A rich selection of documentaries aimed at relentlessly curious minds. No subject is too strange, no idea too weird. Released twice a week, this podcast is introduced by Vanessa Kisuule.
Filmmaker Mike Figgis explores the age of the edit.
Steve Rosenberg visits four Russian cities closely tied to the revolution of 1917.
Poet Bridget Minamore explores how women have created their own literary narratives.
Maria Margaronis explores the life and legacy of right-wing thinker Savitri Devi.
Peruvian-born chef Martin Morales explores the link between food and music in the Andes.
Inside the world of the anti-fascists known as 'antifa' and their far-right opponents.
Miles Jupp boards the train to Transylvania on the trail of Count Dracula.
Novelist Nick Harkaway says we need to talk about surveillance before it is too late.
Lauren Laverne and her dad Les explore the relationship between fathers and daughters.
Comedian and Russophile Viv Groskop explores a century of revolutionary comedy.
An array of colourful characters summon the ghosts of Hull's past.
A portrait of singer, songwriter and truck driver Will Beeley.
Art so small you have to avoid inhaling it. Dr Lance Dann explores miniature art.
Journalist and author Lynne Truss on why Joni Mitchell is her Muse.
Brian Kernohan explores the hidden world of wigs to solve his own not-so-secret hair loss.
The poet Ross Sutherland takes a visceral look at the art of professional wrestling.
30 years on from its launch, Ian Sansom asks: what's the real point of PowerPoint?
What stories are hiding among the paints and pigments in an art supplies shop?
Journalist Ayshea Buksh looks at the complex picture behind the rise in acid attacks.
Colin Grant reports on the 50th anniversary of the Leeds West Indian Carnival.
The life of Diana, Princess of Wales - movingly portrayed in reverse chronology.
Grayson Perry goes in search of the moment the avant-garde died.
We follow the healthcare authority aiming to reduce lives lost to suicide to 0% by 2020.
Bill Drummond is driving to every county in Ireland in five days. But what's driving Bill?