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Introducing: The Mishal Husain Show
10 Oct 2025
00:02:19
Welcome to The Mishal Husain Show. In a world of confusion, let Mishal guide you through some of the most complex stories of our times, through questions, curiosity and decades of journalistic experience.
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney talks to Mishal Husain about trade battles, Vladimir Putin's miscalculations and what he's learned from Donald Trump.
3:41 - Mark Carney's parents and his path to power 4:58 - What does he miss about his old life? 6:34 - Did President Trump help him get elected? 14:05 - "I've learned lots of things from President Trump" 16:42 - Ukraine and NATO 22:18 - Putin's miscalculations 22:49 - Next steps on a Palestinian state 25:00 - The climate crisis, where is the old Mark Carney? 35:10 - What does a prime minister's weekend look like?
Nigel Farage Thinks Britain Has Had Too Many Unifiers
24 Oct 2025
00:51:28
After successfully pushing for Brexit, political disruptor Nigel Farage announced his retirement. Last year, he returned to frontline politics as the leader of Reform UK, an insurgent party that’s never held national power but is now polling ahead of Labour and the Conservatives. Mishal speaks with Farage about dismantling consensus politics, Britain’s future relationship with the European Union and what he thinks Donald Trump is getting right.
4:02 - “We’ve not had enough change” 7:10 - Working in the City of London in the 1980s 11:46 Alignment with the European Union 13:33 “Everything in life’s about risk” 16:24 “Make Britain Great Again” 21:00 The Bank of England 25:19 “Putin is a very bad dude” 30:15 Immigration and ICE raids 35:12 Economic plans 46:14 Reading to prepare for government
María Corina Machado Believes US Pressure on Maduro Is the Only Way
31 Oct 2025
00:37:24
Three weeks after being awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado finds herself supporting US intervention in her native country. Mishal speaks to Maria Corina on recent US boat strikes, Nicolas Maduro’s fate and the need for strength to secure peace.
03:24 - "I had to go into hiding"
03:51 - Impact of the Nobel Peace Prize
05:38 - US Military build up
10:21 - Prospect of US ground strikes
13:10 - Is Machado speaking to the Trump Administration?
16:00 - Prospect of regime change
18:50 - Venezuela after Maduro
23:04 - Machado's economic vision
26:04 - What is the Venezuelan opposition planning next?
28:23 - "We are ready to take our government"
34:22 - Why Machado thinks this time is different
Watch this podcast https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLe4PRejZgr0Ns_wjGlmjlPz0cded0nTYS
You can find the written version of this interview with Mishal’s notes on Bloomberg Weekend: https://www.bloomberg.com/latest/weekend-interview
Contact The Mishal Husain Show mishalshow@bloomberg.net
Julia Ioffe Wants You to Know Russia Is Bigger Than Putin
07 Nov 2025
00:39:45
How do you tell the history of a whole country through its women? And what can it tell us about the world today? These are the questions Russian-American journalist Julia Ioffe set out to answer in her new book, Motherland: A Feminist History of Modern Russia, from Revolution to Autocracy.
Having reported from, and on, Russia for publications including The New Yorker and Foreign Policy for more than a decade, Ioffe says she has repeatedly been asked to explain the actions and motivations of one man: Vladimir Putin.
Motherland is, she says, partly a response to Putin, through her desire to show that Russia is much more than one person, let alone one man.
In this conversation Ioffe talks to Mishal about reclaiming Russia’s women, about Donald Trump’s hollowing out of American institutions and why Putinism will endure. (Note: This podcast contains a discussion of sexual violence that some listeners may find distressing.)
02:30 - “I was born in a country that no longer exists” 03:55 - The anti-feminist at Lenin’s side during the Revolution 06:55 - Reluctancy to write about Russian women 12:55 - What a “horrible boyfriend” Vladimir Putin was 16:50 - Return to Russia, oligarch hunters and ‘trad wives’ 22:13 - Alexei Navalny, “the last shred of hope” 29:20 - Can Russia sustain the war in Ukraine? 32:32 - Trump’s assault on US institutions, faster than Putin 34:30 - American authoritarianism, risk of “one party state”
Richard Moore Was Paid to Steal Secrets, Not Solve Mysteries
14 Nov 2025
00:42:46
For almost 40 years, Richard Moore was a career spy in Britain’s Secret Intelligence Service. Only his closest friends and family knew what he did for a living. When he was appointed chief of the agency in 2020, that changed: The name of the person in the top role is the only one made public.
In his first broadcast interview since leaving his post in September 2025, Moore talks to Mishal Husain about managing China, the psychology of Vladimir Putin and why spies shouldn’t expect recognition.
03:00 - “I certainly haven’t left the world in a better place than I found it”
05:02 - China as an “opportunity and a threat”
07:20 - UK’s China spy scandal
09:44 China should “get their embassy” in London
10:22 - Getting the “tap on the shoulder” at Oxford University
14:16 - Telling your children you’re a spy
16:28 - What is spycraft really like?
22:00 - Intelligence work post 9/11
28:15 - “Putin has no intention of doing a deal”
33:46 - Strikes on Venezuela
40:00 - Life on the outside
Watch this podcast here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLe4PRejZgr0Ns_wjGlmjlPz0cded0nTYS
You can find the written version of this interview with Mishal’s notes on Bloomberg Weekend: https://www.bloomberg.com/latest/weekend-interview
Contact The Mishal Husain Show mishalshow@bloomberg.net
Fei-Fei Li Helped Create AI, Now She Feels the Responsibility
21 Nov 2025
00:44:23
Stanford University Professor Fei-Fei Li has been at the forefront of artificial intelligence research for 25 years, which is why she’s been called the “godmother of AI.”
In this conversation she tells Mishal Husain how she arrived in the US as a teenager after her parents decided to emigrate from China. She also talks about the high school teacher who inspired her and a deep love of physics, leading her to ask what she calls “audacious” questions.
These days, amid her excitement about AI and its potential, she also is focused on what humans must do to build safeguards, and has a message for parents, too.
02:50 - AI is a “civilizational technology” 04:15 - “Technology is a double-edged sword” 05:45 - Being a tech CEO and an academic 06:45 - Falling in love with physics 08:00 - What is intelligence? 08:40 - Finding my first North Star 09:45 - Fei-Fei Li’s two key breakthroughs 14:52 - Moving from China to the US at 15 15:48 - Running the family shop taught me resilience 17:30 - “I wasn’t curious about nightclubs” 18:20 - My inspirational teacher 22:20 - “China is a powerhouse in AI” 23:00 - Creating 3D worlds with AI 27:20 - AI and the jobs market 28:40 - Are humans going to be replaced? 31:00 - “The machine overlord” 32:45 - What should parents tell their children? 34:40 - The AI bubble 36:00 - Powering the big data centres AI needs 37:20 - “I’m not a tech utopian or a dystopian” 38:00 - “My one worry is our teachers” 39:20 - “I’m conscious of my responsibility” 41:28 - Fei-Fei Li believes in timeless human values 42:00 - “My favourite book these days is Harry Potter”
Ken Burns Says Gratitude Is the Missing Ingredient in Our Politics
28 Nov 2025
00:35:43
Ken Burns has been telling stories about America for almost 50 years. The lauded documentary filmmaker has a new series on PBS, The American Revolution, which charts the period before and after 1776. It will air internationally ahead of the 250th anniversary of the US Declaration of Independence.
Mishal Husain asked Burns to join the show to mark Thanksgiving, looking at today’s America through the lens of its past and the characters who made history.
02:15 - The complexity of the American Revolution
04:00 - The underdog story
07:15 - The global significance of the American Revolution
13:43 - Mishal Husain’s connection to Lexington Green
16:15 - Why Ken Burns became a filmmaker
17:55 - “My mother’s gift in a funny way was dying”
19:20 - The Ken Burns Effect
20:15 - Hollywood actors as first person narrators
21:25 - Directing Josh Brolin as George Washington
22:00 - Why Tom Hanks didn’t want to be the voice of George Washington
23:00 - Filming reenactments
24:50 - The American Revolution is not over
29:10 Working for PBS, American Public Broadcasting
32:20 What is Ken Burns grateful for on Thanksgiving?
Salman Rushdie was nearly killed when he was stabbed 15 times on stage in upstate New York in 2022. His injuries were so severe that he lost an eye. It was an attack that came decades after he was first subjected to death threats over his novel, The Satanic Verses.
Once he had recovered, he found he was unable to write fiction. However, after publishing an account of what happened to him, the stories returned, with five brought together in his latest book, The Eleventh Hour.
In this conversation with Mishal Husain, Rushdie talks about free speech, the family connection they both share and the places he’s called home, from India to Britain and the US.
02:30 - “Don’t waste your time” 04:40 - Writing as a form of optimism 05:00 - Starting out as a writer 08:00 - Meeting E.M. Forster as a teenager 10:00 - “You write the story to find out what story you’re writing” 11:15 - Writing Midnight’s Children 12:46 - The family connection between Salman Rushdie and Mishal Husain 14:35 - The women in the family 16:00 - Getting together as a family 17:55 - Returning to India to write about childhood 20:30 - Reclaiming India 22:55 - India today and Prime Minister Modi 24:24 - “If you’re paying attention you see things coming” 24:50 - The family reacts to Midnight’s Children 26:44 - A farewell to India? 28:45 - Before and after the fatwa 31:30 - Defending free speech 32:25 - Banning books in the US 34:30 - Zohran Mamdani’s campaign 38:50 - The next novel 40:25 - “I’m a bit clumsier”
Mustafa Suleyman Isn’t Like Everyone Else in Silicon Valley
12 Dec 2025
00:45:24
Mustafa Suleyman co-founded AI lab DeepMind when he was just 26 years old. Four years later, it was acquired by Google for a reported $400 million.
He is now head of Microsoft’s AI unit, where he just unveiled a new superintelligence team tasked with creating an AI that can outperform humans at all tasks.
In this conversation with Mishal Husain, Suleyman talks about the decisions society has to make about AI, the white-hot war over tech talent and the competition with other tech bros.
00:00 - Introduction from Mishal Husain 02:20 - Suleyman’s daily use of AI 04:52 - Stoicism and the magic of AI 05:50 - Defining superintelligence 07:35 - The AI Wild West 09:20 - Humans misusing technology 11:43 - Promise of abundance, universal basic income 14:30 - Suleyman’s family and decision to drop out of Oxford 19:37 - "Decisions we make may have very lasting consequences” 21:04 - Exploring the ‘broligarchy’ 22:28 - His view of Sam Altman and Open AI 24:11 - Conversations with Demis Hassabis about Gemini 3 26:15 - “I’m sort of a centrist these days” 28:09 - AI containment and the role of government 29:58 - Microsoft’s revised deal with OpenAI: “It is a shift for us” 31:42 -The talent war and ‘Zuck’s’ pay packages 34:12 - Circular deals in AI: “Watching it carefully” 36:22 - “I really want to nail medical superintelligence” 37:36 - Suleyman on using AI for emotional support 40:21 - The UK lacks the “hustle culture” of Silicon Valley 42:13 - AI news reporters: “We’re exploring everything”
Watch this podcast here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLe4PRejZgr0Ns_wjGlmjlPz0cded0nTYS
You can find the written version of this interview with Mishal’s notes on Bloomberg Weekend: https://www.bloomberg.com/latest/weekend-interview
Contact The Mishal Husain Show mishalshow@bloomberg.net
Lynsey Addario’s life work means taking great risks to tell other people’s stories. She is a Pulitzer Prize winning war photographer who has been abducted twice while documenting conflicts from Afghanistan to Ukraine and Sudan.
There aren’t many women in her field. In a new National Geographic documentary called “Love+War,” currently streaming on Disney+, she lets us into that world, one she’s made her profession for three decades. Addario shows how she adjusts from a work environment of grave danger and high-adrenaline to being a mother making the school run and spending time with her sons.
In this conversation, she tells Mishal Husain, why she believes her job is to “bear witness” and how she came to it. She remembers the first time she used a camera and shares how her childhood prepared her to walk into any situation and connect with anyone, from soldiers to refugees and civilians living through extreme times.
This interview contains descriptions of abduction, violence and sexual assault which some listeners/viewers may find distressing.
02:27 - Love+War 03:34 - The turning point 06:00 - Learning about the risks 07:00 “I don’t want to do this for a living” 09:19 - Being held in Fallujah 11:20 - On embed in Afghanistan 14:31 - Operation Rock Avalanche 15:43 - Dealing with the emotion 16:50 - The daughter of hairdressers in Connecticut 17:44 - Getting her first camera 19:30 - Planning a “shoot-list” 21:51 - Russian strike on Ukraine 17:30 - Being held hostage in Libya 31:02 - Survivor’s guilt 33:30 Life at home 36:30 - Social media and fake images 40:18 - Switching off
Watch this podcast here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLe4PRejZgr0Ns_wjGlmjlPz0cded0nTYS
You can find the written version of this interview with Mishal’s notes on Bloomberg Weekend: https://www.bloomberg.com/latest/weekend-interview
Elon Musk Wants Credit for Cutting Waste, Not Cutting Aid
26 Dec 2025
00:43:40
As the year draws to a close, we are bringing you one of Mishal Husain’s biggest conversations of the year, in full. In May 2025, Elon Musk joined Bloomberg's Qatar Economic Forum, in a rare media appearance.
He remains as consequential a global figure today, as he was then, even if he is no longer working with Donald Trump.
Within 10 days of this conversation, he had left DOGE, the Department of Government Efficiency, and soon after that he was publicly trading insults with the president.
Musk talked about Tesla, his ambitions for SpaceX and Starlink and his political spending.
Note: This episode was recorded with a remote guest in front of a live audience, and as a result, the audio quality may vary.
02:31 - Mishal Husain introduces Elon Musk 03:21 - A week in the life of Elon Musk 04:25 - The future of Tesla 9:19 - Attacks on Tesla showrooms 11:35 - The future of warfare 14:30 - “I’m in no rush to go public” 17:30 - OpenAI 20:45 - Regulating AI 24:00 - “I’m simply an advisor” 26:30 - Starlink 29:44 - “Your question’s absurd” 31:26 - DOGE 33:15 - US Agency for International Development 37:20 - Political spending
Watch this podcast here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLe4PRejZgr0Ns_wjGlmjlPz0cded0nTYS
You can find the written version of this interview with Mishal’s notes on Bloomberg Weekend: https://www.bloomberg.com/latest/weekend-interview
Contact The Mishal Husain Show mishalshow@bloomberg.net
Kara Swisher has followed the story of Silicon Valley for three decades, having started work as a tech journalist at a time when few people were interested in the beat.
But through relationships she built with the likes of Steve Jobs, Bill Gates, Mark Zuckerberg and many others, she became a formidable voice, and eventually more of a commentator and critic.
Swisher now hosts the podcasts Pivot and On with Kara Swisher. Following a year in which Silicon Valley titans lined up behind Donald Trump, she tells Mishal Husain what she thinks 2026 will bring. Swisher unpacks fears of an artificial intelligence bubble, why she’s paying attention to robotics and what life after Trump may be like.
02:16 - You would be “stupid” to ignore the AI bubble 05:40 - The promise of AI 07:16 - Swisher’s first download 09:30 - “Serious wealth creates real problems” 14:20 - Steve Jobs was an “adult” 17:15 - “What Tesla did was astonishing” 20:30 - The influence of Peter Thiel 22:20 - Generational shift in tech 23:30 - “You couldn’t have started an Uber now” 26:15 - Swisher’s paying attention to robotics in 2026 29:30 - What Swisher learned from Silicon Valley 31:50 - Swisher’s move into podcasting 35:40 - Life after Trump and why she’s watching KPop Demon Hunters
US President Donald Trump’s tough talk about China and tariffs can be traced back in large part to economist Peter Navarro. A well-known China hawk, he has written books arguing Beijing poses a threat to the US economy and its national security.
Navarro is a loyalist who has served as a key trade adviser in both Trump administrations. In between, he spent four months behind bars for refusing to comply with a Congressional subpoena tied to the Jan. 6, 2021 attack on the US Capitol.
It is Navarro who stands behind Trump’s sweeping tariffs against China and other nations, levies that have in some cases raised prices for US companies and consumers.
In this conversation with Mishal Husain, recorded in Bloomberg's Washington studio, Navarro discusses the US relationship with China and an upcoming Supreme Court ruling on the administration’s use of emergency powers to levy tariffs. They also look ahead to this year’s midterm elections and back at the controversial Vanity Fair profile of Trump Chief of Staff Susie Wiles.
00:00 - Introduction from Mishal Husain 02:16 - Navarro’s bond with President Trump 05:04 - Navarro’s journey from Democrat to MAGA Republican 08:01 - Time in Federal prison 09:36 - US-China relationship 12:21 - Navarro’s advice for Europe 13:22 - Trump diplomacy 15:35 - Allowing Nvidia to export advanced chips to China 17:49 - Delivering for working class Americans 20:08 - Rubio-Vance 2028 21:57 - Addressing affordability concerns 23:38 - Manufacturing jobs: “We can’t wave a magic wand” 26:45 - Supreme Court ruling 30:17 - Cost of tariff refunds 31:15 - “It's not a job, it's a mission”
Jeanne Shaheen Is Pressing For Answers on Venezuela, Greenland and Iran
16 Jan 2026
00:33:26
What is Donald Trump’s plan for Venezuela? Does he have one? Will he go beyond threats in supporting the uprising in Iran or invading Greenland?
Jeanne Shaheen has been in the US Senate since 2009 and is now the most senior Democrat on the Foreign Relations Committee. Her position has given her access to information most lawmakers don’t have. She’s also known as someone prepared to work with Republicans. Indeed, she was one of the eight Democrats who joined the GOP to end last year’s government shutdown over healthcare subsidies that have since been allowed to expire.
In this conversation with Mishal Husain, Shaheen talks about how she’s hoping to reassure traditional American allies shaken by Trump’s attacks and threats as part of a Congressional delegation to Denmark this week. Closer to home, she discusses healthcare, the cost of living and the future of the Democratic party ahead of the midterms.
02:38 - US operation in Venezuela 04:47 - Military action on Greenland? 06:00 - Has Trump already damaged NATO? 07:11 - Is Trump emboldened? 08:13 - Maduro replaced by another “repressive dictator” 12:20 - Trump and Iran 13:31 - Tariffs and China 15:21 - Bipartisanship in a polarized era 18:17 - “I share that frustration” 20:20 - The future of the Democratic party 24:00 - Disquiet amongst Republicans 24:55 - Healthcare and the shutdown 27:25 - Policy differences with her daughter 30:35 - Life after the Senate 31:55 - Optimism for the future?
Rutger Bregman Is Thinking About Billionaires, the US Versus Europe and Saving the World
23 Jan 2026
00:37:39
Rutger Bregman knows what appearing at Davos can do for your profile. His reputation was made when he went there in 2019 and attacked the rich. The clip went viral.
A historian and author originally from the Netherlands, Bregman has been focused on elites ever since, most recently in his book Moral Ambition, and in a series of lectures on the BBC, after which he accused the organization of censoring his views on Donald Trump.
In this conversation with Mishal Husain, we hear more about his worldview, which is more nuanced than some might expect. He discusses how he is impressed by entrepreneurs, favors action over commentary and is putting his book profits toward building a community that furthers his beliefs.
00:00 - Introducing Rutger Bregman 02:30 - The rise of AI 07:53 - Wasted talent 09:22 - I want to pull my hair out 10:05 - European leadership 11:14 - Europe is weak 12:25 - Ideals are worth little without power 13:45 - Building a movement 17:40 - Mamdani and populism 21:00 - The God shaped hole 25:12 - Elon Musk the entrepreneur 26:08 - The BBC and Trump 30:49 - A new form of feudalism 33:56 - Small groups can change the world 35:14 - The best place to think
Netflix’s ‘Cover-Up’ Director Laura Poitras on ICE, ‘Domestic Terrorists’ and US Surveillance
30 Jan 2026
00:45:51
The killing of two US citizens by federal agents in Minneapolis has made January a dark month for many across America. Both Alex Pretti and Renee Good were quickly labeled “domestic terrorists" by the Trump administration, which accused them of endangering the lives of law enforcement. Video evidence soon appeared to contradict government claims, but it’s still a label that filmmaker Laura Poitras says she finds chilling.
Poitras has been producing and directing documentaries for more than 20 years, winning both an Oscar and a Pulitzer Prize for her 2014 work “Citizenfour,” which focussed on the whistleblower Edward Snowden and mass surveillance. She too has her own experience of being regarded as a threat by the US government and says she was on a terrorist watch list for years.
Her latest film, which this week was nominated for a BAFTA, profiles renowned US investigative journalist Seymour Hersh. “Cover-Up,” on Netflix, traces Hersh’s life from his early days in Chicago through his scoops of the 1960s to his current journalism on Substack.
It’s a story of media both past and present. In this conversation with Mishal Husain, Poitras also reflects on the role of citizen journalism in documenting government violence in places like Minneapolis.
02:53 - “Legendary investigative journalist” Seymour Hersh 05:35 - Poitras and Hersh’s Iraq connection 06:40 - US public “failed by our legacy media” 09:06 - Cycles of impunity 09:50 - Criticism of Hersh’s journalism 11:30 - Hersh quits the film 15:00 - Hersh’s early life 16:19 - Poitras’ lens on America 17:40 - Parallels between Iraq and Venezuela 19:30 - “Regime change” in Venezuela 20:20 - Poitras under surveillance 23:00 - Leaving the US 24:40 - Edward Snowden and NSA secrets 28:15 - “I’m very happy he’s not in a US prison” 32:00 - “Cover-Up” and the present day 33:33 - “Whistleblowers face the consequences” 35:00 - “Citizen journalists” 37:00 - Mishal speaks to Poitras for a second time 38:00 - Alex Pretti and the violence in Minneapolis 39:30 - “Domestic terrorist” 40:17 - “Journalists have an obligation” 40:50 - A tipping point for ICE?
David Miliband on Global Disorder, Labour’s ‘Mistakes’ and Deploying $1 Billion on Crises
06 Feb 2026
00:42:05
In 2007 when he was UK Foreign Secretary, David Miliband delivered an address to the Labour Party conference. He described a world with “fewer countries at war” and “more democracies than ever before.”
Two decades later, with that vision further from view, Miliband is head of the New York-based International Rescue Committee, one of the world’s largest aid agencies. Its “Emergency Watchlist” cites 20 urgent crises, from Haiti to Sudan and the Middle East to Myanmar. The group finds itself increasingly constrained by widening conflict and shrinking government aid.
The IRC role, however, gave Miliband new purpose after his bid to lead Labour ended in dramatic and personal fashion when in 2010 he lost to his own brother. Now he sees his old friends and rivals back in power, forced to make decisions he finds painful.
In this conversation with Mishal Husain, Miliband discusses the current state of politics in the UK, including Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s leadership. He talks about Donald Trump’s “Board of Peace” and his old boss, former Prime Minister Tony Blair. They also discuss Miliband’s family heritage.
02:30 - His refugee parents and link to work at IRC 08:09 - Growing up, democracy “seemed like the norm” 08:59 - 2007 speech at Labour Party Conference 10:54 - Mark Carney’s 2026 speech at Davos 12:49 - “America will no longer be Atlas” 13:49 - “More autocracies than democracies in the world today” 14:26 - “A revolution in America’s role in the world” 15:42 - IRC work on the US-Mexico border 17:55 - IRC’s 2026 Emergency Watchlist: Sudan and the Occupied Palestinian Territory 18:36 - “Remediation of desperate suffering is our business” 19:06 - “If you talk to the people you have hope.” 23:31 - Jared Kushner’s plans for Gaza 26:21 - Tony Blair and the Board of Peace 32:12 - Cuts to foreign aid 34:55 - “Challenging period” for UK Labour, Starmer 36:06 - Threats from Reform and Andy Burnham 39:07 - What next for Miliband? 40:28 - Relationship with Hilary Clinton
Watch this podcast here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLe4PRejZgr0Ns_wjGlmjlPz0cded0nTYS
You can find the written version of this interview with Mishal’s notes on Bloomberg Weekend: https://www.bloomberg.com/latest/weekend-interview
Contact The Mishal Husain Show mishalshow@bloomberg.net
Subscribe today on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
Illustration: Uli Knörzer for Bloomberg; Source Photo: Jose Sarmento Matos/Bloomberg
Author Andrey Kurkov on Winter in Kyiv and Why Putin Won’t Stop
13 Feb 2026
00:37:29
This winter has been exceptionally brutal in Ukraine. Already the coldest in more than a decade, it’s been made worse by Russian attacks on energy infrastructure that have left millions with no heating and intermittent power.
As Russia’s war approaches its fourth anniversary, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy is under intense pressure from Donald Trump to hold elections and accept a peace deal within months. But inside Ukraine and among its allies, there remains deep skepticism that Vladimir Putin is truly interested in a durable peace.
Celebrated writer Andrey Kurkov has lived the reality of the wartime winter in his home city of Kyiv. Best known for his 1996 novel “Death and the Penguin,” set in post-Soviet Ukraine, Kurkov also has written extensively about the current war, publishing three volumes of diaries alongside his fiction. While he’s been determined to remain in Ukraine throughout the conflict, he says the present conditions have been too much to bear. In this conversation with Mishal Husain, he talks about his hopes for peace and how he plans to return to Kyiv in the spring.
02:54 Situation in Kyiv: “Winter allied with Russia” 04:53 Four years since full-scale invasion 07:12 Ukraine is “fragmented” 09:12 “Writing nonfiction is a duty” 12:03 “Nobody’s winning” 14:20 Kurkov’s relationship with Russia 17:47 How the war changed Kurkov and his country 20:19 Kurkov’s message to the Munich Security Conference 21:53 Capitulation “camouflaged” as a peace deal 24:15 Support for Zelenskiy in Ukraine 26:15 Corruption scandals: “I’m very angry” 2:49 “I hope the war will be over this year” 31:43 Observing the war as a diarist 33:14 Humor as a “psychological defense” 35:17 “We are part of Europe”
‘KPop Demon Hunters’ Creator Maggie Kang on the Global Hit No One Saw Coming
20 Feb 2026
00:40:35
“KPop Demon Hunters” is the brainchild of Korean-Canadian animator Maggie Kang. It’s Netflix’s biggest-ever film and follows Rumi, Mira and Zoey, members of the girl band Huntrix, as they battle to save the world from dark forces.
As you’ll hear, Kang grew up loving Korean pop music long before it was globally cool and forged a Hollywood career on films including “The Lego Ninjago Movie” and “Kung Fu Panda 3.” In this conversation with Mishal Husain, Kang explains how she had always hoped a story about Korea would one day come her way. But it never did, so she came up with her own.
Kang is in the middle of a life-changing moment. Her movie has already scored wins at the Golden Globes and the Grammys, and now all eyes are on the Oscars. The extraordinary thing is that no one expected “KPop Demon Hunters” to be such a smash hit. Husain asks Kang what it’s been like adjusting to all the attention, and of course whether there’s a sequel in the works.
03:06 - “A global phenomenon” 04:17 - The screaming fans 05:01 - The movie theater screenings 06:49 - Pitching “KPop Demon Hunters” 09:27 - Living between two cultures 12:04 - Growing up as an “outsider” 16:34 - Kang’s first animation book 17:16 - “I liked to draw” 18:21 - Recording the voiceover, over and over 20:11 - The story of “Golden” 21:39 - Rumi, Mira and Zoey in “Golden” 23:00 - Waiting for “the tingles” 25:25 - “We kinda worried it was a little cheesy” 27:27 - Helping the world find Korean culture 29:30 - Choosing the title for a “kooky” movie 34:20 - A message from Kang to the fans 34:48 - “There’s a sequel, surely?” 35:14 - Live action “KPop Demon Hunters”? 37:01 - “I’m still very grounded” 37:22 - Diving back into the sequel? 38:00 - “Wow! You are going to the Oscars!”
Read this interview with Mishal’s notes on Bloomberg Weekend: www.bloomberg.com/latest/weekend-interview
Contact The Mishal Husain Show mishalshow@bloomberg.net
Visit https://www.bloomberg.com/mishal
Contact The Mishal Husain Show mishalshow@bloomberg.net
The Feb. 19 arrest of Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, the brother of King Charles, puts the British Royal Family into uncharted territory. The former Prince Andrew was detained on suspicion of misconduct in public office after further details emerged of his relationship with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
For this bonus episode, Mishal Husain speaks to Allegra Stratton, a contributing editor to Bloomberg who previously worked for Prime Minister Boris Johnson.
She’s also joined by Harry Wilson, a reporter on Bloomberg UK’s finance team who’s been involved in reporting on Epstein’s emails and has previously broken stories about Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor.
They discuss Andrew’s business links and the significance of today’s events for the monarchy and the UK.
Contact The Mishal Husain Show mishalshow@bloomberg.net
WHO Chief Tedros on Covid, China and Texting RFK Jr
27 Feb 2026
00:42:23
When President Donald Trump returned to the White House last year, one of his first acts was to sign an executive order withdrawing the US from the World Health Organization. The administration's rupture with the WHO began in Trump’s first term, when relations deteriorated as the Covid-19 pandemic set in.
In this conversation with Mishal Husain, WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus reveals he remains in close contact with US Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy Jr. despite that break. He also talks about the lessons learned from Covid and why the WHO is still waiting for answers from China as it seeks to understand the origins of the virus.
Beyond the politics of global health, Ghebreyesus opens up about his own childhood trauma and why the death of his brother in 1970 makes the fight against preventable disease personal for him.
02:51 - Being a child of war 06:25 - Working in conflict zones 08:07 - “War and disease are old friends” 09:34 - “Don’t forget the invisible enemy” 11:35 - How far away is the next pandemic? 12:48 - US withdrawal from the WHO 14:50 - Covid and China 16:50 - Personal attacks from the US 18:16 - The US flag has been returned 18.51 Argentina is leaving the WHO 21:22 - Was Covid a lab leak? 22:49 - Waiting for answers from China 26:46 - Vaccine skeptics 27:26 - Texting RFK Jr. 28:56 - “My brother died” 31:06 - “He could have survived” 33:46 - “Defunding mRNA research is the wrong decision” 34:20 - Will MAHA work? 37:27 - A message for President Trump 39:26 - “Viruses get advantage when we are divided”
Read this interview with Mishal’s notes on Bloomberg Weekend: www.bloomberg.com/latest/weekend-interview
Contact The Mishal Husain Show mishalshow@bloomberg.net
Middle East Expert Bernard Haykel on the Three Futures for Iran After the Strikes
06 Mar 2026
00:37:46
Within 24 hours of the US and Israeli strikes on Iran, a host of other countries were drawn into the latest conflict in the Middle East.
Iran retaliated by targeting sites in Israel and across the Gulf, including the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait and Bahrain, as well as Iraq, Oman and Jordan. Israel, meanwhile, has carried out air strikes on Lebanon and sent in ground troops as it seeks to dismantle Iranian ally Hezbollah.
For this conversation, Mishal Husain has turned to an expert on the broad sweep of Middle East politics. Bernard Haykel is a professor of Near Eastern Studies at Princeton University. Born in Lebanon, he is known for weaving together knowledge of history, religion and social change across the region. His forthcoming book is about contemporary Saudi Arabia and its leader, Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman, with whom he is in regular contact.
02:45 - “I was not surprised” 03:40 - The Iranian retaliation 09:00 - The three scenarios in this conflict 11:00 - “This regime will survive” 13:20 Protests after Khamenei's death 15:35 Did MBS encourage the strikes on Iran? 18:40 The Saudi Air Force will get “involved” 21:30 Trump and MBS 25:00 MBS “doesn’t want wars” 27:00 Saudi competition with UAE 29:18 MBS is “a bit like Elon Musk” 30:30 MBS is an authoritarian 33:00 The US has a “role to play” in the Middle East
Why Iran Isn’t Breaking: Vali Nasr on Pain, Patience and the Uprising That Isn’t Coming
13 Mar 2026
00:42:10
Despite the intensity of the US-Israel bombing campaign, Iran’s regime, now under a new supreme leader, hasn’t given President Donald Trump the “unconditional surrender” he’s seeking.
Mishal Husain speaks with Vali Nasr, a professor at Johns Hopkins University’s School of Advanced International Studies and a preeminent scholar on the Islamic Republic. His life has been shaped by the story of Iran over the last 50 years, starting when his family fled amid the 1979 revolution.
His life’s work has been to study the region and its relationship with the US. He’s also worked as an adviser to the US State Department during the Obama administration.
Nasr explains why Tehran believes time is on its side in the war, and that a prolonged conflict may only strengthen Iranian nationalism.
02:34 - Why Iran is “prepared to suffer more” 06:28 - What drives the new ayatollah 10:03 - How Iranians view the US and Israel 12:07 - War will last “longer” than Trump hopes 14:00 - School strike, destruction of heritage sites 15:35 - Lessons from the Iran-Iraq war 19:03 - “This is the final battle” 20:17 - Impact of US sanctions 22:40 - Will Iran pursue a nuclear bomb? 26:02 - Iran’s experience of foreign intervention 28:27 - Can Reza Pahlavi, son of the Shah, succeed? 30:48 - Nasr’s experience fleeing Iran in 1979 35:15 - Mood among Iranian-Americans 39:32 - Iran’s “rightful place in the world”
Ro Khanna on Stopping the Iran War, Taking on the ‘Epstein Class’ and Taxing Billionaires
20 Mar 2026
00:36:56
US Representative Ro Khanna of California helped force Donald Trump to release the Epstein files. Now he wants to end the war with Iran. Earlier this month, the Democratic Congressman joined forces with Representative Thomas Massie of Kentucky, a Republican, on a War Powers resolution seeking to halt the military action, though it ultimately failed in the GOP-controlled House.
Speaking to Mishal Husain almost three weeks after the US and Israel began coordinated attacks on Iran, Khanna says he believes that opposing war in the Middle East and taxing billionaires could unite progressives and disaffected Trump voters.
02:57 - Hearing Epstein’s name for the first time 05:18 - Forcing the release of the Epstein files 10:07 - Holding this Epstein class accountable 11:05 - A new found confidence 11:59 - Hoping for a split in MAGA? 12:43 - “It’s a coalition that’s gonna win” 14:24 - Stopping the war in Iran 15:53 - Trump’s “looking for an off ramp to end the war” 17:21 - Increasing pressure on Trump over Iran 19:50 - Could Cuba be next? 21:21 - Khanna’s grandfather was an Indian MP 23:15 - Running for president in 2028? 24:58 - Taxing billionaires 30:08 - A progressive coalition 34:06 - “You can't help but be hopeful about the American story”
Why Israel Could Be Forced to Stop: Shira Efron on War, Fatigue and Netanyahu's Strategy
27 Mar 2026
00:41:18
With attention fixed on the potential developments between the US and Iran, could the Israeli government be forced to end the war earlier than it might like?
The last few weeks have seen daily air strikes by Israel on Iran, and retaliatory attacks that have killed and injured Israelis. The wider picture is of two and a half years of constant conflict, particularly in Gaza.
In this conversation, Mishal Husain speaks to Shira Efron, who has been a Middle East analyst for the last 20 years and is now Distinguished Chair for Israel Policy at RAND. They discuss Israeli public opinion on Iran, the extent of the military operation in Lebanon and what’s at stake in the Israeli election due later this year.
02:25 - Life in Tel Aviv 04:42 - Israeli public opinion on Iran 06:24 - “A feeling of deja vu” 07:42 - Netanyahu's calculation 09:17 - Will elections go ahead? 10:59 - Did the Mossad get it wrong? 12:44 - American public opinion 14:24 - US and Israeli relations 18:24 - “There's one boss and this boss is President Trump” 20:11 - The future of Lebanon 23:52 - “Everyone forgot where Gaza is” 31:21 - Smotrich’s plan 33:44 - “We are seeing a shift to the right” 37:37 - Looking ahead to 2028
Lionel Shriver on Immigration, Identity and Why She Refuses to Stay Quiet
02 Apr 2026
00:44:47
Lionel Shriver has often tackled complex or contentious issues in her fiction. From school shootings in We Need to Talk About Kevin to economic collapse in The Mandibles.
Her new novel, A Better Life, is the story of a family home taken over by outsiders. In this conversation with Mishal Husain, Shriver discusses the sociological concerns behind the story, which she says is a metaphor for the increase in undocumented US immigration during the Biden administration.
Shriver is a regular columnist for The Spectator, a conservative UK magazine. The link between the writing styles in that publication and her novel also feature in this episode.
In the written version of this conversation, you’ll find more information on how Mishal Husain researched and prepared for this interview, including her own notes, data, historical context and further quotes from Lionel Shriver. www.bloomberg.com/latest/weekend-interview
02:27 - Inspiration for A Better Life 03:39 - Extended adolescence 06:32 - A metaphor for America 10:21 - Shriver’s political journey 12:42 - Declining populations 17:02 - ICE tactics 20:34 - From North Carolina to Northern Ireland 22:57 - Rebelling against church 24:30 - Transgender debate 30:07 - Why Shriver left the UK 32:26 - Muslim immigration 35:32 - Novels versus columns 40:12 - Writing for shorter attention spans 41:30 - Shriver’s recovery from illness
Contact The Mishal Husain Show mishalshow@bloomberg.net
America’s Limits, Iran’s Leverage, Pakistan’s Moment: Maleeha Lodhi on a Shifting Order
09 Apr 2026
00:31:33
After almost six weeks of war, how did Pakistan manage to get the US and Iran to talk?
Amid a still-fragile situation in the Middle East, that question sits at the heart of this conversation with Maleeha Lodhi. She has served as Pakistan’s ambassador to Washington, as well as to the UK and United Nations.
For her, the Islamabad talks mark a moment of wider significance, as the middle powers demonstrate their capacity to influence geopolitics.
02:55 - Pakistan as a peacebroker 05:00 - Field Marshal Asim Munir and President Trump 07:49 - Pakistan and Iran 10:00 - Economic pain in Pakistan 13:40 - Israel and Lebanon 14:45 - “I'd like to be optimistic” 19:30 - US miscalculations 22:00 - “US dominance is fading” 23:00 Middle powers can “shape geopolitics” 23:53 - Is China a winner? 29:00 - Trump’s Board of Peace 29:50 - “Common ground can be found”
Contact The Mishal Husain Show mishalshow@bloomberg.net
Hamlet, James Bond and SNL UK: Riz Ahmed on Reinventing Cultural Icons
17 Apr 2026
00:38:41
A new and radical take on Shakespeare’s Hamlet is out in US cinemas. The force behind it is actor, writer, producer and musician Riz Ahmed. He says the 400-year-old story has never felt more current.
Ahmed, Oscar-nominated for Sound of Metal and star of the Oscar-winning live-action short The Long Goodbye, has a new series on Prime Video called Bait. It’s a black comedy about an actor on the cusp of a life-changing role as James Bond.
In this conversation with Mishal Husain, Ahmed talks about creativity and politics, discusses his upcoming movie with Tom Cruise and how becoming a father affected his acting.
02:32 - Hamlet “never goes out of fashion" 03:39 - “The old order is falling apart” 05:00 - “Is it the world that’s gone crazy or is it me?” 07:50 - The dream of playing Hamlet 09:51 - To be, or not to be is “misunderstood” 13:40 - “It's authentic. I'm not acting” 17:00 - Bait “it’s a very personal show” 17:24 - Why Barbara Broccoli said yes to using Bond 21:43 - Looking for acceptance 22:34 - “Culture works in cycles” 25:04 - Acting was an extension of real life 28:20 - “I don’t like being pinned down” 28:42 - SNL UK 30:01 - Working with Tom Cruise 32:21 - “My weekends are really simple”
Contact The Mishal Husain Show mishalshow@bloomberg.net
How to Get a Deal With Iran: Former US Negotiator Wendy Sherman on Power, Pressure and Reality
24 Apr 2026
00:44:01
We’re now eight weeks on from the start of the US-Israel war with Iran, a conflict that’s been watched with increasing alarm by Wendy Sherman, architect of the 2015 nuclear deal between the US and Iran and a former deputy secretary of state.
Having spent years across the table from Iranian officials, she sees a far more volatile landscape today. In this conversation with Mishal Husain, she shares how her concerns go beyond the Middle East and explains how China and Russia are beneficiaries of the war.
03:13 - Iran’s “culture of resistance” 05:00 - “The regime now is more hardline” 05:33 - Iran won’t make concessions “easily” 09:38 - Control of the Strait of Hormuz 10:36 - “They have not bombed away all of Iran’s knowledge” 14:35 - Negotiating with Iran 17:13 - Negotiations aren’t about trust 23:47 - What might a US deal with Iran look like? 25:14 - Iran will want the US “out of the Middle East” 29:10 - China is “stronger” 32:50 Trump’s visit to China 41:19 - “I have found myself angrier”
Why India Has Lost Its Way: Writer Amitav Ghosh on the New World Order, Politics and Past Lives
01 May 2026
00:33:36
For more than 30 years, the Indian-born writer Amitav Ghosh has built a global following with novels that draw on deep historical research.
But his latest offering, Ghost-Eye, is more esoteric. The plot moves back and forth between India and the US, using past lives to explore the ties between the personal and the political.
The plot centers on a psychiatrist treating a 3-year-old who shocks her family by insisting she remembers a past life in a fishing community.
In this conversation with Mishal Husain, Ghosh explains why he’s finding it harder to write nowadays, how the memories of his childhood came flooding back during the Covid pandemic, why he sees capitalism as an obstacle to protecting the environment and thinks India has lost its way diplomatically.
03:37 - “She had a near-death experience” 05:37 - Reincarnated past lives 08:05 - “The world has lost all its wonder” 08:28 - Growing up in Kolkata 10:56 - Kolkata and New York are the “opposite ends of the telescope” 11:44 - “I really learned to think against the grain” 12:13 - Creating a “bubble of tranquility” to write 12:32 - Writing from “within the crisis” 14:45 - India has lost its way diplomatically 16:25 - Watching Zohran Mamdani grow up 19:12 - India and China 23:11 - Writing a story to be read in 100 years 27:31 - Writing books by hand
Contact The Mishal Husain Show mishalshow@bloomberg.net
Anthony Scaramucci: Trump and the Humiliation That Made Him Famous
08 May 2026
00:48:10
For a brief moment in 2017, Anthony Scaramucci became a unit of time. His 11-day stint as White House communications director was so short-lived that it entered the political lexicon.
Almost a decade on, he has proven more durable than the joke. The Trump loyalist-turned-critic, Wall Street financier and podcast host remains a well-known figure in American political culture.
Scaramucci is still holding forth on the US president he once backed, as well as bets that have shaped his own career, including on crypto and Sam Bankman-Fried.
In this conversation with Mishal Husain, Scaramucci talks about his early life, his mistakes and his view of the political landscape ahead of the midterm elections.
03:00 - The midterms are “a longtime off” 06:58 - “I’m a loyalist” 08:35 - Who’s Trump’s successor? 08:55 - A president needs “name recognition” 11:41 - Meeting Trump for the first time 13:14 - Trump’s “phenomenal political instincts” 14:45 - Joining the Trump campaign 16:11 - “Donald Trump was talking to my Dad” 20:56 - Getting fired by Trump 24:16 - It was “humiliating” 25:56 - Meeting Sam Bankman-Fried 27:53 - “I made false assumptions” 31:18 - Bitcoin “I want to judge it over a five or 10 year period” 33:05 - Growing up on Long Island 35:17 - “The Mooch” 37:17 - The future of the Democrats 44:51 - History is a guide
Contact The Mishal Husain Show mishalshow@bloomberg.net
China vs the US: Kishore Mahbubani on a Zero-Sum Rivalry
15 May 2026
00:34:41
Beyond this week’s talks between Chinese President Xi Jinping and US President Donald Trump, there’s an epic tale that has been unfolding for decades. It’s a battle to be the world’s number one power and a much bigger story than the latest meeting of these two men.
Kishore Mahbubani is a former Singaporean diplomat who served as president of the United Nations Security Council. For two decades, he has argued that the West fundamentally misunderstands the rise of China and its challenge to American supremacy.
Mahbubani. who eventually turned to academia, now specializes in governance and public policy. In this conversation with Mishal Husain, he traces the story behind the Xi-Trump talks, the handshakes and the social media posts–and what may lie ahead.
Mahbubani also reveals how his own successes were made possible by Singapore’s remarkable growth.
Read this interview with Mishal’s notes on Bloomberg Weekend: www.bloomberg.com/Mishal
03:34 - “The most important contest of our time” 5:50 - “It's not about personalities” 6:26 - “China can no longer be stopped” 07:28 - US versus China: It’s a “zero-sum” game 08:40 - Bill Clinton’s first meeting with Jiang Zemin 12:35 - Cold War Comparisons 18:30 - Growing up in Singapore in the 1950s 19:53 - "My mother never cracked” 26:25 - “China has become a tiger” 30:24 - US war is a “gift” to China
Contact The Mishal Husain Show mishalshow@bloomberg.net
Can Britain’s Politics Cope: David Dimbleby Thinks Not
22 May 2026
00:40:53
David Dimbleby was for decades the face of election programs on the BBC. He anchored coverage of 10 UK general elections, as well as the 1975 and 2016 referendums on European membership, the funeral of Princess Diana and a host of other royal and state occasions.
He’s seen prime ministers come and go, from Margaret Thatcher to Tony Blair and many more since. With Prime Minister Keir Starmer facing a potential leadership challenge, Dimbleby is uniquely placed to understand the characters and conflicts shaping Britain’s volatile politics today.
In this conversation with Mishal Husain he gives his take on Starmer, Andy Burnham and Nigel Farage.
0:03:15 Why so many prime ministers? 0:09:14 Keir Starmer is a “dud” 0:09:55 “I don’t know what (Burnham) stands for” 0:11:31 Would Burnham be a different PM? 0:13:37 The UK is in a “dire state” 0:16:16 “I am worried about the future” 0:16:49 Nigel Farage as prime minister 0:21:35 Ten years on from Brexit 0:24:31 The UK rejoining the EU 0:31:52 King Charles' state visit to the US 0:37:15 “I'm not in any way a republican”
Ebola Is Back: Virus Pioneer Peter Piot Explains the Threat
05 Jun 2026
00:37:58
Peter Piot first encountered the Ebola virus in a laboratory in Antwerp in 1976. At the time, the pathogen was largely unknown. Now, almost 50 years later, a new outbreak is spreading through parts of Central Africa, triggering travel restrictions and quarantines across the globe.
In this conversation with Mishal Husain, Piot, one of the world's leading authorities on the disease, discusses why Ebola, while deadly, is not easily spread. The Belgian scientist also explains the challenge of controlling outbreaks in conflict zones and lessons the world still hasn’t learned from Covid-19.
06:44 - "No future in infectious diseases" 10:50 - How contagious is Ebola? 12:05 - “I'm not concerned that this will become a pandemic” 13:23 - Are travel restrictions necessary? 18:00 - “Ebola is not their only problem” 19:07 - How far are we from a vaccine for this Ebola strain? 22:14 - Tackling Ebola in 1976 23:48 - Tracking the virus 32:25 - Vaccine disinformation 33:18 - “Long Covid really exists” 34:18 - “I was scared to die”
Contact The Mishal Husain Show mishalshow@bloomberg.net
Cuba on the Brink: Ada Ferrer on Life Under US Pressure
29 May 2026
00:42:10
Ada Ferrer won the Pulitzer Prize in 2022 for her acclaimed book, Cuba: An American History, which examined the island’s relationship with the US.
Her latest work, Keeper of My Kin, tells her family story: a mother who fled the island nation carrying an infant daughter, while leaving a brother behind.
Now, as Donald Trump increases pressure on Cubans and their leaders, cutting off oil while obtaining an indictment of Raul Castro for the 1996 shootdown of a small plane, Ferrer tells Mishal Husain about the human cost of Cuba’s long crisis.
03:26 - Writing “Keeper of my Kin” 04:09 - A love-hate relationship with Cuba 05:40 - The Cuba of Castro 07:11 - Leaving Cuba in 1963 08:13 - Leaving her brother Poly behind 12:08 - Letters from Poly 15:48 - Cuba’s history of migration 17:58 - Helping family in Cuba 22:50 - People in Cuba are “suffering” 24:01 - A threat to US national security? 26:51 - A shared experience with Rubio 32:19 - Cuban-Americans and Trump 34:04 Obama’s visit to Cuba 37:52 - Calling myself an American 39:52 - The books is a “testament of love”
Contact The Mishal Husain Show mishalshow@bloomberg.net
Gary Lineker on the World Cup, Trump and the Fans Left Behind
12 Jun 2026
00:38:48
For decades, Gary Lineker anchored live sporting events for the BBC. Now he’s a podcaster and media boss. In this conversation with Mishal Husain, he talks about his new Netflix show and hopes for an England World Cup win.
Lineker co-founded Goalhanger Productions, the UK’s fastest growing private company. Throughout the World Cup, his podcast “The Rest Is Football” will be streamed on Netflix.
He talks about the politics around the tournament and FIFA boss Gianni Infantino’s relationship with US President Donald Trump. They also discuss Lineker’s departure from the BBC, which he describes as a “long marriage.”
Contact The Mishal Husain Show mishalshow@bloomberg.net
Can Republicans Win California Again? Steve Hilton Thinks So
26 Jun 2026
00:39:03
In November, California will choose a new governor to replace Gavin Newsom, pitting Democratic candidate Xavier Becerra, a former US Secretary of Health and Human Services, US Congressman and state attorney general, against an unlikely Republican rival: Steve Hilton.
Hilton was born in the UK and became a US citizen only five years ago. He had a career in center-right British politics, working as an adviser for former Conservative Prime Minister David Cameron.
In 2012, Hilton moved to California, where he worked as a tech entrepreneur and as a host on right-leaning Fox News.
Hilton, who wants to be the state’s first Republican governor since Arnold Schwarzenegger, tells Mishal Husain how he joined the party, discusses the US-Israel war with Iran, his attitude to big tech and what he misses about life in Britain. He also discusses what having Donald Trump’s endorsement means for him and his campaign.
Contact The Mishal Husain Show mishalshow@bloomberg.net
Bonus: Alastair Campbell & Jacob Rees-Mogg Debate Brexit 10 Years On (Live)
23 Jun 2026
00:34:53
It’s 10 years since the United Kingdom voted to leave the European Union. It was an enormous decision, one that has contributed to the churn of British prime ministers since, a phenomenon that has continued this week with the resignation of Keir Starmer.
What effect has Brexit had on UK politics and the British economy over the last decade? This bonus episode of The Mishal Husain Show is an opportunity to reflect and look ahead.
Earlier this month, Alastair Campbell, Co-Host of The Rest Is Politics podcast, and Jacob Rees-Mogg, a presenter on GB News, joined Mishal Husain in front of an audience of Bloomberg subscribers to mark the anniversary.
AI Wants Your Life: Tech Boss Meredith Whittaker Says No
19 Jun 2026
00:44:56
Meredith Whittaker has spent years arguing that privacy is a prerequisite for a free society.
As the president of the nonprofit foundation behind the encrypted messaging app Signal, she now finds herself defending that principle in the face of mounting pressure from governments and tech companies alike.
In this conversation with Mishal Husain, Whittaker says she believes business models that rely on data collection, the rise of artificial intelligence assistants and even well-meaning efforts to protect children online risk undermining private communication. She also explains why Signal would rather leave a market than weaken the product’s encryption.