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  • The Summer of 1998 | France '98, The Ladettes, the Birth of Google & the Death of Cool Britannia
    2026/06/30

    We go back to the summer of 1998 and start where so many UK memories start: France 98, England vs Argentina, and the David Beckham backlash that somehow became bigger than the match itself. From there, things spiral into a perfect little time capsule of late-90s Britain, right down to the unhinged tabloid “Beckham dartboard” that turned national frustration into something nastier.

    We also dig through what was on telly and what was starting to take over: Graeme Norton’s early rise, South Park’s UK debut on Channel 4, Soccer Saturday becoming a weekend fixture, SMTV Live pulling everyone in, and Telly Addicts quietly bowing out. Add in a sweep of the summer 1998 music charts (Boyzone, B*Witched, Three Lions 98, and Billie) and a detour through the films of 1998, including a proper Truman Show “what happens next?” debate, and you get a portrait of a year that feels oddly in-between.

    If you like UK pop culture history, 90s telly, and honest nostalgia that remembers the rough edges as well as the bangers, hit subscribe, share it with a mate, and leave us a review. What single thing from summer 1998 do you still remember most clearly



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    40 分
  • TV We'd Like to Get Rid Of | Shows, Characters, Theme Tunes & Genres (From The Madeley Archives)
    2026/06/28

    Some telly doesn’t age badly, it just gets under your skin in new ways. We crack open the Madeley Archives and revisit “Get Rid of It”, our very British, very subjective spin on Room 101, where we pick the TV shows, characters, and overused bits of footage we’d happily wipe from the schedule forever.

    Got a TV moment you’d ban forever, or one you defend to the death? Listen, then subscribe, share the episode with a fellow nostalgia nerd, and leave us a review so more people can join the argument.

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    37 分
  • The Breakfast Cereal World Cup
    2026/06/23

    A breakfast bowl shouldn’t feel like a sporting rivalry, yet here we are. We take the World Cup format and use it for something far more personal: a full knockout tournament to crown the greatest UK childhood breakfast cereal, with only pre-2000 contenders allowed and no “modern taste” revisionism to save the sensible options.

    Press play, pick your side, then tell us what we got wrong. Subscribe, share with a mate who’ll argue, and leave a review so more people can join the cereal World Cup debate.

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    1 時間 5 分
  • Paul Sykes - Britain's Hardest Prisoner (From The Madeley Archives)
    2026/06/21

    He’s a former prisoner who calls himself “a wonderful citizen”, argues like he’s in court even when he’s alone in a front room, and tells a shark story that sounds impossible and somehow still believable. Yes, we’re taking you back to our most-listened to Living With Madeley episode and reuploading our take on the legendary Paul Sykes documentary.

    If you enjoy the show, subscribe, share it with a mate who loves classic British documentaries, and leave us a review so more people can find the podcast. What’s the one Paul Sykes line you can’t stop repeating?

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    56 分
  • Remembering the 2010 World Cup: South Africa Revisited Part 2 (with Ben "Mo Money" Meakin & Travelling Blade)
    2026/06/19

    A ball bounces down off the bar, lands over the line, and somehow the goal is not given. That single moment is enough to send you straight back to 2010, when the South Africa World Cup knockouts delivered peak drama, peak chaos, and a few scars that still itch whenever anyone mentions refereeing.

    We pick up our UK nostalgia deep-dive with England v Germany and the infamous Lampard “ghost goal”, plus the strange pre-match confidence that collapses almost immediately. From there we jump to Argentina v Mexico, where an offside goal is shown on the stadium screen for everyone to see, yet it still stands because there is no VAR to intervene. If you ever wonder why football sprinted towards goal-line technology and video review, these are the case files.

    The quarter-finals and beyond give us a different kind of argument: not just who is better, but what we actually want the game to be. Germany flatten Argentina while Maradona provides pure managerial theatre, Spain grind their way through with suffocating tiki-taka, and the Netherlands shock Brazil before turning the final into a war of attrition. We also revisit Ghana v Uruguay, Suarez’s deliberate handball, Asamoah Gyan’s heartbreak, and the uncomfortable question of whether a “smart” red card can still feel like cheating.

    If you love World Cup history, 2010 South Africa memories, and proper debates about fairness versus winning, hit play. Subscribe, share it with a mate who still argues about that Lampard goal, and leave us a review with the moment you will never forgive: what’s yours?

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    55 分
  • Remembering the 2010 World Cup: South Africa Revisited Part 1 (with Ben "Mo Money" Meakin & Travelling Blade)
    2026/06/16

    We’re joined by two guests with serious football memory power, Travelling Blade and Ben “Mo Money” Meakin, as we dig into why South Africa 2010 still sparks such strong opinions across UK football fans.

    Subscribe for part two, share this with a mate who still hears vuvuzelas in their sleep, and leave us a review with the one South Africa 2010 moment you’ll never forget.

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    57 分
  • Public Information Films (From The Madeley Archives)
    2026/06/14

    A railway sports day where children die in body bags, a farm safety film that ends with real dead kids’ names, and a nuclear warning video that casually advises you to move corpses into the spare room. Public information films were meant to keep people safe, but the ones that linger in memory often feel closer to horror than education, and we can’t stop picking at why.

    We dig into classic British public information films and safety adverts, starting with the odd innocence of Charlie Says and its stranger danger message that somehow feels unfinished. From there we head straight into the controversy of The Finishing Line, a railway safety film so graphic it still shocks, and Apaches, whose ending reframes the whole film when you realise the “credits” are not credits at all. Along the way we talk road safety nostalgia, why these films often appeared late at night, and how the AIDS tombstone advert landed on children who didn’t even understand what it was warning them about.

    The mood turns bleaker with Protect and Survive, the Cold War civil defence guidance designed for the days before nuclear attack, and we look at what it says about government preparedness and public fear. We also confront Boys Beware, a US government film that confuses homosexuality with danger, to show how “public protection” messaging can become propaganda. We finish by asking what we’d warn people about today, and whether modern safety campaigns have lost something by becoming less bold.

    If you enjoy dark nostalgia, British TV history, and the psychology of fear-based public health messaging, hit subscribe, share the episode with a friend, and leave us a review. What public information film or safety advert do you still remember most vividly?

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    39 分
  • The Funniest World Cup Moments - Our Top 10
    2026/06/09

    Join us as we rank our top ten funniest World Cup moments. They're all absolutely hilarious. Every single one of them.

    If you love football nostalgia, funny World Cup moments, classic punditry, and the little TV details that become folklore, you’ll feel right at home. Subscribe, share the episode, and leave us a rating or review so more people can find the podcast.

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    58 分