
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Living in New York during lockdown, Adam Gopnik spent his time enjoying the escapism of foreign TV shows - like the BBC's W1A and 2012.
While these shows were unapologetically British, chock-full of alien cultural references to Frankie Howerd and Dad's Army, Adam says these shows helped him appreciate the universal language of satire.
'I'd say we enjoy satire more when we don't know the things being satirized' he writes, 'and so cannot protest their portrayal'.
He says we 'depend on the satirist for all our information, both for the ground and for the graffiti he scrawls upon it.'
Producer: Sheila Cook
4.6
7272 ratings
Living in New York during lockdown, Adam Gopnik spent his time enjoying the escapism of foreign TV shows - like the BBC's W1A and 2012.
While these shows were unapologetically British, chock-full of alien cultural references to Frankie Howerd and Dad's Army, Adam says these shows helped him appreciate the universal language of satire.
'I'd say we enjoy satire more when we don't know the things being satirized' he writes, 'and so cannot protest their portrayal'.
He says we 'depend on the satirist for all our information, both for the ground and for the graffiti he scrawls upon it.'
Producer: Sheila Cook
5,404 Listeners
370 Listeners
1,837 Listeners
159 Listeners
7,687 Listeners
294 Listeners
304 Listeners
106 Listeners
508 Listeners
1,817 Listeners
1,086 Listeners
895 Listeners
276 Listeners
154 Listeners
371 Listeners
2,000 Listeners
1,940 Listeners
1,062 Listeners
44 Listeners
58 Listeners
62 Listeners
74 Listeners
746 Listeners
2,974 Listeners