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Cities

Cities

Written by: gary bills
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About this listen

CITIES is a narrative podcast about how cities form, grow, and fight with themselves. Each episode takes one city and tells the story of the decisions, accidents, and arguments that shaped it. The tone is warm, intelligent, and slightly contrarian. Think BBC Radio 4 meets longform journalism you can listen to on a walk.Copyright 2026 gary bills Social Sciences Travel Writing & Commentary World
Episodes
  • Cities, Series Trailer
    Feb 21 2026

    Runtime: Approximately 2:00–2:15 at natural pace. Should not exceed 3:30.

    Mystery cities: The clues are designed to be tantalising but not immediately identifiable. Listeners familiar with the cities may guess. Everyone else gets curiosity. The clues currently hint at 6 cities, but this does not commit the series to those cities or that order.

    Quick-fire line: “A city split in two by a volcano. A city older than its own country. A city that burned to the ground and used the ashes as foundations.” These are rapid, one-breath images. They should feel like a montage. If any individual clue is too obscure or too obvious, swap it. The pattern (short / short / short / slow concluding line) is what matters.

    Music: Record voice dry. Time to music in post. The voice should never feel rushed to fit the music.

    Final line: “We’ve got a lot of ground to cover” is a deliberate double meaning. Deliver lightly. If it feels too cute in the room, cut it and end on the CTA.

    Tone: This should feel like the first two minutes of an episode, not a sales pitch. The listener should feel they are already inside CITIES.

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    3 mins
  • Canterbury - The murder that build England
    Feb 23 2026
    Cities | Episode 1: CanterburyEpisode Description

    A 12th century murder turned a small English cathedral city into one of medieval Europe's first tourist destinations. Nine hundred years later, Canterbury is still living with the consequences. In this episode, we pull apart a city caught between its ancient identity as England's ecclesiastical capital, a student population that now outnumbers permanent residents in term time, and a development battle over what the city becomes next. Along the way: why Kent is now making world-class wine, the 45-minute train ride to Whitstable that every visitor misses, and what happens when a city's greatest asset is also the thing holding it back.

    In This Episode

    The Murder That Built a Tourism Industry How four knights, a cathedral, and a political miscalculation in 1170 created the pilgrimage economy that shaped Canterbury for centuries.

    The Student Question Canterbury's universities have transformed the city's demographics, economics, and culture. Not everyone thinks that's a good thing.

    Development vs. Heritage The tension between preserving what makes Canterbury worth visiting and building the city its residents actually need to live in.

    The Hidden Engine The economic story underneath the heritage branding that most visitors never see.

    Street Level What Canterbury actually feels like on the ground, beyond the cathedral walls.

    Cities is a podcast that pulls cities apart to find the decisions, accidents, and arguments that made them what they are. One city at a time.

    Hosted by Gary Bills

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    34 mins
  • Gdansk - First Shots
    Mar 1 2026
    Episode Description

    At 4:48 on the morning of 1 September 1939, a German battleship opened fire on a small Polish garrison in the harbour of the Free City of Danzig. Those were the first shots of the Second World War. Forty-one years later, in the same city, a shipyard electrician climbed a wall and started the movement that brought down every communist government in Europe. Between those two events, Gdańsk was almost entirely destroyed and then rebuilt, brick by brick, from paintings, by people who had never seen the original. In this episode, we pull apart a Baltic port city that keeps getting flattened and rebuilt by forces beyond its control, and ask what identity even means when the city, the population, and the country around it have all changed multiple times.

    In This Episode

    The First Shots How Westerplatte and the Polish Post Office defence became the opening acts of the Second World War, and why the city where it started is also the city where the Cold War ended.

    Amber and the Hidden Economy The material that built Gdańsk's Hanseatic wealth, funded its architecture, and still threads through the city's economy and identity today.

    Rebuilt from Paintings The extraordinary story of how a city destroyed by ninety percent was reconstructed by settlers from Lwów who had never lived there, working from Dutch and Flemish paintings of what the buildings once looked like.

    Solidarity's Complicated Legacy The shipyard strikes, the European Solidarity Centre, and the awkward domestic reality of a revolution that changed the world but still divides Poland.

    The Tricity Why twenty minutes on a commuter train from Gdańsk to Sopot to Gdynia tells you more about Polish resilience than any museum.

    Cities is a podcast that pulls cities apart to find the decisions, accidents, and arguments that made them what they are. One city at a time.

    Hosted by Gary Bills

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    42 mins
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