| Date | Programmes | Podcast Title | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 08-Oct-25 |
Morning Brief (7:45 AM) |
Malaysia, Turning Digital Progress into Real Economic Benefits
Ayesha Khurshid, Public Sector Specialist, World Bank |
|
| 18-Apr-24 |
Morning Brief (8:45 AM) |
Strategic Plan To Elevate Malaysian Semiconductor Sector
Dato' Seri Wong Siew Hai, President, Malaysia Semiconductor Industry Association |
|
| 10-Jun-21 |
Morning Brief (7:45 AM) |
The State Of Mental Health In Malaysia
Aziff Azuddin, Policy Researcher, The Centre |
|
| 31-May-21 |
Morning Brief (7:15 AM) |
Covid-19: More Mental Health Support Needed In 2021
Dr Chua Sook Ning, Founder and Clinical Psychologist, RELATE |
|
| 12-Mar-19 |
Resource Centre (11:00 AM) |
Why Projects Fail & How To Prevent Them
Randy Black, Project Management Institute |
|
| 14-Jun-17 |
Today's BizTalk (8:47 AM) |
FGV Fiasco: Will Idris be Impartial?
Lya Rahman, General Manager, Minority Shareholder Watchdog Group |
Best of Enterprise
(REPEAT) Peng T. Ong, Co-Founder & Managing Partner at Monk's Hill Ventures talks about how to survive in an age where AI does everything for us.
Popcorn Culture
(REPEAT) We review Sam Raimi’s survival-horror flick, Send Help, and then ask: What are the best depictions of survival, whether in movies or TV?
Cruise Control
(REPEAT) Daniel shares his thoughts on what the 2026 Proton Saga MC3 is supposed to be for Malaysians after taking it out for a ride.
Matt-Splained
(REPEAT) Matt and Richard unpack OpenClaw, aka Moltbot, and try to explain what a 2026 operated by agents is going to look like.
Earth Matters
(REPEAT) This World Wetlands Day, we explore Kuala Selangor Nature Park, where mangroves, mudflats, and wildlife thrive just minutes from the city.
Bar None
(REPEAT) Bowling legend, Esther Cheah joins us in the studio to reflect on her career after announcing her retirement recently.
BBC World Service
Datshiane Navanayagam brings together two women from the US and Australia to discuss the art of writing a political biography and whether women in politics are placed under more scrutiny than men.