Episodes

  • Ro Khanna on Stopping the Iran War, Taking on the ‘Epstein Class’ and Taxing Billionaires
    Mar 20 2026

    US Representative Ro Khanna of California helped force Donald Trump to release the Epstein files. Now he wants to end the war with Iran. Earlier this month, the Democratic Congressman joined forces with Representative Thomas Massie of Kentucky, a Republican, on a War Powers resolution seeking to halt the military action, though it ultimately failed in the GOP-controlled House.

    Speaking to Mishal Husain almost three weeks after the US and Israel began coordinated attacks on Iran, Khanna says he believes that opposing war in the Middle East and taxing billionaires could unite progressives and disaffected Trump voters.

    02:57 - Hearing Epstein’s name for the first time
    05:18 - Forcing the release of the Epstein files
    10:07 - Holding this Epstein class accountable
    11:05 - A new found confidence
    11:59 - Hoping for a split in MAGA?
    12:43 - “It’s a coalition that’s gonna win”
    14:24 - Stopping the war in Iran
    15:53 - Trump’s “looking for an off ramp to end the war”
    17:21 - Increasing pressure on Trump over Iran
    19:50 - Could Cuba be next?
    21:21 - Khanna’s grandfather was an Indian MP
    23:15 - Running for president in 2028?
    24:58 - Taxing billionaires
    30:08 - A progressive coalition
    34:06 - “You can't help but be hopeful about the American story”

    Read this interview with Mishal’s notes on Bloomberg Weekend: www.bloomberg.com/latest/weekend-interview

    Contact The Mishal Husain Show mishalshow@bloomberg.net

    Subscribe today on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    37 mins
  • Why Iran Isn’t Breaking: Vali Nasr on Pain, Patience and the Uprising That Isn’t Coming
    Mar 13 2026

    Despite the intensity of the US-Israel bombing campaign, Iran’s regime, now under a new supreme leader, hasn’t given President Donald Trump the “unconditional surrender” he’s seeking.

    Mishal Husain speaks with Vali Nasr, a professor at Johns Hopkins University’s School of Advanced International Studies and a preeminent scholar on the Islamic Republic. His life has been shaped by the story of Iran over the last 50 years, starting when his family fled amid the 1979 revolution.

    His life’s work has been to study the region and its relationship with the US. He’s also worked as an adviser to the US State Department during the Obama administration.

    Nasr explains why Tehran believes time is on its side in the war, and that a prolonged conflict may only strengthen Iranian nationalism.

    02:34 - Why Iran is “prepared to suffer more”
    06:28 - What drives the new ayatollah
    10:03 - How Iranians view the US and Israel
    12:07 - War will last “longer” than Trump hopes
    14:00 - School strike, destruction of heritage sites
    15:35 - Lessons from the Iran-Iraq war
    19:03 - “This is the final battle”
    20:17 - Impact of US sanctions
    22:40 - Will Iran pursue a nuclear bomb?
    26:02 - Iran’s experience of foreign intervention
    28:27 - Can Reza Pahlavi, son of the Shah, succeed?
    30:48 - Nasr’s experience fleeing Iran in 1979
    35:15 - Mood among Iranian-Americans
    39:32 - Iran’s “rightful place in the world”

    Contact The Mishal Husain Show mishalshow@bloomberg.net

    Read this interview with Mishal’s notes on Bloomberg Weekend: www.bloomberg.com/latest/weekend-interview

    Subscribe today on Apple Podcasts and Spotify

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    42 mins
  • Middle East Expert Bernard Haykel on the Three Futures for Iran After the Strikes
    Mar 6 2026

    Within 24 hours of the US and Israeli strikes on Iran, a host of other countries were drawn into the latest conflict in the Middle East.

    Iran retaliated by targeting sites in Israel and across the Gulf, including the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait and Bahrain, as well as Iraq, Oman and Jordan. Israel, meanwhile, has carried out air strikes on Lebanon and sent in ground troops as it seeks to dismantle Iranian ally Hezbollah.

    For this conversation, Mishal Husain has turned to an expert on the broad sweep of Middle East politics. Bernard Haykel is a professor of Near Eastern Studies at Princeton University. Born in Lebanon, he is known for weaving together knowledge of history, religion and social change across the region. His forthcoming book is about contemporary Saudi Arabia and its leader, Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman, with whom he is in regular contact.

    02:45 - “I was not surprised”
    03:40 - The Iranian retaliation
    09:00 - The three scenarios in this conflict
    11:00 - “This regime will survive”
    13:20 Protests after Khamenei's death
    15:35 Did MBS encourage the strikes on Iran?
    18:40 The Saudi Air Force will get “involved”
    21:30 Trump and MBS
    25:00 MBS “doesn’t want wars”
    27:00 Saudi competition with UAE
    29:18 MBS is “a bit like Elon Musk”
    30:30 MBS is an authoritarian 33:00 The US has a “role to play” in the Middle East

    Read this interview with Mishal’s notes on Bloomberg Weekend: www.bloomberg.com/latest/weekend-interview

    Contact The Mishal Husain Show mishalshow@bloomberg.net

    Subscribe today on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    38 mins
  • WHO Chief Tedros on Covid, China and Texting RFK Jr
    Feb 27 2026

    When President Donald Trump returned to the White House last year, one of his first acts was to sign an executive order withdrawing the US from the World Health Organization. The administration's rupture with the WHO began in Trump’s first term, when relations deteriorated as the Covid-19 pandemic set in.

    In this conversation with Mishal Husain, WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus reveals he remains in close contact with US Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy Jr. despite that break. He also talks about the lessons learned from Covid and why the WHO is still waiting for answers from China as it seeks to understand the origins of the virus.

    Beyond the politics of global health, Ghebreyesus opens up about his own childhood trauma and why the death of his brother in 1970 makes the fight against preventable disease personal for him.

    02:51 - Being a child of war
    06:25 - Working in conflict zones
    08:07 - “War and disease are old friends”
    09:34 - “Don’t forget the invisible enemy”
    11:35 - How far away is the next pandemic?
    12:48 - US withdrawal from the WHO
    14:50 - Covid and China
    16:50 - Personal attacks from the US
    18:16 - The US flag has been returned
    18.51 Argentina is leaving the WHO
    21:22 - Was Covid a lab leak?
    22:49 - Waiting for answers from China
    26:46 - Vaccine skeptics
    27:26 - Texting RFK Jr.
    28:56 - “My brother died”
    31:06 - “He could have survived”
    33:46 - “Defunding mRNA research is the wrong decision”
    34:20 - Will MAHA work?
    37:27 - A message for President Trump
    39:26 - “Viruses get advantage when we are divided”

    Read this interview with Mishal’s notes on Bloomberg Weekend: www.bloomberg.com/latest/weekend-interview

    Contact The Mishal Husain Show mishalshow@bloomberg.net

    Subscribe today on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.



    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    42 mins
  • ‘KPop Demon Hunters’ Creator Maggie Kang on the Global Hit No One Saw Coming
    Feb 20 2026

    “KPop Demon Hunters” is the brainchild of Korean-Canadian animator Maggie Kang. It’s Netflix’s biggest-ever film and follows Rumi, Mira and Zoey, members of the girl band Huntrix, as they battle to save the world from dark forces.

    As you’ll hear, Kang grew up loving Korean pop music long before it was globally cool and forged a Hollywood career on films including “The Lego Ninjago Movie” and “Kung Fu Panda 3.” In this conversation with Mishal Husain, Kang explains how she had always hoped a story about Korea would one day come her way. But it never did, so she came up with her own.

    Kang is in the middle of a life-changing moment. Her movie has already scored wins at the Golden Globes and the Grammys, and now all eyes are on the Oscars. The extraordinary thing is that no one expected “KPop Demon Hunters” to be such a smash hit. Husain asks Kang what it’s been like adjusting to all the attention, and of course whether there’s a sequel in the works.

    03:06 - “A global phenomenon”
    04:17 - The screaming fans
    05:01 - The movie theater screenings
    06:49 - Pitching “KPop Demon Hunters”
    09:27 - Living between two cultures
    12:04 - Growing up as an “outsider”
    16:34 - Kang’s first animation book
    17:16 - “I liked to draw”
    18:21 - Recording the voiceover, over and over
    20:11 - The story of “Golden”
    21:39 - Rumi, Mira and Zoey in “Golden”
    23:00 - Waiting for “the tingles”
    25:25 - “We kinda worried it was a little cheesy”
    27:27 - Helping the world find Korean culture
    29:30 - Choosing the title for a “kooky” movie
    34:20 - A message from Kang to the fans
    34:48 - “There’s a sequel, surely?”
    35:14 - Live action “KPop Demon Hunters”?
    37:01 - “I’m still very grounded”
    37:22 - Diving back into the sequel?
    38:00 - “Wow! You are going to the Oscars!”

    Read this interview with Mishal’s notes on Bloomberg Weekend: www.bloomberg.com/latest/weekend-interview

    Contact The Mishal Husain Show mishalshow@bloomberg.net

    Visit https://www.bloomberg.com/mishal

    Contact The Mishal Husain Show mishalshow@bloomberg.net

    Subscribe today on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    41 mins
  • Bonus Episode: The Andrew Story
    Feb 19 2026

    The Feb. 19 arrest of Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, the brother of King Charles, puts the British Royal Family into uncharted territory. The former Prince Andrew was detained on suspicion of misconduct in public office after further details emerged of his relationship with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

    For this bonus episode, Mishal Husain speaks to Allegra Stratton, a contributing editor to Bloomberg who previously worked for Prime Minister Boris Johnson.

    She’s also joined by Harry Wilson, a reporter on Bloomberg UK’s finance team who’s been involved in reporting on Epstein’s emails and has previously broken stories about Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor.

    They discuss Andrew’s business links and the significance of today’s events for the monarchy and the UK.

    Contact The Mishal Husain Show mishalshow@bloomberg.net

    Subscribe today on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    25 mins
  • Author Andrey Kurkov on Winter in Kyiv and Why Putin Won’t Stop
    Feb 13 2026

    This winter has been exceptionally brutal in Ukraine. Already the coldest in more than a decade, it’s been made worse by Russian attacks on energy infrastructure that have left millions with no heating and intermittent power.

    As Russia’s war approaches its fourth anniversary, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy is under intense pressure from Donald Trump to hold elections and accept a peace deal within months. But inside Ukraine and among its allies, there remains deep skepticism that Vladimir Putin is truly interested in a durable peace.

    Celebrated writer Andrey Kurkov has lived the reality of the wartime winter in his home city of Kyiv. Best known for his 1996 novel “Death and the Penguin,” set in post-Soviet Ukraine, Kurkov also has written extensively about the current war, publishing three volumes of diaries alongside his fiction. While he’s been determined to remain in Ukraine throughout the conflict, he says the present conditions have been too much to bear. In this conversation with Mishal Husain, he talks about his hopes for peace and how he plans to return to Kyiv in the spring.

    02:54 Situation in Kyiv: “Winter allied with Russia”
    04:53 Four years since full-scale invasion
    07:12 Ukraine is “fragmented”
    09:12 “Writing nonfiction is a duty”
    12:03 “Nobody’s winning”
    14:20 Kurkov’s relationship with Russia
    17:47 How the war changed Kurkov and his country
    20:19 Kurkov’s message to the Munich Security Conference
    21:53 Capitulation “camouflaged” as a peace deal
    24:15 Support for Zelenskiy in Ukraine
    26:15 Corruption scandals: “I’m very angry”
    2:49 “I hope the war will be over this year”
    31:43 Observing the war as a diarist
    33:14 Humor as a “psychological defense”
    35:17 “We are part of Europe”

    Watch this podcast here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLe4PRejZgr0Ns_wjGlmjlPz0cded0nTYS

    You can find the written version of this interview with Mishal’s notes on Bloomberg Weekend: https://www.bloomberg.com/latest/weekend-interview

    Contact The Mishal Husain Show mishalshow@bloomberg.net

    Subscribe today on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
    Illustration: Uli Knörzer for Bloomberg; Photo: Leonardo Cendamo for Getty

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    37 mins
  • David Miliband on Global Disorder, Labour’s ‘Mistakes’ and Deploying $1 Billion on Crises
    Feb 6 2026

    In 2007 when he was UK Foreign Secretary, David Miliband delivered an address to the Labour Party conference. He described a world with “fewer countries at war” and “more democracies than ever before.”

    Two decades later, with that vision further from view, Miliband is head of the New York-based International Rescue Committee, one of the world’s largest aid agencies. Its “Emergency Watchlist” cites 20 urgent crises, from Haiti to Sudan and the Middle East to Myanmar. The group finds itself increasingly constrained by widening conflict and shrinking government aid.

    The IRC role, however, gave Miliband new purpose after his bid to lead Labour ended in dramatic and personal fashion when in 2010 he lost to his own brother. Now he sees his old friends and rivals back in power, forced to make decisions he finds painful.

    In this conversation with Mishal Husain, Miliband discusses the current state of politics in the UK, including Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s leadership. He talks about Donald Trump’s “Board of Peace” and his old boss, former Prime Minister Tony Blair. They also discuss Miliband’s family heritage.

    02:30 - His refugee parents and link to work at IRC
    08:09 - Growing up, democracy “seemed like the norm”
    08:59 - 2007 speech at Labour Party Conference
    10:54 - Mark Carney’s 2026 speech at Davos
    12:49 - “America will no longer be Atlas”
    13:49 - “More autocracies than democracies in the world today”
    14:26 - “A revolution in America’s role in the world”
    15:42 - IRC work on the US-Mexico border
    17:55 - IRC’s 2026 Emergency Watchlist: Sudan and the Occupied Palestinian Territory
    18:36 - “Remediation of desperate suffering is our business”
    19:06 - “If you talk to the people you have hope.”
    23:31 - Jared Kushner’s plans for Gaza
    26:21 - Tony Blair and the Board of Peace
    32:12 - Cuts to foreign aid
    34:55 - “Challenging period” for UK Labour, Starmer
    36:06 - Threats from Reform and Andy Burnham
    39:07 - What next for Miliband?
    40:28 - Relationship with Hilary Clinton

    Watch this podcast here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLe4PRejZgr0Ns_wjGlmjlPz0cded0nTYS

    You can find the written version of this interview with Mishal’s notes on Bloomberg Weekend: https://www.bloomberg.com/latest/weekend-interview

    Contact The Mishal Husain Show mishalshow@bloomberg.net

    Subscribe today on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.

    Illustration: Uli Knörzer for Bloomberg; Source Photo: Jose Sarmento Matos/Bloomberg

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    42 mins