When a man tells you he knows the exact truth about anything, you may safely infer he is an inexact man - Bertrand Russell
You know those tired magazines you find in doctor’s waiting rooms?
But, just occasionally, you wonder why the particular pool into which you are casting your fly did to deserve the name it has
British artists sent to the Front during the First World War captured its brutal horrors like nothing else, but no one more so than C.R.W. Nevinson, argues Jeremy Paxman
Jeremy Paxman on Brexit for the Mail on Sunday
The Dickens Collection: An Audible Exclusive Series
To see an osprey haul a fish out of a river or loch is one of the most thrilling sights in nature
"Cheerful in his disdain, incredulous in his responses to shallow or evasive answers, quick to probe a weakness or to pull a dismissive face, he leaves many of his victims feeling they should be grateful he had wasted his evening eviscerating them"
Financial Times
(Jeremy is) "genuinely angry and tortured"
Under attack on all fronts, Britain’s broadcaster needs to focus on what it does best
In Zambia’s Lower Zambezi national park, the FT writer finds that nothing unhinges one’s sense of self quite like the wild
"Mr Paxman’s familiar approach – snorting and whinnying like a disdainful racehorse – suddenly felt both tired and tiresome. If anything, his relentless interrupting actually appeared to get the studio audience on Mr Corbyn’s side"