2 Dope Queens

Comedy panel hit

Phoebe Robinson and Jessica Williams’s podcast is a perfect storm of comedy and representation, with the two US comedians hanging out with their mostly female, often non-white and LGBT guests to chat “race, gender, sex, and other less serious topics”. Recorded in front of a live audience, Dope Queens isn’t a low-key affair, and all the better for it. Interview-based offshoot Sooo Many White Guys - produced by Broad City’s Ilana Glazer - is equally engaging. HJD

If you like this try Another Round, Late Night Whenever

The Adam Buxton Podcast

Freewheeling interviews

Buxton’s open-ended “ramble chats” are a delight, with Bob Mortimer, Aisling Bea and even Wes Anderson among those bouncing off his observational genius. There are moments when it gets hysterical, and one of the finest involves Louis Theroux breaking out a falsetto version of Yes Sir, I Can Boogie that goes on just long enough to make it eye-wateringly funny. HV

If you like this try Richard Herring’s Leicester Square Theatre Podcast

All Killa No Filla

Sideways serial killer pod

Facebook Twitter Pinterest Rachel Fairburn and Kiri Pritchard-McLean.

If true crime is the food of podcasts, comedians Rachel Fairburn and Kiri Pritchard-McLean are your mild-mannered chefs cracking jokes as they work. They claim they’re not mocking serial killers; they’re simply obsessed with them. Discussing how Ted Bundy only needs one name “like Britney or Madonna” suggests otherwise, and the pair’s understated humour means they just about get away with the grim jokes. HV

If you like this try A Very Fatal Murder

Athletico Mince

Surreal, sport-themed ruminations

If you’re more concerned with the state of Steve McClaren’s hair than Soccer AM, this is the football podcast for you. Bob Mortimer and Andy Dawson are the anti-Carragher and Neville, bringing surreal fun to the sport. You might find Harry Kane fighting over celery or Peter Beardsley feeling sorry for himself, but you’ll rarely hear the final score. HV

If you like this try The Football Ramble

Atlanta Monster

Complex true crime

Payne Lindsey had a huge hit with Up and Vanished, his podcasting debut, in which he examined the disappearance of a former beauty queen. Lindsey struck journalistic gold when his DIY sleuthing turfed-up two fresh arrests. For the follow-up, he explores a spate of 28 murders of black children in Atlanta. This time, race and City Hall politics loom far larger than a simple whodunnit. GH

If you like this try Dirty John, West Cork

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Brian Gittins and Friends

Erratic conversations with comics

David Earl, the genius behind anti-comic Brian Gittins, has long been a pioneer of leftfield audio shows. Comparatively, this is more slick, bringing in guests to interact with him and his friend David Edwards and robot Charles. The fictional setting changes each episode, from the Haçienda in the 90s to a hot-air balloon, inviting the best/most game members of the modern alternative comedy scene – Jamie and Natasia Demetriou, Lolly Adefope, Diane Morgan, Kim Noble and Tim Key – to play. HG

If you like this try Comedy Bang! Bang!

Exploring the murky world of modern porn

Ronson’s intimate exposé of the pornography industry is more interested in search terms and algorithms than titillation, which is where its charm lies. Your host remains quietly curious as he listens to tales of how German tech opportunist Fabian Thylmann built up his online empire, but how tough it is for today’s actors. HV

If you like this try The Moth

Caliphate

Terrorist doc

Or: Cribs – Isis Edition, in which the New York Times’s terrorism correspondent, Rukmini Callimachi, reports back on her time spent rifling through abandoned Islamic State barracks, leafing through their HR records and diaries to piece together the human face within the inky darkness. Having raised the bar with The Daily, NYT is keen to show us just how cinematic their sound design can get with this Hans Zimmer-level dazzler. GH

If you like this try Slow Burn

Capital

Brexit-style satire

This semi-improvised narrative podcast is about the panic and bureaucracy in the UK after a vote to make execution legal has been made. In a Thick of It-style story that’s got more than a touch of Brexit chaos to it, Harry Enfield plays an inept capital punishment minister, and there’s a cameo from newsreader Jon Snow. However, it’s Fresh Meat’s Charlotte Ritchie and Liam Williams (of BBC3’s Pls Like) who steal the show as warring, ineffectual civil servants. HJD

If you like this try This Sounds Serious

Cocaine & Rhinestones

Country tales

Facebook Twitter Pinterest Tyler Mahan Coe.

Tyler Mahan Coe’s history of country music lives up to its glamorously scandalous title, bringing out the backstories of both high-profile figures and lesser-known names. From the reason why Loretta Lynn’s songs were banned and Wynonna Judd’s life story to a three-parter based around those involved in the record Harper Valley PTA, each episode has more sagas than a country song, making it a gripping listen. HV

If you like this try Disgraceland

The Comedian’s Comedian

Comics get in-depth

Stuart Goldsmith’s interview podcast sees top billing comedians give insights into how they bring out the laughs, whether it’s Katherine Ryan demonstrating her “benevolent roast” or Shappi Khorsandi pinpointing her need to perform with a rant about her childhood. HV

If you like this try The Two Shot Podcast

Dear Joan and Jericha

Fictional agony aunts

Julia Davis and Vicky Pepperdine’s podcast is offensiveness disguised as polite conversation. Playing a pair of seemingly respectable agony aunts, their audience’s questions solicit filthy answers, dressed up as the kind of advice that comes from women in buttoned-up cardigans. From a lustful description of a stepson to a screeching tirade against “geriatric” mothers, it’s perfectly delivered gold that’s hilarious all the way through. HV

If you like this try Why Is Your Bottom So Dirty?

Dissect

Musical academia

Host Cole Cuchna recorded his track-by-track albums teardown by night, in his garage, while holding down a full-time job. It’s a feeling that still bleeds into his third season, on Frank Ocean’s Blonde: an uber-nerd, juiced on passion, blasting out genius-level Rap Genius footnotes. GH

If you like this try In Sight Out

Do the Right Thing

Riotous quiz

Award-winning moral panel show that asks the question: what would you do in a catastrophe? Led by Danielle Ward and a revolving cast including Sara Pascoe and Nish Kumar, the debate ranges from the righteous to the ridiculous. HG

If you like this try Throwing Shade

Elis James and John Robins podcast

Pub chat in podcast form

There’s more to Radio X than Blossoms. This podcast follows a mighty lineage of comic-led shows from the station (Adam and Joe, Ricky Gervais and Stephen Merchant, Russell Brand) but James and Robins give the setup a tenderness and emotionally unstable slant. Regular features like Humble Brag of the Week sit sweetly next to Robins’s sweaty-palmed obsession with Queen/Zappa. HG

If you like this try Elis James’ Feast of Football

Gossip

Sex and the City for audio

Allison Raskin has cooked up a smart soap opera of a podcast centred on all the juicy (scripted) gossip that goes down in a coffee shop. Along with standard news about whose husband’s cheating this week, there’s a hint of something more sinister going on in the US suburb of Golden Acres. Funny, quick-witted and perfect for a commute. HV

If you like this try Homecoming



Griefcast

How to deal with loss

Cariad Lloyd’s award-winning podcast about death is touching and, at times, downright hilarious, with guests including Sara Pascoe, Adam Buxton and David Baddiel. The death of Lloyd’s own dad at an early age shapes her sensitive questioning with a knowledge of knowing when it’s OK to make a joke. In Baddiel’s case, dark laughs stem from the absurd fallout of his mum’s affair with a golfing memorabilia salesman. HV

If you like this try Made of Human

The Guilty Feminist

Instersectional panel show

Facebook Twitter Pinterest Deborah Frances White.

It can be pretty difficult to know what constitutes being an upstanding feminist these days, a fact that led Deborah Frances-White to create this much-loved podcast. Covering themes from menstruation and exercise to ethical clothing, she and her guests explore the contradictions and limitations of modern feminism in a way that never feels overly heavy. Plus, there’s a diverse pool of guests; recent interviewees have included FGM activist Leyla Hussein and actor Gemma Arterton. HJD

If you like this try Scummy Mummies, Unladylike

Hannibal Buress Handsome Rambler

Leftfield interviews

While its interview format appears traditional upfront, the chats are freestyle, and often scored with whirring synths and drums. His encounter with musician Lizzo brings the improv chaos of The Eric Andre Show to audio, while snagging time with the likes of Tiffany Haddish, Run the Jewels and Chris Rock is impressive, especially since Buress is often very high. HG

If you like this try New Year’s Eve With Neil Hamburger



With portfolio careers and freelancing ever more du jour, this podcast from US writer Mary HK Choi feels highly relevant. She interviews everyone from a music A&R to a porn star to a paparazzo about the hard graft that’s got them to where they are. HJD

If you like this try How I Built This, Wanna Be

Romesh Ranganathan’s rap academia

A melodramatic title for a comic known for his lethargic delivery, but this podcast drills into the genre’s impact on its guests’ lives, from Loyle Carner to Chali 2na, Doc Brown and star of Asian Provocateur, Shanthi Ranganathan (Romesh’s mum) teasing out coming-of-age memories and present day psychoanalysing. Start with Frankie Boyle’s episode and his conspiracy theory about Biggie and 2Pac. HG

If you like this try Questlove Supreme

Hit Parade

Examining pop

Chart analyst and critic Chris Molanphy’s super in-depth, meticulously researched podcast is perfect for the sorts of pop addicts who are always ahead of the charts. From B-sides that deserved better and the mid-80s obsession with the charity single to Madonna’s pivot to electronica, nothing is too big a topic for the host to break down. HJD

If you like this try On Shuffle

Facebook Twitter Pinterest Alexa Chung with Mike Skinner and Murkage Dave.

Dry your eyes: there isn’t a new Streets album, but there is a Mike Skinner podcast. He and TONGA collaborator Murkage Dave are the hosts of this interview show, which, to date, has featured Liam Gallagher (who memorably describes fellow parents at the school gates as “nosy cunts”), Alexa Chung, XL boss Richard Russell and SB.TV founder Jamal Edwards. HJD

If you like this try Distraction Pieces Podcast with Scroobius Pip

Longform

Journalism unpacked

As any hack who has ever muttered: “Oh just give me the dictaphone, I’ll do it,” slightly out of earshot of a tedious starlet will already know – if you want great quotes, interview journalists. In between the endless stream of New Yorker staff writers we hear from all-time greats such as Gay Talese and Michael Lewis. GH

If you like this try Thirty Seconds Or Less

You know your podcast has hit the big time when it’s not sponsored by Squarespace. This one has Kellogg’s Corn Flakes as its benefactor. Corn Flakes, of course, were originally designed to dampen the sex drive, but don’t tell Arielle Free and Kem Cetinay, who chew through the previous evening’s fumblings on the ITV2 monolith. GH

If you like this try Buffering the Vampire Slayer

Love + Radio

Strange stories

The stories at the heart of this intimate, moving podcast are what will keep you coming back for more, from heartbreak to revenge to near-death traumas. Nothing is too niche, either: a recent episode focused on a Texas violin teacher who believed he’d cracked a classical music mystery, while season five highlight A Girl of Ivory is about a man “married” to two plastic dolls. HJD

If you like this try Swipe Left Swipe Left!

Lovett Or Leave It

Political panel

Former Obama speechwriter Jon Lovett is a fast-talking bomb of smart one-liners – he’s the kind of man who would stalk the corridors of The West Wing or Veep, correcting everyone along the way. His podcast, from the same stable as quick-witted Pod Save America, offers razor-sharp opinions on Trump’s North Korea summit, Facebook’s influence on politics and Bill Cosby. HV

If you like this try Slate’s Trumpcast

Meat

Body positive introspection

Jonathan Zenti isn’t the most prolific podcaster and he admits that nothing will top his first episode, Host’s Fat, in which he talks about how he feels about being overweight. He’s right: it’s one of the most incredible podcasts you’ll hear; full of honesty, raw emotion and an insight into why society has such a problem with people who take up more space in the world. HV

If you like this try The Heart

My Dad Wrote a Porno

Risque book club

My Dad Wrote a Porno sounds bizarre on paper, but not as bizarre as the Belinda Blinked series – a set of stilted, cringe-inducing sex books written by host Jamie Morton’s dad. Morton’s reactions – as well as those of co-hosts Alice Levine and James Cooper – are what makes the show, though. And with their current tour taking them to huge venues around the world, you imagine there are probably plenty more Belinda-themed tomes still to come. HJD

If you like this try The Worst Idea of All Time, No Such Thing As a Fish

The Nod

Exploring the US black experience

Brittany Luse and Eric Eddings venture down various race-related paths, be it the Wayans brothers flick White Chicks or the 1974 Zaire football team’s World Cup adventure, in a garrulous way that appeals equally to everyone. Case in point: I Want That Purple Stuff, in which the duo delve not into Alice Walker, but how grape-flavoured soft drinks became a staple of African-American culture. GH

If you like this try Cosby Unravelled

On Shuffle

Musical talking points

Good music podcasts are hard to come by, not least because you can’t really play music on a podcast for reasons of copyright (boo). Despite this, On Shuffle – from US sport and culture site The Ringer – does a great job at summing up the biggest debates of the minute, from the death of divisive rapper XXXTentacion to whether Kanye West is actually cancelled. HJD

If you like this try Hit Parade

Pod Save America

How the White House works

Left-leaning common sense-merchants Jon Lovett, Tommy Vietor and Jon “Not the one from Swingers” Favreau all worked in Barack Obama’s team and now have plenty to get their Trump-baiting teeth into every week. Obama gifted them his last interview as President and now they give a twice-weekly insight into how the White House works and how horrendous the current situation is. HV

If you like this try Making Obama

Queery with Cameron Esposito

Queer Eye for the podcast

At a time when queer culture is more mainstream than ever but often commodified and contorted, it’s heartening to hear US standup Esposito make genuine connections with well-known names across the gender and sexuality spectrum, with a smattering of laughs thrown in for good measure. This warm podcast often feels like earwigging on a conversation between two mates, with recent guests including Search Party’s Alia Shawkat, Bad Feminist author Roxane Gay and Drag Race contestant-turned-comedian Trixie Mattel. HJD

If you like this try Nancy, RuPaul: What’s the Tee?, Las Culturistas

The Recappables

TV-flavoured conversation

Where once we would have had proper companions to watch TV with, nowadays it’s an altogether more solitary pastime, and one many of us squidge to fit into commutes or even gym sessions. However, chats about telly haven’t disappeared; rather, they now unfold on social media, in comments sections or on a podcast like this, which boasts strands covering Westworld, Billions and Atlanta. There’s also The Rewatchables, its sister show, which is all about the joy of rewatching your favourite films, from Miami Vice to The Big Lebowski via David Fincher’s The Social Network, a film that’s both compelling and now increasingly anachronistic. HJD

If you like this try The Wire Stripped, How Did This Get Made?

The Reductress Minute

Bite-sized feminist satire

Joke women’s site The Reductress has long been the place to go for hilariously on-the-nose comic “news” (among its recent hits are Eating Dinner in Bed Transformed Into Self-Care by String Lights and Are You Ovulating or Did You Just Look at a Picture of The Rock Holding His New Baby?). After putting faux-advice podcast Mouth Time on ice last year, they’ve launched The Reductress Minute, a recap of the site’s best stories of the week, plus some all-time classics. HJD

If you like this try Guys We Fucked, Call Your Girlfriend

Rule of Three

A comedy fan forum

Created by Joel Morris and Jason Hazeley – the writers behind Philomena Cunk and Ladybird Books for Grown-ups – this celebratory new podcast asks comics to talk about the comedy they love in order to learn something about the maths of making people laugh. Particular highlights include Rufus Jones on Robert De Niro’s Midnight Run, John Finnemore praising the dark delights of Chris Morris’s news satire On the Hour and Danielle Ward dissecting Bottom (not like that). HG

If you like this try Sitcom Geeks, Museum of Comedy

Sandra

Scripted technophobia drama

Gimlet’s seven-episode blast is snappy enough to binge in a day and one episode is never enough. Alia Shawkat is Helen, a woman in the middle of a messy divorce who gets a job scripting the answers of a virtual assistant (played by Kristen Wiig). Ethan Hawke is her bothersome manager, who becomes just another problem as Helen’s life begins to unravel. HV

If you like this try Rabbits

Savage Lovecast

Audio agony aunt

Dan Savage gives the best love and lust advice around in his distinctly NSFW podcast. Nothing is left uncovered, so if you need to know how to explain your kinky preferences on a dating profile or when to ask if your new partner is trans, Savage is your guide. And yes, the dilemmas he solves are real. HV

If you like this try Dear Sugars

Short Cuts

Short documentaries

The Radio 4 show offers “brief encounters, true stories, radio adventures and found sound” and each one is a self-contained gem. Josie Long presents the long-running series packed with observations on themes from sibling rivalry to mortality, and just about everything else in between, so you never know what you’re going to get. HV

If you like this try The Truth

Song Exploder

Sleeve notes

Each Song Exploder might be only be around 20 minutes long, but in that time host Hrishikesh Hirway persuades musicians to take the deepest dive into pop songs in a way that makes you crave a listen by the end. If you haven’t already been hooked, start with St Vincent’s New York, Lorde’s Sober and Solange’s Cranes in the Sky. HV

If you like this try New York Times’s Popcast

Still Processing

Identity politics and pop culture

Facebook Twitter Pinterest Still Processing. Photograph: Ryan Pfluger/The New York Times

The New York Times’ Wesley Morris and Jenna Wortham are two writers of colour who aren’t afraid to get real about race and identity. They present this sharp pop-culture pod, where you can expect to hear about everything from “bad” women on screen to Roseanne’s Ambien-fuelled Twitter meltdown, the rise of queer pop and what whiteness means on screen in 2018. HJD

If you like this try Keep It

Susan Calman’s Mrs Brightside

Comedians on mental health

The Scottish standup invites other funny people to discuss their mental health and help remove the stigma that persists. Although subtitled A Cheerful Look at Depression, Calman’s guests have varied challenges; in the opening episode of eight, she sits down with Edinburgh-nominated comic Jordan Brookes, who has pure O, a type of OCD that focuses around inner compulsions rather than outward rituals. Kind, raw, pertinent and funny, this is everything a mental health podcast should be. HJD

If you like this try Terrible, Thanks for Asking

Switched on Pop

The maths of music

A fascinating deep-dive into how vast teams of talented people channel their knowledge of melody, diminished chords and syncopated snares into making truly terrible slush pop. Or, if you prefer, a subtle reminder not to dismiss a Despacito or a Twenty One Pilots out of hand. GH

If you like this try Henry Rollins’ Henry and Heidi Show

Table Manners

Food with famous people

What could be just another pop star reminiscing about Live Lounges and the album campaign lull has turned into its own enlightening entity. This podcast finds musician Jessie Ware sitting in her kitchen with her rambunctious mum, who makes dinner for a new guest each week, from Ed Sheeran to London mayor Sadiq Khan, the latter of whom broke his Ramadan fast to talk about standing for re-election, nightlife in London, crime and chips. HG

If you like this try Homo Sapiens

Unpopped

Zeitgeist musing

The BBC’s pop culture offering gets a millennial spin with this factual-but-fun podcast hosted by journalist Hayley Campbell. Zoning in on the biggest pop culture trends and moments of recent history, from One Direction to Drag Race and, er, Come Dine With Me, she and her contributors offer detailed overviews that never feel overly weighty. HJD

If you like this try The High Low

The Watch

Pop culture explained

The Ringer – the website that’s the new home to cult sports writer Bill Simmons – bottles his brand of “lightly worn- heavy IQ” commentary in the same way his old stomping ground Grantland did. Here you can find The Watch, where writers Andy Greenwald and Chris Ryan take the week’s biggest watch/read/listen questions apart, from the Fox-Comcast merger and Black Mirror to Donald Glover’s This Is America video. GH

If you like this try Slate’s Culture Gabfest, The Nerdist

Where Should We Begin

Couples therapy

In each 40-45-minute episode, two romantically entwined, often anguished people sit with Esther Perel, Belgian psychotherapist and emotional mastermind, who works through their insecurities. From low libidos to overcoming infidelity, role play and all manners of childhood traumas that might lead to a skewiff love life, the podcast is an essential for nosy or curious types. Season three is set to branch out into family and platonic relationships. HG

If you like this try Death, Sex & Money

Why Is This Happening? With Chris Hayes

The news, explained

Slate’s grumble-heavy Trumpcast made heavy weather in 2016. In 2018 the genre it spawned has morphed into a kind of horrified “Aaarghcast”. With a title that recalls Jeff Goldblum turning into The Fly, Chris Hayes explores a question bigger than just the meaning of Trump: just why the entire mass of society, democracy and media seems to be warping and folding beneath us. GH

If you like this try Chapo Trap House

WTF With Marc Maron

Intimate interviews

Prolific podcaster Maron pulls in big names, from Barack Obama downwards. His angry preambles are dynamite and he even makes the adverts sound furious. Start with the Jennifer Lawrence episode, in which she out-talks him and is rip-roaring company rather than line-toeing Hollywood ingenue. HV

If you like this try The Joe Rogan Experience

You Must Remember This

Hollywood history

This cinematic exploration is hosted by Karina Longworth, a narrator whose voice drips with old-school glamour and powder-room gossip. Marilyn Monroe gets the three-episode treatment and Joan Crawford enjoys six degrees, while there’s a whole string devoted to Charles Manson, with plenty of fresh material. HV

If you like this try Hollywood and Crime