Confessions with Giles Fraser - UnHerd

Confessions with Giles Fraser - UnHerd

By UnHerd

UnHerd columnist Giles Fraser talks to distinguished guests about how their beliefs shape who they are.

Episodes

Michael Ignatieff's Confessions — Liberalism, populism and multiculturalism

Giles chats to the former leader of the Canadian Liberal Party and now rector of the Central European University, Michael Ignatieff, about how his family went from Russian nobles to Canadian refugees, why the Brexit debate was good for the UK's democracy and what threat populism poses to liberalism.
11/05/2056m 18s

Jonathan Aitken's Confessions — Parliament, prison and prayer

Giles chats to former MP and convict and now ordained chaplin, Jonathan Aitken, about the importance of diversity in politics, the power of forgiveness and how a tweet led him to become ordained.
27/04/2049m 22s

Nicky Gumbel's Confessions — Family, faith and finding God

In a Good Friday special, Giles chats to Anglican priest and pioneer of the Alpha Course Nicky Gumbel about the moment he changed from atheist to a Christian, why his father never talked about his being Jewish and doubting God after tragically losing his best friend.
10/04/201h 5m

Mervyn King's Confessions — Crises, capital and coronavirus

Giles talks to former Governor of the Bank of England Mervyn King about why economists don't understand human nature, what caused the 2008 financial crisis and the mistake both sides made in the Brexit referendum.
30/03/201h 6m

Johnathan Sacks's Confessions — Capitalism, community and covenant

Giles talks to former Chief Rabbi Jonathan Sacks about the power of community, antisemitism in the 21st century and the 72-hour bus journey across America that changed his life.
16/03/2057m 36s

Richard Layard's Confessions — History, happiness and mental health

In a 'Blue Monday' special, Giles talks to economist and happiness expert Richard Layard about his journey from the humanities to science, why individualism is making us depressed and how we can be more happy.
20/01/201h 13m

Charles Moore's Confessions — Thatcher, theology and the Tories

Giles talks to Margaret Thatcher's biographer and former Telegraph editor Charles Moore about becoming a Catholic, how the BBC licence fee is dividing 'somewheres' and 'anywheres' and why he's never liked the Conservative Party.
13/01/2048m 17s

Jonathan Sumption's Confessions — Rights, rhetoric and rationalism

Giles talks to historian and former Supreme Court Justice Jonathan Sumption about leaving academia behind for a career in law, the problem with human rights and the art of persuasion.
06/01/201h 12m

Helen Thompson's Confessions — Elections, economics and Euroscepticism

Giles talks to Professor of Political Economy Helen Thompson about not fitting in at Warwick University Labour Club, why Margaret Thatcher would have voted Leave and what to look out for in politics in 2020.
30/12/1957m 45s

Susan Hill's Confessions — Christmas, children and coping with grief

In a Christmas special, Giles chats to novelist Susan Hill about writing ghost stories, the coffin maker who taught her how to whistle and losing her 5-week-old daughter.
23/12/1959m 22s

Patrick Deneen's Confessions – Wendell Berry, working class Tories and why liberalism failed

Giles talks to political theorist Patrick Deneen about why liberalism has failed, how the Conservatives became the party of the working class and the revolution yet to come.
16/12/1959m 11s

Jonathan Rowson's Confessions — Chess, concentration and climate change

Giles chats to philosopher and chess grandmaster Jonathan Rowson about the beauty of chess, the importance of spirituality and why the political spectrum is fake news.
09/12/191h

Andrew Sullivan's Confessions — Catholicism, coming out and Jeremy Corbyn

Giles talks to author and political commentator Andrew Sullivan about his troubled home life, how moving to America liberated him and why Jeremy Corbyn is the real 'Britain Trump'.
02/12/191h 5m

George Monbiot's Confessions — Boarding school, the BBC and Extinction Rebellion

Giles chats to environmental activist and "professional troublemaker" George Monbiot about the horrors of boarding school, why he's a eurosceptic Remainer and how he escaped a near-death experience in Indonesia.
25/11/1954m 25s

Yoram Hazony's Confessions – Nationalism, Imperialism, and Israel

In a special episode recorded in Jerusalem, Israeli philosopher Yoram Hazony tells Giles about the time he almost quit working for Benjamin Netanyahu, why the English are most parallel to Israelis and what he is most theologically afraid of.
30/09/1956m 30s

Elif Shafak's Confessions – Populism, polarities and post-truth fiction

Giles chats to Turkish author Elif Shafak, whose latest novel is shortlisted for the Booker Prize, about being a citizen of the world, the dangers of populism and why fiction is more important now than ever.
16/09/1954m 53s

Alan Johnson's Confessions - London, Labour and leadership

Giles chats to Alan Johnson, former Labour MP and Shadow Chancellor about growing up, being a postman and Jeremy Corbyn's Labour Party.
09/09/1955m 37s

Jesse Norman’s Confessions – Capitalism, Conservatism and proroguing parliament

Giles chats to Jesse Norman MP about the compatibility of conservativism and capitalism, what we get wrong about Adam Smith and if the proroguing of parliament really is a coup.
02/09/1939m 7s

Larry Siedentop's Confessions – Liberalism, localism and populism

Giles talks with Sir Larry Siedentop, Oxford philosopher and author of 'Inventing the Individual: The Origins of Western Liberalism', about being taught by Isaiah Berlin, how Brexit is going to federalise the UK and why liberalism isn't dead yet.
26/08/1948m 49s

Julia Hartley-Brewer's Confessions – Brexit, burqas and bad parenting

Giles talks to broadcaster and journalist Julia Hartley-Brewer about being an atheist, working in a nightclub at 14 and why she doesn't agree with Margaret Thatcher.
19/08/1958m 15s

Kate Hoey's Confessions – Labour, Leave.EU and life after Parliament

Giles talks to Labour MP for Vauxhall and long-standing Brexiteer, Kate Hoey, about the future of the Labour Party, meeting Nigel Farage on a boat and her plans for retirement.
12/08/1953m 20s

Reverend Richard Coles's Confessions – Punk, pop and priesthood

Giles chats with former member of 80s pop band The Communards turned Vicar Richard Coles about finding faith, facing the black dog and being a curate in the highest voting Leave constituency.
05/08/1952m 49s

Simon Heffer's Confessions – Boris Johnson, the Brexit Party and the Battle of the Somme

Giles talks to journalist and historian Simon Heffer about inventing the 'Essex man', why he voted for the Brexit Party and what it's like to work with Boris Johnson.
29/07/1954m 11s

Katharine Birbalsingh's Confessions – Discipline, diversity and the danger of mobile phones

Giles chats to the education reformer and headteacher dubbed "Britain's strictest headmistress", Katharine Birbalsingh, about knife crime, bad education, and why ethnic minorities should be swing voters.
22/07/1955m 56s

Andrew Doyle's Confessions - Free speech, the far-Right and Titania McGrath

Giles talks to the man behind Twitter's woke queen Titania McGrath about coming out at 18, being a hero of the far-Right and why individualism is more important than identity politics.
11/06/1958m 27s

Jon Lansman's Confessions - Live at HowTheLightGetsIn

In a live recording at HowTheLightGetsIn Festival, Giles talks to Momentum founder and Labour Party activist Jon Lansman about the European Elections, losing his wife to cancer, and cleaning chicken coops in an Israeli kibbutz.
03/06/1940m 5s

Mary Beard's Confessions - Teaching, Twitter and trigger warnings

Giles speaks to classicist Mary Beard about the ethnic diversity of Roman Britain, why there's more to democracy than just voting and how it feels when the Twitter mob comes after you.
20/05/191h 2m

Kehinde Andrews's Confessions - Corbyn, colonialism and the case against Martin Luther King

Giles talks to Kehinde Andrews, the first ever professor of black studies, about discovering black psychology, why the EU is racist and his grandmother's letter from Robert Mugabe.
13/05/1955m 18s

Peter Hitchens's Confessions - Boarding school, Bolsheviks and Bible burning

Giles speaks to columnist and author Peter Hitchens about motorways, leaving the Communist party, and why changing your mind will lose you friends.
06/05/1953m 34s

Paul Mason's Confessions - Class, culture and Charlie Parker

Giles chats with journalist, film-maker and author Paul Mason about his musical family, why neoliberalism killed culture and the socialist ideal of cricket on a summer's evening.
29/04/191h 2m

Yotam Ottolenghi's Confessions - Apricots, academics and cultural appropriation

Giles chats with Israeli chef, food writer and restaurateur Yotam Ottolenghi about ham sandwiches, swapping 'futile' academia for cooking, and being a poster boy for Israeli-Palestinian harmony.
22/04/1955m 26s

Sir James MacMillan's Confessions - Communism, Catholicism and composition

In our Holy Week special, Giles talks to composer and conductor Sir James MacMillan about Scottish sectarianism, joining the Communist Party, and why composing is like having a photo developed. ___ Sir James MacMillan is one of the most successful composers of his generation, achieving international acclaim. His music has been programmed worldwide by orchestras including the London Symphony Orchestra, and the New York and Los Angeles Philharmonics, as well as being commissioned for Pope Benedict XVI's 2010 state visit to the UK. He is heavily influenced by his Scottish heritage, Catholic faith, and his social and political conscience.
15/04/1951m 42s

Lionel Shriver's Confessions - Belfast, Brexit and being an adopted Brit

Giles chats with novelist and columnist Lionel Shriver about growing up in a deeply religious family, living in Belfast during the Troubles, and Britain's great divide.
08/04/1953m 13s

Margaret Drabble's Confessions - Marriage, modesty and mental health

Giles talks to the author Margaret Drabble about family secrets, coping with depression and unwittingly writing feminist literature.
01/04/1945m 23s

Iain Dale's Confessions – Brexit, beaches and coming out

Giles Fraser talks to broadcaster and politico Iain Dale about growing up on a farm, coming out as gay, his love of politics and how Brexit is driving us mad.
25/03/191h 3m

Marina Cantacuzino's Confessions – Forgiveness, courage and Shamima Begum

Giles Fraser talks to journalist and campaigner Marina Cantacuzino about founding The Forgiveness Project, the power of stories, channelling her anger and losing her brother at a young age.
18/03/1952m 36s

Alan Rusbridger's Confessions - Facebook, fearless journalism and failing the 11+

Giles speaks to Alan Rusbridger, former Guardian editor and Principal of Oxford University's Lady Margaret Hall, about his thrifty family, battling fake news and the fate of journalism.
11/03/1959m 14s

Marcus Du Sautoy's Confessions – Machine learning, the multiverse and the magic of music

In the first of Confessions Season 2, Oxford's Simonyi Professor for the Public Understanding of Science, Marcus du Sautoy, talks to Giles Fraser about being terrible at sums, his love of music and whether code will develop consciousness.
04/03/1949m 21s

Melanie Phillips's Confessions - Nationalism, self-doubt and falling out with the Guardian

In the last of this season's Confessions, journalist and life-long provocateur Melanie Phillips joins Giles for a revealing discussion about falling into journalism, rediscovering Judaism and her perennial self-doubt.
10/02/1946m 25s

Helena Kennedy's Confessions – Class, justice and Martin Scorsese Catholicism

Giles Fraser talks to distinguished human rights lawyer Helena Kennedy QC about growing up in Glasgow's tenements, living her faith, gender discrimination, and how the law has failed the working class.
03/02/1943m 57s

Jacqueline Rose's Confessions – Israel, motherhood and Marilyn Monroe

Giles Fraser talks to academic and writer Jacqueline Rose about growing up in a family with ghosts, transgenerational trauma, Israel as a moral project and the ferocious pressure of motherhood.
27/01/1942m 27s

Fiyaz Mughal's Confessions – Racism, Islamophobia and Saudi's brutal Islam

Giles Fraser talks to Director of Faith Matters Fiyaz Mughal about founding Tell MAMA, the scale of Islamophobia, and why Saudi Wahhabism has ripped the heart out of Islam.
20/01/1926m 57s

Claire Fox's Confessions – Communism, Catholicism and personal sovereignty

Giles Fraser talks to educator and writer Claire Fox about growing up Catholic, life in the Revolutionary Communist Party, her passion to reanimate the public square and why she's positive about the state of democracy.
13/01/1943m 32s

Roger Scruton's Confessions – Faith, family and finding Conservatism

Giles Fraser talks to writer and philosopher Sir Roger Scruton about the importance of faith and family, finding Conservatism, humanity in architecture, and being a class traitor.
07/01/1950m 49s

Maurice Glasman's Confessions – Judaism, Brexit, and Blue Labour

Giles Fraser talks to political theorist and Blue Labour founder Lord Glasman about Judaism, Brexit, and why his philosophy was a love letter to his parents.
31/12/1851m 19s

Salley Vickers's Confessions – Faith, fiction and A Christmas Carol

Giles Fraser talks to novelist and poet Salley Vickers about communist camaraderie, finding her faith and great fiction.
24/12/1849m 3s

Tom Holland's Confessions – Islam, Christianity and ancient power

Giles Fraser talks to bestselling ancient historian Tom Holland about Islam, rock star Gods, the collapse of ancient empires and being on the side of Pontius Pilate.
17/12/1845m 29s

Matt Kelly's Confessions - Hemingway, Liverpool and battling Brexit

Giles Fraser talks to the editor of the New European Matt Kelly about growing up in Liverpool, how journalism was the perfect career and why Hemingway made him a Remainer.
10/12/1846m 5s

Mary Warnock's Confessions – Morality, God and #MeToo

Giles Fraser talks to distinguished philosopher Baroness Warnock about morality, being an atheist Anglican and how she dealt with her own #MeToo experience.
30/11/1850m 8s

Jonathan Haidt's Confessions – Disgust, Trump and the rise of 'call out' culture

Giles Fraser talks to eminent psychologist and ethicist Jonathan Haidt about the 'wisdom of repugnance', the importance of belonging and the closing of the American mind.
30/11/1851m 22s

Philippe Sands's Confessions – Genocide, the nation state, and feeling Jewish

Giles Fraser talks to distinguished QC Philippe Sands about his family history, crimes against humanity and his fears about Brexit and Trump.
30/11/1852m 34s

Trailer: UnHerd Confessions with Giles Fraser - Coming soon.

Subscribe to make sure you don't miss UnHerd's new podcast series featuring columnist Giles Fraser in which he talks to distinguished guests about how their beliefs shape who they are. First episodes coming soon.
29/11/181m 24s
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