Peter Rhodes on Theresa's tears, the no-fly movement and the privilege of chatting with the warriors of D-Day
Peter Rhodes on a boy called Archer, rethinking your appendix and the risks of tinkering with the climate
Peter Rhodes on TV brain freeze, the blight of smoking and politicians incapable of being embarrassed
Peter Rhodes on a coded whodunnit, a sudden ceasefire in Gaza and a new twist in the mobile-phone dilemma
Peter Rhodes on short-sighted voting, a brilliant plan to cut air travel and a round of applause for scrapping HS2
Peter Rhodes on signing the eco-pledge, exciting sins and the spiritual elevation of Sir David Attenborough
Peter Rhodes on a dame's frequent flights, the robotic face of news and some final words from a comedian who died too soon
Peter Rhodes on the joy of blame, the rushing of royal-birth photos and how events conspired against Extinction Rebellion
Peter Rhodes on contempt for politicians, pointless space research and the grim, green future for our great-grandchildren
Peter Rhodes on peeks into history, the sitting-down campaign and why the best TV comedy is the shortest-lived
Peter Rhodes on MPs at the door, ancient family memories and hunting the Birmingham Pub Bombers - where's the will?
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