Notes of Late

Notes of Late - 1 - Dame Jenni Murray

41 min · 27 mrt 2026
aflevering Notes of Late - 1 - Dame Jenni Murray artwork

Beschrijving

The Resonance of a Voice: The Life and Legacy of Dame Jenni Murray In this episode of the Notes of Late podcast, we examine the life, legacy, and profound cultural influence of Dame Jenni Murray, who died on 12 March 2026 at the age of seventy-five. For over three decades as the defining presenter of BBC Radio 4’s Woman’s Hour, Murray was not just a familiar daily comfort; she was a central pillar in the architecture of modern womanhood in the UK, transforming a programme originally dedicated to domestic tips into a formidable platform for sexual politics and social inquiry. We explore her working-class origins in Barnsley, the intense, complicated ambitions of her mother, and the childhood elocution lessons that ultimately forged her powerful broadcasting voice. The episode delves into her fearless, "hypnotic" interviewing style—a unique blend of empathy and rigorous forensic questioning that famously disarmed global figures, from Margaret Thatcher and Hillary Clinton to Hollywood icon Bette Davis. Going beyond her professional milestones, we look sympathetically at the totality of her human experience. We discuss her lifelong, painful battle with obesity and her advocacy against fat-shaming, her candidness regarding her breast cancer diagnosis, and her campaigns for the right to an assisted death following her mother's severe decline from Parkinson's disease. Finally, we address the ideological collisions of her later career, including her controversial stance on transgender issues that led to her feeling "cancelled" by the BBC, and her triumphant final act writing and broadcasting for Saga Magazine. Join us for a deliberate, nuanced reflection on a pioneering journalist who forced a nation to pause, to listen, and to confront the unvarnished realities of a life fully and courageously lived. Support the show [https://ko-fi.com/notesoflate]

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aflevering Notes of Late - 2 - Len Deighton artwork

Notes of Late - 2 - Len Deighton

The Architect of the Shadows: The Life and Legacy of Len Deighton In this episode, we explore the incredible life and enduring legacy of Len Deighton, the legendary British author who recently passed away at the age of 97. Widely known for radically reshaping the spy thriller genre in the 1960s, Deighton was far more than just a novelist—he was a polymath, an illustrator, a military historian, and a culinary pioneer. We dive into his working-class origins in a Marylebone workhouse and discuss how his childhood proximity to real-life treason forged his fierce anti-establishment worldview. Discover how his 1962 debut, The IPCRESS File, introduced a cynical, unnamed "everyman" spy—later immortalised on film as Harry Palmer by Michael Caine—who served as the ultimate working-class antidote to the glamorous fantasies of James Bond. Beyond the paranoia of Cold War Berlin, we also explore his revolutionary culinary "cookstrips" that helped demystify cooking for men, his meticulous WWII masterpiece Bomber, and his fascinating history as the first novelist to ever compose a book using a word processor. Join us for a deliberate and sympathetic reflection on a fiercely private literary titan who repeatedly rejected the establishment's prizes but forever altered our understanding of 20th-century history and espionage. Support the show [https://ko-fi.com/notesoflate]

4 apr 202648 min
aflevering Notes of Late - 1 - Dame Jenni Murray artwork

Notes of Late - 1 - Dame Jenni Murray

The Resonance of a Voice: The Life and Legacy of Dame Jenni Murray In this episode of the Notes of Late podcast, we examine the life, legacy, and profound cultural influence of Dame Jenni Murray, who died on 12 March 2026 at the age of seventy-five. For over three decades as the defining presenter of BBC Radio 4’s Woman’s Hour, Murray was not just a familiar daily comfort; she was a central pillar in the architecture of modern womanhood in the UK, transforming a programme originally dedicated to domestic tips into a formidable platform for sexual politics and social inquiry. We explore her working-class origins in Barnsley, the intense, complicated ambitions of her mother, and the childhood elocution lessons that ultimately forged her powerful broadcasting voice. The episode delves into her fearless, "hypnotic" interviewing style—a unique blend of empathy and rigorous forensic questioning that famously disarmed global figures, from Margaret Thatcher and Hillary Clinton to Hollywood icon Bette Davis. Going beyond her professional milestones, we look sympathetically at the totality of her human experience. We discuss her lifelong, painful battle with obesity and her advocacy against fat-shaming, her candidness regarding her breast cancer diagnosis, and her campaigns for the right to an assisted death following her mother's severe decline from Parkinson's disease. Finally, we address the ideological collisions of her later career, including her controversial stance on transgender issues that led to her feeling "cancelled" by the BBC, and her triumphant final act writing and broadcasting for Saga Magazine. Join us for a deliberate, nuanced reflection on a pioneering journalist who forced a nation to pause, to listen, and to confront the unvarnished realities of a life fully and courageously lived. Support the show [https://ko-fi.com/notesoflate]

27 mrt 202641 min