Best of the Spectator

The Edition: SAS betrayal, the battle for Odesa & in defence of film flops


Listen Later

This week: SAS SOS

The enemy that most concerns Britain’s elite military unit isn’t the IRA, the Taliban or Isis, but a phalanx of lawyers armed with the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR), writes Paul Wood in The Spectator. Many SAS soldiers now believe that if they kill a terrorist during an operation, they’ll spend decades being hounded through the courts. Paul speaks to former SAS soldiers who say that stories of men being ‘dragged back to be screamed at in interview rooms’ are ‘flying around the canteens now’. Soldiers feel like ‘the good guys have become the bad guys – and the bad guys are now the good guys’. This is hurting morale and may eventually hit recruitment. Paul joins the podcast to discuss further, alongside Colonel Richard Williams, a former SAS commanding officer in Iraq and Afghanistan. (01:36)

Then: how much more punishment can Ukrainian city Odesa take?

The Black Sea port of Odesa occupies a unique role in Ukrainian – and Soviet – history. Added significance has been thrust on it by the Russian invasion: both symbolically, as well as practically, given how central it is to grain exports. But while war weariness sets in for Ukrainians – and their allies – the battle for Odesa is ever more crucial; further deadly aerial attacks took place only days ago. In the magazine this week, journalist Peter Pomerantsev reviews a new book looking at the port city by Julian Evans. Undefeatable: Odesa in Love and War is part-history book, part-memoir exploring many of the human stories that make up the city. How has the conflict changed the people of Odesa? And for Ukrainians who grew up consuming Russian-speaking media and culture, did the war challenge their identity? Peter joins the podcast alongside the author of the Spectator’s Ukraine newsletter, Svitlana Morenets. (18:24)

And finally: do we secretly love a good film flop?

‘I’ve fallen out of love with cinemas,’ declares long-standing (or should that be long-suffering?) film critic Chris Tookey in the magazine this week. He argues the experience isn’t as good, and Hollywood is partly to blame. Perhaps films are getting worse? Some people love a good film flop though – the big-budget blockbuster disasters. Fellow film critic Tim Robey is one such person, and he explores his love of Hollywood flops in his new book Box Office Poison, out now. But how has the experience of cinema changed? And what’s the worst film they’ve ever seen? Tim and Chris join the podcast. (32:58)

Hosted by William Moore and Lara Prendergast.

Produced by Oscar Edmondson and Patrick Gibbons.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Best of the SpectatorBy The Spectator

  • 4.4
  • 4.4
  • 4.4
  • 4.4
  • 4.4

4.4

154 ratings


More shows like Best of the Spectator

View all
The Book Club by The Spectator

The Book Club

11 Listeners

Coffee House Shots by The Spectator

Coffee House Shots

180 Listeners

Politics Unpacked by Times Radio

Politics Unpacked

120 Listeners

Americano by The Spectator

Americano

266 Listeners

Holy Smoke by The Spectator

Holy Smoke

130 Listeners

The spiked podcast by The spiked podcast

The spiked podcast

214 Listeners

The Brendan O'Neill Show by The Brendan O'Neill Show

The Brendan O'Neill Show

358 Listeners

The Edition by The Spectator

The Edition

53 Listeners

Last Orders - a spiked podcast by Last Orders - a spiked podcast

Last Orders - a spiked podcast

49 Listeners

Table Talk by The Spectator

Table Talk

10 Listeners

New Culture Forum by New Culture Forum

New Culture Forum

94 Listeners

The Daily T by The Telegraph

The Daily T

127 Listeners

Reality Check by The Spectator

Reality Check

1 Listeners

Planet Normal by The Telegraph

Planet Normal

192 Listeners

UnHerd with Freddie Sayers by UnHerd

UnHerd with Freddie Sayers

222 Listeners

The Current Thing by Nick Dixon

The Current Thing

28 Listeners

Quite right! by The Spectator

Quite right!

44 Listeners