

The Delingpod: The James Delingpole Podcast
James Delingpole
James Delingpole interviews the world’s most fascinating people.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Feb 21, 2026 • 2h 7min
Kris Millegan
Kris Millegan, independent researcher and founder of TrineDay known for work on Skull & Bones and covert state power. He explores secret societies' ties to mining and money. He outlines a three-tier model of elite control, the role of drugs, media and ritualized influence, and links intelligence-era programs to modern manipulation. He ends on technology, exposure and cautious optimism.

Feb 17, 2026 • 1h 26min
Keith Weiner
Keith Weiner, monetary analyst and founder of Monetary Metals, explains why fiat money fails and how paying interest on gold and silver can restore honest savings. He covers backwardation in silver, how gold can withdraw its bid from the dollar, and practical mechanics of earning yield on physical metals. Short, sharp conversations about monetary science, market incentives, and real-world precious metals solutions.

Feb 13, 2026 • 1h 44min
Edward Slavsquat
Edward Slavsquat, writer and long‑time Russia resident (pen name of Riley Wagaman), shares vivid stories from life in Russia. He talks about media narratives, propaganda and perception management. He discusses everyday Russian society beyond headlines, the war’s messy consequences, and why power and elites behave similarly everywhere.

9 snips
Feb 10, 2026 • 2h 31min
Cynthia Chung
Cynthia Chung, researcher, author and co-founder of the Rising Tide Foundation, unpacks ancient mystery religions and their imprint on modern secret societies. She traces Tavistock origins, social engineering and media influence. Conversations cover occult themes in film, cultural conditioning, and links between elite institutions and psychological operations.

Feb 6, 2026 • 2h 5min
Peter Duke
Peter Duke, photographer, technologist and independent publisher, shares wild personal and cultural stories. He discusses losing his home in the Palisades fires, theories about engineered social change and elite influence in Hollywood and academia. Linguistic patterns, persuasion techniques and how media and institutions shape belief systems come up in lively, wide-ranging conversation.

Feb 4, 2026 • 1h 56min
Leo Biddle
Leo Biddle, orangutan rescuer and founder of Project Borneo, runs a rescue and rehab centre for orangutans, sun bears and crocodiles. He recounts daring escapes and rescue methods, blowpipe and archery tactics, dangerous animal captures, and his microscopic investigations into PCR swabs. He also discusses alleged infiltration, crowd manipulation techniques and the motives behind public deception.

Feb 4, 2026 • 1h 28min
Dick Delingpole
Dick Delingpole, brother of James and frequent conversationalist, shares family anecdotes and sharp cultural commentary. They trade banter about parenting, back pain remedies, and nostalgic hobbies. Conversation jumps to Twitter algorithms, Orthodox spirituality, climate skepticism, animal bonds, and quirky takes on history and justice.

Jan 27, 2026 • 2h 5min
EM Burlingame
EM Burlingame, author, historian and former Special Forces operator turned venture investor. He tackles fear, horse psychology and leadership in short, vivid stories. He outlines old family power, a hidden Praetorian elite running illicit networks, and geopolitical flashpoints from Venezuela to Greenland. Expect bold historical sketches and polemical takes on elites and future conflict.

14 snips
Jan 24, 2026 • 2h 5min
Steven and Jana Ben-Nun
Jana Ben-Nun, a Christian of Jewish descent who researches rabbinic Judaism and the Noahide laws. Steven Ben-Nun, formerly an ardent Zionist who researches biblical documents and Middle East affairs. They discuss leaving Zionism, surviving a suicide bombing, the origins and political reach of Talmudic and Noahide law, Chabad’s global influence, and claims about media, intelligence and religious power structures.

Jan 21, 2026 • 1h 59min
Dr Ferdinand Santos III
Dr. Ferdinand Santos III, a Canadian physicist and skeptic of mainstream science, discusses his controversial views on the Apollo moon landings, claiming they were faked and that the Soviet Union was complicit. He highlights gaps in early rocket programs, critiques the lunar module's design, and questions the authenticity of historical footage. Ferdinand also delves into the implications of modern deepfakes and AI on our understanding of space narratives, advocating for a re-examination of scientific foundations like relativity and the speed of light.


