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Lindsey Graham
History Daily is brought to you by Progressive Insurance. Do you ever think about switching insurance companies to see if you could save some cash? Progressive makes it easy. Just drop in some details about yourself and see if you're eligible to save money when you bundle your home and auto policies. The process only takes minutes and it could mean hundreds more in your pocket, so visit progressive.com after this episode to see if you could save Progressive Casualty Insurance Company and affiliates. Potential savings will vary, most not available in all states. It's December 19, 1931. Inside a seedy pub in East London. A gangly, sad looking young man sits slumped at a corner table, his eyes heavy lidded with drink. 28 year old Eric Blair has already had 5 pints of beer and almost an entire bottle of whiskey. The alcohol coursing through Eric's bloodstream numbs his senses. Eric is an aspiring writer who wants to document the lives of the poor and downtrodden. For several months now, he's been immersing himself in London's squalid East End, observing the experiences of the people who live here. Tonight, Eric intends to go one step further. He wants to get arrested for drunk and disorderly conduct and be forced to spend the night in jail. He then hopes to turn his experience behind bars into a newspaper article about London's criminal underbelly. When the barman rings for last orders, Eric heaves himself up from the table and picks his way unsteadily across the room, then motions for the barman to pour him another whiskey. Eric raises the glass to his lips and gulps the liquor down. With the room spinning, Eric turns and staggers toward the exit. In his moth eaten suit and flat cap, Eric shuffles off down the street, the cold night air stinging his cheeks. Up ahead he spots two police constables patrolling the sidewalk and Eric seizes the opportunity. He lurches up to the officers, deliberately stumbling in front of them, drunkenly weaving left and right. The constables don't hesitate. They grab Eric by the scruff of the neck and place him under arrest. Soon Eric finds himself locked in a cell with an assortment of drunkards and petty thieves. He sits down in a corner with a look of satisfaction on his face. Then Eric reaches into his jacket pocket, pulls out a pencil and notebook and begins to write. Eric Blair will record his observations in prison, the peephole in the cell door, the single flickering light bulb, the sadistic enjoyment of the police officers as they manhandle the inmates, using all of them to write an article about his experience. Then one day, many Years later, Eric will draw on this spell in jail once again, this time while writing his masterpiece, a dystopian novel about an authoritarian society that he will title 1984 and publish under his pen name, George Orwell on June 8, 1949. History Daily is sponsored by Shopify Now I shop online. Like all of us, I assume, but it's startling how different the shopping experience can be store to store. Finding what you're looking for is often tough enough, but some sites make the actual purchase so difficult. I know I've abandoned full carts because of a bad UI or poor experience and it's infuriating. So I'm always glad to see that little purple Shop Pay button clean checkout with all my information pre filled. It's a small thing, but I'm here to buy something, not do a bunch of data entry. Well behind that purple Shop pay button is Shopify, the commerce platform powering millions of businesses around the world and 10% of all e commerce in the US from household names like Heinz and Mattel to brands just getting started with Shopify, you can easily create email and social media campaigns wherever your customers are scrolling or scrolling. And best yet, Shopify is your commerce expert with world class expertise in everything from managing inventory to international shipping to processing returns and more. So see less carts go abandoned and more sales go. Choose Shopify and their Shop Pay Button. Sign up for your $1 per month trial today at shopify.comhistorydaily go to shopify.comhistorydaily that's shopify.com historydaily history daily is brought to you by Progressive Insurance. Do you ever think about switching insurance companies to see if you could save some cash? Progressive makes it easy. Just drop in some details about yourself and see if you're eligible to save money when you bundle home and auto policies. The process only takes minutes and it could mean hundreds more in your pocket. So visit progressive.com after this episode to see if you could save Progressive Casualty Insurance company and affiliates. Potential savings will vary. Not available in all states, Grainger knows
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Lindsey Graham
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gold from Amex wherever you dine four times. Membership Rewards points at restaurants worldwide are piling up. Learn more at americanexpress.com Explore-Gold terms and points cap apply From Noiser and Airship I'm Lindsey Graham and this is History. Daily. History is made every day on this podcast. Every day we tell the true stories of the people and events that shaped our world. Today is June 8th, 1949 George Orwell's 1984 becomes a literary sensation it's December 1936 in Spain. 13 years before 1984 will hit bookshelves. George Orwell sits aboard a train as it trundles toward Barcelona's central station. The 33 year old writer looks out the window at the desolate landscape of the war torn city. Orwell feels a pang of nerves as he contemplates the potentially fatal decision he's made by traveling to a country ripped apart by civil war. Over the past five years, Orwell's writing career has slowly gathered steam. While working various odd jobs, he's managed to publish a handful of novels and one memoir about his experiences living in poverty in London and Paris. In his books, Orwell takes aim at certain aspects of contemporary society that he considers detrimental or dangerous, be it social inequality, material greed or excess consumerism. His writing has been critically well received, but commercial success continues to elude him. This stems partially from Orwell's refusal to pander to the public's appetite for light entertainment. Orwell believes it's the responsibility of the writer to comment on the world around them and to deliver hard truths, no matter how unwelcome they are. Most recently, Orwell has been monitoring the worrying surge of right wing populism in Germany and Italy. Orwell is a socialist and considers the rise of fascism in Europe to be a profoundly concerning development. The latest country to fall victim to its extremist elements is Spain. A few months ago, rebels in the military took up arms against the country's democratically elected liberal government, and now Spain is engulfed in a civil war between the fascist revolutionaries and a coalition of socialist workers militias known collectively as Republicans. Like many idealists intent on defending democracy in the face of fascist aggression, Orwell has traveled to Spain to fight for the Republicans. He intends to document his experiences and later write them up as a memoir about the war. Back in July, an attempt by fascist rebels to seize control of Barcelona failed, and since then the city has been under the control of workers, militias. Now, as Orwell walks through the city, he sees evidence of Spain's political strife. Everywhere he looks. Almost every wall has been covered with scrawled images of the hammer and sickle, the international symbol of communism. Orwell notices that the class system appears to have been completely suspended. Nobody seems to be dressed in fine clothes. Instead, all pedestrians he passes are wearing grubby workers overalls and address each other not as signor, but but as comrade. Then Orwell makes his way to the Lenin Barracks, the military headquarters of the Socialist Workers Party. There, the Englishman signs up as a volunteer and receives his uniform and bedding. Over the course of the next few days, Orwell undergoes basic training, though he is shocked by how amateurish the militants are. Many of the volunteers are mere teenagers, youngsters full of ideological zeal, but without the slightest bit of military experience. Their training consists exclusively in conducting marching drills around the cobblestone courtyard because they don't have enough rifles to practice shooting. Orwell is dismayed by this operation, though he can't help but feel moved by his comrades blind devotion to their cause. After just a week in the barracks, Orwell and his fellow volunteers are called up to the front. One evening in late December, Orwell boards a train groaning with militiamen. There's a nervous electricity in the air as the locomotive chugs across the plains toward the mountains. Somebody passes Orwell a bottle of wine and he takes a swig, the alcohol helping to calm his jittery stomach. Orwell and his company then arrive at a quiet stretch of the front, which sees little action in the first few months of their deployment. Still, life in the trenches is far from easy. Orwell and his comrades must endure a brutally cold winter and an insufficient supply of food and firewood. Fortunately, Orwell is accustomed to hardship from his destitute days in London and Paris, and it isn't long before he's promoted to corporal. As the Spanish Civil War wears on, Orwell and his company are transferred to a town in northeast Spain. And there, one morning in May, Orwell is walking the trenches, checking on sentry posts, when a sniper's bullet catches him in the throat. The force of it sends him sprawling to the ground, blood gushing from his mouth. Orwell is stretchered to a field hospital, where medics give him morphine and manage to stop the bleeding. The bullet missed Orwell's main artery by a millimeter. He knows he's incredibly lucky to be alive, but his time as a soldier is over. Once he's recovered from his injuries, Orwell will return to England, but the political situation in Europe will continue to unravel, with the continued rise of fascism casting a dark shadow across the continent and sparking in Orwell an idea for a novel that will make him famous. History Daily is sponsored by Shopify Now I shop online. Like all of us, I assume, but it's startling how different the shopping experience can be store to store. Finding what you're looking for is often tough enough, but some sites make the actual purchase so difficult. I know I've abandoned full carts because of a bad UI or poor experience and it's infuriating. So I'm always glad to see that little purple Shop pay button clean checkout with all my information pre filled. It's a small thing, but I'm here to buy something, not do a bunch of data entry. Well, behind that purple shop pay button is Shopify, the commerce platform powering millions of businesses around the world and 10% of all e commerce in the US from household names like Heinz and Mattel to brands just getting started With Shopify, you can easily create email and social media campaigns wherever your customers are scrolling or strolling. And best yet, Shopify is your commerce expert with world class expertise in everything from managing inventory to international shipping to processing returns and more. So see less carts go abandoned and more sales go. Choose Shopify and their Shop Pay Button. Sign up for your $1 per month trial today at shopify.comhistorydaily go to shopify.comhistorydaily that's shopify.com historydaily history daily is brought to you by Progressive Insurance. Do you ever think about switching insurance companies to see if you could save some cash? Progressive makes it easy. Just drop in some details about yourself and see if you're eligible to save money when you bundle your home and auto policies. The process only takes minutes and it could mean hundreds more in your pocket. So visit progressive.com after this episode to see if you could save Progressive Casualty Insurance Company and affiliates. Potential savings will vary. Not available in all states.
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Lindsey Graham
It's August 1941 in London, eight years before 1984 will be published. George Orwell lopes up the front steps of 55 Portland Place, home of the British Broadcasting Corporation. The now 38 year old writer pauses on the threshold, a look of doubt suddenly appearing on his long, shadowy face. But it's only a fleeting hesitation. Orwell stubs out his cigarette and then strides confidently through the revolving doors of the BBC. Orwell has recently been hired as a radio producer by the BBC's Eastern Service, a department of the national media organization that serves Britain's overseas territories in Asia. Orwell's brief is he will be producing propaganda pieces for broadcast in British India, ensuring that wartime morale remains high in that corner of the colonies. Two years ago, Britain entered World War II against Nazi Germany. Orwell has always been committed to resisting the spread of fascism and can think of no worthier cause than taking up arms against Hitler's authoritarian ambitions. So he eagerly enlisted for military service. But Orwell's hope of active duty was snuffed out. The gunshot wound that he had sustained during the Spanish Civil War has left him impaired, and he failed his medical assessment. Still, Orwell's desire to contribute to Britain's war effort remained undiminished, so he accepted this job producing the BBC's propaganda broadcasts. Though Orwell is suspicious of any government telling their citizens how to think, he admits that in a time of war, some degree of thought control is warranted. A receptionist meets Orwell in the lobby and guides him through the labyrinthine building. It's a hive of activity. Announcers sit inside recording booths broadcasting light entertainment programs. In the newsrooms, typists frantically write up bulletins detailing the latest reports from the front lines. Orwell is ushered downstairs to a dingy basement office occupied by the Eastern Service. He's never worked in an office before, and as Orwell sits down at his desk, he feels a twinge of longing for the wild mountains and valleys of Spain. But despite his reservations Orwell excels in his new occupation. It isn't long before he's sitting behind the microphone himself, presenting his own cultural programs for listeners in India. Orwell is a known anti imperialist, and his BBC supervisors believe this fact will make him a popular and trusted voice among the people of India who have been striving for independence from Britain for many years. As well as being staunchly anti imperialist, Orwell's socialist sympathies are also well documented. But this is of some concern to the propaganda branch of the British government, the Ministry of Information, who suspect that they will need to keep a close eye on the leftist writer. But when government officials approach Orwell for confirmations that his personal politics won't get in the way of his patriotism, the writer reassures them. He reasserts his commitment to Britain's fight against fascism and insists that the views he expresses on air will never contradict government policy. But despite these assurances, Orwell is still subjected to additional oversight. His scripts require prior clearance from the Ministry of Information before being broadcast, and a state official is required to sit with Orwell inside the recording booth, ready to interrupt the program should the writer stray from the government's pre approved message. Eventually, this stifling atmosphere becomes too much for Orwell. He would never say anything that could threaten national security, but the constant surveillance makes him feel claustrophobic and creatively frustrated. So he resigns from the BBC in 1943 and takes up a new role as the literary editor of the Tribune, a left wing magazine. By now, Orwell is also immersed in writing his latest novel. It's an allegorical tale inspired by the events of the 1917 Russian Revolution and the subsequent betrayal of communist ideals by power hungry dictators like Joseph Stalin. By this stage In World War II, Britain has allied itself with Stalin, a strategy that Orwell finds unconscionable given Stalin's murderous policies against his own people. And this sense of outrage fuels Orwell's writing. As the war drags on, with German air raids continuing over London, Orwell enters the most productive period of his life. As well as writing countless book reviews for the magazine he edits, he also makes good progress on his novel, which is on track for publication next year. But then one night in 1944, disaster strikes. While Orwell and his family are visiting friends outside the city, a German bomb hits the Orwell's home in West London. Fearing he's lost years of work, there was but one copy of his manuscript. Orwell rushes back to the Capitol and begins picking through the rubble. With a wheelbarrow, he manages to recover most of his books and papers, including his unpublished novel, slightly charred and crumpled but still legible. The following year, Animal Farm hits bookshelves and becomes an overnight bestseller, catapulting its author to unprecedented levels of fame and fortune. But just when Orwell's professional success reaches its peak, tragedy will blight his personal life. His wife, Eileen, will die suddenly, leaving Orwell the lone parent of their adopted infant son. Crippled by grief, plagued by his own failing health, and troubled by the emerging complexities of a new post war world, Orwell's outlook will become increasingly pessimistic, leading him to embark on a new project, a dystopian novel that will change the face of the literary landscape and cost its author his life. History Daily is sponsored by Shopify Now I shop online. Like all of us I assume, but it's startling how different the shopping experience can be store to store. Finding what you're looking for is often tough enough, but some sites make the actual purchase so difficult. I know I've abandoned full carts because of a bad UI or poor experience and it's infuriating. So I'm always glad to see that little purple shop pay button clean checkout with all my information pre filled. It's a small thing, but I'm here to buy something, not do a bunch of data entry. Well behind that purple shop pay button is Shopify, the commerce platform powering millions of businesses around the world and 10% of all e commerce in the US from household names like Heinz and Mattel to brands just getting started with Shopify, you can easily create email and social media campaigns wherever your customers are scrolling or strolling. And best yet, Shopify is your commerce expert with world class expertise in everything from managing inventory to international shipping to processing returns and more. So see less carts go abandoned and more sales go. Choose Shopify and their Shop Pay button. Sign up for your $1 per month trial today at shopify.comhistorydaily go to shopify.comhistorydaily that's shopify.com historydaily history daily is brought to you by Progressive Insurance. Do you ever think about switching insurance companies to see if you could save some cash? Progressive makes it easy. Just drop in some details about yourself and see if you're eligible to save money when you bundle your home and auto policies. The process only takes minutes and it could mean hundreds more in your pocket. So visit progressive.com after this episode to see if you could save Progressive Casualty Insurance Company and affiliates. Potential savings will vary not available in all states.
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Lindsey Graham
Foreign. It's May 1946, three years before the publication of 1984. A small wooden boat skims across the surface of the sea a few miles off the coast of the Scottish mainland. Sitting huddled on deck, his lean face unshaven and pale, is 43 year old writer George Orwell. The boat's driver, a gruff local fisherman, clears his throat and points toward a streak of rock looming on the horizon. Orwell glances up, his bright eyes registering the presence of the remote Scottish island that is about to become his home. Following the publication of Animal Farm, Orwell's life grew infinitely more complex. The novel's enormous success triggered a tidal wave of interview requests and fan letters. Already overwhelmed by this outpouring of adulation, the death of his wife plunged Orwell even further into a malaise and exacerbated his declining health. So one of Orwell's friends offered him the use of their cottage on the remote Scottish island of Jura, a secluded outpost where Orwell can recuperate and write. As the fisherman's boat reaches the shore, Orwell walks up the sandy beach to the lonely, whitewashed stone cottage. He pushes the door open and looks around. It's simple and primitive, lacking electricity and running water. But Orwell knows it's the perfect place to shut himself away from the world and work on his next novel, a tale about a man living in a totalitarian society where citizens are under constant surveillance and where one's own private thoughts are monitored by the state. While imagining this hellish world. Orwell draws on his own experiences of Britain during wartime, as well as taking inspiration from Soviet Russia and fascist Germany. By the end of 1947, he is well into his third draft, but his health is getting worse every day. Orwell has been diagnosed with tuberculosis and the disease eats away at him. Orwell knows he's in a race against time to finish his novel, but the mental strain he's under only makes him sicker. Not wanting to waste any time, Orwell refuses to see a doctor and instead hammers away at his typewriter day and night. By the end of November 1948, the novel that Orwell has decided to call 1984 is finished. He sends the manuscript to his publishers, who recognize the book's brilliance immediately. On June 8, 1949, the novel is published to great fanfare and flies off the shelves. The tale grips readers with its chilling depiction of a world under round the clock surveillance controlled by an all seeing Big Brother. It's deemed a masterpiece and sends Orwell's fame to new heights. But the writer can hardly enjoy the book's reception. He has already left Jura and is hospitalized at a tuberculosis clinic in England. Seven months later, Orwell passes away at the age of 46, having only fleetingly glimpsed the dizzying success that his last novel will become. As the decades pass, 1984 will be enjoyed by generation after generation, becoming a climb classic of dystopian literature and a cultural touchstone as relevant today as it was upon its release on June 8, 1949. Next on History Daily. June 9, 1898. Following the opium Wars, Britain signs an agreement to lease Hong Kong from China for 99 years. From Noizr and Airshift, this is History Daily. Hosted, edited and executive produced by me, Lindsey Graham. Audio editing by Mohammed Shahzid Sound design by Misha Stanton Music by Lindsey Graham this episode is written and researched by Joe Viner. Produced by Alexandra Curry Buckner. Executive producers are Steven Walters for Airship and Pascal Hughes for Noiser Foreign. The job site with Dale, who's a framing contractor. Hey, good morning. Dale traded up to Geico Commercial Auto Insurance for all his business vehicles. We're here where he needs his most. Yep, they sure are. We make it easy for him to save on all his insurance needs. All in one place with coverage that fits his business and bottom line. Oh, I shouldn't have looked down. It's all right. We're so far up here. Look at me. Take a deep breath. I'm good. So good. Get a commercial auto insurance quote today. @geico.com and see how much you could save. It feels good to Geico Granger knows
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Host: Lindsay Graham
Date: June 8, 2026
Theme: On the anniversary of its publication, this episode explores the turbulent life and career of George Orwell (born Eric Blair), tracing key moments and experiences that shaped his worldview and led to the creation of his masterpiece, 1984.
This episode chronicles George Orwell’s evolution from impoverished writer to one of the most influential voices in 20th-century literature. Through immersive storytelling, host Lindsey Graham highlights how Orwell’s personal hardships, political engagement, and firsthand experiences with authoritarianism and war informed his writing, culminating in 1984's enduring legacy as a warning against totalitarianism.
Eric Blair’s Down-and-Out Phase
In 1931, Orwell, then known as Eric Blair, purposefully sought out the company of society’s marginalized in East London. Realizing he could only authentically write about poverty by experiencing it firsthand, he even orchestrated an arrest for drunk and disorderly conduct so he could spend a night in jail, later writing about the grim reality of the prison system.
Emerging Social Conscience
Early works critiqued social inequality and consumerism, reflecting Orwell’s conviction that writers must bear witness to oppressive realities and inform the public, even at the cost of popularity.
Fighting in the Spanish Civil War
In 1936, Orwell went to Spain to fight fascism, joining the Republicans. He was deeply moved by the sense of equality in Barcelona, describing a classless camaraderie, but ultimately disillusioned by the chaos and brutality.
Lasting Impact on Orwell’s Worldview
Fascism’s spread, the betrayals within leftist movements, and the failures of idealism in practice all left Orwell deeply cynical about power and propaganda, shaping the themes of surveillance and oppression in his later fiction.
Work at the BBC (1941-1943)
Unable to enlist in WWII due to injuries, Orwell produced propaganda for the BBC’s Eastern Service. He was uneasy about state-managed messaging, believing that “some degree of thought control is warranted” during war but despising the atmosphere of surveillance and censorship that surrounded his work.
Personal Turmoil and Literary Success
As the war raged, Orwell toiled on Animal Farm, an allegory criticizing both fascist and communist betrayals. Its success after near disaster (a bombing that nearly destroyed his sole manuscript copy) brought him fame, but his wife’s sudden death and declining health cast a shadow over personal triumph.
Isolation on Jura (1946-1948)
Overwhelmed by fame, grief, and tuberculosis, Orwell retreated to a remote cottage on the island of Jura, Scotland, to write his next novel.
Publication and Immediate Impact
Narrated in a rich, immersive, and somber tone, Lindsey Graham weaves together dramatic reenactments with insightful context, respecting the gravity of Orwell’s struggles and the significance of his literary contributions.
1984 is far more than a work of fiction—it’s born from George Orwell’s direct confrontation with poverty, war, censorship, and loss. This History Daily episode traces the evolution of a principled writer who, at immense personal cost, produced a warning that resonates eternally: vigilance against the machinery of tyranny and the erosion of truth.
For listeners or readers, this summary offers not only the story of 1984’s creation, but also a window into the life and mind of its remarkable author.