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John Swinfield's Big Business
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John Swinfield's Big Business

Author: John Swinfield

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Welcome to Big Business. Business stories and anecdotes from a leading financial Journalist. I’ve spent much of my life writing and making films about business bosses. This Pod’s gossipy, irreverent, informative and fun. Big business is on every week at 11am (GMT) on Wednesdays. If you like the feed .. please don’t forget to click the subscriber button to follow all new content.
22 Episodes
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ROBERT SANGSTER: First past the PostThe bloodstock business is a multi-billion dollar industry employing thousands of people around the globe. John Swinfield made a TV documentary about Robert Sangster who was an axial figure in the rarefied and risky bank-balance stakes. It’s a business closely linked to the lucrative and exploitative gambling industry. It’s often in the spotlight because of its showy image. And it’s frequently nobbled by controversy. Sexism is said to be rife among joc...
SYNOPSISED ACKER of Pan Am: Triumphs and Tragedies Flying taxis, private space shots, aircraft powered by electricity, solar and even hydrogen. Aviation has witnessed swift and tumultuous developments from the heady days of the intrepid Wright brothers taking to the skies over North Carolina at the dawn of the 20th century. As Covid and its variations, from Delta to Omicron, wreaks havoc on routes and companies and passenger numbers – commercial airlines have faced some of the most ...
SYNOPSISINTO THE RED: how a gift company fell to earthA high number of different businesses have gone bust lately, many being the victims of Covid. But life in business has always been precarious with more stories of calamity than success. Way before the pandemic Red Letter Days was a small British company which took off but subsequently failed. In its hey-day, with its founder Rachel Elnaugh at the helm, customers could send presents and surprise events to lucky recipients. The firm pro...
HEAVENS ABOVE: Sir Freddie Laker’s low fares and cheap travel.In the capricious airline business low cost fliers battle it out. The Hungarian based Wizz Air has collared a chunk of the market and is widely thought to have put in a so-far unsuccessful bid for easyJet. The Irish Ryanair, run by the ebullient Michael O’Leary, is planning to quit the London stock market, blaming its departure on Brexit. Loss-making Flybe, which collapsed in 2020, will fly again in 2022. It operated out of Ex...
MARKS & SPENCER: Weathering the stormBritain’s ubiquitous Marks & Spencer (M&S) with over a 1,000 shops and 78000 workers began as a market stall in the Yorkshire city of Leeds in 1884. Like other familiar high street names it’s had a difficult time but new financial figures are encouraging. John Swinfield has known the company for decades. He recalls his friendship with the once-chairman Marcus Sieff and interviewed the current boss, Archie Norman, who at one time ran ITV an...
STRICTLY DELFONT: The impresario Lord Delfont.Lord Bernard Delfont began as a dancer and rose to the top of the entertainment industry. A powerhouse in London’s theatre land and New York’s Broadway he was part of a media and entertainment dynasty and worked with myriad superstars from Frank Sinatra to Judy Garland. His brothers were Lew and Leslie Grade. Leslie was a theatrical agent who died prematurely. Lew became a big wheel in television and cinema. Bernard’s nephew, Michael Grade, r...
PARTY TIME: Clive Sinclair and Jeffrey ArcherLegendary inventor and computer genius Sir Clive Sinclair was a friend of many years standing of John Swinfield. They met up again at a party given by the Tory peer and novelist Jeffrey Archer and his wife Mary at their Grantchester home in Cambridge. John recalls a colourful cast including Lord Archer, who went to jail for perjury; Michael Edwardes, the cost-cutting boss of stricken car conglomerate British Leyland, and the fruity-voiced thespian ...
PROFITS TO POPEYEThe world’s biggest mouse house and why Gerry Robinson of Granada TV chose profit over priesthood. Robinson ran Britain’s Granada company. It triggered a takeover battle which changed the face of British TV and enraged the comedian John Cleese of Monty Python’s Flying Circus. In America, John Swinfield made a TV documentary about the Disney Corporation, the world’s biggest entertainment conglomerate and home to Mickey Mouse and Popeye. Disney embraces everything from fil...
Big Bucks and Bold BreakthroughsHi-tech is hi-risk. It’s built into the DNA. People and companies make fortunes, others fall by the wayside. In some the science is strong. In others it’s flaky. Deals can be imperilled by myriad factors - not just the purity or effectiveness of the science. John Swinfield looks at the roller-coaster world of earth-shaking advances, where business acumen and scholarly endeavour can be harnessed to achieve astonishing goals. Cambridge, like Oxford, is ...
FORTELittle Big Man: Lord ForteThe legendary Charles Forte built a hotel and catering empire which straddled the globe, only to see it snatched away in his twilight years in one of the City’s most ferocious takeover battles. John Swinfield knew Forte, and his son Rocco, who has built his own portfolio of exclusive hotels. John Swinfield’s essay, based upon the newspaper articles that he wrote, and the television films that he made for ITV about the company and its masters, is a story of ...
SILICON FEN: CHIPS with EVERYTHINGThe Cambridge hi-tech phenomena has produced myriad outstanding companies, scientists and engineers. A dozen engineers broke away from the once-legendary Acorn computers and started ARM – Advanced Risc Machines - in an 18th century barn in the Cambridgeshire village of Swaffham Bulbeck. Today it’s a global player of immeasurable clout, a world-beating silicon chip designer. Cambridge University and a diversity of commercial players, big and sm...
New York

New York

2021-10-0614:03

New York is one of John Swinfield’s favourite cities. He’s always admired its insomniac energy and insatiable drive. But it was a violent and dangerous place when he first visited, spiralling into a vortex of murder and narcotics. Financially it was on its knees, with City Hall at daggers drawn with the unyielding trade union boss Victor Gotbaum. Gotbaum controlled the thousands of essential workers who kept New York going and who – for a period – had it by its throat. While the cit...
That’s ShowbizAs well as making TV documentaries about business leaders for Enterprise (ITV/C4), having previously been a reporter with The Money programme (BBC2), John Swinfield made 26 half-hour interview programmes for London News Radio which he called ‘The Boss’. Among his guests were Pete Waterman, of pop music fame, and Christopher Bland and Greg Dyke, two of TV’s foremost players, executives with London Weekend Television. They were at the epicentre of a hostile takeover bid by Gr...
John Caudwell of Phones4U and Charles Dunstone of Carphone Warehouse and TalkTalk have made a fortune out of the explosion in mobile phones and telecommunications. But it’s a tough sector and there have been casualties as well.
Minding the shop: TescoSecrets of the retail trade with Britain’s biggest shopkeeper. Sir Leslie Porter was the boss of Tesco – Britain’s largest supermarket chain. He was the son-in-law of Jack Cohen, the inventor of supermarkets and the founder of Tesco who started with a market stall in London’s east end. Cohen’s slogan was ‘Pile it High and Sell it Cheap’. The sector is hotly competitive with the likes of Asda, Sainsburys, Morrisons, Waitrose, Ocado and German companies Aldi and Lidl...
Gloria Vanderbilt:The Vanderbilt’s were one of the legendary families with the Rockefeller’s, Henry Ford, JP Morgan and Andrew Carnegie, who built America. The heiress Gloria Vanderbilt was an actress, novelist and painter. An entrepreneur and business woman, she was also famous for her textiles, designs and the best-selling Vanderbilt jeans. Married four times, she was a glamorous, cultured and fascinating subject for the documentary film maker and journalist John Swinfield. She and Joh...
Lotus goes Italian!

Lotus goes Italian!

2021-09-0118:34

After the death of motor racing legend Colin Chapman, his Lotus car company was bought by Italian car boss Romano Artiolli, who had previously resuscitated fabled Bugatti cars. Artiolli later sold Lotus to Proton cars of Malaysia. Today it’s controlled by Geely cars of China. During his ownership of Lotus Artiolli met with the boss of Ford Cars, a meeting engineered by the presenter of this podcast John Swinfield. Ford owned Aston Martin, the James Bond car. Bond had also driven a ...
Three industrialists who began with nothing and built empires were all friends and lived near each other in the East of England. George Williams built a window company – Bernard Matthews had a turkey business and Colin Chapman created Lotus cars which dominated Grand Prix motor racing.
In this podcast John Swinfield tells the story of a 30 minute film he was making about international nightclub owner Regina and the Playboy club.Please do subscribe to this podcast to listen to weekly podcasts.
This is the second part of Robert Maxwell. Please subscribe to keep informed of the latest stories and we hope you enjoy this episode.
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