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Bad Gays

Bad Gays

By: Huw Lemmey & Ben Miller
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A podcast about evil and complicated queers in history. Why do we remember our heroes better than our villains? Hosted by Huw Lemmey and Ben Miller. Learn more: www.badgayspod.comCopyright 2019-. All rights reserved. World
Episodes
  • Mandelson: A Homosexual History - Episode Five
    May 27 2026

    Today we are reaching the next to last chapter––for now!––of the Mandelson story.

    Listen to the sixth and final episode now by subscribing to Extra Bad Gays on Patreon.

    As we are recording this, on 18th May 2026, the Prime Minister, Keir Starmer, is facing a potential leadership challenge and a collapse in legitimacy following two major crises, both of these the responsibility of Peter Mandelson; one, directly, the other a consequence of the changes of which Mandelson has been the driving force of for almost 40 years. The first crisis is Starmer’s appointment of Mandelson as Ambassador to the United States, despite his having failed a Foreign Office vetting procedure, and the fallout of that once Mandelson was outed as a close long-term friend of the child sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein, to whom it’s alleged he passed sensitive government and financial information while in power. The other is the complete decimation of Labour in the recent local elections, and in elections for the Welsh and Scottish devolved assemblies, which saw the party lose close to 1500 local council seats and, in Wales, lose a century-long winning streak as the country’s largest party. In today’s episode we’ll talk about Mandelson’s journey from MP to peer to Ambassador, and we’ll also discuss how his enormous influence over that time, usually behind the scenes, has led to a Labour Party and indeed the two party system itself on the edge of total collapse.

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    57 mins
  • Mandelson: A Homosexual History - Episode Four
    May 20 2026

    Peter Mandelson has been the definitive comeback kid of British politics, and it’s impossible to ever rule out his return.

    Listen to Episode Five right now and get Extra Bad Gays every month by subscribing on Patreon!

    Today, we will learn why he got that reputation as we look at Mandelson in power. The Millennium Dome, a Y2K fever dream! His public outing! A wider cultural shift in attitudes towards gay men, one which contributed to the idea that poofs were everywhere at the top of society! Resignations, and returns!

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    1 hr and 10 mins
  • Mandelson: A Homosexual History - Episode Three
    May 13 2026

    This week, on Mandelson: A Homosexual History, we cover the 1992 UK election and the birth of New Labour.

    Subscribe on Patreon to support our work and stay a week ahead on this miniseries!

    If Huw's Margaret Thatcher wasn't enough to turn your stomach, try his John Major on for size. Neil Kinnock loses the 1992 election. John Smith becomes leader of the Labour Party, flanked by two feuding up-and-coming reformers named Gordon Brown and Tony Blair. Peter Mandelson buys a lovely home in Notting Hill with questionable financing, and sets himself to defeating Clause IV once and for all. The exciting but fundamentally reactionary Cool Britannia cultural moment helps us understand how tentative New Labour were about rocking the cultural boat. Their victory in 1997 was more about stasis than change.

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    1 hr and 9 mins
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Because of my life circumstances I listen a lots of different podcasts and I kind of binged this one. About the title: the creators are gay so it is not an anti LGBTQIA podcast. It is about choosing dividing historical figures and investigate on what role their gender identity played in their life. The hosts Huw Lemmey and Ben Miller do an extensive research often using the sources from the person who they investigate on. The episodes build on the biography which prepared by one of them while the other host reacts to it. I really like that they never move out the person from the historical context, they explain why these historical figures are bad and how they dealed with their gender identity in their eras. They end up with colorful, interesting and intellectual conversations which make me think days later on the topics. This podcast definitely changed my opinion on how to look at history.

This podcast is a hidden gem

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