Late Night Live - Separate stories podcast
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Late Night Live - Separate stories podcast
Incisive analysis, fearless debates and nightly surprises. Explore the serious, the strange and the profound with David Marr. This LNL podcast contains the stories in separate episodes. Subscribe to the full podcast wherever you get your podcasts.
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516 episoderPsst: the Irish love a conspiracy theory
The Irish have high trust in government, and, also, a surprisingly widespread belief in conspiracy theories. What explains the Irish appetite for cons...
Why is it so hard to make Australian TV?
The amount of money going towards subsidising Australian film and TV has gone way up over the last two decades. The number of hours being made has gon...
Lost Vanuatu numbering system
In the early 2000s, esteemed Australian archaeologist Matthew Spriggs made a promise to the community of Aneityum, an island of Vanuatu: he would try...
Armageddon briefings: US Troops told Iran war is 'God’s plan'
US military commanders have been invoking extremist Christian rhetoric about biblical “end times” to justify involvement in the Iran war to troops. A...
Bruce Shapiro's USA: Noem, no more
Will the war in Iran be long or short? According to Donald Trump: both, depending on what day you ask him. Plus, new and scandalous allegations from t...
Power, crime, and money: the rise of the global mafia
In Mafia: A Global History, Ryan Gingeras draws on more than a decade of research to uncover this suppressed underworld history. Crossing centuries an...
Why France is backing Lebanon in the Middle East War
“For Lebanon we must act,” said French President Emmanuel Macron last week. “Everything must be done to prevent this country, so close to France, from...
Anna Henderson's Canberra: Albanese's call for de-escalation in Middle East
Australia's military capabilities are in focus as the government decides how it can assist Gulf states facing an Iranian retaliatory strike, amid the...
Australia's oldest continuously used library turns 200
The State Library of NSW has had to adapt its collections and philosophy over the years, becoming both a foundation of, and mirror to, broader societa...
Yanis Varoufakis on the Iran war, drug charges & cancelling Adelaide Writers' Week
Yanis Varoufakis sits down with David Marr to reflect on the war on Iran, the failures of the Democracy in Europe Movement, cancelling his appearance...
In conversation with the UK's Ian Dunt
For the first time, Late Night Live UK political commentator Ian Dunt, meets David Marr in person. In this special hour-long conversation, Dunt explor...
Australia's first desert people
Sometimes described as a 'phantom population', because so little is known about them, the first settlers across the arid interior of Australia are com...
Batteries, and the power they have over us
The green energy future depends on batteries. But batteries are not exactly a low-footprint technology; a massive mining and industrial operation will...
Gideon Levy on Israel's objectives in Iran, Lebanon, and the broader Middle East
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio has said the US bombing of Iran had to happen because they had intelligence that Israel was about to take action. He...
Behind the bestseller: feuds, failures, and publishing mishaps
Behind every great book lies a story — and sometimes, it’s a disaster. In When Books Go Bad, Alexander Johnson uncovers the scandalous mishaps that ha...
Trump attacks Iran: the view from inside America
President Trump has put the United States, and the world, into an unpredictable situation: a war without a clear rationale, and without a clear end. I...
Anna Henderson's Canberra: Australia and the Iran war
Our regular Canberra correspondent dissects the careful language being used by the Australian Government, in the wake of the US and Israel's surprise...
Bob Carr on suddenly losing his wife Helena
Former NSW Premier and former Federal Minister for Foreign Affairs Bob Carr and his wife Helena were almost inseparable. When she suddenly died, while...
High Court rules the Catholic Church is liable for a priest's abuse
A NSW man who suffered sexual abuse at the hands of a priest in the late 1960’s when he was 13, has won his High Court battle over liability, but had...
Bruce Shapiro's USA: the State of the Union address
US President Donald Trump has just given his State of the Union address, saying America is winning so much they don't know what do. But who believes h...
Water in 2026: will Australia learn from our mistakes?
Australia's last big drought was from 2017 to 2019; a relatively short drought, but a vicious one. Water storage levels in Sydney dropped by 50% in ju...
What do Mawson's diaries reveal about the Flinders Ranges in South Australia?
As well as his Antarctic work, the explorer Sir Douglas Mawson had a deep interest in the Flinders Ranges. A team has been working for years to deciph...
A new treaty for the High Seas
Ocean advocates call it 'the most exciting thing that's happened this century'. The lawless High Seas have a new international Treaty - the UN's High...
What can and can't the Royal Commission on Antisemitism and Social Cohesion decide?
As the Royal Commission on Antisemitism and Social Cohesion gets underway, legal writer Richard Ackland discusses what the Commission can and can't co...
Former New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark: The UN has a woman problem
A new report from the group GWL voices (Global.Women.Leaders) has highlighted the scarcity of women at the top of international organisations, across...
Anna Henderson's Canberra: ISIS women and Australian values
As the debate continues over what to do about the Australian ISIS women and children in Syria, Anna Henderson discusses the current political obsessio...
The end of the gay rights revolution?
The LGBTQI rights movement in the West has succeeded beyond its wildest dreams, but gay author Ronan McRea argues this success seems suddenly fragile...
The end of the gay rights revolution?
The LGBTQI rights movement in the West has succeeded beyond its wildest dreams, but gay author Ronan McRea argues this success seems suddenly fragile...
Immigrant labour from the Pacific: are we getting it right?
With political rhetoric around immigration firing up again, we look at the great potential, but very real problems, of a temporary migration policy, P...
Deflect, distract, deny: how politicians avoid direct answers
The best political communicators don’t just speak, they position. They don’t just answer, they frame. They don’t just promise, they hedge. A look at...
The return of Germany as a military power
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine was a Zeitenwende, a “watershed moment”, in the words of Germany’s chancellor at the time. Germany shook itself out of it...
Ian Dunt's UK: is Keir Starmer's leadership is risk?
UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer's has spruiked Britain's necessity to be closer to Europe, both in defence and economic terms, at the Munich Security C...
How green are green burials?
Knowing that your body is contributing to the growth of a tree or the richness of soil is increasingly attractive. But the healthier climate claims ma...
Washington tightens grip as Cuba faces mounting crisis
Whether former President Donald Trump will strike a deal with Cuba remains an open question, as pressure on Havana intensifies. Trump has signalled th...
Democracy for sale: gambling’s grip on politics
While Australians lose over $31 billion to gambling each year, industry donations to major political parties continue. Over the past decade, millions...
The music of the stars, with the "founding mother" of asteroseismology
Conny Aerts had a hunch, that stars had internal rotation and measuring those rotations could give us rich information about the universe. She was rig...
Jimmy Lai, Hong Kong's voice of freedom, will die in prison
The Hong Kong publisher Jimmy Lai will die in prison, after being sentenced to 20 years. Lai is one of the island's most prominent pro-democracy advoc...
Anna Henderson's Canberra: what to expect from the new Liberal leadership
The new Opposition leader Angus Taylor and deputy Liberal leader Jane Hume are flagging their crisis plan will involve lowering taxes and immigration,...
Anna Henderson's Canberra: what to expect from the new Coalition leadership
The new Opposition leader Angus Taylor and deputy leader Jane Hume are hinting their crisis plan will involve lowering taxes and immigration, possibly...
Steven Pinker on common knowledge... and common delusion
In his new book, Steven Pinker asks us to look at how group knowledge works. Pinker argues that what drives society is knowing that what we know is wi...