No Tags
No Tags
54: Flags, football shirts and indie nationalism
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54: Flags, football shirts and indie nationalism

Plus a new No Tags book and live show for Christmas!

Lots to cover today, but first off: we’re going live again!

We’ll be bringing No Tags live to the ICA in London – yep, that one – on the evening of 11th December. If you are based enough to subscribe to our paid tier, then you now have early access to discounted tickets via the link in this email’s header. These early access tickets will be available for seven days before the show goes on general sale on 8th October.

If you don’t subscribe to our paid tier but are considering making the leap, then you’re in luck: the discount will also be available to new subscribers who sign up in the next seven days – once you subscribe, you’ll receive an email with the link.

You may have already guessed it but that also means there’s a second No Tags book on the way! Volume 2 will provide an edited selection of the interviews and conversations from the past year of the show, plus new commissioned essays from some of our favourite writers and thinkers. Tom wants a crossword, but we’ll see.

More details for both the show and the book are imminent, but for the former: there will be guests! There will be DJs! There will be books on sale! And there may be merch!


OK, on to this week’s show. With the second leg of the Oasis reunion cashgrab safely behind us, it felt like the right time to tackle something we’ve noticed building all year long – a massive surge of flag-waving, football shirts and indie tribalism across pop and political culture.

Is the “Britcore” trend anything more than warmed-over nostalgia for the ‘90s? When and where is it safe to wave an England flag? How did the Ireland flag become a rallying point for right-on indie tribes and politicised youth? Why do we show support for Palestine through football shirts?

And a bonus Blobby mention, as is customary.

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