Synopsis
From razor-sharp analysis of current events to the hottest debates in politics, science, philosophy and culture, Late Night Live puts you firmly in the big picture.
Episodes
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The worldwide spread of Pentecostalism, and a writer delves into his family's mobster past
17/02/2022 Duration: 51minPentecostalism's growth is phenomenal, and in some countries in Africa and South America, it's political, and a form of warfare. Plus author Russell Shorto delves into his family's past to tell the story of his Sicilian mobster grandfather in small town America.
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State capture and democracy in Australia and the importance of friction in modern life
16/02/2022 Duration: 53minHow much industry influence is too much for a democracy like Australia to bear and why the science of friction is so critical to modern life with Laurie Winkless.
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Bruce Shapiro's America, Blinken's visit down under and Australian 'sheroes'
15/02/2022 Duration: 53minAs tensions continue to escalate between Russia and the West, Bruce Shapiro considers what cards are left to play. Meanwhile, Secretary of State Antony Blinken has travelled to the Asia-Pacific, so what does that say about the importance of our region? Plus, we'll meet some badass women that have been largely forgotten by Australian history.
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Laura Tingle's Canberra, humanitarian crisis unfolds in Afghanistan and the diaries of Chips Channon
14/02/2022 Duration: 53minLaura Tingle reflects on the final sitting days of the 46th parliament, more than half the population of Afghanistan facing starvation and the diaries of Henry 'Chips' Channon, attaché to the American Embassy in Paris in the lead up to WWII.
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Questionable autopsy work, and plastic surgery in prison
10/02/2022 Duration: 53minHow one man with major holes in his CV ran South Australia's autopsies for nearly three decades. And the strange but true tale of plastic surgery provided to US prisoners.
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Ian Dunt, a history of terrorism in Australia and the WW2 story of the Hutchinson Camp
09/02/2022 Duration: 53minIan Dunt on Boris Johnson's latest gaffe, Kristy Campion on some forgotten history of terrorism in Australia and Simon Parkin on the brilliant refugees that were interned on the Isle of Man during World War Two.
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Bruce Shapiro's America, hydrogen hype and the world of psychic-mediums
08/02/2022 Duration: 53minDebates about free speech sweep the States; hydrogen now comes in green, blue, grey, even pink, but are they all worth the hype? And journalist Gary Nunn explores just how far psychics have infiltrated the media, the corporate world, government, the criminal justice system and beyond.
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Text message scandals, does power corrupt and can we have universal ethics?
07/02/2022 Duration: 53minLaura Tingle on Deputy PM Barnaby Joyce being embroiled in the text message scandal, political scientist Dr Brian Klaas on the nature of power and philosopher A.C Grayling considers three major threats to humanity and how universal ethics might help.
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Celebrating 100 years of the BBC
03/02/2022 Duration: 53minA new history of the BBC looks back at the people who made it what it is, and the people it serves.
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Pacific update, Chile's young new leaders and a history of monoculture
02/02/2022 Duration: 53minTess Newton Cain reports on how the clean up is progressing in Tonga, John Bartlett on the youthful progressive government newly elected in Chile and Frank Uekotter on what can be learnt from the history of monoculture.
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Bruce Shapiro's America, a history of democracy and vale Ann Newmarch and Hossein Valamanesh
01/02/2022 Duration: 53minBruce Shapiro sheds some light on Biden's possible Supreme Court picks, political theorist John Keane gives us a potted history of democracy, and art history professor Catherine Speck celebrates the life and work of artists Ann Newmarch and Hossein Valamanesh.
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Canberra politics, Guy Rundle's Australia and war in Yemen
31/01/2022 Duration: 53minCrikey's Bernard Keane takes a look at the week in politics, Guy Rundle reflects on Australia in the lead-up to the 2019 federal election and what's behind the recent escalation in Yemen's protracted war?
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Ian Dunt's Britain, and Johann Hari on why we struggle to pay attention
27/01/2022 Duration: 53minIan Dunt returns for 2022 to talk Westminster parties and the Ukraine, and Johann Hari explains why a digital detox is harder than you might imagine
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An Australian republic - a new model and unfinished business
26/01/2022 Duration: 53minThe Australian Republic Movement has released its Australian Choice model for Australia to become a republic. Peter FitzSimons, Bob Carr and Anne Twomey debate the direct election model and its suitability for the Australian voter. Megan Davis is also a republican, but she believes that the unfinished business put forward through the Uluru Statement must be addressed first.
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Bruce Shapiro's America and how the Aboriginal Tent Embassy was established
25/01/2022 Duration: 53minBruce Shapiro on the challenges Biden faces as he enters year two of his presidency, and the remarkable story of how the Aboriginal Tent Embassy was established fifty years ago.
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Laura Tingle's Canberra, Ukraine-Russia tensions and the disappearing Arctic treeline
24/01/2022 Duration: 53minLaura Tingle on Scott Morrison's summer of woe, will Russia really go to war with Ukraine and how climate change is affecting the Arctic treeline and those who depend on it.
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Bernadette Brennan on her biography of Gillian Mears
20/01/2022 Duration: 53minBernadette Brennan discusses her biography of the brilliant but enigmatic author, Gillian Mears.
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East meets West during the Ottoman Empire and in Sicily
19/01/2022 Duration: 53minMarc David Baer explains why the history of the Ottoman Empire should be considered part of European history and Jamie Mackay takes us through the many empires that left a mark on the island of Sicily
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The untold story of a secret Australian operation in WW2 Borneo. Difficult Women: A history of feminism in 11 fights
18/01/2022 Duration: 53minANU anthropologist Christine Helliwell tells the story of a secret mission to infiltrate Borneo, under Japanese occupation.
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Flawed forensics. The role of chance in life.
17/01/2022 Duration: 54minBrandon Garrett chronicles the litany of cases where flawed forensics have put innocent people in gaol and in some cases on death row. Is life preordained or random? Dr Sean Carroll argues that our existence, and that of the world, is the result of pure chance.