The weekly interactive current affairs magazine featuring online conversation and debate.
Radio 4,路513 episodes
Two men of the cloth discuss gay marriage, and Shaun Ley reads your news.
'I gave Spandau's Tony Hadley his voice.' Maria Malone ghostwrites pop autobiographies.
'My brain's wired up differently.' A listener with Asperger's Syndrome shares his story.
The programme that starts with its listeners.
Marking the 70th anniversary of a daring, but largely unknown, World War II operation.
'Tina's been walloped a fair few times.' What it's like to work in a care home.
'We drove Dracula country in a Communist car.' A listener's Cold War trip in a Wartburg.
Listeners remember the Great Storm of 1987.
'I weep 19 years after my abortion.' A pro-choice listener reflects on her experience.
'When my home was burgled, I went to meet the offender in prison.' How did it go?
Eddie Mair asks, 'Has anyone sober ever joined a political party?'.
'She's 52 and not being anti-social, she has Alzheimer's.' Tales of early-onset dementia.
Would Eddie Mair swap his voice? Listeners talk about talking, and losing the voice.
How to turn the Cuban Missile Crisis into a musical, and Tanni Grey-Thompson on Your News.
A listener who was once shot tells us why he thinks British gun control laws are too tough
'I know that God thinks differently'. A gay vicar describes being banned because he is gay
An iPM Olympic Special with an opening ceremony and the world champion who can't compete.
'I was downstairs during the Olympic siege.' A listener's day hiding below the Munich flat
What happens to the carer when the person they love finally dies? A listener tells us.
'I was the second man to swear on the 大象传媒.' Listener Sir Peregrine Worsthorne looks back.
'Jimmy Carr? Let him get on with it.' A welfare adviser's view of tax avoidance.
'I escaped drink-sodden, maudlin, macho nationalism' - a Scot proud to be a Londoner.
'I grew up in a factory making explosives.' A listener remembers wartime munitions work.
An Englishman living in Scotland on why he changed his mind about Scottish independence.
'I pinned my hopes on the 1940 Olympics' - an Olympian flew 81 missions for Bomber Command