![]() ![]() The new season will feature the oeuvre of Chris Kamara, Mesut Özil and the Neville brothers, but start with the episode about journeyman striker Darren Huckerby's Hucks: Through Adversity to Great Heights. This homebrewed podcast from comedy writers James Bugg, Jack Bernhardt, James Boughen and Natasha Daniels will return for a third series in February 2021, mining the bathos and strangeness of life stories by people who got to live the dream, and got half a dozen fairly workaday anecdotes out of it. ![]() Tune in or you’re going to be missing out on the best thing you’ll hear since I was last on radio.” Besides, I’m bored of Ofcom and its regulations and so it’s time for the UK to hear what a real award-winning podcast is like. You may think you know me, but trust me, you have no idea what goes on behind closed doors at my podcast innovation studio. With this series, I want to give my fans an intimate view of who I really am. “If David Dimbleby has one, then of course I needed to make one,” Partridge has said. This 18-part Audible series comes direct from Alan’s oasthouse (a ye olde Norfolke room for drying out hops, which Alan uses as a shed) and, so the promo says, “reveals a side to Partridge that’s never been seen or heard before,” and “without the BBC or North Norwich Digital’s editorial management breathing down his neck”. Incredibly, though, he’s not had his own podcast until now. Having conquered sports reporting, celeb autobiographies, chat shows, radio chat shows, digital radio chat shows and triumphantly returned to TV, Alan Partridge is at the top of his very, very large game. ![]() Audible From the Oasthouse: The Alan Partridge Podcast
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