Bringing funny back / Trump makes America laugh again
Policing / The lessons of the Chris Kaba case
Decline and fall
How our greatest universities are betraying students
Long life / The medicinal powers of a good book
Real life / My boyfriend, the hedgehog hero
Wild life / What the Delameres did for Kenya
The Wiki Man / Why the young are fleeing to Portugal
Latest from Coffee House
All the latest analysis of the day's news
Taxing the gambling industry just won’t work
Leyte Gulf is the greatest naval battle you’ve never heard of
Angela Rayner’s drama-queen habit at PMQs
Diana biographer: Meghan has ‘worst judgement in world’
David Lammy can’t afford to let down South Korea
Dowden and Rayner do battle for the last time
Israel won’t be distracted by ceasefire talks
Lord Alli found in breach of parliamentary rules
Northern Ireland Civil Service’s bizarre language guide
Spectator TV Presents
‘This war will end up at the negotiating table’ — Owen Matthews on Ukraine’s Nato membership
Spectator Life
An intelligent mix of culture, food, style and property, plus where to go and what to see.
Are you ready for the baby wars?
From Spectator LifeAn old codger’s guide to ageing
From Spectator LifeOzempic and the sugar coating of reality
From Spectator LifeThe cult of true crime
From Spectator LifeThe finest Rhône I have ever tasted
From the magazineThe medics would have one believe that alcohol is a depressant. That may be their conclusion drawn from test tubes in laboratories. Fortunately, however, it bears little relation to real life, which is just as well. The world has rarely been in greater need of antidepressants, in every form. One tries to tease American friends
I’m a Nisbets addict
From Spectator LifeMagazine
This week's magazine
Decline and fall
How our greatest universities are betraying students
Decline and fall: how university education became infantilised
Last month, after 21 years study-ing and teaching Classics at the University of Cambridge, I resigned. I loved my job. And it’s precisely because I loved the job I was paid to do, and because I believe so firmly in preserving the excellence of higher education, in Britain and beyond, that I have left. When
Decline and fall: how university education became infantilised
Last month, after 21 years study-ing and teaching Classics at the University of Cambridge, I resigned. I loved my job. And it’s precisely because I loved the job I was paid to do, and because I believe so firmly in preserving the excellence of higher education, in Britain and beyond, that I have left. When
Culture
The good, the bad and the ugly in books, exhibitions, cinema, TV, dance, music, podcasts and theatre.
You’ll even hate the cat: Disclaimer, on Apple TV+, reviewed
From the magazineSometimes spoilers can be your friend. For example, I have just cheated and looked up on the internet the shocking final plot twist in Disclaimer and now I have been relieved of a massive burden. No longer need I watch any more episodes of this weird, creepy, pretentious, contrived and prurient series just to see
Mandy Rice-Davies saw the Profumo affair as an adventure, not a scandal
From the magazineAt Japan House humanity has arrived at the perfect future: food for ogling, not eating
From the magazineGreat knits – shame about the film: Almodovar’s The Room Next Door reviewed
From the magazineChrissie Hynde remains outstanding: the Pretenders, at Usher Hall, reviewed
From the magazineSchoenberg owes his survival to crime drama
From the magazineRevenge tragedy for kids: The Duchess [of Malfi], at Trafalgar Theatre, reviewed
From the magazineCartoons
Cartoon
‘‘He’s never open with me.’’
Cartoon
‘‘This is our forever home, so his bedroom is big enough for a 35-year-old.’’
Cartoon