
Insights from recent episode analysis
Audience Interest
Podcast Focus
Publishing Consistency
Platform Reach
Insights are generated by CastFox AI using publicly available data, episode content, and proprietary models.
Most discussed topics
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Total monthly reach
Estimated from 43 chart positions in 43 markets.
By chart position
- 🇦🇺AU · Music History#31M to 3M
- 🇬🇧GB · Music History#51M to 3M
- 🇺🇸US · Music History#31100K to 300K
- 🇩🇪DE · Music History#7330K to 100K
- 🇨🇦CA · Music History#7430K to 100K
- Per-Episode Audience
Est. listeners per new episode within ~30 days
990K to 3.0M🎙 Daily cadence·42 episodes·Last published 3mo ago - Monthly Reach
Unique listeners across all episodes (30 days)
3.3M to 10M🇦🇺30%🇬🇧30%🇺🇸3%+40 more - Active Followers
Loyal subscribers who consistently listen
990K to 3.0M
Market Insights
Platform Distribution
Reach across major podcast platforms, updated hourly
Total Followers
—
Total Plays
—
Total Reviews
—
* Data sourced directly from platform APIs and aggregated hourly across all major podcast directories.
On the show
From 10 epsHosts
Recent guests
Recent episodes
8. What the World is Waiting For
Mar 16, 2026
22m 18s
7. Regret
Mar 16, 2026
18m 06s
6. Shoot You Down
Mar 16, 2026
23m 46s
5. World in Motion
Mar 16, 2026
18m 30s
4. Loose Fit
Mar 16, 2026
25m 01s
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| Date | Episode | Topics | Guests | Brands | Places | Keywords | Sponsor | Length | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3/16/26 | ![]() 8. What the World is Waiting For✨ | Madchestermusic history+4 | — | BBC Radio 6 MusicBBC Audio+3 | — | MadchesterTony Wilson+5 | — | 22m 18s | |
| 3/16/26 | ![]() 7. Regret✨ | MadchesterBritpop+4 | — | The Stone RosesBlur+3 | ManchesterThe Hacienda | MadchesterThe Stone Roses+5 | — | 18m 06s | |
| 3/16/26 | ![]() 6. Shoot You Down✨ | music historyMadchester+4 | — | The Happy MondaysFactory Records+4 | BarbadosManchester | MadchesterThe Happy Mondays+5 | — | 23m 46s | |
| 3/16/26 | ![]() 5. World in Motion✨ | Madchesterpolitics+4 | — | The Happy MondaysNew Order+5 | LondonManchester+1 | Madchester1990+8 | — | 18m 30s | |
| 3/16/26 | ![]() 4. Loose Fit✨ | Madchestermusic history+4 | Leo StanleyMike Pickering+2 | The Happy MondaysThe Stone Roses+4 | ManchesterBlackpool+1 | MadchesterHappy Mondays+7 | — | 25m 01s | |
| 3/16/26 | ![]() 3. Twenty Four Hour Party People✨ | Madchestermusic history+4 | Angela MatthewsMike Pickering+1 | The HaçiendaThe Stone Roses+1 | Manchester | MadchesterThe Haçienda+5 | — | 20m 26s | |
| 3/16/26 | ![]() 2. Movement✨ | Madchesterhouse music+5 | Mike PickeringAngela Matthews+1 | New OrderHaçienda+1 | — | Blue MondayNew Order+7 | — | 21m 50s | |
| 3/16/26 | ![]() 1. Wilderness✨ | Manchester music sceneJoy Division+5 | Mike Pickering | Joy DivisionNew Order+2 | ManchesterThe Haçienda+1 | Joy DivisionNew Order+8 | — | 18m 13s | |
| 10/27/25 | ![]() 8. My Way✨ | Sex Pistolspunk music+5 | Jah Wobble | — | LondonRio+3 | Sex PistolsJohn Lydon+7 | — | 21m 03s | |
| 10/27/25 | ![]() 7. No Fun. Implosion in the USA.✨ | Sex Pistolspunk rock+4 | — | Sex PistolsBBC+1 | — | Sex PistolsSid Vicious+7 | — | 20m 07s | |
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| 10/27/25 | ![]() 6. The Album, The Outrage and the Court Case | After the chaos of their Jubilee riverboat stunt and the media storm around God Save the Queen, the Pistols were marked men. Attacked in the streets, vilified in the press, and hated by half the country, Britain’s most notorious band were now public enemy number one.But manager Malcolm McLaren had no intention of retreating. Amid rising paranoia, infighting, and Sid Vicious’s self-destruction, the Pistols did what no one expected: they released one of the most incendiary debut albums of all time - Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols.It wasn’t just the music that caused outrage. One word on its cover dragged the band into a landmark obscenity trial that would test the limits of freeEpisode 6 of The Rise and Fall of Sex Pistols is the story of the album that changed British music forever, and how the Sex Pistols took on the law, the tabloids, and the establishment… and won.Featuring archive interviews from: Richard Branson, Johnny Rotten, Steve Jones, Paul Cook, Malcolm McLaren and Sid Vicious alongside a new interview with the legendary photographer Dennis Morris and a cameo appearance from BBC 1 continuity announcer Duncan Newmarch.Presented by Gina Birch and Steve LamacqA BBC Audio Production | 20m 40s | ||||||
| 10/27/25 | ![]() 5. Anarchy on the Thames | 1977, and as Britain prepared to celebrate the Queen’s Silver Jubilee, the Sex Pistols were plotting something else entirely. Fresh from being dropped by two major labels, they signed with Virgin Records and unleashed God Save the Queen… a blistering punk anthem that tore into the monarchy and shattered British tradition.It was banned by the BBC, blacklisted from shops, and allegedly kept from reaching Number 1. And then, on Jubilee Day, the Pistols took to the Thames in a now-legendary riverboat stunt that ended with police raids and arrests.Episode 5 is the story of how the Pistols hijacked Britain’s biggest party, declared war on the establishment, and created the most controversial single in UK history.Featuring archive interviews from: Richard Branson, Johnny Rotten, Steve Jones, Paul Cook, Malcolm McLaren and Sid Vicious alongside new interviews with the legendary Sex Pistols official photographer Dennis Morris and groundbreaking bass player Jah Wobble.Presented by Gina Birch and Steve LamacqA BBC Audio Production | 18m 30s | ||||||
| 10/27/25 | ![]() 4. Cancelled | In the aftermath of the Bill Grundy interview, the Sex Pistols became Britain’s most notorious band, not for their music, but for the chaos that followed. To some, they were a threat to society itself, and instead of ignoring them, middle England lost its collective mind.Episode 4 of the Rise and Fall of Sex Pistols plunges into the wreckage of that moment: a UK tour collapsing date by date, sackings from two major labels in just six months, and how manager Malcolm McLaren spun outrage into art.From smashed toilets to moral panic, from Caerphilly to Buckingham Palace, this is the story of how doing nothing made the Pistols more famous than ever.Episode 4 features archive interviews from: Johnny Rotten, Steve Jones, Paul Cook, Malcolm McLaren and Sid Vicious alongside a brand-new interview with punk author and historian Chris Sullivan.Presented by Gina Birch and Steve LamacqA BBC Audio Production | 22m 21s | ||||||
| 10/27/25 | ![]() 3. The Filth and the Fury | In just three months, the Sex Pistols went from unknowns to the most feared band in Britain. After headlining the infamous 100 Club Punk Festival, they landed a major-label deal with EMI and released their debut single, Anarchy in the UK.Radio wouldn’t touch it, and record shops banned it. No matter, as within weeks the Pistols were on everyone’s lips… for an entirely different reason.Episode 3 of The Rise and Fall of Sex Pistols focuses on one of the most notorious moments in British television history. A half-cut band. A smirking presenter. A live broadcast that shattered the illusion of polite British youth.Within 24 hours, the headlines screamed “The Filth and the Fury!” and the nation erupted. Gigs were cancelled. Politicians raged. Record label shareholders revolted. EMI, who had only just signed the band, were already trying to distance themselves.This was the moment Britain met punk at teatime… and it never recovered.Episode 3 features archive interviews from: Johnny Rotten, Steve Jones, Vivienne Westwood, Paul Cook and Malcolm McLarenPresented by Gina Birch and Steve LamacqA BBC Audio Production | 19m 02s | ||||||
| 10/27/25 | ![]() 2. Year Zero | Britain in the summer of 1976 was hot, angry, on strike and broke; a country on the brink. In the shadows, four raw, unpolished young punks were limbering up on the sidelines, unaware of the impact they would make.From half-empty art school shows to now-legendary gigs at Manchester’s Lesser Free Trade Hall and London’s 100 Club Punk Festival, Episode 2 takes you inside the band’s earliest and most shambolic shows.At the heart of it all: a band more interested in provocation than perfection. As guitarist Steve Jones told the NME during this period: “We’re not into music, we’re into chaos.”Fights broke out, glasses were thrown, and punk ripped itself from the underground onto the front pages. The Pistols were forming a following, and they were soundtracking a country crying out for change.The Sex Pistols were ready to deliver it, whether Britain wanted it or not.Episode 2 features archive interviews from: Johnny Rotten, Glen Matlock, London club promoter Jack Barrie, Paul Cook, Peter Hook from Joy Division and New Order, Sid Vicious, Siouxsie Sioux, Malcolm McLaren and 100 Club promoter Ron Watts.Alongside this, there is a new interview from TV Smith from The Adverts.Presented by Gina Birch and Steve LamacqA BBC Audio Production | 23m 08s | ||||||
| 10/27/25 | ![]() 1. No Future | “Ever get the feeling you’ve been cheated?” spat a deflated Johnny Rotten before walking off stage in San Francisco. The Sex Pistols were finished. One album, a handful of singles, and a trail of chaos that changed British music.But where did it all begin? How did a green-haired kid from Finsbury Park, nearly killed by meningitis and raised in poverty, end up fronting the most incendiary band in British history?In Episode 1 of The Rise and Fall of Sex Pistols, Gina Birch, a founding member of The Raincoats, and Steve Lamacq drag you back to the murky mid-70s and dive into the turbulent origins of punk’s most iconic band.From stolen Bowie gear to backroom pub auditions, this is a story of disillusioned youth, of a fetish shop on the King’s Road, of a snarling, short-sighted teenager, and of a chaotic Britain. The perfect breeding ground for a cultural revolution that the Sex Pistols were being primed to lead.Featuring archive interviews with: John Lydon, Steve Jones, Glen Matlock, Paul Cook, Malcolm McLaren, Vivienne Westwood and Bob Geldof.Presented by Gina Birch and Steve LamacqA BBC Audio Production | 17m 38s | ||||||
| 7/25/25 | ![]() 8. Not Nineteen Forever | So here we are, twenty years on... The UK indie guitar scene was a brief, bright moment where exciting new bands emerged from all corners of the UK, and made themselves available to fans. It was a time when young people controlled the culture and left the major record labels in the dust. It was an intoxicating era of community, messiness and hedonism. And actually, there is a hunger for all of that now. Many of the bands from that time are still going, and are playing to more people than they ever have before. The UK Indie Explosion holds a fascination for those audiences too young to have experienced it firsthand, and those Gen Z-ers have popularised the term ‘indie sleaze’. Meanwhile, guitar music is cool again, with the likes of English Teacher, Wet Leg, and Wolf Alice leading a rock revival.Presented by Kate Nash Produced by Jack Howson & Rich Power A Peanut & Crumb production for BBC Sounds & 6 Music Commissioners for the BBC were Will Wilkin and Hannah ClaphamThe producers would like to extend deep thanks to: Ed Greig for additional (early noughties) production heard across the series David Crackles for engineering every episode The BBC Archive team, namely David Hyde, Joseph Schultz, and Colin Waddell | 23m 38s | ||||||
| 7/25/25 | ![]() 7. Bang Bang You're Dead | Just six action-packed years after the start of the UK indie sleaze music scene, The Word magazine coins the derisory term “Landfill Indie” to describe the oversaturation of guitar music, turning the entire genre into a joke. Major labels are falling over themselves to sign the next big indie thing, but many of these hopefuls aren’t ready for the limelight. And audiences seem ready for a new, entirely different, sound ... one that's less male-dominated, for starters. Cue Kate Nash, Adele, Laura Marling, Florence Welch and co.Featured interviewees include Alexandra Haddow, Johnny Borrell, Tara Joshi, Alex Kapranos, Paul Smith and Gary Jarman Presented by Kate Nash Produced by Jack Howson & Rich Power A Peanut & Crumb production for BBC Sounds & 6 MusicWarning: this episode contains strong language and adult themes. | 16m 09s | ||||||
| 7/25/25 | ![]() 6. When The Sun Goes Down | The UK indie guitar music scene hits the tabloids. Johnny Borrell, Pete Doherty and Luke Pritchard partner up with A-List celebrity girlfriends. Lily Allen and Amy Winehouse become unhealthy media obsessions. And most shockingly of all, Preston from the Ordinary Boys goes on Celebrity Big Brother and actually has a great time. This red top frenzy builds to a messy crescendo that includes phone hacking, divorce, band break-ups, and a devastating fatality.Featured interviewees include Alexandra Haddow, Pete Doherty, Samuel Preston, Tara Joshi, Johnny Borrell and Luke Pritchard Presented by Kate Nash Produced by Jack Howson & Rich Power A Peanut & Crumb production for BBC Sounds & 6 MusicWarning: this episode contains strong language, adult themes and descriptions of drug use, which some listeners may find distressing. Details of help and support are available at bbc.co.uk/actionline | 20m 39s | ||||||
| 7/25/25 | ![]() 5. Can't Stand Me Now | What’s a music scene without fighting and feuding? Brace yourself for Art Brut versus Bloc Party, Razorlight versus The Kooks, and The Libertines versus themselves. With all the booze, drugs, and partying, things are bound to get messy. Especially at the notorious NME Awards, where Ryan Jarman of the Cribs has a near death experience. Featured interviewees include Luke Pritchard, Johnny Borrell, Eddie Argos, Pete Doherty and Ryan Jarman. Presented by Kate Nash Produced by Jack Howson & Rich Power A Peanut & Crumb production for BBC Sounds & 6 MusicWarning: this episode contains strong language, adult themes and descriptions of drug use, which some listeners may find distressing. Details of help and support are available at bbc.co.uk/actionline | 16m 26s | ||||||
| 7/25/25 | ![]() 4. Golden Touch | 2005 to '06 is the pinnacle of UK Indie Sleaze, as Razorlight, Arctic Monkeys, The Kaiser Chiefs and The Kooks well and truly take over the mainstream. Scrappy guitar bands are now dominating the BRIT Awards and playing to an audience of 2 billion at Live 8. But with success comes the inevitable backlash...Featured interviewees include Johnny Borrell and Luke Pritchard Presented by Kate Nash Produced by Jack Howson & Rich Power A Peanut & Crumb production for BBC Sounds & 6 MusicWarning: this episode contains strong language, adult themes and descriptions of drug use, which some listeners may find distressing. Details of help and support are available at bbc.co.uk/actionline | 18m 00s | ||||||
| 7/25/25 | ![]() 3. Hey Scenesters! | A new tribe is born: The Indie. You can spot an Indie a mile off. They are in skinny jeans, scarves, and trilbies, in a random configuration designed to look as dirty and debauched as possible. The early internet - MySpace and band forums - solidifies this fun new scene, and breaks down barriers between artist and fan. 'Guerilla Gigs' become a thing, with spontaneous shows sprouting up in funeral parlours, tube trains, pub roofs ... and drug dens. Featured interviewees include Alexandra Haddow, Gary Jarman and Pete Doherty Presented by Kate Nash Produced by Jack Howson & Rich Power A Peanut & Crumb production for BBC Sounds & 6 MusicWarning: this episode contains strong language, adult themes and descriptions of drug use, which some listeners may find distressing. Details of help and support are available at bbc.co.uk/actionline | 20m 09s | ||||||
| 7/25/25 | ![]() 2. Boys In The Band | Now that being in a band is cool again, and now that grotty indie guitar music seems a viable career choice, every corner of the UK sprouts an exciting new group ... or two, or three. Glasgow's Franz Ferdinand seize the moment, winning the Mercury Music Prize. They are the undisputed early leaders of this new scene-without-a-name, setting a tone that is unashamedly artistic and literate. And also quite boozy.Featured interviewees include Alex Kapranos, The Cribs and Paul Smith Presented by Kate Nash Produced by Jack Howson & Rich Power A Peanut & Crumb production for BBC Sounds & 6 MusicWarning: this episode contains strong language and adult themes. | 16m 26s | ||||||
| 7/25/25 | ![]() 1. Foundations | Noughties UK indie music was iconic, fashionable and thrilling. These days the kids call it 'Indie Sleaze', although at the time there was no cohesive name for the collection of bands - from Franz Ferdinand to The Libertines, The Long Blondes to The Cribs, Bloc Party to Razorlight, Arctic Monkeys to The Kooks - that erupted from all corners of Britain. These young artists exploded with attitude, tunes, vitality, and misconduct, creating an army of costumed disciples. This is the story of the UK’s most influential musicians of this millennia, and the wild culture that surrounded them - including a collapsing music industry in the face of new media, a fatal tabloid frenzy, and the lows to be found amidst the highlife. Come and ride the UK Indie Wave, as recalled by the people who were there, sweating into their skinny jeans.Episode 1 takes us back to Year Zero (aka 2001), when a foreign band invasion led by the Strokes ignites and inspires this nation's youth.Featured interviewees include Johnny Borrell, Pete Doherty and The Hives Presented by Kate Nash Produced by Jack Howson & Rich Power A Peanut & Crumb production for BBC Sounds & 6 MusicWarning: this episode contains strong language, adult themes and descriptions of drug use, which some listeners may find distressing. Details of help and support are available at bbc.co.uk/actionline | 16m 50s | ||||||
| 7/30/23 | ![]() 8. To The End | Celebrating the 30th anniversary of Britpop! | 24m 08s | ||||||
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Chart Positions
50 placements across 43 markets.
Chart Positions
50 placements across 43 markets.



