Podcasts permit a shift of listening time from a set appointment to virtually 
any convenient occasion.  I do it while taking my daily (more or less) 3 mile 
walk, while I’m “plodding along”.  While there are thousands, perhaps tens of 
thousands, of great podcasts from other sources, the ones sponsored via public 
radio have been vetted through the worthy objectives of the medium.  Here’s 
what I’ve been listening to recently.  I hope you might find these suggestions 
— in roughly 90 minute bites -- helpful in enhancing your own enjoyment of 
radio, our favorite medium.

__ __

“Fresh Air weekend: 'Hamnet' star Jessie Buckley; filmmaker Morgan Neville”
FRESH AIR - NPR and WHYY Philadelphia
Hamnet star Jessie Buckley looks for the "shadowy bits" of her characters: 
Buckley has been nominated for a best actress Oscar for her portrayal of 
William Shakespeare's wife in Hamnet. The film "brought me into this next 
chapter of my life as a mother," Buckley says.
This quiet epic is the top-grossing Japanese live action film of all time: The 
Oscar-nominated Kokuho tells a compelling story about friendship, the weight of 
history and the torturous road to becoming a star in Japan's Kabuki theater.  
(46”)
https://www.npr.org/2026/03/07/nx-s1-5737611/jessie-buckley-hamnet-morgan-neville-man-on-the-run

“Is it moral to attack Iran?”
MORAL MAZE - BBC Radio 4
Conflict has deepened in the Middle East since the United States and Israel 
launched a coordinated wave of air and missile strikes across Iran, targeting 
military facilities, nuclear sites and the country’s leadership.
Supporters argue the attacks were necessary. Iran’s missile programme, its 
support for armed proxies across the region and its long-running nuclear 
ambitions have convinced some Western leaders that waiting would only make a 
future conflict far more dangerous. In that view, striking first may be grim, 
but it is sometimes the least bad option. Others frame the issue in terms of 
human rights. Iran’s government has long been accused of brutal repression at 
home, imprisoning dissidents, violently suppressing protests and enforcing 
strict controls over women’s lives. To some, confronting such a regime is not 
simply a matter of strategic calculation but of moral responsibility.
But critics see something more troubling: the deliberate bombing of a sovereign 
state without international authorisation and with potentially catastrophic 
consequences. Iran has already retaliated with missiles and drones across the 
region, targeting U.S. bases and cities in Gulf states, while Iran-backed 
militias have joined the fight. And the human cost is becoming clearer. A 
missile strike on a girls’ school in southern Iran reportedly killed at least 
150 people, many of them children, though the circumstances remain disputed. 
While many Iranians are celebrating the death of their Supreme Leader, others 
are sceptical about the human rights motives of the strikes. Is it moral to 
attack Iran?  (57”)
https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m002s4jc

— — 

A compendium of these suggestions, plus on occasion additional pertinent 
material, is published every other month in the CIDX Messenger, the monthly 
e-newsletter of the Canadian International DX Club (CIDX).  For further 
information and membership information, go to www.cidxclub.ca 


John Figliozzi
Editor, "The Worldwide Listening Guide”
11th EDITION, with comprehensive listings of radio programs on AM, FM, 
shortwave, satellite radio, internet-wifi radio and podcasts, available from 
universal-radio.com, amazon.com. amazon.co.uk, amazon.de, amazon.com.au 

PLEASE NOTE:  Times change and some things just get passed by.  Such is the 
case with THE WORLDWIDE LISTENING GUIDE.  This 11th Edition will be its last. 
Once the current crop of issues is sold, the series is sold out for good. For 
35 years, starting with THE SHORTWAVE RADIOGUIDE, it has been my pleasure to 
provide to select listeners a written record of some of the best programming 
available on public media radio everywhere.  The media landscape is changing — 
much for the good, but some that’s concerning.  This is especially true for the 
jewel that is public service media.  But it’s also clear that radio — all its 
platforms — is de-emphasizing schedules and embracing the freeing capacity of 
podcasting.  It’s also clear that — happily — there are some fine accessible 
and more timely resources for finding that public audio content available 
online.  So for the next few weeks I will be compiling some of the best of 
those to share with you and provide places where you can still gain the 
information that the WWLG has tried to provide for these many years.  On to the 
future! 





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