In addition to via the websites referenced, these podcasts generally are made 
available through several other popular internet sources such as iTunes and 
TuneIn.  Late Night Live has been a staple of ABC-RN's (ABC Radio National) 
programming for nearly 25 years. The program's host, Phillip Adams, is a well 
respected Australian journalist, writer, cultural figure and political 
activist.  He is a consummate interviewer and his roster of guests include 
Australian and international persons of stature from the worlds of literature, 
politics, culture and science.  The program's web page includes an archive of 
some of the best of Late Night Live from the last quarter century and is well 
worth a perusal and more than several listens.

------------------------------

LATE NIGHT LIVE - ABC RN
Robert Fisk on Gaza and MH17; Bob Dylan Tangled Up in Blue
Veteran Middle East watcher Robert Fisk compares our reaction to two recent 
alarming death tolls – in Gaza where more than 1,300 people have died, and the 
298 passengers who were killed on the MH17 plane crash. He explains the deep, 
historical background to the current conflict.  Bill Wyman's recent article for 
New York magazine makes out this legendary pop icon is cloaked with decades of 
mystery and behaviour weirdly at odds with his contemporaries. And RN blogger 
Mark Sutton explains the difference between being an obsessive Dylan fan but 
not a nutter.  (54')
http://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/latenightlive/past-programs/?page=5
 (Scroll down to 31 July 2014)

LATE NIGHT LIVE - ABC RN
Should Scotland Leave the Union?; Thank You for Your Military Service
The upcoming referendum (discussion took place prior to the referendum) for 
Scottish independence is the most important political decision of a generation. 
But a pervasive feeling of complacency exists, and many Scots assume that 
independence is either inconceivable, or irrelevant. Former first Minister for 
Scotland Henry McLeish and Rory Stewart OBE, Tory MP discuss what's at stake. 
Rory Stewart's constituency includes Hadrian’s Wall and half of the English 
Scottish Border.  Two million Americans were sent to the wars in Iraq and 
Afghanistan, and now between 20 to 30 per cent are grappling with psychological 
issues including chronic anxiety, nightmares, suicidal thoughts and traumatic 
brain injury. David Finkel was embedded with a group of men in Iraq, and now he 
tells their stories of life after war. ‘Every war has its after war; its 
consequences and reminders and the consequences and reminders of Iraq and 
Afghanistan will be some five hundred thousand mentally wounded veterans, a 
number significant enough to affect American social policy, medical care, even 
the broader economy, for decades,' writes Finkel.  (54')
http://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/latenightlive/past-programs/?page=5
  (Scroll down to 4 August 2014)

-----------------------------  

John Figliozzi
The Worldwide Listening Guide - 6th edition now available
wwlgonline.com
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