The Age and Sydney Morning Herald

Good Weekend Talks

News EN ↓ 100 episodes

Good Weekend Talks features in-depth conversations with the people fascinating Australians right now, from sport to politics to the arts, business and beyond, interviewed weekly by the country's top journalists. Consider it a magazine for your ears.

Author

The Age and Sydney Morning Herald

Category

News

Podcast website

www.smh.com.au

Latest episode

Jul 10, 2026

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Episodes

‘I know enough to be dangerous’: Boost Juice founder Janine Allis on failure and success 10.07.2026

Starting a business is one thing, running it successfully is another – but doing it with your spouse and four kids is a different kettle of fish. Janine Allis has done all of the above, after founding Boost Juice as a single store in the 2000s and growing it into a global empire. She’s since become one of the most sought-after entrepreneurs in the country and a regular on small screens...

‘I’ve mellowed a little bit’: Peter Singer on the limit of free speech and his guidance for giving 03.07.2026

Peter Singer, often called the world's most influential philosopher, is turning 80, and he's returned home to Melbourne too, after almost 25 years as a professor of bioethics at Princeton University. Singer's practical ethics has had a huge impact and caused controversy across issues as diverse as the rights of animals, voluntary euthanasia and abortion, freedom of speech, and our moral obligation...

'Accomplishment flows into courage': Rob de Castella on the Indigenous Marathon Project 26.06.2026

Rob de Castella, otherwise known as “Deeks” - or, to his opponents, “Tree”, due to his sturdy limbs and unshiftable calm - is a two-time Commonwealth Games gold medal winner and Australian running royalty. He joins  Good Weekend Talks to chat about his Indigenous Marathon Project, in which he takes a group of Indigenous people from around the country every year and sig...

Anna Funder on telling untold stories – and the blowback it sometimes brings 19.06.2026

Australian author and intellectual Anna Funder specialises in telling the stories of people forgotten or ignored by official histories. She began her writing career with Stasiland, detailing the state surveillance of the people of the former East Germany, which was followed by her prize-winning novel, All That I Am, telling the previously untold story of early resisters to the Nazis. In her most r...

Pulitzer novelist Andrew Sean Greer on ‘charm novels’, the Italian life and travel wisdom 12.06.2026

Picture this: a crumbling Italian mansion in the Tuscan hills, an eccentric aristocrat, sun-soaked lunches, too much wine and a house humming with secrets. That’s the delightful world into which we’re heading today as we talk to writer Andrew Sean Greer, whose new novel, Villa Coco , is loosely inspired by his own time at an Italian estate around a famous Baroness. The Pulitzer Prize-w...

John Safran on growing up Jewish, free speech, race - and Race Around the World 05.06.2026

John Safran burst into the public consciousness in 1997 as a contestant in the ABC TV show Race Around the World , where young filmmakers travelled the world making four-minute films in just 10 days. Safran won the popular vote on the reality show after running through Jerusalem naked, and asking a voodoo priest to put a curse on an ex-girlfriend. Almost 30 years on, the show is back, with Safran...

What childless Gen Xer Katrina Strickland wants those stuck in today's baby-making vortex to know 29.05.2026

There's a profound grief associated with not having kids if you really wanted them, one that's rarely acknowledged, even less understood. But there's also an unexpected joy when you come out the other side. In today's conversation, Good Weekend senior writer Katrina Strickland discusses the ups and downs of her own path into childlessness with Good Weekend editor Melissa Stevens. They traverse wha...

From two-up to bingo halls and gaming apps  – Shaun Micallef on our gambling obsession 22.05.2026

Shaun Micallef has graced our TV screens since 1989 – from crime caper  Mr and Mrs Murder to long-running game show Talkin' About Your Generation and weekly satirical news comedy Mad as Hell. But he's not averse to tackling the big issues, either: his latest series, Going for Broke, examines our national gambling habit. In today's conversation, with senior culture writer Kerrie O'Brien,...

'Angertainers' are dividing society: Author Ed Coper explains why we fall for 'rage bait' 15.05.2026

Social media was once harnessed by Barack Obama to spread hope. Now “angertainers” are exploiting our human instinct to seek threat to divide society and to build their own cultural, political and social capital, often based on misinformation and lies. They create content for platforms that reward stunts, insults and anger – in the process, distorting reality and hijacking any po...

300th episode: Bob Brown on finding optimism – live at the Melbourne Writers Festival 09.05.2026

Bob Brown has spent the past 50 years trying to make people put the planet before profit. The environmental crusader, former senator and medical doctor, and founding member of the Wilderness Society has fought pivotal battles, including campaigns to save the Franklin River and the Swift parrot. He also practises what he preaches: he has lived sustainably for decades in a one-bedroom home. Today, t...

‘Even today, the cost continues’: Christie Whelan Browne on speaking out 01.05.2026

You might know her best from Shaun Micallef's Mad as Hell , but over the past 20 years, Christie Whelan Browne has become one of the most in-demand stars of the Australian stage, appearing in Britney Spears: The Cabaret , The Producers , Shane Warne: The Musical and Muriel's Wedding . But the thing that has kept her in the headlines is no laughing matter – the allegations of sexual harassmen...

Fran Lebowitz on smoking, Trump and today's young people being another species 24.04.2026

When Fran Lebowitz was growing up in suburban New Jersey in the 1950s, she won a school award for being “the Class Wit” – and in her 50-year career as a writer and speaker, she’s repeatedly earned that label. Among her countless famous aphorisms, this zinger: "The best fame is a writer's fame. It's enough to get a table at a good restaurant, but not enough to get you i...

Luke Bateman: Former NRL star and gambling addict, now lumberjack ‘bookfluencer’ 17.04.2026

Luke Bateman is perhaps Australia’s most unlikely book critic – a former rugby league star and recovered gambling addict who works as a logger on a remote Queensland property. While hardly your average inner-city literary type, Bateman had always loved reading – especially fantasy books – but living in the bush with only black snakes for company, had no one to talk to about...

The New Yorker's Patrick Radden Keefe on investigating 'an unnatural death' 10.04.2026

Investigative journalist Patrick Radden Keefe has made a career out of chasing the kinds of stories that most people would be wise to leave alone. The  New Yorker writer is drawn to powerful institutions and the people at their heart – from the Sackler dynasty, whose pharmaceutical company created the opioid painkiller OxyContin, in Empire of Pain, to the legacy of the Troubles in North...

Bourdain and Batali's 'right-hand' woman Laurie Woolever on her tell-all book 03.04.2026

New York food writer, editor and podcaster Laurie Woolever spent the early years of her career assisting two very famous chefs: first Mario Batali, then Anthony Bourdain, for whom she worked for nine years. Woolever was also, for much of this time, an addict – using alcohol, marijuana and sex to get through the ups and downs of work, marriage and motherhood. She writes about all of this in h...

From finance to front row: Australian fashion boss Marianne Perkovic 26.03.2026

Marianne Perkovic spent decades working in the finance sector. In 2006, she was the youngest chief executive of an ASX-listed company and in 2018, as a banking executive, she faced a grilling at a royal commission. This is not the standard path for nailing the best seat at Australian Fashion Week. In fact, becoming executive chair of the Australian Fashion Council in 2023 was meant to be her &ldqu...

Stephanie Alexander on writing, eating, air-frying – and The Cook’s Companion turning 30 20.03.2026

Stephanie Alexander is a national icon: an internationally renowned cooking guru, best-selling writer and inspirational founder of a nationwide kitchen-garden scheme for schoolkids. She's also the final arbiter of kitchen disputes in homes all over Australia – resolving disagreements about how to store tomatoes and when to take the sponge out of the oven – as the author of Australia's...

Bob Carr on grief and 'the left-over life' after his wife's death 13.03.2026

Bob Carr has done hard jobs before. He was premier of NSW for 10 years, and later served as foreign minister under Julia Gillard’s government. But when his beloved wife, Helena, died suddenly of a brain aneurysm in 2023, he faced the hardest job of his life – learning how to live without her. Carr worked through his deep shock and sadness by obsessively walking the Sydney streets he on...

Courtney Barnett on songwriting, her deadpan delivery – and what she did next 06.03.2026

In this episode, we talk to Courtney Barnett, who broke into the musical mainstream a little over a decade ago as an Aussie singer-songwriter with deadpan delivery, with work veering from the witty and rambling to something evoking Margaret Atwood. The Grammy-nominated artist chats to Konrad Marshall from her home in Los Angeles, where she's about to release her fourth album, "Creature of Habit"....

Kathy Lette on female betrayal: ‘More painful than divorce’ 27.02.2026

Kathy Lette is a comic writer and pioneering voice in contemporary feminism whose first book,  Puberty Blues , was published in 1979. Co-authored with Gabrielle Carey, it catapulted her into the public eye, horrifying her headmistress mother with its graphic depictions of teenage sex and drug taking. She has subsequently written 21 best-selling books and today speaks with The Sydney Morning H...

Todd Sampson on doomsday preppers, aliens and why people reach for the extreme 20.02.2026

Todd Sampson began his TV career on Gruen , the long-running ABC series about advertising, before transforming himself into a human guinea pig to scrutinise the limits of the human brain and body. His upcoming show, called Why?, explores the reasons behind why people turn to extreme beliefs and behaviours such as doomsday prepping, base-jumping or alien worship. In this chat, hosted by The Sy...

Why we run: Konrad Marshall on 365 days of jogging 13.02.2026

Konrad Marshall is Good Weekend magazine's deputy editor, he's also the regular host of this podcast and he's just released a new book. Run For Your Life is a year-long journey on why we run, and explores a year Konrad spent in constant motion – jogging and sprinting, shuffling and loping, while also interviewing some of Australia's most interesting runners. See omnystudio.com/listener for p...

Brooke Blurton is successful, smart and Indigenous. And still, trolls tell her she's 'on Centrelink'. 06.02.2026

In this episode, we talk to reality TV star, youth worker and mental health advocate Brooke Blurton. Many know her as the first Indigenous and bisexual Bachelorette from the dating-show franchise, but she's also an author, presenter and podcaster. Blurton talks with Konrad Marshall about everything from growing up in Western Australia to life after  The Bachelorette and her recent TV collabor...

Martin Luther King III on retaining hope in today’s world: ‘Civility has been temporarily lost’ 28.01.2026

Martin Luther King III carries one of the most famous names in 20th century history, that of his father, Dr Martin Luther King, Jr. The second child and eldest son of Dr King, Mr King was just 10 years old when his father was assassinated in Memphis on April 4, 1968. Mr King joins  Good Weekend  senior writer Amanda Hooton for a discussion on what it was like to have the most f...

Pod Save America’s Jon Lovett on hope – and comedy – in the midst of a Trump presidency 23.01.2026

Jon Lovett is a former speech writer for Barack Obama, a progressive activist and co-host of a global hit political podcast. Sounds serious, right? Yet, out of the four hosts of the popular  Pod Save America , Lovett it is known as the funny one. He's a comedian   who appeared on a season of  Survivor , wrote a political sitcom that lasted one season and even worked o...

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