wars of the future" | Ulrike Franke | 28 May 2019 | |
Drones and 'killer robots' | ||||
70 | "Who won?" | Caroline de Gruyter | 4 June 2019 | |
Unpicking the results of the European elections | ||||
71 | "Europe needs culture" | André Wilkens | 11 June 2019 | |
Why Europeans need to get better at telling their own story | ||||
72 | "Sarajevo calling" | Aleksandar Brezar | 18 June 2019 | |
Bosnian politics | ||||
73 | "Eldorado" | Kai Maurer | 25 June 2019 | |
The cult European soap opera: Eldorado | ||||
74 | "Notes from Black Europe" | Johny Pitts | 2 July 2019 | |
What does it mean to be black in Europe? | ||||
75 | "Brave and competent women" | Benjamin Roll | 9 July 2019 | |
A growing Czech protest movement | ||||
76 | "Morals and the Mediterranean" | Matteo Villa | 16 July 2019 | |
Italian migration and the laws of the sea | ||||
77 | "When politicians talk about love" | Darren Cunningham | 23 July 2019 | |
Electronic opera about politics and love | ||||
78 | "Portugal's revolutionary drug policy" | Andreia Alves | 30 July 2019 | |
Decriminalisation of drugs in Portugal | ||||
79 | "Hiphopo" | Federico Gobbo | 6 August 2019 | |
The internet and Esperanto | ||||
80 | "Back for your Görlitzening pleasure" | Emily Schultheis | 10 September 2019 | |
Politics and Identity in the East of Germany | ||||
81 | "What the hell is the European Way of Life?" | Alberto Alemanno | 17 September 2019 | |
Looking at the first decisions of Ursula von der Leyen | ||||
82 | "The Tourists of Venice" | Elena Riu | 24 September 2019 | |
Venetian residents organising a fightback against overtourism | ||||
83 | "Podchraoladh" | Darach Ó Séaghdha | 1 October 2019 | |
The Irish language | ||||
84 | "Toxic elements" | Jaciek Dehnel | 8 October 2019 | |
LGBT rights in Poland | ||||
85 | "Invisible ink" | Carme Font Paz | 22 October 2019 | |
Remembering the female writers that Europe forgot | ||||
86 | "A Polish teenage diarist" | Ania Jakubek | 29 October 2019 | |
The extraordinary story of Renia Spiegel | ||||
87 | "Loggerheads" | Gabriel Paun | 5 November 2019 | |
Protecting Romanian forests against logging | ||||
88 | "The Other Europeans" | Orlando Figes | 12 November 2019 | |
A cultural history of 19th Century Europe | ||||
89 | "Postcards from Europe: Herstedvester" | Lene Bech Sillesen | 19 November 2019 | |
Special episode exploring a Greenlandic inmates in a Danish maximum-security prison | ||||
90 | "Europe's colonial past and present" | Elliot Ross | 26 November 2019 | |
How the colonial past of Europe continues to affect the present | ||||
91 | "President of the European what now?" | Tom Moylan | 3 December 2019 | |
Special episode explaining the European Commission | ||||
92 | "What's going on in Malta?" | Ranier Fsadni | 10 December 2019 | |
Investigating the murder of Daphne Caruana Galizia | ||||
93 | "A bar in Budapest" | Gyuri Bihari | 17 December 2019 | |
A bar at the centre of the fightback against Hungary's government |
No. | Title | Guest(s) | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|
94 | "A fisherman goes to Brussels" | Katz Laszlo | 8 January 2020 | |
Special episode telling the story of a Catalan fisherman influencing European policy | ||||
95 | "Why are monarchies still a thing in Europe?" | Bob Morris | 15 January 2020 | |
European monarchies | ||||
96 | "Fanya and the Forest" | Fanya Brancovskaja | 22 January 2020 | |
a 97-year-old holocaust survivor living in Vilnius | ||||
97 | "How the hell do you make an EU law?" | Katz Laszlo | 5 February 2020 | |
Explaining how the E.U. Single-Use Plastics directive was passed. | ||||
98 | "What just happened in Ireland?" | Naomi O'Leary | 12 February 2020 | |
Irish Election Results | ||||
99 | "Eurafrica" | Patrick Gathara | 19 February 2020 | |
Eurafrica: a forgotten post-war project | ||||
100 | "Why is Greece's refugee policy such a mess?" | Apostolis Fotiadis | 26 February 2020 | |
Migration researcher explains what is going wrong in Greece | ||||
101 | "The God Lobby" | Quentin Aries | 4 March 2020 | |
Religious lobbying in Europe | ||||
102 | "Long Distance" | Saara Turunen | 11 March 2020 | |
Cross-cultural relationships | ||||
103 | "Consent" | Emma Holten | 18 March 2020 | |
Revenge porn | ||||
104 | "Lakes and dogs" | Kapka Kassabova and Katz Laszlo | 25 March 2020 | |
Inner and outer geographies of the Balkans | ||||
105 | "Absolutely marble-lous" | Dion Bakker and Meganne Christian | 1 April 2020 | |
Jelle's Marble Runs and isolation tips | ||||
106 | "Poll-Land" | Ania Jakubek | 15 April 2020 | |
Politics of Poland | ||||
107 | "Normal and Boring" | Christoph Niemann | 22 April 2020 | |
visual essay about Estonia | ||||
108 | "The Other C-Words" | Esther Goodwin-Brown | 29 April 2020 | |
the Circle Economy | ||||
109 | "Quarantainment" | Noé Debré | 6 May 2020 | |
European Parliament | ||||
110 | "What is Russia doing at the bottom of the sea?" | Thomas Nilsen | 13 May 2020 | |
Russian submarine Losharik | ||||
111 | "Wikipedia's Missing Women" | Rebecca O'Neill | 20 May 2020 | |
Women in Red | ||||
112 | "Guide to a Non-Existent Country" | Giovanni Vale | 27 May 2020 | |
Guidebooks about countries that no longer exist | ||||
113 | "The Great Pull of China" | Tom Wan | 3 June 2020 | |
Europe's relationship with China | ||||
114 | "Why the Black Lives Matter protests are different in Europe" | Quinsy Gario | 10 June 2020 | |
Black Lives Matter | ||||
115 | "Recipes for rebellion" | Albena Shkodrova | 17 June 2020 | |
A history of food and cooking in the People's Republic of Bulgaria | ||||
116 | "Love, bees and brain surgery" | Rafael Loss | 24 June 2020 | |
European Solidarity Tracker from European Council on Foreign Relations | ||||
117 | "The Political Pianist" | Igor Levit | 1 July 2020 | |
Racism in Germany and performing during the coronavirus pandemic | ||||
118 | "George Soros, Explained" | Emily Tamkin | 8 July 2020 | |
George Soros | ||||
119 | "The Summer of Solidarity" | Natalie Nougayrède | 8 March 2020 | |
Europe's media landscape | ||||
120 | "The Chain, part one" | Andreea Sirbu, Thomas van Neerbos, and Veronica Tosetti | 6 August 2020 | |
What Europeans love about each other's countries | ||||
121 | "The Chain, part two" | Julie Lindahl, Sedera Ranaivoarinosy, and Marta Santiváñez | 14 August 2020 | |
What Europeans love about each other's countries | ||||
122 | "The Chain, part three" | Philip Pollak, Viola Theunissen, and Nina Lamparski | 19 August 2020 | |
What Europeans love about each other's countries | ||||
123 | "Italy's past, Europe's future" | Francesca Melandri | 9 September 2020 | |
Europe and Italy | ||||
124 | "The women of Belarus" | Hanna Liubakova | 16 September 2020 | |
Belarus protest movement | ||||
125 | "Make Europe Romantic Again" | Simon Strauß | 23 September 2020 | |
Stories of Europe | ||||
126 | "Poison, puffins and the people's game" | Eniola Aluko | 30 September 2020 | |
Being a woman in European football | ||||
127 | "The oat milk question" | Fredrik Gertten | 7 October 2020 | |
Oatly and Blackstone | ||||
128 | "The One Where We Interview A Prime Minister" | Aava Murto | 14 October 2020 | |
16-year-old becomes Finland's PM for a day | ||||
129 | "The House of Many Languages" | Alexander Drechsel | 21 October 2020 | |
Euro English | ||||
130 | "A war on the edge of Europe" | Arzu Geybulla | 28 October 2020 | |
Nagorno-Karabakh | ||||
131 | "A non-election podcast" | Nikolay Staykov | 4 November 2020 | |
Corruption in Bulgaria | ||||
132 | "A hot mess of an airport" | Jöran Mandik | 11 November 2020 | |
Berlin's Brandenburg Airport | ||||
133 | "France's Invisible Asians" | Grace Ly | 18 November 2020 | |
Food and Racism in France | ||||
134 | "A country of dreamers" | Aliona Rotaru | 25 November 2020 | |
Exodus from Moldova | ||||
135 | "An unsung hero" | Ola Cichowlas | 2 December 2020 | |
Story of Janina Garbień | ||||
136 | "Philip and Laci" | Philip Pollak | 9 December 2020 | |
Conversation with a classmate who is a member of a far-right group | ||||
137 | "'Twas Christmas Eve in Dublin" | Richy Craven and Darach Ó Séaghdha | 16 December 2020 | |
Christmas story from Marks and Spencer |
No. | Title | Guest(s) | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|
138 | "Life after Merkel" | Wolfgang Munchau | 13 January 2021 | |
Germany after Merkel | ||||
139 | "The mafia on trial" | Federico Varese | 20 January 2021 | |
'Ndrangheta maxi-trial | ||||
140 | "The Shell Case" | Anoek Nuyens | 27 January 2021 | |
Climate Justice in the Netherlands | ||||
141 | "Taming Big Tech" | Andrii Degeler | 3 February 2021 | |
EU regulating the internet | ||||
142 | "The weird and wonderful world of eels" | Patrik Svensson | 10 February 2021 | |
The Gospel of the Eels | ||||
143 | "Decolonising Kitchens" | Asma Khan | 17 February 2021 | |
Border-crossing food | ||||
144 | "A polyphonic episode" | Timothy Garton Ash | 24 February 2021 | |
Europe's Stories | ||||
145 | "Poland's abortion fight" | Marta Lempart | 11 March 2021 | |
All-Poland Women's Strike | ||||
146 | "Headscarves & Eurovision" | Inès El-Shikh | 18 March 2021 | |
Referendum on face-coverings in Switzerland | ||||
147 | "The Great Reverse Migration" | Ognyan Georgiev | 25 March 2021 | |
Reverse migration during the pandemic | ||||
148 | "The power of Romanian teenagers" | Sofia Scarlat | 1 April 2021 | |
Girl Up Romania | ||||
149 | "Trains!" | Lorenzo Ferrari | 8 April 2021 | |
European rail connections | ||||
150 | "The Northern Ireland Knowledge Gap" | Tim Mc Inerney | 15 April 2021 | |
Riots in Northern Ireland | ||||
151 | "Realo Greens and Fake Palm Trees" | Joanna Rajkowska | 22 April 2021 | |
A Palm Tree in Warsaw | ||||
152 | "Cheese Diplomacy" | Natalie Lamprou | 29 April 2021 | |
Halloumi awarded Protected Designation of Origin | ||||
153 | "Unravelling a Scandal" | Răzvan Luțac | 16 May 2021 | |
Corruption in Romania as featured in Collective (2019 film) | ||||
154 | "The bear, the prince and the streaming giant" | Jérôme Dechesne | 13 May 2021 | |
Is Netflix creating a shared culture in the EU? | ||||
155 | "Inventing an Alphabet" | Maria Doreuli and Krista Radoeva | 20 May 2021 | |
A celebration of Cyrillic writing | ||||
156 | "Josh and Franco" | Giosuè Prezioso | 27 May 2021 | |
Father and son coming of age | ||||
157 | "Thinker, Plaintiff, Merkel, Spy" | George Blaustein and Sander Pleij | 3 June 2021 | |
Creating a European Review of Books | ||||
158 | "The best rainy city in the world" | Jens Thoms Ivarsson | 10 June 2021 | |
Rain Gothernburg | ||||
159 | "The plastics law, revisited" | Katz Laszlo | 17 June 2021 | |
"How the hell do you make an EU law?" | ||||
160 | "The women who built Europe" | Mary Fitzgerald and Francesca Cavallo | 24 June 2021 | |
"How the hell do you make an EU law?" | ||||
161 | "Denisa" | Denisa | 1 July 2021 | |
Freedom of movement in action | ||||
162 | "Bread Week" | Apollonia Poilâne | 8 July 2021 | |
Secrets of sourdough | ||||
163 | "Europe's next illiberal democracy?" | Aljaž Pengov Bitenc | 15 July 2021 | |
State of democracy in Slovenia | ||||
164 | "Is Friday the new Saturday" | Pedro Gomes | 9 September 2021 | |
The four day week | ||||
165 | "The Belarus solidarity algorithm" | Hanna Komar | 16 September 2021 | |
Solidarity among women in Belarus | ||||
166 | "Submarines and rainbow families" | Beatriz Ríos | 23 September 2021 | |
Ursula von der Leyen's State of the Union | ||||
167 | "The last 250 years of Amsterdam – Live at the Tolhuistuin" | Thomas Lamers | 28 September 2021 | |
Reflecting on the end of Amsterdam | ||||
168 | "The château, the walrus and the rogue Danish artist" | Arndt Leininger | 7 October 2021 | |
German election | ||||
169 | "What the hell just happened in Poland?" | Jakub Jaraczewski | 14 October 2021 | |
Poland's Constitutional Court | ||||
170 | "Will Europe's climate policy save us all?" | Emily Stewart | 21 October 2021 | |
Fit for 55? | ||||
171 | "Sara" | Sara | 4 November 2021 | |
Trahana | ||||
172 | "Trapped at the EU border" | Marta Górczyńska | 11 November 2021 | |
Humanitarian crisis on Poland/Belarus border | ||||
173 | "Pushbacks" | Andrei Popoviciu | 18 November 2021 | |
Accusations of pushbacks on the border of Europe | ||||
174 | "Move Fast and Fix Things" | Guillermo Beltrà | 25 November 2021 | |
EU's plan to rein in the tech giants | ||||
175 | "The Subtle Art of Subtitling" | Max Deryagin | 2 December 2021 | |
Subtitling on streaming services | ||||
176 | "The life of a reindeer herder" | Jannie Staffansson | 9 December 2021 | |
Sámi people herding reindeer | ||||
177 | "The Europeans' Christmas Party!" | Wojciech Oleksiak and Katz Laszlo | 16 December 2021 | |
European Christmas traditions |
No. | Title | Guest(s) | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|
178 | "Energy bills, bills, bills" | Marine Cornelis | 20 January 2022 | |
Rising energy bills | ||||
179 | "Malta's abortion taboo" | Liza Caruana-Finkel | 27 January 2022 | |
Malta's strict abortion ban. | ||||
180 | "The Case for Colour" | Taryn de Vere | 3 February 2022 | |
Object Dress Challenge | ||||
181 | "A Whale of a Taxonomy" | Emma Ursich | 10 February 2022 | |
Revamping the Procuratie Vecchie | ||||
182 | "WTF, housing market?" | Cody Hochstenbach | 17 February 2022 | |
Europe's housing crisis | ||||
183 | "Let Them Entertain Us" | Elise Phamgia and Janine Cathrein | 24 February 2022 | |
Live Music Industry Europe | ||||
184 | "Army Boots" | Olesya Khromeychuk | 2 March 2022 | |
The human cost of war in Ukraine | ||||
185 | "Voice notes from Ukraine" | Multiple | 14 March 2022 | |
Voice notes from Ukrainians | ||||
186 | "Finnish Lessons" | Pasi Sahlberg | 7 April 2022 | |
Public education in Finland | ||||
187 | "Katy went to Le Pen's party so you didn't have to" | Katy Lee | 12 April 2022 | |
French Presidential Election | ||||
188 | "Can the EU fix fast fashion?" | Nimue Smit | 21 April 2022 | |
EU fast fashion legislation | ||||
189 | "Mohamed" | Mohamed | 28 April 2022 | |
Life as an undoocmented person in Amsterdam | ||||
190 | "Doctor Eurovision" | Dr Dean Vuletic | 5 May 2022 | |
Eurovision preview | ||||
191 | "Solar-Powered Scrolling" | Kris de Decker | 12 May 2022 | |
Solar-powered magazine | ||||
192 | "Moldova's Propaganda Problem" | Diana Filimon | 26 May 2022 | |
Propaganda in Moldova | ||||
193 | "Hanna" | Hanna Komar | 2 June 2022 | |
A story about the meaning of freedom | ||||
194 | "What is Orbán playing at?" | Viktória Serdült | 9 June 2022 | |
Negotiating EU sanctions against Russia | ||||
195 | "It takes more than two, baby" | Remco Yizhak Cooremans | 16 June 2022 | |
Multi-parenting families | ||||
196 | "Your Face Looks Familiar" | Domen Savič | 30 June 2022 | |
Facial recognition technology | ||||
197 | "The bigger the better?" | Dr. Ilke Toygür | 7 July 2022 | |
EU enlargement | ||||
198 | "Farmers, fossils and files" | Janez Potočnik | 14 July 2022 | |
Global food crisis | ||||
199 | "Bad laws and feta wars" | Una Hajdari and Gregory Warner | 21 July 2022 | |
North Macedonia and Rough Translation | ||||
200 | "Episode 200! Sweden's elections and a guy who used to run a country" | Alexander Stubb | 15 September 2022 | |
Europe's current and future leaders | ||||
201 | "The joys of the early internet" | Marie Le Conte | 22 September 2022 | |
The generation that grew up alongside the internet | ||||
202 | "What the hell just happened in Italy?" | Lorenzo Marsili | 29 September 2022 | |
Italian election result analysis | ||||
203 | "Golden passports, anal beads, and the world's most complicated elections" | Aleksandar Brezar | 6 October 2022 | |
Bosnia and Herzegovina election result analysis | ||||
204 | "Hacked by Hungary" | Szabolcs Panyi | 13 October 2022 | |
Pegasus spyware | ||||
205 | "Kinga" | Kinga | 20 October 2022 | |
A story from an isolated corner of Georgia | ||||
206 | "The one where we take over the European Parliament" | Roberta Metsola and Silja Markkula | 3 November 2022 | |
A youth activism bootcamp in Brussels |
Guy Maurice Marie Louise Verhofstadt is a Belgian liberal politician and an advocate of a Federal Europe. He is a former prime minister of Belgium. He has been a member of the European Parliament (MEP) from Belgium since 2009.
Nigel Paul Farage is a British broadcaster and former politician who was Leader of the UK Independence Party (UKIP) from 2006 to 2009 and 2010 to 2016 and Leader of the Brexit Party from 2019 to 2021. He was Member of the European Parliament (MEP) for South East England from 1999 until the United Kingdom's exit from the EU in 2020. He was the host of The Nigel Farage Show, a radio phone-in on the Global-owned talk radio station LBC, from 2017 to 2020. Farage is currently the Honorary President of Reform UK and a presenter for GB News.
Robert Lee Jr. is an American stand-up comedian, actor, and podcaster. From 2001 to 2009, Lee was a cast member on MADtv, and he co-starred in the ABC single-camera sitcom series Splitting Up Together alongside Jenna Fischer and Oliver Hudson between 2018 and 2019. Lee has also appeared in the films Harold & Kumar Go to White Castle (2004), Pineapple Express (2008), and The Dictator (2012). He had a guest appearance as the cynical, burned-out Dr. Kang on FX on Hulu's TV comedy series Reservation Dogs.
Roderick James Nugent Stewart is a British academic, diplomat, author, broadcaster, former soldier and former politician. He is the president of GiveDirectly and was a visiting fellow at Yale University's Jackson Institute for Global Affairs, where he taught politics and international relations. He hosts the podcast The Rest is Politics with Alastair Campbell. Previously, Stewart served as a minister in four different departments of the UK Government. He then became a Cabinet minister as Secretary of State for International Development from May to July 2019. He served as Member of Parliament (MP) for Penrith and The Border from 2010 to 2019.
Olivia "Liv" Boeree is a British science communicator, television presenter and former professional poker player. She is a World Series of Poker and European Poker Tour champion, and is the only female player in history to win both a WSOP bracelet and an EPT event. Boeree is a 3× winner of the Global Poker Index European Female Player of the year. As of September 2021, having retired in late 2019, Boeree still ranks among the top ten women in poker history in terms of all-time money winnings.
Katherine Frances Brand, known as Katy Brand, is an English actress, comedian and writer, known for her ITV2 series Katy Brand's Big Ass Show and for Comedy Lab Slap on Channel 4.
Kevin Michael McHale is an American actor, singer, and dancer. Formerly one of the two lead vocalists of the boy band NLT, McHale is best known for his role as Artie Abrams in the Fox musical comedy-drama series Glee, for which he was nominated for a Grammy Award, three Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Comedy Series and two Teen Choice Awards. From 2014 to 2016, he hosted the British panel show Virtually Famous on E4. In 2019, McHale and Glee co-star Jenna Ushkowitz began a podcast called Showmance, where they recap Glee episodes and interview Glee cast and crew members, as well as other people. The podcast was rebranded in 2022 as And That’s What You Really Missed on iHeartRadio.
American Ninja Warrior is an American sports entertainment reality show based on the Japanese television reality show Sasuke. It features thousands of competitors attempting to complete series of obstacle courses of increasing difficulty in various cities across the United States, in hopes of advancing to the national finals on the Las Vegas Strip and becoming the season's "American Ninja Warrior".
The Istituto Affari Internazionali (IAI) (English: Institute of International Affairs) is an Italian international relations think tank, and non-profit organisation founded in 1965 by Altiero Spinelli. It is ranked among the global top-20 think tanks in the "Foreign Policy and International Relations" category, according to the 2020 Global Go To Think Tank Index.
Kumail Ali Nanjiani is a Pakistani-American stand-up comedian and actor. He is known for his role as Dinesh in the HBO comedy series Silicon Valley (2014–2019) and for co-writing and starring in the romantic comedy film The Big Sick (2017). For co-writing the latter with his wife, Emily V. Gordon, he was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay. In 2018, Time magazine named him one of the 100 most influential people in the world.
Brexit was the withdrawal of the United Kingdom (UK) from the European Union (EU) at 23:00 GMT on 31 January 2020. The UK is the only sovereign country to have left the EU. The UK had been a member state of the EU or its predecessor the European Communities (EC), sometimes of both at the same time, since 1 January 1973. Following Brexit, EU law and the Court of Justice of the European Union no longer have primacy over British laws, except in select areas in relation to Northern Ireland. The European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018 retains relevant EU law as domestic law, which the UK can now amend or repeal. Under the terms of the Brexit withdrawal agreement, Northern Ireland continues to participate in the European Single Market in relation to goods, and to be a de facto member of the EU Customs Union.
Serial is an investigative journalism podcast hosted by Sarah Koenig, narrating a nonfiction story over multiple episodes. The series was co-created and is co-produced by Koenig and Julie Snyder and developed by This American Life; as of July 2020, it is owned by The New York Times.
Riverdale is an American supernatural horror crime drama television series based on the characters of Archie Comics. The series was adapted for The CW by Archie Comics' chief creative officer Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa, and is produced by Warner Bros. Television and CBS Studios, in association with Berlanti Productions and Archie Comics. Conceived as a feature film adaptation for Warner Bros. Pictures, the idea was re-imagined as a television series for Fox. In 2015, development on the project moved to The CW, where the series was ordered for a pilot. Filming takes place in Vancouver, British Columbia.
The New European is a British pan-European weekly political and cultural newspaper and website. Launched in July 2016 as a response to the United Kingdom's 2016 EU referendum, its readership is aimed at those who voted to remain within the European Union, with the newspaper's original tagline being "The New Pop-up Paper for the 48%". Formerly owned by Archant, it was announced at the beginning of February 2021 that a consortium including founder Matt Kelly, media executive Mark Thompson and former Financial Times editor Lionel Barber had acquired the newspaper.
People's Vote was a United Kingdom campaign group that unsuccessfully campaigned for a second referendum following the UK's Brexit vote to leave the European Union (EU) in 2016. The group was launched in April 2018 at which four Members of Parliament spoke, along with the actor Patrick Stewart and other public figures.
Oh God, What Now? formally known as Remainiacs, is a British hour-long weekly political podcast about Brexit, speaking from the pro-Remain point of view. It was started on 26 May 2017 as Remainiacs after the European Union membership referendum as "a no-holds-barred podcast for everyone who won't shut up about Brexit". In October 2020, Remainiacs was renamed "Oh God, What Now?", due to the nature of Brexit making the unlikelihood of re-joining and changing nature of the British government.
Femi Oluwole is a British political activist and co-founder of the pro-European Union advocacy group Our Future Our Choice (OFOC). He has appeared as an activist and commentator on British television. He has written for The Independent, The Guardian and The Metro.
Reform UK is a right-wing populist political party in the United Kingdom. It was founded with support from Nigel Farage in November 2018 as the Brexit Party, advocating hard Euroscepticism and a no-deal Brexit, and was briefly a significant political force in 2019. After Brexit, it was renamed to Reform UK in January 2021, and became primarily an anti-lockdown party during the COVID-19 pandemic. Subsequently, in December 2022, it began campaigning on broader right-wing populist themes during the British cost-of-living crisis. Its greatest electoral success was as the Brexit Party, which won 29 seats and the largest share of the national vote in the 2019 European Parliament election.
Brexitcast is a British political talkshow and television programme produced by BBC Radio 5 Live and BBC News. It was launched on 5 June 2017 following the success of Electioncast, a podcast that had covered that year's general election. Originally aired on radio, it was announced on 3 June 2019 that Brexitcast had been commissioned as a television programme for BBC One. It was the first BBC podcast to be commissioned for television.
Voxeurop is a multilingual news website aimed at European audiences. Voxeurop was launched in 2014, after the demise of Presseurop.