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Tim Windsor Podcasts

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WE ARE ALL BORN WITH THE WONDROUS POTENTIAL TO STAND OUT FROM THE HERD AND LIVE A SIGNIFICANTLY IMPACTFUL LIFE- SO, LET’S START RIGHT NOW! the UNCOMMODiFiED Podcast … an Unusually Provocative Guide to Standing Out in a Crowded World
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New Community Church

New Community Church

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New Community Church is a multi-venue church in South East London living for Jesus. On Soundcloud we have Sunday talks and podcasts from across our venues. You can also find the talks on Spotify, Apple Podcasts and Google Podcasts.
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Daily political analysis from The Spectator's top team of writers, including Michael Gove, Tim Shipman, Isabel Hardman, James Heale, Lucy Dunn and many others. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Duty First

Pivot Studios

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This is Duty First, a podcast about the history of the Royal Australian Regiment (RAR). Bear witness as the regiment rises from the ashes of the Second World War to become Australia’s first ever professionalised infantry force. Told by members of the regiment who were there, enter a world where courage takes centre stage and history comes alive. Tim Russell, Writer & Producer Slade Gibson, Audio Producer & Composer Paul Larter, Host Harry Windsor, Writer Produced by Pivot Studios for The Dep ...
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BOOM CHUCK a Drummers Podcast

Boom Chuck A Drummers Podcast

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Chris Phillips from IAMDYNAMITE and Mad Valley talking to Drummers about, Life, Skills, Techniques, History, and gear....Pretty much everything! Thanks for Listening! Social Media links mentioned in Podcast are no longer relevant!
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Last Sunday, Tim launched our Jonah series by exploring what happens when we choose our ways over God’s ways. Jonah runs from God’s call, yet God pursues him with mercy. This message looks at why we run, how God uses crisis to draw us back, and how Jonah points us to Jesus, our true rescuer.By New Community Church
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What lessons does America have for our politics? While progressives look to Zohran Mamdani for inspiration on how to get elected successfully, the really important question is how to govern effectively. And here it is the Trump administration which is setting the standard, writes Tim Shipman in this week’s cover story. On day one, Donald Trump step…
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A year ago, the Chancellor called her £38 billion tax rise a ‘one-and-done’ move. Now she looks set to rinse and repeat, with reports that a 2p increase in income tax is on the table. According to The Times, she has informed the Office for Budget Responsibility that a rise in personal taxation is one of the ‘major measures’ she will announce. This …
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This Week At Windsor, Jonathan and Ardin are joined by some very special guests from across the world—Jonathan’s cousin Jessica and her husband Barry Shafer. Jessica is a world-renowned singer, and Barry is a teacher of the Word. Together, they share the whirlwind story of how God brought them together, how He has shaped their lives and ministry, a…
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With three weeks until the Budget, the main political parties have been setting out their economic thinking. Each faces the same bind: anaemic growth, fiscal constraints and uncomfortable exposure to the bond markets. The upshot is that there is less ‘clear blue water’ on the economy between Labour, the Conservatives and Reform. This has left a spa…
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In a crowded field, today’s could have been the most bizarre PMQs ever. From David Lammy pronouncing ‘I am the Justice Secretary’ as if it were an affirmation to be chanted in the bathroom mirror, to the wild hair on display on both benches, it surely takes the mantle of parliament at its most ridiculous – and that’s not to mention the story that a…
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What if your worth had nothing to do with what you produce, achieve, or check off a list? In this raw and revealing UNCORKED conversation, Tim Windsor sits down with Gordon D. Melville—known as The Vault—to challenge one of the most dangerous lies of modern culture: “I am what I do.” Together they peel back the layers of identity, worth, and valida…
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Last Sunday, Nick launched our Jonah series by exploring what happens when we choose our ways over God’s ways. Jonah runs from God’s call, yet God pursues him with mercy. This message looks at why we run, how God uses crisis to draw us back, and how Jonah points us to Jesus, our true rescuer.By New Community Church
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It is three weeks until the Budget – and Rachel Reeves wants to get her narrative out there. The Chancellor held an early morning press conference today to, in her words, ‘set out the circumstances and the principles’ guiding her thinking on 26 November. Her speech followed a familiar pattern. First, there was the evisceration of the ‘austerity’, ‘…
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With Reform leading in the polls, Nigel Farage is determined to ensure that nothing can impede its growth. This morning he sought to bolster his credibility on an area that the Tories think could be his Achilles heel: the economy. Reform’s £90 billion programme of tax cuts promised at the last election has been constantly used as a stick with which…
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Introducing The Spectator's newest podcast, Reality Check with economics editor Michael Simmons. Like what you hear? Search 'Reality Check' wherever you are listening to this podcast and be sure to hit 'follow' to never miss an episode. Are the rich fleeing Britain? That's what the numbers suggest, but some activist groups have hit back that the da…
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‘On the day of the local elections, when the Tories suffered a historic setback, Kemi Badenoch went to the gym and got her hair done,’ Tim Shipman reveals in the magazine this week. Aides insist that Badenoch has since ‘upped her game’. Her PMQs performances are improving and the CCHQ machine seems to have whirred into gear, making sure that Labour…
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Happy All Hallows’ Eve, everyone – and there is something spooky going on with Rachel Reeves and a property in Dulwich. Yesterday she was leading the news after admitting to renting out her family home following the move into No. 11 without getting the required licence from Southwark Council. There are a number of mitigating circumstances – not lea…
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There are a few sore heads at 22 Old Queen Street this morning because it was The Spectator’s Parliamentarian of the Year Awards last night. From Lucy Powell’s jibe at Morgan McSweeney (and Tim Shipman, for that matter) to Robert Jenrick’s jokes falling flat, it was an eventful evening of good-natured hazing, naval-gazing and – of course – recognis…
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What if the things you call impossible are simply waiting for you to remember who you once were before the world told you what you couldn’t do? In this bold and mind-twisting episode of the UNCOMMODiFiED Podcast, Tim Windsor cracks open a wild truth — before you were born, you breathed in water. That’s right. You lived, thrived, and grew in an envi…
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Kemi Badenoch continues to look more confident at PMQs – although there are always going to be some easy goals when you lead on the economy. Today she pressed the Prime Minister on Labour’s manifesto pledge not to raise income tax, VAT or national insurance – which he dodged – as well as repeating her offer to work with Labour towards a cross-party…
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There are reports that the OBR will downgrade Britain’s productivity growth forecasts, increasing the size of the black hole facing the Chancellor at the end of the month. This continues the spate of bad news for the Chancellor on the economy – but can we trust the figures? James Heale and Michael Simmons join Patrick Gibbons to talk about what thi…
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With the news that the Home Office has spent billions of taxpayers' money on asylum hotels – and following the accidental release of the Epping sex offender – Tim Shipman and James Heale discuss this most shambolic of government departments. Is it fit for purpose? Can Shabana Mahmood fix the cursed department? And, if not, who will voters turn to i…
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We thought when we organised this podcast that there would just be the newly announced deputy Labour leader to discuss – Lucy Powell beat Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson by 87,407 votes to 73,536. But instead we also have evidence the Prime Minister may have lied to Parliament over the collapse of the China spy case, and there is a manhunt u…
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On the face of it, the Caerphilly by-election result is a disaster, a drubbing and a humiliation for Keir Starmer’s Labour party. A once secure bastion of the Welsh Labour heartlands fell without a squeak from the governing party. Their vote collapsed to a miserable 11 per cent, while Plaid Cymru won with 47 per cent and Reform surged to second pla…
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This Week At Windsor, Jonathan and Ardin sit down with Dave Daniels, our very own WDBC member with a story that echoes the heart of the prodigal son. Growing up as a pastor’s kid, Dave left home and walked away from God at 17, chasing happiness through success, music, and life on his own terms - looking up to his idols in music. But God had other p…
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With every new poll predicting a Reform win at the next general election, the party continues its preparation for government. James Heale joins Oscar Edmondson and Tim Shipman to talk about his article in the magazine looking at what – or who – is shaping Reform’s intellectual revolution. Cambridge intellectual James Orr, close friend to J.D. Vance…
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What if your brand isn’t what you think it is? What if every interaction — every word, tone, and experience — is a hot iron pressing into the hearts and minds of the people who encounter you, your company, or your work? In this provocative and insightful episode of The UNCOMMODiFiED Podcast, Tim Windsor uncorks a deep conversation with branding exp…
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We’ve just had PMQs, which have become much more interesting now that Kemi Badenoch has got her act together. She led on the Grooming Gangs Inquiry after a fourth survivor quit the inquiry over fears that it’s being watered down. She went as far as to say that the government is in a ‘briefing war against survivors’, and accused Labour of a ‘cover-u…
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Rachel Reeves is hosting an investment summit in Birmingham, trying to turn the narrative away from Britain's economic 'doom loop' ahead of next month's budget. But the harbinger of bad economic news Michael Simmons – who joins James Heale and Patrick Gibbons on the podcast – points to the news today of soaring government borrowing costs, and expec…
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There have been lots of movements in foreign affairs over the weekend, including a potential collapse of the Gaza peace deal, a Trump–Putin bilateral and new revelations about the China spy case. But closer to home, all eyes are on Kent Council, Reform’s flagship administrative project run by Linden Kemkaran (formerly of this parish). Over the week…
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To mark the centenary of Thatcher’s birth, Michael Gove is joined by Charles Moore, her biographer, and Peggy Noonan, speechwriter to Ronald Reagan, to reflect on the chemistry that bound the two conservative leaders. Both outsiders turned reformers, they shared not only ideology but temperament – ‘They were partners in crime,’ says Peggy. Yet it w…
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It's been a rough week for the government: the row over the collapsed Chinese spy trial has rolled on, all while the Chancellor has been trying to lay the groundwork ahead of next month's budget. Then, overnight, another issue has emerged as fans of the Maccabi Tel Aviv football team have been banned from attending a football game against Aston Vil…
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Tim Shipman's bombshell cover piece for the magazine this week explains how the collapsed spy trial blew up in the government’s face. As well as raising ‘serious questions’ about Keir Starmer’s judgment and Jonathan Powell’s role, ‘the affair reveals a Whitehall tendency to cover up the gory details of foreign spying in the UK’. According to Tim, f…
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Keir Starmer did not go into Prime Minister’s Questions with the intention of resolving the row over the collapse of the Chinese spying case: he merely wanted to avoid the pressure building too much. He announced in a long statement at the start of the session that the government would be publishing its three witness statements, and then spent the …
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Redigging the Well: Worship Part 5Last Sunday, we finished our 'Redigging the Well: Worship' series, talking about what it really means to worship through our work. Our panel shared real-life stories of their worship in the everyday — a beautiful reminder that worship isn’t just for Sundays, but also in the day to day.…
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Redigging the Well: Worship Part 5Last Sunday, we finished our 'Redigging the Well: Worship' series, talking about what it really means to worship through our work. Our panel shared real-life stories of their worship in the everyday — a beautiful reminder that worship isn’t just for Sundays, but also in the day to day.…
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Redigging the Well: Worship Part 5Last Sunday, we finished our 'Redigging the Well: Worship' series, talking about what it really means to worship through our work. Our panel shared real-life stories of their worship in the everyday — a beautiful reminder that worship isn’t just for Sundays, but also in the day to day.…
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Tim Shipman and Charles Parton, China adviser at the Council on Geostrategy, join James Heale to discuss the ongoing fallout over the collapse of the Westminster spy case. Security minister Dan Jarvis answered an urgent question on the matter late on Monday in Parliament, stringently denying that the government played an active role in collapsing t…
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It’s a ‘great and beautiful day’, as Donald Trump wrote in the guestbook at the Knesset, where he will address the Israeli parliament after the final hostages were handed back to Israel. It is, of course, a historic piece of diplomacy, and the conversation in Westminster has turned to the extent to which the UK was involved. Bridget Phillipson clai…
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What if the thing you planted with hope — the thing that once gave you shade, shelter, and pride — is now standing in your way?What if it’s not growing … It’s groaning? What if it’s not dying … It’s already dead, and you just haven’t admitted it yet? In this raw and thought-provoking episode of the UNCOMMODiFiED Podcast, Tim Windsor amplifies the q…
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Isabel Hardman presents highlights from Sunday morning's political shows. A ceasefire begins in the Middle East, as world leaders prepare for Monday's peace summit. And questions linger over the collapsed Chinese spy trial. Produced by Joe Bedell-Brill. Become a Spectator subscriber today to access this podcast without adverts. Go to spectator.co.u…
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From wartime leadership to economic revolutions, Conservative figures have shaped Britain’s past and present. But who stands out as the greatest of them all? In this conversation, recorded live at Conservative Party Conference: Katie Lam makes the case for William Pitt the Younger, Camilla Tominay nominates Margaret Thatcher, William Atkinson point…
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Recorded live in Manchester, during the Conservative Party conference, Michael Gove sits down with Tim Shipman, Madeline Grant and Tim Montgomerie to discuss how the Tories can turn their fortunes around. Do the Tories need to show contrition for their record in government? Has the party basically been split ever since the Coalition years? And does…
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This Week At Windsor, Jonathan and Ardin are joined by WDBC regular, mum, wife, and full-time worker Michelle de Rooy. Michelle shares about her role as Community Engager at Norwest Christian College - what it’s like being the “gatekeeper” for students and families, and the joys and challenges that come with it. She also opens up about her faith jo…
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Donald Trump says Israel and Hamas have agreed to the first phase of his Gaza peace plan. During an extraordinary round table on the Antifa organisation last night, the US President was interrupted by Marco Rubio and given a hand-written message. He told those assembled at the White House: ‘I was just given a note by the Secretary of State saying t…
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This morning Kemi Badenoch wrapped up Tory conference with a speech that will – for now at least – calm Tory jitters. The Tory leader’s hour-long address in Manchester was intended as a rejoinder to critics of her leadership and she certainly achieved that aim. Having been accused of lacking spirit, imagination and vigour, Badenoch today demonstrat…
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