You're listening to the Globalist, first broadcast on 14 January 2025 on Monocle Radio.
The Globalist in association with U.
Hello, this is the Globalist broadcasting to you live from Midori House in London.
I'm Georgina Godwin.
On the show ahead, we'll bring you the latest from the impeachment trial of South Korean President Yoon Sik Yul.
Then we are close to a deal and it can get done this week.
I'm not making a promise or a prediction, but it is there for the taking and we are going to work.
To make it happen.
Jake Sullivan, the US national security adviser there, will find out more about a possible ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, currently being neglected negotiated in Doha.
Ah, pity.
The author who has a book published this week, Pope Francis memoir comes out today and it's guaranteed to hog the best seller lists.
We'll ask why he's bucking papal convention and publishing within his lifetime.
The Baltic Sea NATO allies meet today in Helsinki.
We'll hear about plans to protect crucial undersea infrastructure from Russia.
We'll also flick through the papers with Charles Hecker and get the latest environmental news from North America.
And finally, he wasn't scared to ask us questions about what we think about being black, being white, why we demonize some people, what society was willing to take on on board.
Andrew Tutt looks back at the controversial work of Oliviero Toscani, who's died aged 82.
That's all coming up here on the Globalist, live from London.
First, a look at what else is happening in the Korea fired multiple short range ballistic missiles off its east coast today, South Korea's military said, marking Pyongyang's latest show of force.
Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum has rolled out an economic plan aimed at curbing imports from China in an apparent nod to US President Elect Donald Trump and his allegations that Mexico is a backdoor for Chinese goods entering the United States.