Happy Standard Time to our readers in North America. This afternoon Mark launches a new Tale for Our Time at SteynOnline right after today's Serenade Radio Song of the Week - now back at its regular time on this side of the Atlantic: 5.30pm GMT, 12.30pm Eastern, 9.30am Pacific.
Meanwhile, in case you missed it, here's how the last seven days looked to Mark:
~The week began with a Halloween horror classic and the anthology edition of The Hundred Years Ago Show.
~Mark's Monday column noted Biden's cratering numbers on all fronts, but observed that Republicans were sounding an awful lot like they did in 2010: it was our most read piece of the week.
~Tuesday was Election Day in Virginia and New Jersey: Steyn pronounced it "a good-ish night for Republicans".
Also on Tuesday Laura's Links rounded up the Internet from the Wokestapo's cancelation of Margaret Atwood to some great replacement phrases for the Great Replacement.
~On Wednesday, Steyn checked in with Colin Brazier on GB News to discuss the accelerating flight from white. Click below to watch:
~The Thursday edition of The Mark Steyn Show found Mark offering a few postscripts to the week's elections, plus a Bottom Story of the Day. Plus: all power corrupts, and absolute power may be a thing of the past when it comes to your car and light bulb. Also Steyn dramatically expanded his video-poetry cash-cow into the even more lucrative Latin poetry market.
~On Friday Mark returned to the presenter's chair on UK telly to sit in for Nigel Farage. COP-26, the migrant tide, and record numbers of rape cases were among the topics - and he rounded out the week with the always brilliant Douglas Murray:
~For his Saturday movie date, Rick McGinnis contemplated Brits on the Costa in Sexy Beast.
The Mark Steyn Show, Tales for Our Time and The Hundred Years Ago Show are special productions for The Mark Steyn Club. The Mark Steyn Club is not to everyone's taste, but we do have members in every corner of the world from Virginia to Vanuatu, and, if you have a chum who's a fan of classic poems on video or classic fiction in audio, we also offer a special gift membership.
The war on terror has ended in shambles and shame, and the global humiliation of a fallen superpower. There is no better book on the war's first year, and the lack of strategic clarity that eventually spelt doom, than Steyn's The Face of the Tiger.
A new week at SteynOnline begins later today with the above-mentioned Tale for Our Time and Mark's Song of the Week.