The Late Edition
Latest Episodes
563
Jeffrey Kofman and Matthew Jamison discuss the day’s top stories, we head to Benin to talk contemporary art and Caleb Lauer reviews new Turkish film ‘Yunus Emre: Askın Sesi’.
562
Gavin MacFadyen and Stewart Purvis discuss the day’s top news, we check in with our Eastern Mediterranean correspondent and Tristan McAllister previews an ambitious redesign of New York’s iconic MoMA building.
561
Shashank Joshi and James Boys discuss the day’s top news stories, we check in with our Milan correspondent and Melanie Gerlis explains why art is a risky investment.
560
Martin Plaut and Rachel Shabi review the day’s top news stories. We also check in with our man in Ukraine, learn the allure of art fakes and forgeries and preview the imminent Cairo International Book Fair.
559
Robert Fox and John Everard discuss the day’s top news stories, Huw Thomas of Foster + Partners explains the firm’s sky-high cycle proposal for London and Matt Wolf reviews the holiday’s theatre highs and lows.
558
Monocle Nairobi correspondent Tristan McConnell and editor of Think Africa Press James Schneider report on the growing violence in South Sudan, Xenia Dormandy of Chatham House explains why the US foreign policy could put the world at risk, and Shashank Joshi of RUSI sets the day’s news agenda.
557
Ahead of the 25th anniversary of the Lockerbie bombing, transport editor Tristan McAllister assesses how aviation has changed; author of ‘Megrahi: You are my Jury’, John Ashton, discusses how he thinks the trial of the bomber was incompetent. Plus: editor in chief Tyler Brûlé looks back at the design developments…
556
The deputy head of UN peacekeeping operations in South Sudan, Toby Lanzer, reports from Juba with journalist Andrew Green on the recent unrest; Emma Vickers of Global Witness assesses the economics of oil between north and south. Plus: Rachel Shabi sets the day’s news agenda from the Middle East and…
555
A look at France’s requests more European military support in the Central African Republic, we hear from Jerusalem where storms – both political and meteorological – have been battering the West Bank, and check in with a Parisian retrospective of Cartier’s most iconic jewellery designs.
