Czechia in 30 minutes
Latest Episodes
Czechia in 30 minutes (March 27, 2024)
News; Fears of AI-driven disinformation in campaigning to European elections; Prague housing crisis impacting more people than it used to before; Things really went wild: The 1969 Czechoslovak ice hockey riots
Czechia in 30 minutes (March 26, 2024)
News; Amanita games wins prestigious prize in San Francisco; Czechs doing Erasmus reaches over 400,000; Heartcore
Czechia in 30 minutes (March 25, 2024)
News;Carpenters make replica of 7,000-year-old wooden well using prehistoric tools; Chess players in Prague have their own caf in Karln;Red tape: Rosamund Johnston digs into Czechoslovak Radio under communism
Czechia in 30 minutes (March 23, 2024)
Miroslav Srnka on episode three of the Faces of Czech Music podcast
Czechia in 30 minutes (March 22, 2024)
News, renovated Maj department store to reopen soon, 60 years since koda 1000 MB was unveiled, Ukrainian refugees in Czechia.
Czechia in 30 minutes (March 21, 2024)
News;30 years of People In Need: a grassroots story; Czech glassmakers make medals for the Ice Hockey World Championships; interview with the US-born Peter Zusi, associate professor of Czech and Comparative Literature at the University of London
Czechia in 30 minutes (March 20, 2024)
News; Czech government and opposition clash over pacifist language on Ukraine; New CAMP exhibition draws attention to importance of living better with nature; Hradec Krlov: city where history meets modernity
Czechia in 30 minutes (March 19, 2024)
News;Very powerful: New Havel doc gets special Prague Castle screening;International experiences can change your life: Exchange programs on the rise in Czechia;New game aims to make Kafkas work more accessible to young people
Czechia in 30 minutes (March 18, 2024)
News;Russians in Prague join Noon against Putin protests at home;Culture defines a nation: Head of National Library on urgency to preserve Ukrainian cultural artefacts
Czechia in 30 minutes (March 16, 2024)
In the week of the anniversary of Jan Patoka's death, we hear from Ivan Chvatk, the man who has done more than anybody to keep the philosopher's legacy alive