To dissect a good joke, do you have to kill it?
Perhaps the most futile of all questions is why some things make us laugh, which doesn’t bode well for BBC…
ByReviewing politics
and culture since 1913
Perhaps the most futile of all questions is why some things make us laugh, which doesn’t bode well for BBC…
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Listening to musicians discuss their best travel experiences is both magical and otherworldly.
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The tenth series of Rufus Hound’s hit show opens with Jane Horrocks and an adventurous “coming of age” holiday to Sorrento.
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In this episode, authors Sarah Perry and Sinéad Gleeson reflect on how their relationships with their bodies have changed over lockdown.
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Does it move more slowly when we experience pain? Do we really see things “in slow motion” during a sudden…
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Episodes can be heavy in subject matter or dovetail with broader topical issues – the Windrush scandal, Brexit and Covid-19…
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Phil Tinline digs through history, journalism, fiction and film to try to understand why the idea of being “in on”…
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This four-episode series mixes winking chats between Keyes and Tara Flynn, with readings from Keyes’s non-fiction work.
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Although it covers important and sensitive issues, Chloe Combi’s “You Don’t Know Me” can feel exploitative in its approach.
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In this three-part adaptation of Tess of the D’Urbervilles, Tess relates her own story in a series of first-person monologues.…
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