Hello again and thanks for joining us here at SteynOnline for another fresh batch of Laura's Links. From all of us at Steyn HQ, we would like to thank you for all of the messages of concern and support for Mark. He is resting and recovering and appreciates the concern and heartfelt prayers. We appreciate your support as we navigate this period of time, as we endeavor to provide you with a variety of guest opinions and voices until such time as Mark is back up to speed. ~ Hi guys and gals. I hope you had a chance to join me and Tal Bachman yesterday as we co-hosted The Mark Steyn Club Live Q&A Around the Planet. We took questions on music, culture and politics and even dabbled a little bit on President Trump and the disastrous migration ...
Laura Rosen Cohen and Tal Bachman took over the mic again today at Steyn HQ for Live Around the Planet, while Mark continues to recuperate. The Dynamic Duo tackled tough questions from Mark Steyn Club members about the situation in Belfast, which is now seeing nightly protests; where President Trump is winning - and losing; and of course, Rock n' Roll (i.e., should artists speak about politics and if so, what are the consequences on their careers). If you missed it, the Action Replay is now available, listen now! And remember, if you aren't a member yet of The Mark Steyn Club, you can join here. And if you are, remember, giving is the best way to show you care, so get a friend a Gift Membership today! ...
UPDATE: Live Around the Planet with Tal Bachman and Laura Rosen Cohen! Club members can submit questions now and throughout the broadcast! Greetings from Steyn HQ on this lovely Wednesday morning. And Wednesdays as you know, are Live Q&A Around the Planet day here at SteynOnline. This week, we will once again have a duo arrangement for the live show. Our In House Rock Star, Tal Bachman will join our Sinister In House Jewess for a solid hour of co-hosting festivities starting at 3:00 ET (North America Eastern Time) and 8 p.m. British Summer Time. Tal and Laura will be happy to take your questions on any matters that interest you, whether the arts, culture, politics, history or otherwise. As always, listening to the show is free, but in ...
Steyn reads the concluding episode of his highly prescient bestseller America Alone: The End of the World As We Know It...
Alpha polemicist Sam Harris is an enthusiastic and persuasive debater, but in his June 5 substack post, reproduced in the Free Press, titled, "Why it's futile to debate Israel's enemies," he informed his readers that he would no longer debate antizionists. Harris has concluded that it is pointless to debate with people who take a dimmer view of those who shoot rabid dogs than they do of the rabid dogs themselves. As he explained, "if my intransigence on these matters mystifies you, it might help to understand that, for whatever reason, I think militant Islam is ten times worse than you think it is. When I talk about "jihadists" and their various groups – Hamas, Hezbollah, al-Qaeda, the Islamic State, the IRGC, etc. – I'm talking about ...
The Odyssey is a story about Greeks, written down by a Greek author, taking place in Greek-speaking areas...
In case you missed it, here's how the last seven days looked at SteynOnline...
The filming of The Strange Love of Martha Ivers happened when the Paramount lot was ringed by a picket line, part of the 1945 strike by motion picture set decorators that led to the infamous Black Friday riot outside the main gate at Warner Bros. The strike is a movie history footnote today, and though it gets aired out whenever the industry endures another labour dispute, it's hard to imagine pickets full of writers or actors today in a melee with studio security and police with "tear gas bombs, fire hoses, brass knuckles, clubs, brickbats, and beer bottles" as Variety described the two-hour battle. The strike wasn't just a fight between labour and management but between two unions over who would represent the studios' skilled workers, ...
In case you missed our Clubland Q&A with guest hosts Laura Rosen Cohen and Tal Bachman, here's the action replay...
Mark has been busted out of hospital but still has a way to go before he is at full strength. Thank you for the many kind inquiries, prayers and supportive messages - which he very much enjoys receiving. Overnight, the release of bodycam footage out of the UK of the arrest of stabbing victim Henry Nowak has raised questions yet again re institutions supposedly founded on the principles of Robert Peel: In his final moments, Henry Nowak told police officers nine times "I can't breathe" and four times that he had been stabbed. In response police officer dragged him across the gravel, handcuffed and read him his rights. It was the last thing Henry heard before he died. pic.twitter.com/nIPoPEgOWa — Visegrád 24 (@visegrad24) June 1, 2026 ...
As the USS Nimitz heads to the Caribbean, we share Mark's "obituary" to Fidel Castro...
The groupthink in our public discourse is so pervasive it goes as unnoticed as the air...
Programming note: On May 6th 2017 The Mark Steyn Club slipped quietly onto the Internet, and, unlike many of the noisier online launches of the era, we're still here nine years later. We thank (almost) all our First Week Founding Members for re-upping for a tenth year, and we hope our First Fortnight members will want to do the same as this first week of our new season draws to a close...
The Eurovision Song Contest doesn't get a lot of attention in the United States, but years before the euro came along, it was the prototype pan-European institution...
In case you missed Steyn's Clubland Q&A, here's the action replay...
If you're wondering what the US Secret Service do when they're not letting you sprint through the security checkpoint, well...
"Wars the world has lost interest in" is paradoxically a subject of great interest to me...
Distance lends a smidgeonette of enhanced perspective...
Washington is ever more like Churchill's riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma...
Steyn on yet another Trump assassination attempt...
Greetings from Ukraine. I'm in the Kharkiv oblast, which the huge numbers of Russian speakers all around prefer to call the Kharkov oblast. But, whichever your preferred vowel, this oblast is oh, such a blast. Last night, the actual Russians (from Russia, that is) tried to take a town about fifteen kilometres away from where I am...
Twenty years ago this month - January 2006 - The Wall Street Journal and The New Criterion published the first draft of what would become the thesis of my bestselling book, America Alone...
Mark with an hour of music - and memories of a rather odd double-date in Delaware...
A special D-Day edition of Mark's Serenade Radio show, turning the clock back to the sounds and sentiments of the era...
A special Memorial Day edition on battle, sacrifice and remembrance - from the Civil War to the Great War to the unwon wars of our own time...
The words came first. With Rodgers & Hart, the music came first. But Rodgers & Hammerstein opted to reverse the process, which is why the tunes lack that particular freewheeling quality of Rodgers' music in the Twenties and Thirties...
Today's episode celebrates an old friend of our host, the late Ann Ronell, who tells Mark about her two biggest hits...
Welcome to this week's edition of Mark Steyn on the Town. On today's show, we start with Eurovisions past and end with the canine Sinatra...
There's really only one song with which we could celebrate The Mark Steyn Club's ninth anniversary...
On today's show, we start with playmates and end with chaperones...
One of the most popular features of Tales for Our Time has been the music Mark chooses to accompany each story. So here, after many requests, is a sampler of the accompanying melodies from some of our tales...
Mark traces the history of a very distinctive song from the twilight of the Habsburg Empire to the twilight of disco via an especially pitiful act of rock karaoke and the loss of the word "gigolette"...
Welcome to this week's edition, coming to you live-ish from the delightful and historic city of Odessa...
Mark in conversation with Artie Shaw and Julio Iglesias on a Cole Porter classic...
With so many ongoing Russian blasts across the oblasts, we enjoy a few extra Ukrainian blasts across the oblasts, with a brief detour into the good old days of the Polovtsian empire...
Welcome to this week's edition. I'm weekending in Kiev, and so I thought we'd enjoy a bevy of blasts from oblasts...
April 15th marks the end of "Tax Season" in America, and Mark has a seasonal song...
On this week's edition, being of a contrarian bent, we start by going beddy-bye and end at dawn. In between come an easy-listening take on a rock classic, and an extended cavalcade of Non-Stop Number Ones...
An Easter entry to Mark's anthology of video poetry - from T S Eliot's Four Quartets...
On this week's show we start in search of a standard and wind up getting a Handel on it. In between come an anglo-franco Caribbean, Japan's all-time biggest non-Japanese hit and Sousa's afternoon nap...
The conclusion of our seventy-ninth Tale for Our Time: The Quest of the Sacred Slipper by Sax Rohmer...
In episode twenty, Cavanagh and the girl with the violet eyes are hot on the trail of Hassan...
In episode thirteen of Sax Rohmer's Mohammedan caper, thriller abducted hero awakes in a heady environment...
In episode five, the forces of the Prophet manage to get the better of Scotland Yard's finest...
In Part Three of our serialisation of The Quest of the Sacred Slipper by Sax Rohmer, Cavanagh suspects someone is trailing him...
Welcome to the seventy-ninth audio entertainment in our series Tales for Our Time. Sax Rohmer was at one point one of the biggest-selling authors in the world - and then the arbiters of our culture decided to eighty-six his most famous creation...
A remote fantastical kingdom far from Europe's chancelleries of power... An unpopular monarch on the eve of his coronation... A ruling class of plotters and would-be usurpers... ...and a gentleman adventurer on holiday. No, not Ruritania in the nineteenth century, but the United Kingdom in the twenty-first...