Peter Rhodes on waiting for Shakespeare, dreaming about Boris and why councillors carry wooden spoons
Peter Rhodes on the smartphone Commons, a joke that fell flat and a stunning link to the age of slavery
Peter Rhodes on the death of a turtle, the case for a new political party and a tea towel in very poor taste
Peter Rhodes on Fleabag, the rise of the Right and that impossible Irish problem that suddenly became possible
Peter Rhodes on "challenges" in Albert Square, magnetic personalities and another miscalculation by the Master Race
Peter Rhodes on Speaker power, a movie for our time and the reader who invented the mobile phone - almost
Peter Rhodes on the dimbling Dimblebies, reading by flashlight and what cat-cafe cats do on a day off
Peter Rhodes on nasty neighbours in the Caliphate, dodgy instructions and mistaking phone conmen for Santa
Peter Rhodes on a TV disappointment, scrapping "hard" lessons and is it the end of the road for caravans?
Peter Rhodes on the dangers of deselection, a Brummie voice in the Commons and the brutal days of the gallows
Peter Rhodes on the perils of online gambling, witchcraft in London and computers that are almost human
Peter Rhodes on a dry January, the campaign to scrap borders and when the BBC said Nigel Farage was right