cover of episode A Tension Deficit with James Harding

A Tension Deficit with James Harding

Publish Date: 2021/1/5
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Listen to Misspelling on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Over these past months of coronavirus, I, like many others, have been fixated on the news. And if you live in the United States, last year we went through a presidential election and many of us were obsessed with the news. But there's this one nagging question, this thing that gnawed at me, which is, can I trust the news?

I called James Harding. He's the founder and editor-in-chief of Tortoise, a new news organization, and the former head of the news for the BBC, to sit down and talk to me about what the news could be, about what the future of news must be. This is a bit of optimism.

James, I can't tell you what a treat it is to see you. It's been a while since I've sat down and talked to you. Yeah, and it's been a while since we've seen any other humans. It's been a while since we've seen any other humans. That too, yeah. Yeah. I think we've learned a lot during COVID. A lot has been revealed to us. The importance of space, the importance of gratitude and value, you know, our relationships.

But the other thing that has confounded me over COVID is who and what to believe. And I try and get my news from multiple sources. And I try and get my news from sources that are on opposite sides of the political spectrum, because I'm always curious how things are being reported from both sides. And then I try and sort of make my own determination as to what reality is. But the question I have for you as a career journalist or career newsman,

Where do I get the truth? I mean, I've just gone through an election here in the United States, and much has been made of fake news, which is now in our vernacular, and the extreme influence of social media, where now anyone can post anything, and it's held at the same standard as journalism. And so...

With such a massive influx of misinformation, disinformation, manipulation, I am finding it harder to know where to get the truth.

and who to believe. And our instinct is to believe the people who sort of reflect our own political beliefs because, you know, it reinforces our own biases. But that doesn't make it the truth. That just makes it nicer to hear. Let me try a theory on you. I think 2020 may mark a move to post-politics news, by which I mean

The biggest story of the year, coronavirus, has not been much helped by looking through a Republican or Democrat lens, a conservative or liberal lens. In fact, you really want to understand things in ways that are A, data-driven, B, with a timescale of science, C,

Really interestingly, we've been in a decade where the political argument has been about the nation. I think the thing about the pandemic that's really interesting is that nationalism, whichever approach you take to it,

has been really unhelpful in the coronavirus, which is something that operates globally and is experienced locally. And so that's the other thing is that there's been, you said right at the top, Sam, about place. Place is a big thing. It's been really, really evident that we think differently about the planet, but we also think differently about where we are, where we live and work.

And so I wonder whether or not we'll come away thinking, yes, I really do care about the news, but I care about the news as regards the place I'm in, as regards the data that I get access to and the quality of that data, as regards news not in the moment, not events-based news, but news over time.

And so I think that that might give us ways of looking at what's happening in the world that's different from left, right. But the thing that I think is so different now about news now than where it used to be, and I think how social media has been able to penetrate standard news, you know, legitimate news.

is that in the past, the news was a trusted source where I could just turn on the television or open the newspaper and I could basically trust, even if there was some political bias, I could basically trust that the reporting I was being given, I could believe.

Now, I can't simply open a newspaper or turn on a television station, but rather what you're saying to me is I have to go on my own search as an individual to find what I believe to be the truth. I don't buy that, to be honest with you. Not the last bit. I think that's true. I think that you have to be a consumer of news in a way in which you are going to have to be a consumer of streaming TV. You know, it takes a while to find the things that are really worth watching and

and we're going to have to learn how to navigate the guide. The thing I don't agree with is that it was much better years and years ago. This idea that there was this kind of Delphic sort of news, you could tune into it and it would tell you what was really going on and what was going to happen next. It wasn't like that. I think there's a thing that we really underestimate is the extent to which there was enormous information inequality.

I don't think it's nearly fixed, but it's much more fixable than it was. What does that mean? What does information inequality mean? Information inequality means that if you were wealthy and college educated, you had access to much, much better sources of information than the vast majority of other people. If you lived in certain in the United States, certain metropolitan centers, you had way better sources of information nationally and internationally.

What I think is happening in the news is not about left and right. Left and right is the thing that enrages people. What's happening is about places of darkness, by which I mean there are places where geographically there's just no provision of news. You're not finding out what's happening in the courts. You're not finding out what's happening in the state legislature or in the governor's mansion whatsoever.

you're just not finding it out at all. You're not getting that community information. And then the other thing is there are parts of our lives, right? And until the coronavirus, science and medicine and healthcare were one of those parts of our lives where we got really, really odd, you know, occasional versions of the news. Now,

That's my point about post-politics news, is can we stop thinking about the news in terms of Crossfire or, you know, New York Times versus Wall Street Journal, CNN versus Fox? Because these arguments, right, the sort of...

you know, what was Bill O'Reilly versus, you know, what is Rachel Maddow? Those arguments weirdly make us feel good because they affirm things that we feel. They don't help us to discover things that we need to know. But I want to go back to something you said, how it's become our response. And I hear you.

And that, again, puts the responsibility on the consumer to go, as you said, you know, like a movie that we want to watch on TV. We have to sort of, we sit there and watch all the trailers and trying to decide what to watch. That's how news has become. But the problem is, is the algorithm that is Google attempts to show you

the thing it thinks you want to see, not necessarily the thing you're asking for. And so a study I was told about not that long ago was that people with left-leaning politics who said, I'm trying to find the truth. I reject the political biases of the traditional news sources that are available to me. I'm going to do my own research

and I'm going to go into Google and I type in Benghazi to find out what's really going on. And if you have left-leaning politics, Google shows you left-leaning news items. If you have right-leaning politics, Google shows you right-leaning news. So you get completely different answers. And the study showed is that if you're completely independent and have no political leanings, Google shows you travel advice. Yes. Yeah. And so even well-intentioned citizens who are attempting to use

A search engine to find news cannot find news that doesn't play to their biases. No, no. We've got a massive problem here, which is people who are responsible for the provision of information in society, in which information is the most important tool in decision making, have gone from saying,

they're just providing a platform and let everything, you know, let the chips fall where they may to acknowledging that their business model actually has impact on the outcomes and information to now saying in a way that I find really hard to swallow, oh, you know what? We are now seeking regulation. But let's face it, this is a systemic failure of the public square.

That is just what's happened. I grew up in newspapers in the UK. We had a very clear understanding of our responsibility. We could be curious. We could lean into your life as long as it was in the public interest. And the nature of the law that underpinned the special privileges and priorities of a journalist were that you could do so in the public interest. It was necessary for the citizens to know.

I moved out of newspapers into TV and radio. And there we had a system which was known as public service broadcasting, the BBC. And the BBC, again, you were able to not only be curious about people's lives, but frankly, put it on TV. Again, as long as it met certain understandings of what was in the public interest, public service, right?

With digital, there's been nothing at all. And I've been arguing for, well, quite a few years now, you need to have something that's the equivalent. So I think the public standard for digital information, and then it's incumbent on the owners of those platforms, Google and Facebook and all the rest of it, to say, we provide information that meets a public standard. That's not inimical to free speech, right? That's essential to the functioning of the public square.

Okay. I think what you're saying is very interesting. And I think the newspaper industry in particular did this to themselves. They devalued themselves, which is to your point, you know, journalists go to school, there's standards inside newspapers. You separate the editorial staff from the publishing staff. And there's this thing that we herald called journalistic integrity, right? That has certain standards. And when the internet showed up,

And I remember this. When bloggers started blogging, which is basically anyone with an email account could now be a newsman, right? The newspapers, they got so freaked out by the internet that

that instead of doubling down on journalistic integrity and separating themselves from the blogosphere and saying, yes, those are bloggers and we are newspapers, they devalued themselves and told all of their journalists to start blogging. And in so doing, raised the credibility of the blogosphere. They allowed for a blogger to have equal ranking, equal standing in our society as a trained journalist with a degree in how to do this thing called journalism.

And now we're suffering the side effects where the blogger and the journalist are no longer distinguishable. Okay, Simon, I don't think this podcast is working. Because here's the problem. I am supposed to be, you know, darkly cynical. And you're supposed to be, you know, optimistic, borderline Pollyanna, you know. And now I'm going to say to you that you're wrong because you're much too, you know, negative on this. And here's the sudden upness.

So I think that something as really good as that. A lot of the journalism that you talk about 10, 20 years ago as being this integrity journalism, it wasn't. We were just putting out like...

three, four, five stories a day. I mean, I remember when I started out as a reporter at the FT, you know, we'd be like, oh yeah, this story's coming, make two calls, report it, come as a press release, here's another company results, da, da, da, da. I remember saying, look, I'm not good, but I'm fast, right? And that was, that was, I mean, and that was a... That was appealing. It was a reasonable boast. What's happening to us is that we are all being forced to identify

Not just information that's new, not just information that I have that you don't, right? But information that's really valuable, insightful, that tells you something that you need to know. I'll give you a kind of example in our own year, right? So, you know, when we first started talking, which is nearly three years ago now, what we were talking about, I was sort of saying, I think I'm going to leave the BBC. I'm going to set up a slow newsroom.

Part of the idea was it would be better by being slower, right? By not chasing after headlines. And part of the thinking was it would be different by being open, that we'd have our news meetings, that they'd be open, right? What's happened, I think, this year is that, firstly, we've had an amazing year, right? I know everyone's knackered and I can't see straight, but the appetite for slow news, the appetite for...

Yes, the latest data, the latest press conferences will be huge.

But also there's been a real growth in people saying, hang on, what's driving this? What are the forces that are behind this? So A, there's an appetite that's impressive. But for us on process terms, it's really changed. We are much, much more focused on once we've identified the subject that matters, then how do we distill that to find the story that tells you that

the different elements of the issue. So what we found has really changed is that it's one thing to say, hey, why can't we plant a trillion trees to deal with the climate crisis? Hang on a second, we can do better than that. We can find the person who counts trees, and then we can tell the story of Tom Crowther who counts trees, and the battle over tree countings.

That is itself a proxy for, you know, which countries in the world and where are we really dealing with climate? And that is, and for me, what that says is just your bigger point is, no, don't take the 10 year view that every journalist became a blogger and vice versa. Actually, journalists have been forced to raise their game because there's just so much more information out there. So this is very interesting where there's an appetite, not just for the news, but for an explanation of how the news came to be.

Yeah. We want to understand the reason because it is in the reason of how it came to be. Yeah. That's more objective.

And I can now draw my own conclusion. Yeah. And what you're suggesting is that in this 24 hour news cycle, news as a business, when you make your revenue from advertising, especially on television, that's a problem because ratings become the thing to drive. But what you're saying is, is that simply reporting what has happened yesterday or this week is insufficient. I want to understand the underlying meaning, root and people involved. Yeah. And,

And I don't have the time or attention to go research that. So I'm looking for what you're saying is the new raised standard of journalism to go investigate that for me. So I'll give you a concrete example, which is we talked about how would you tell a story

and create elements of the story that gave people greater access to your thinking, right? We started, I don't know why this was, but with a why, right?

We started. I like it. I like it. Go on, go on. By the way, this is an idea you may want to pick up. I can't believe I'm giving you all my best stuff here. But the idea was, after we'd spoken, I was like, oh yeah, that's quite interesting. Imagine if at the top of your story, you have a box every time you tell a story, which is why this story. Yeah, why this story matters. Yeah. So we introduced that.

That was quite good, actually. In my world, that was massively innovative. People were going to say, I love the fact that every time you do a story, you've got a box that says, why this story? And that you as the editor have explained why you've chosen to tell this story. The thing that was interesting was that was an innovation. I think that what you're talking about is it's an old-fashioned industry that is being disrupted in a very positive way. Yeah. And so what you're doing at Tortoise, what's happening at Axios, these are...

career news people that I think are disrupting and offering alternatives to

to what were considered the standards in journalism. Because I like disruption. When industries get old and stale, they deserve to be disrupted. And journalism, it's being disrupted. Well, journalism, by the way, the truth is journalism is being disrupted not by other journalists. We're just responding to the fact that the old models don't work. They don't work for consumers in terms of information and they don't work for the commercial side either. But can I just give an example of where I think

Culturally, things have changed. Take people who are not in the same swim as me. Whatever you think about Fox News, the really interesting thing that happened in the course of election night was Arizona. The thing that people most liked, of course, was Jared calls Rupert. Rupert doesn't necessarily respond. They stick by the call they've made on Arizona.

But culturally, what had changed was that they brought in the team of sophologists that are on the desk making the judgment, and they show you their workings. They say, look, we've made this judgment because our read is that there's a one in 400 chance that Trump picks up Arizona. When I started out as a reporter...

Everything was behind closed doors. Editorial meetings were behind closed doors. The investigative team operated behind closed doors. But even the sharing of our data operated behind closed doors. One of the things that's happened with the disruption is that you are seeing much more of that shared publicly. This conversation is not helping me. I know. But the things about it was a preposterous idea. You said, let's have a positive conversation about the news. Let me just tell you the jumble of thoughts that are going through my head.

They're not depressing me. I'm just left just as confused now as I started off at the beginning. So the television news used to be a public service. And in the United States, a deal was made that the FCC would allow the TV stations to prosper and make money off the public airwaves in return for a public service called the news.

And it gave rise to people like Walter Cronkite. Yeah. And it happened in 1979 during the Iran hostage crisis that for the first time ever, the ratings of the news went whoop. Yeah. And Ted Koppel and the NewsHour all of a sudden had the potential to make money. They could no longer be a public service. And in the 80s,

There's this conversion where the business people at the TV stations just ignored the news and let them do their thing. And so the integrity was the thing. And then all of a sudden it became a business. And unlike in the newspapers...

where you had the separation of the business side and the journalist side. Here, you now had the business people getting involved in the news, dictating what things should be reported and what things shouldn't be reported. And advertising became a thing. So if it bleeds, it leads because it drives eyeballs, which drives ad dollars. And the gross influence of money in business

intertwined, now we can't distinguish, but really in the 80s gave rise to this screwed up system. To the point where we now reach where if I turn on one of the apps from one of the TV stations, where they now report opinion as if it's news. So they'll have a headline that's a standard headline. And then I notice what they do. It's very sneaky. They'll put the name of the TV personality, not necessarily a journalist, and then comma,

and then the headline that they said, their opinion. But it's reported as a headline. You know, the news is biased and has no place in the world, Harding. And my point is, we are now at the point, because of business, that we are no longer presented. Forget about distinguish. That we're no longer presented news as news versus opinion. It's all become a blur. Yeah. So I think that...

What you're talking about are systemic failures in the media in the way in which we were talking about systemic failures on the internet. And when I say systemic, the thing that's important to me is I was in a conversation earlier today where someone said to me, what's the difference between responsible business and responsible capitalism? And my point, responsible business is operational, right? It's a company saying, you know, we're good on emissions.

Responsible capitalism is systemic. It's where you've introduced expectations around carbon taxes or emissions or, you know, behaviours.

And what happened, I think, around the media, and I think you'll make it easy to demonize business and you let journalists and journalism off the hook. You know, the journalists like the attention too. They like the success and they like the prosperity that came with it. So I'll give you the UK version of it. It's really interesting. So we are torn culturally between two marketplaces for information, Fleet Street,

the newspapers, and the BBC. Fleet Street's kind of founding myth is John Wilkes, a man who fought for freedom of speech and against the licensing of newspapers. Individuals

would be free to say what they wanted. And, you know, in the US, I think the closest echo is probably Jefferson, right? Jefferson's argument, you know, that a society where there was freedom of expression was safer than any other society in the world. And

And he sort of championed the pamphleteers in that way. That was a kind of founding myth of Fleet Street. The founding myth of the BBC was different. In 1922, as people began to wrap their heads around the possibility of broadcasting and the idea of journalists...

reaching into the minds of millions of people, the government in the UK got spooked. They thought to themselves, good grief, if we allow journalists or even worse, proprietors, to have that kind of power, that is terrifying. So they created in the UK a licensing regime in which anyone who was getting a receiver or

And anyone who had a transmitter had to have a government license. And with that license came certain regulatory requirements on standards of output. And the BBC model was, we are going to provide the best of everything to everyone. So it had a high public purpose. It had a high global purpose. The kind of motto of the BBC is nation shall speak peace unto nation. But there is quite a detailed regulatory regime, which is not just

You're going to have to deliver news in order to get that access. It's quite clear what kinds of news and the culture of the news that's required. And so you have these two competing information marketplaces, Fleet Street Free-for-All and regulated BBC. And that tension, and it's often quite an aggressive tension between the two, I think is really important.

What's been lost in the States is that for a long time, network news was a very American echo of the BBC. So it wasn't the BBC, but it was an alternative. And the Metropolitan Dailies had a culture because of place. But what happened is cable news and then to my mind, digital news drove a coach and horses through both of those.

That's such an interesting point, which is what makes a democracy work is that we have multi-parties. We don't have oligarchy. We don't have one party who runs the show. And it's the tension that

that's supposed to keep the society in balance. You know, in a business, you'd say that it's the tension of the visionary and the operator. It's that beautiful tension that makes something work at its best. And what you're saying is that in the news media, the thing that's been lost is that we're quick to blame or demonize, but the reality is it's the loss of this special tension. And the reason it feels unbalanced is because it very much is unbalanced.

because there's no opposing party that has a different point of view about how news should be delivered. And the irony is, you know when you were saying we did this to ourselves? I think we did this to ourselves ideologically as well as commercially. And by that I mean that people like me who spent their lives really believing in journalism, and I still do, I really believe in the importance of information in the news,

Also spent 30 years campaigning against the propaganda machines of, you know, Eastern Europe or the Soviet bloc as was or communist China. And even today, we fight for freedom of speech because there's never been in some ways a worse time to be a journalist given how many are being kind of suffocated or rubbed out. And so when, if you like, the tech crew came along and said,

Are you for freedom of speech? We were like, hell yeah. That's absolutely what we're for, right? We don't want to have government regulating what you say, because look what happens in, you know, Behrouz or Moscow or Beijing. And the problem is, in that process, we've lost, as you say, it's not even a balance. It's a contest, isn't it? It's two

worldviews around information that both must be operating at the same time. Yeah. You know, one of the things I know about your organization, Tortoise, and what I know about Axios is Axios says, if you want a job here,

You may not express any political opinion in your personal Twitter feeds or social media, and you may not go to a protest because we are journalists. We stay out of the fray. And if you don't like that standard, don't work here. And what I like about this is it's creating a necessary tension between

which is what you want, which is you want the opposing side, which is what we consider the traditional media now where we're getting most of our news, to look at that and say, you're crazy and we want that little tension. We want that little battle to happen because it's in that tension, it's in the different points of view of how news should be delivered that we're more likely to get a better quality news. I think that the thing I found myself saying again and again and again this year is it's revealed more than it's changed, right? And it's revealed...

This generation gap, it's revealed, obviously, a global gap, East versus West. I think it's revealed a real gap between centres and regions, this gap of place between

But I also think that it's revealed an ideological gap, right? And it doesn't need to be, and it's not one that is the old left-right politics. That takes me back to the post-politics is a silly point to make, because the truth is, politics will shift eventually.

to consume any argument. So the differences that we have now around responsible information and trust will be championed by different sides in a political argument because politics moves to adopt or ease into an argument. But I think there is something there. I love this. I think the idea of the need for attention and that the news media has lost the tension. And it's old school news people...

like yourself, who've come up through the system and have now, you're looking at the system going, no, no, no, there's a piece that's missing. Doesn't mean I reject the system I came up in, but there's a piece that's missing that needs to be included in this system to create balance. Sam, can I ask you a question though? Yeah. I am really intrigued to know if you're having these conversations with a bunch of people,

And you're inviting them in on the grounds that this has been a tough year, but let's find, you know, a bit of optimism. Frankly, it's a very English title, isn't it? It's sort of like, let's not oversell it. So, but Simon, what are you honestly feeling? Has it been a year that has given you grounds to be optimistic? Or do you think you are sifting for optimism when the trend in what you're seeing and thinking is the other direction?

My answer is neither. Or if I want to be optimistic, it's both. I have really been practicing always seeking balance. And so when something bad happens, it's my instinct to say, well, hold on a second. What good has come out of this also? Or what's the positive side of this?

And when something good happens, it's my habit to say, well, hold on, let's not get too carried away. You know, I seek balance. And so I have two answers to your question. One is objective and one is subjective. The subjective one is we've all gone through all kinds of emotions. No one has escaped the trauma of COVID. And somebody asked me this morning, in fact, how have you been sleeping? And the answer was sleep.

I've had some good weeks and I've had some bad weeks. I've had weeks where I've slept incredibly well and I've had some weeks where it's been really bad. And she said, oh, good. If you said I've been sleeping well all the time, I would have hung up and said, you're lying to me. The point being is the subjective part is there are days that I've struggled to be optimistic and there are days that I'm only optimistic. The objective side is in all of this trauma and tragedy that is around us.

there is a lot of good that has happened. And I think it's important for us to find the balance. I believe in those tensions and those balances. I think that's important. The reason I ask, because I've thought about this a lot. I've thought about it a lot, partly because I'm a kind of positive person. I've got a sunny disposition. And also, I think like a lot of people, I've been really touched by...

the nature of patience and generosity and love this year. And I see all of that. And also, I'm alive to the criticism that journalism just always hops on about the negative and doesn't actually... can't tell the human story that is often good. I get that. So that's the sort of throat clearing. The problem I've got is...

One, certainly in the UK, if I were trying to distill my critique of the reasons why we have had such a high excess death rate and the reasons why we are so hard hit in terms of livelihoods, and it's been so much worse for some than for others, if I were to sum that up, I would say optimism bias.

That time and time again, the problem has been that we've hoped things would turn out better than they did, and then scrambled to make a difference. And so I didn't want to get to the end of this conversation without just flagging up that I think that I think the optimism itself has had a bit of a kicking in 2020. I'm going to push back here. I agree with the premise that

I think it's a positivity bias, not an optimism bias. What's the difference? So in my mind, positivity is what you're talking about. Everything's fine. It's fine. It's going to be fine. We're fine. It's fine, right? It's overblown. We'll get through this. It's fine, right? Where optimism is not a denial of the current state. Optimism is the belief that the future is bright, but it accepts current darkness, right?

So positivity would say, everything's fine. Go about your business and we'll get through this just fine. You'll see. And then there's the scrambling to your point. Optimism says, this is a dark time. We have to hunker down. This is going to hurt.

But I know that the future is bright. I can see the light at the end of the tunnel. I know if we come together and work together, that we will come through this better and stronger than we went in. I think, by the way, I'm not sure that you may not want to do a U-turn in 2021 and get into the pessimism business.

Because I think everyone's going to be crowding into this optimism space. And pessimism is going to be a bargain. It's a saturated market. You're going to be able to call the box. And in the theme of tension and maintaining tension, if optimism gets too many headlines, I think I better go pessimistic to maintain the tension. And also, it'd be good for the brand, Simon. It would be good for you. Like Simon Sinek, it'd be a natural story. Like Simon Sinek, I used to be such an optimist, but I've had to rethink. Right, exactly. Exactly.

Okay, let me see if I can sum this up. Let me see if I can sum this up. Okay. Which is just like nature abhors a vacuum, so do people. Yeah. We need attention. We need balance. Yeah. We need yin and yang. We need good and evil. You know, we need these tensions. And in this news journalism industry that as it's matured and become a thing, it's become sort of a mush. And unfortunately, because the way news and journalism is delivered today is largely the same,

regardless if it's liberal or conservative, Republican or Democrat, it's kind of the same mush. The tension that has been exaggerated because human beings need that opposition, because it's not come from the news media itself, it's become very political. So the tension has become left and right. And that's the tension in the news. But the reality is the tension that's actually needed, the healthier tensions,

is an entirely new way to deliver news. And the tension has to be between the traditional news media, regardless of their political bias, and new sources of news that are challenging the system. That's what we need. Yeah.

By the way, not only do I like that, I've even got a headline for you, which is a tension deficit. Very good. Do you like that? Very good. It's all put together. It's packaged. A tension deficit. Yeah. Simon, thank you for inviting me on. It's really, really nice to chat with you. I don't think there's ever been a time where I've talked to you where I haven't learned something or walked away a little wiser. And this is no exception. And likewise, well, take good care of yourself. You too.

If you enjoyed this podcast and you'd like to hear more, please subscribe wherever you like to listen to podcasts. Until then, take care of yourself. Take care of each other. Hello and welcome to Haunting, Purgatory's premiere podcast. I'm your host, Teresa.

We'll be bringing you different ghost stories each week straight from the person who experienced it first hand. Some will be unsettling, some unnerving, some even downright terrifying. But all of them will be totally true.

Listen to Haunting on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Hello, from Wonder Media Network, I'm Jenny Kaplan, host of Womanica, a daily podcast that introduces you to the fascinating lives of women history has forgotten. Who

Who doesn't love a sports story? The rivalries, the feats of strength and stamina. But these tales go beyond the podium. There's the team table tennis champ, the ice skater who earned a medal and a medical degree, and the sprinter fighting for Aboriginal rights.

Listen to Womanica on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Meet the real woman behind the tabloid headlines in a personal podcast that delves into the life of the notorious Tori Spelling as she takes us through the ups and downs of her sometimes glamorous, sometimes chaotic life in marriage. I just filed for divorce. Whoa. I said the words that I've said like in my head for like 16 years.

wild. Listen to Misspelling on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.