meta_pixel
Tapesearch Logo
Log in
Best of the Spectator

The Edition: plan Bibi

Best of the Spectator

The Spectator

News, Daily News, Society & Culture, News Commentary

4.3826 Ratings

🗓️ 29 February 2024

⏱️ 48 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Welcome to a slightly new format for the Edition podcast! Each week we will be talking about the magazine – as per usual – but trying to give a little more insight into the process behind putting The Spectator to bed each week.

On the podcast this week: plan Bibi

In the early hours of Friday morning, Benjamin Netanyahu leaked his ‘Day after Hamas’ plan for post-war Gaza. But the plan is not a plan, writes Anshel Pfeffer – it is just a set of vague principles that do not stand up to the slightest scrutiny. Its sole purpose is rather to keep the ministers of Netanyahu’s fragile cabinet together to ensure his political survival. Joining the podcast is former National Security advisor to Netanyahu and former head of the Israeli Professor Uzi Arad, to discuss Bibi’s self-interested survival strategy. (03:08)

Also this week: Lara and Will discuss some of their favourite pieces from the magazine. Including Richard Bratby’s arts lead on the composer you should take far more seriously and Ysenda Maxtone Graham’s piece on the ‘sad clappies’.

Then: why Latvia is expelling its Russian speakers. New rules mean that ethnic Russians, many of whom have lived in Latvia for their entire lives, have been told they need to learn Latvian or face deportation. In the magazine, Lukas Degutis, The Spectator’s editorial manager, interviews people affected by the illiberal policy, as well as the politicians defending the change as part of de-Russification of the Baltic states. We spoke to Lukas and Inga Springe, investigative journalist at Re:Baltica who has been across this story on the derussification of the Baltic. (22:16)

And finally: why don’t we have more time, and when we do, why do we waste it? This is the central question of a new book by Gary S. Cross, titled: Free Time: The History of an Elusive Ideal. We thought this was the perfect question to ask our own Wiki Man columnist Rory Sutherland, who had some fascinating things to say about free time and how best to spend it. (34:39)

Hosted by Lara Prendergast and William Moore. 

Produced by Oscar Edmondson. 

If there are any areas of the magazine that you are particularly interested in or any questions you have for Will and Lara, please email: podcast@spectator.co.uk. We will try and answer as many as we can in next week’s episode. 


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

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

The Spectator magazine combines incisive political analysis with books and arts reviews of unrivaled authority.

0:07.4

Subscribe today for just £12 and receive a 12 weeks subscription in print and online.

0:13.1

Plus, we'll give you a £20 £20,000 Amazon gift voucher, absolutely free.

0:17.7

Go to spectator.com.uk forward slash voucher.

0:29.1

Hello and welcome to a slightly new format for the edition podcast. We're going to be talking

0:34.3

a little bit more about the magazine, as per usual, but trying to give some insight into the thought process behind putting the spectator to bed each week.

0:43.0

I'm Lara Prendergast, the Spectator's Executive Editor.

0:46.1

And I'm William Moore, the Spectator's Features Editor.

0:53.3

So, Lara, we're speaking on Wednesday afternoon. The magazine went to press just a couple of hours ago.

0:59.3

And our cover line for this week is Plan Bibi. Stalmate suits Nehanyahu, says Anshelfeffer.

1:07.2

Can you talk our readers through why we settled on this cover this week?

1:18.6

Well, on Friday, Netanyahu chose to release this day after Hamas plan for post-war Gaza. And we asked Anshil Feffer to look a little bit more into what's actually going on there.

1:22.6

And as he says in the piece, the plan doesn't actually seem designed to end the war in Gaza.

1:28.2

If anything, it seems to be more about Netanyahu's own political survival.

1:32.1

I think Netanyahu is obviously perhaps a kind of fascinating political figure, and it is

1:35.9

interesting how the war in Gaza is being used, as Angel says, to bolster his own political position.

1:42.5

So that's the cover.

1:44.2

And we asked Morton to come up with an image for it.

1:47.6

Obviously, it's quite a difficult thing to depict.

1:49.7

But I think the way he's shown Netanyahu from behind, surveying the ruins of Gaza

1:55.0

and looking over towards other parts of, I suppose, it's Israel or Israel's borders is kind of a clever way of doing it.

2:04.9

And to give a bit more insight about it, we actually just spoke to Professor Uzi Arad,

...

Please login to see the full transcript.

Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from The Spectator, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.

Generated transcripts are the property of The Spectator and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.

Copyright © Tapesearch 2026.