Russell Brand has a deft ability to weave his spiritual convictions into a case for wholesale political and economic transformation.
How Russell Brand's political activism fuses spiritual consciousness with a resurgent psychedelic counterculture.
Where to start? He repeatedly accuses feminists of being “moralisers”, when he's not saying we're “vampires” or “liberals” instead. But there can be no real solidarity without intersectionality.
A former BBC editor argues that the system is close to breaking point and meaningful voting and participative democracy, rather than revolution, must be the answer.
Russell Brand said nothing unusual in his interview with Jeremy Paxman and yet it's been watched over 9m times and the debate is still raging. Why?