Gesamtlänge aller Episoden: 2 days 3 hours 23 minutes
Double figures. Gosh, they grow up so fast. In this episode, Charles examines why old documents use the letter "f" where we would now write the letter "s" (spoiler: they don't), argues about the desirability of gay marriage with Michael Brendan Dougherty, and reflects upon the late Christine McVie's fabulous contributions to Fleetwood Mac.
On this Thanksgiving episode, Charles stops complaining for a moment and explains what he's grateful for; interviews Ricky Cobb about his smash-hit Twitter account, @Super70sSports; and answers questions about his dual citizenship.
From his island perch in the Lucayan Archipelago, Charles takes a look at what he got wrong about the 2022 midterms, argues that it is well beyond time for the Republican Party to dump Donald Trump, and talks to Josh Sauerman about animatronics.
It's Election Day in America. To celebrate, Charles chats with RealClearPolitics's Sean Trende about opinion polls past and present, and talks to David Bernstein about his book, 'Classified: The Untold Story of Racial Classification in America.'
Charles has lost much of his voice on this sixth episode of The Charles C. W. Cooke Podcast. Nevertheless, he persists. On this one, Charles takes the press to task for its reaction to the attack on Paul Pelosi, talks to Mary Katharine Ham about her ordeal at CNN, and runs through Giles Martin's brilliant 'Revolver' remix with the help of Jeff Blehar.
In this diametrically striped edition of The Charles C. W. Cooke Podcast, Charles shares his readers' most bizarre sporting superstitions and talks to Andy McCarthy about whether Congress should abolish the FBI.
This episode of The Charles C. W. Cooke Podcast has been released on a Thursday—just as the Founding Fathers intended. It features an interview with NBC's Marc Caputo about Florida and its upcoming election, and a new Q&A during which Charles answers questions about his kids' accents and what he thinks of the Bible.
A surprise "pop-up episode." Charles debates his recent column, "Biden’s Pot Pardons Are the Wrong Means to the Right End," with the Cato Institute's Clark Neily, and, on the podcast's first Color Supplement, talks to Jeff Blehar about Supertramp's classic album, "Breakfast in America."
The difficult second episode. Features a discussion of the New York Times's piece, "At N.Y.U., Students Were Failing Organic Chemistry. Who Was to Blame?"; an interview with Gareth Russell about his book on the Queen Mother; and the very first—dun, dun, duh!—Q&A.
The first episode. Features a review of the new format, an observation about cancel culture, an interview with Troy Senik about his new book on Grover Cleveland, and a brief chat with Dan McLaughlin about Aaron Judge's 61st home run of the season.