I678L Aviso, en nuestro foro de Tarot nos lo tomamos en serio si quieres un vidente o tarotista de fiar eficaz certero bueno y recomendado por usuarios 806 533 717 visa paypal 00 34 984 200 947
PUBLICIDAD:Tarot vidente tarotista teléfono opiniones, Videncia recomendada 806 533 717 visa o paypal 984 200 947 ERES VIDENTE PUEDES ANUNCIARTE GRATIS EN http://www.poneranuncios.com/Buscar
Mensajes: 13
Temas: 13
Registro en: Sep 2021
%%TYL_NUMTHANKEDLIKED%%
Reputación:
0
#1
I678L Aviso, en nuestro foro de Tarot nos lo tomamos en serio si quieres un vidente o tarotista de fiar eficaz certero bueno y recomendado por usuarios 806 533 717 visa paypal 00 34 984 200 947
26-09-2021, 08:06 AM
Rethinking the bottle
Rethinking the bottle
When I was younger, wine came in a glass bottle, and—outside of a few value-priced boxed options—that was that. But
now, quality wine comes in all sorts of packaging: boxes, cans, pouches, even slim [url=http://www.suokun-
glassbottle.com/wine-bottles/]wine bottles[/url] that can fit through a mail slot. Of course, the bottle is still king—but
even that classic container isn’t beyond innovation. The British company Frugalpac has just launched a standard-sized wine
bottle made mostly out of recycled paper.
The Frugal Bottle is a 750 milliliter bottle “made from 94 percent recycled paperboard with a food-grade liner to hold
the wine or spirit,” according to Frugalpac. Not only is it “comparable in cost to a labelled glass bottle,” but it can
also “be refrigerated and keeps the liquid cooler for longer.”
Naturally, the company offers an environmental pitch, as well. “Our mission is to design, develop and supply sustainable
packaging. The Frugal Bottle is up to five times lighter than a glass bottle, has a carbon footprint up to six times lower
and is easy to recycle again,” explained Frugalpac chief executive Malcolm Waugh. “We’ve had fantastic feedback from
people who’ve trialed the Frugal Bottle. As well as the superior environmental benefits, it looks and feels like no other
bottle you have ever seen.”
Digging into the specifics, a Frugal Bottle weighs about 3 ounces, whereas [url=http://www.suokun-glassbottle.com/wine-
bottles/burgundy-bottles/]burgundy bottles[/url] can weigh about a pound. Additionally, Frugalpac says that beyond offering a
carbon footprint that is 84 percent lower than a glass bottle, it’s also “more than a third less than a bottle made from
100 paper recycled plastic,” with a “water footprint is also at least four times lower than glass.” And, yes, the paper
bottle is easy to recycle—because the liner inside is removable: “Simply separate the plastic food-grade liner from the
paper bottle and put them in your respective recycling bins.”
The new Frugal Bottle has debuted with Italy’s Cantina Goccia who is using it for their 2017 3Q wine—a Sangiovese
retailing in the UK for about $16. On top of its other benefits, this first bottle shows off another intriguing trait: The
artwork can easily cover the entire surface.
“When some of our top hotel customers saw samples of our paper wine bottle, there was no hesitation in their minds that
this type of bottle would be well received in their dining rooms,” said Cantina Goccia owner Ceri Parke. “It’s much
lighter than glass, easier to transport and friendlier to the planet."
As of right now, Frugal Bottle doesn’t appear slated to arrive in the United States in the near future, but that could
easily change. Frugalpac is currently taking orders for the machines used to produce the bottles, with delivery planned for
next year—and though right now interest is primarily in the U.K. and Europe, nothing seems to preclude American companies
from getting on board.
“Frugalpac’s business model is to supply Frugal Bottle machines for wine producers or packaging companies to
manufacture the bordeaux bottles on their site,
cutting carbon emissions even further,” Waugh added. “Materials can be purchased locally through existing paperboard
printers to give maximum freedom of design and the best commercial offering.”
Naturally, the company offers an environmental pitch, as well. “Our mission is to design, develop and supply sustainable
packaging. The Frugal Bottle is up to five times lighter than a glass bottle, has a carbon footprint up to six times lower
and is easy to recycle again,” explained Frugalpac chief executive Malcolm Waugh. “We’ve had fantastic feedback from
people who’ve trialed the Frugal Bottle. As well as the superior environmental benefits, it looks and feels like no other
bottle you have ever seen.”
Digging into the specifics, a Frugal Bottle weighs about 3 ounces, whereas [url=http://www.suokun-glassbottle.com/wine-
bottles/ice-wine-bottles/]ice wine bottles[/url] can weigh about a pound. Additionally, Frugalpac says that beyond offering a
carbon footprint that is 84 percent lower than a glass bottle, it’s also “more than a third less than a bottle made from
100 paper recycled plastic,” with a “water footprint is also at least four times lower than glass.” And, yes, the paper
bottle is easy to recycle—because the liner inside is removable: “Simply separate the plastic food-grade liner from the
paper bottle and put them in your respective recycling bins.”
Shops in Scotland have become the first place in the UK to stock wine in paper bottles in a move which aims to reduce the
carbon footprint associated with glass bottles.
Three Scottish off licences will sell the Italian wine in its new lightweight, recyclable container, which the
manufacturers say has a carbon footprint up to six times (84 per cent) lower than a glass bottle and more than a third less
than a bottle made from 100 per cent recycled plastic.
The 75cl bottle, manufactured by Ipswitch-based company Frugalpac is made from 94 per cent recycled paperboard and has
gone on sale for the first time at Woodwinters Wine and Whiskies stores.
The wine is from Italian vineyard Cantina Goccia and is a blend of Sangiovese, Merlot and Cabernet Sauvignon grapes.
But the manufacturers said the bottle can also be used for spirits such as whisky, gin, vodka and rum, and has already
sparked a interest in a drinks industry keen to cut their emissions and appeal to a new audience of consumers interested in
sustainability.
Please use the sharing tools found via the share button at the top or side of articles. Copying articles to share
with others is a breach of FT.com T&Cs and Copyright Policy. Email licensing@ft.com to buy additional rights. Subscribers may
share up to 10 or 20 articles per month using the gift article service. More information can be found at
https://www.ft.com/tour.
https://www.ft.com/content/a5cf1075-5bc1-4214-9a2e-6e06214111f4
For many of us wine drinkers, our first conscious act towards saving the planet was to separate
champagne bottles from the rest of our rubbish.
It made us feel pretty good, even though most of us were — and continue to be — shockingly ignorant about what then happens
to them.
Today, few really understand the relative merits of different forms of packaging for wine in terms of sustainability. And
this is hardly surprising, since even those whose job it is to study such things admit that the whole subject is hugely
complex and definitive statistics are extremely difficult to come by.
To the average consumer, a glass bottle may seem virtuous because they generally assume that it’s both recycled and
recyclable. Hence when the European glass manufacturers association, FEVE, commissioned a consumer research project last year
involving 10,000 15-minute interviews in 13 European countries, it was able to boast that 91 per cent of interviewees agreed
glass is the best packaging material for wine. (Brits are the most sceptical about glass, apparently — only 82 per cent of
us agreed.)
On the strength of this research, Europe’s glass manufacturers have come up with a new hallmark on bottles that, as far
as I can make out, merely confirms that the bottle you have in your hand is indeed made of glass, even if the design of the
logo vaguely suggests recyclability.
The official online presentation of this innovation last November skipped lightly over the massive carbon footprint of
producing and transporting glass bottles, the biggest factors in any winemaker’s carbon audit. A greener sort of furnace,
which relies more on electric power than fossil fuels, is being piloted in Germany over the next few years, yet it will
require considerable effort and investment for bottle manufacturers to reach FEVE’s ambition of carbon neutrality by 2050.
Please use the sharing tools found via the share button at the top or side of articles. Copying articles to share
with others is a breach of FT.com T&Cs and Copyright Policy. Email licensing@ft.com to buy additional rights. Subscribers may
share up to 10 or 20 articles per month using the gift article service. More information can be found at
https://www.ft.com/tour.
https://www.ft.com/content/a5cf1075-5bc1-4214-9a2e-6e06214111f4
One of the keys to this is, of course, recycling rates. The figure FEVE likes to quote is that Europe’s “average
glass collection for recycling rate” is 76 per cent (which it would like to see reach 90 per cent by 2030), though it
acknowledges that not all of this will ultimately be recycled.
In the UK, each local authority is in charge of contracting waste management, which means that standards and practices
can vary enormously from place to place. Overall, only 68 per cent of all glass containers in the UK are recycled, compared
with well over 90 per cent in Switzerland and Scandinavia. (Swiss citizens are incentivised by a combination of free glass
collection points and a tax on bags for general rubbish.) The British Standards Institution, which sets national standards
for everything from financial services to medical devices, would like to see recycling protocols harmonised.
Recycling bottles is complicated. They come in all sorts of colours which have to be separated from each other, while
labels and foils have to be removed. The farsighted Torres winemaking family in Catalonia is pressing for a standard wine
bottle that could be recycled and reused anywhere in the world — or at least anywhere in Europe to begin with.
Yet this would require EU legislation, admits Miguel Torres, which seems a very distant possibility to me, when so many
wine producers choose to use bottle design and weight — especially weight — to try to carve out a distinctive identity for
their wines. (It was notable in a recent online forum on the future of wine that the greatest opprobrium was directed towards
those who use heavy bottles unnecessarily.)
Increased awareness of sustainability issues has also resulted in a flurry of new designs for wine packaging. These
include a replica of a standard bottle from Frugalpac, which is made from 94 per cent recycled paperboard (and “a food-grade
liner”) that can in turn be recycled.
Please use the sharing tools found via the share button at the top or side of articles. Copying articles to share
with others is a breach of FT.com T&Cs and Copyright Policy. Email licensing@ft.com to buy additional rights. Subscribers may
share up to 10 or 20 articles per month using the gift article service. More information can be found at
https://www.ft.com/tour.
https://www.ft.com/content/a5cf1075-5bc1-4214-9a2e-6e06214111f4
One of the most energetic and thoughtful innovators on this side of the Atlantic has been Santiago Navarro, chief
executive of Gar?on Wines. He has designed an almost flat wine bottle that can fit through a letter box and is much lighter,
considerably more space-saving and less fragile than the traditional glass bottle. If the option of an active oxygen
scavenger is applied, the wine will stay fresh for more than 12 months before opening, he claims.
A keen diver, he is well aware of the problems of plastic waste, as highlighted so vividly by David Attenborough in his
Blue Planet series. Even though the food-friendly PET plastic from which Navarro’s smooth, olive-green bottle is moulded has
already been used once — and in general plastic has a much lower carbon footprint than single-use glass — some consumers
are convinced that all plastic is evil.
In fact, there are many different forms of plastic, of which PET is arguably the most sustainable, and Navarro treasures
the letter he received from Sir David congratulating him on his novel design.
The problem with plastic is not so much the material itself but how to manage it after use. According to the British
Plastics Federation, about 50 per cent of all plastic in the UK is recycled. Yet unlike glass, which can be recycled many
times, plastic can be recycled effectively much less often because it degrades — though work is ongoing to improve this.
Please use the sharing tools found via the share button at the top or side of articles. Copying articles to share
with others is a breach of FT.com T&Cs and Copyright Policy. Email licensing@ft.com to buy additional rights. Subscribers may
share up to 10 or 20 articles per month using the gift article service. More information can be found at
https://www.ft.com/tour.
https://www.ft.com/content/a5cf1075-5bc1-4214-9a2e-6e06214111f4
Wine in cans is becoming popular in the US, where a high proportion of all drinks is sold in cans already. They tend
to be much smaller than a regular bottle and, let’s face it, there are some pretty huge disadvantages to the 75cl bottle. It
’s way too much for one person, often too much for two at a single sitting, and the unit price is far higher than a can’s,
which some younger potential wine drinkers in particular find off-putting. Cans are convenient: they can easily be popped
into a picnic bag or even, should we return to office life, a briefcase.
Made from steel or aluminium, they can also be recycled almost infinitely. Still, like glass, the manufacturing process
is heavy on energy and resources.
Glass, so usefully inert, will surely remain the material of choice for fine wine that deserves long ageing, but for the
sake of the planet we do need to look more favourably on the alternatives for that which is drunk within days or weeks of
purchase — which constitutes by far the majority of all wine sold.
Borough Wines in London deserves mention for its work founding Sustainable Wine Solutions, which offers a bottle return
scheme, a refillable box (a “zero-waste alternative to bag-in-box”) and what it claims are “the UK’s only 100 per cent
reusable kegs”. The latter are a fine solution for restaurants and bars — should they ever be in business again.
This article has been amended since publication to make clear that latest government figures show 68 per cent of glass in
the UK is recycled, not 50 per cent as originally stated
Tasting notes on Purple Pages of JancisRobinson.com
Follow Jancis on Twitter @JancisRobinson
Follow @FTMag on Twitter to find out about our latest stories first. Listen to our podcast, Culture Call, where FT
editors and special guests discuss life and art in the time of coronavirus. Subscribe on Apple, Spotify, or wherever you
listen.
Rethinking the bottle
When I was younger, wine came in a glass bottle, and—outside of a few value-priced boxed options—that was that. But
now, quality wine comes in all sorts of packaging: boxes, cans, pouches, even slim [url=http://www.suokun-
glassbottle.com/wine-bottles/]wine bottles[/url] that can fit through a mail slot. Of course, the bottle is still king—but
even that classic container isn’t beyond innovation. The British company Frugalpac has just launched a standard-sized wine
bottle made mostly out of recycled paper.
The Frugal Bottle is a 750 milliliter bottle “made from 94 percent recycled paperboard with a food-grade liner to hold
the wine or spirit,” according to Frugalpac. Not only is it “comparable in cost to a labelled glass bottle,” but it can
also “be refrigerated and keeps the liquid cooler for longer.”
Naturally, the company offers an environmental pitch, as well. “Our mission is to design, develop and supply sustainable
packaging. The Frugal Bottle is up to five times lighter than a glass bottle, has a carbon footprint up to six times lower
and is easy to recycle again,” explained Frugalpac chief executive Malcolm Waugh. “We’ve had fantastic feedback from
people who’ve trialed the Frugal Bottle. As well as the superior environmental benefits, it looks and feels like no other
bottle you have ever seen.”
Digging into the specifics, a Frugal Bottle weighs about 3 ounces, whereas [url=http://www.suokun-glassbottle.com/wine-
bottles/burgundy-bottles/]burgundy bottles[/url] can weigh about a pound. Additionally, Frugalpac says that beyond offering a
carbon footprint that is 84 percent lower than a glass bottle, it’s also “more than a third less than a bottle made from
100 paper recycled plastic,” with a “water footprint is also at least four times lower than glass.” And, yes, the paper
bottle is easy to recycle—because the liner inside is removable: “Simply separate the plastic food-grade liner from the
paper bottle and put them in your respective recycling bins.”
The new Frugal Bottle has debuted with Italy’s Cantina Goccia who is using it for their 2017 3Q wine—a Sangiovese
retailing in the UK for about $16. On top of its other benefits, this first bottle shows off another intriguing trait: The
artwork can easily cover the entire surface.
“When some of our top hotel customers saw samples of our paper wine bottle, there was no hesitation in their minds that
this type of bottle would be well received in their dining rooms,” said Cantina Goccia owner Ceri Parke. “It’s much
lighter than glass, easier to transport and friendlier to the planet."
As of right now, Frugal Bottle doesn’t appear slated to arrive in the United States in the near future, but that could
easily change. Frugalpac is currently taking orders for the machines used to produce the bottles, with delivery planned for
next year—and though right now interest is primarily in the U.K. and Europe, nothing seems to preclude American companies
from getting on board.
“Frugalpac’s business model is to supply Frugal Bottle machines for wine producers or packaging companies to
manufacture the bordeaux bottles on their site,
cutting carbon emissions even further,” Waugh added. “Materials can be purchased locally through existing paperboard
printers to give maximum freedom of design and the best commercial offering.”
Naturally, the company offers an environmental pitch, as well. “Our mission is to design, develop and supply sustainable
packaging. The Frugal Bottle is up to five times lighter than a glass bottle, has a carbon footprint up to six times lower
and is easy to recycle again,” explained Frugalpac chief executive Malcolm Waugh. “We’ve had fantastic feedback from
people who’ve trialed the Frugal Bottle. As well as the superior environmental benefits, it looks and feels like no other
bottle you have ever seen.”
Digging into the specifics, a Frugal Bottle weighs about 3 ounces, whereas [url=http://www.suokun-glassbottle.com/wine-
bottles/ice-wine-bottles/]ice wine bottles[/url] can weigh about a pound. Additionally, Frugalpac says that beyond offering a
carbon footprint that is 84 percent lower than a glass bottle, it’s also “more than a third less than a bottle made from
100 paper recycled plastic,” with a “water footprint is also at least four times lower than glass.” And, yes, the paper
bottle is easy to recycle—because the liner inside is removable: “Simply separate the plastic food-grade liner from the
paper bottle and put them in your respective recycling bins.”
Shops in Scotland have become the first place in the UK to stock wine in paper bottles in a move which aims to reduce the
carbon footprint associated with glass bottles.
Three Scottish off licences will sell the Italian wine in its new lightweight, recyclable container, which the
manufacturers say has a carbon footprint up to six times (84 per cent) lower than a glass bottle and more than a third less
than a bottle made from 100 per cent recycled plastic.
The 75cl bottle, manufactured by Ipswitch-based company Frugalpac is made from 94 per cent recycled paperboard and has
gone on sale for the first time at Woodwinters Wine and Whiskies stores.
The wine is from Italian vineyard Cantina Goccia and is a blend of Sangiovese, Merlot and Cabernet Sauvignon grapes.
But the manufacturers said the bottle can also be used for spirits such as whisky, gin, vodka and rum, and has already
sparked a interest in a drinks industry keen to cut their emissions and appeal to a new audience of consumers interested in
sustainability.
Please use the sharing tools found via the share button at the top or side of articles. Copying articles to share
with others is a breach of FT.com T&Cs and Copyright Policy. Email licensing@ft.com to buy additional rights. Subscribers may
share up to 10 or 20 articles per month using the gift article service. More information can be found at
https://www.ft.com/tour.
https://www.ft.com/content/a5cf1075-5bc1-4214-9a2e-6e06214111f4
For many of us wine drinkers, our first conscious act towards saving the planet was to separate
champagne bottles from the rest of our rubbish.
It made us feel pretty good, even though most of us were — and continue to be — shockingly ignorant about what then happens
to them.
Today, few really understand the relative merits of different forms of packaging for wine in terms of sustainability. And
this is hardly surprising, since even those whose job it is to study such things admit that the whole subject is hugely
complex and definitive statistics are extremely difficult to come by.
To the average consumer, a glass bottle may seem virtuous because they generally assume that it’s both recycled and
recyclable. Hence when the European glass manufacturers association, FEVE, commissioned a consumer research project last year
involving 10,000 15-minute interviews in 13 European countries, it was able to boast that 91 per cent of interviewees agreed
glass is the best packaging material for wine. (Brits are the most sceptical about glass, apparently — only 82 per cent of
us agreed.)
On the strength of this research, Europe’s glass manufacturers have come up with a new hallmark on bottles that, as far
as I can make out, merely confirms that the bottle you have in your hand is indeed made of glass, even if the design of the
logo vaguely suggests recyclability.
The official online presentation of this innovation last November skipped lightly over the massive carbon footprint of
producing and transporting glass bottles, the biggest factors in any winemaker’s carbon audit. A greener sort of furnace,
which relies more on electric power than fossil fuels, is being piloted in Germany over the next few years, yet it will
require considerable effort and investment for bottle manufacturers to reach FEVE’s ambition of carbon neutrality by 2050.
Please use the sharing tools found via the share button at the top or side of articles. Copying articles to share
with others is a breach of FT.com T&Cs and Copyright Policy. Email licensing@ft.com to buy additional rights. Subscribers may
share up to 10 or 20 articles per month using the gift article service. More information can be found at
https://www.ft.com/tour.
https://www.ft.com/content/a5cf1075-5bc1-4214-9a2e-6e06214111f4
One of the keys to this is, of course, recycling rates. The figure FEVE likes to quote is that Europe’s “average
glass collection for recycling rate” is 76 per cent (which it would like to see reach 90 per cent by 2030), though it
acknowledges that not all of this will ultimately be recycled.
In the UK, each local authority is in charge of contracting waste management, which means that standards and practices
can vary enormously from place to place. Overall, only 68 per cent of all glass containers in the UK are recycled, compared
with well over 90 per cent in Switzerland and Scandinavia. (Swiss citizens are incentivised by a combination of free glass
collection points and a tax on bags for general rubbish.) The British Standards Institution, which sets national standards
for everything from financial services to medical devices, would like to see recycling protocols harmonised.
Recycling bottles is complicated. They come in all sorts of colours which have to be separated from each other, while
labels and foils have to be removed. The farsighted Torres winemaking family in Catalonia is pressing for a standard wine
bottle that could be recycled and reused anywhere in the world — or at least anywhere in Europe to begin with.
Yet this would require EU legislation, admits Miguel Torres, which seems a very distant possibility to me, when so many
wine producers choose to use bottle design and weight — especially weight — to try to carve out a distinctive identity for
their wines. (It was notable in a recent online forum on the future of wine that the greatest opprobrium was directed towards
those who use heavy bottles unnecessarily.)
Increased awareness of sustainability issues has also resulted in a flurry of new designs for wine packaging. These
include a replica of a standard bottle from Frugalpac, which is made from 94 per cent recycled paperboard (and “a food-grade
liner”) that can in turn be recycled.
Please use the sharing tools found via the share button at the top or side of articles. Copying articles to share
with others is a breach of FT.com T&Cs and Copyright Policy. Email licensing@ft.com to buy additional rights. Subscribers may
share up to 10 or 20 articles per month using the gift article service. More information can be found at
https://www.ft.com/tour.
https://www.ft.com/content/a5cf1075-5bc1-4214-9a2e-6e06214111f4
One of the most energetic and thoughtful innovators on this side of the Atlantic has been Santiago Navarro, chief
executive of Gar?on Wines. He has designed an almost flat wine bottle that can fit through a letter box and is much lighter,
considerably more space-saving and less fragile than the traditional glass bottle. If the option of an active oxygen
scavenger is applied, the wine will stay fresh for more than 12 months before opening, he claims.
A keen diver, he is well aware of the problems of plastic waste, as highlighted so vividly by David Attenborough in his
Blue Planet series. Even though the food-friendly PET plastic from which Navarro’s smooth, olive-green bottle is moulded has
already been used once — and in general plastic has a much lower carbon footprint than single-use glass — some consumers
are convinced that all plastic is evil.
In fact, there are many different forms of plastic, of which PET is arguably the most sustainable, and Navarro treasures
the letter he received from Sir David congratulating him on his novel design.
The problem with plastic is not so much the material itself but how to manage it after use. According to the British
Plastics Federation, about 50 per cent of all plastic in the UK is recycled. Yet unlike glass, which can be recycled many
times, plastic can be recycled effectively much less often because it degrades — though work is ongoing to improve this.
Please use the sharing tools found via the share button at the top or side of articles. Copying articles to share
with others is a breach of FT.com T&Cs and Copyright Policy. Email licensing@ft.com to buy additional rights. Subscribers may
share up to 10 or 20 articles per month using the gift article service. More information can be found at
https://www.ft.com/tour.
https://www.ft.com/content/a5cf1075-5bc1-4214-9a2e-6e06214111f4
Wine in cans is becoming popular in the US, where a high proportion of all drinks is sold in cans already. They tend
to be much smaller than a regular bottle and, let’s face it, there are some pretty huge disadvantages to the 75cl bottle. It
’s way too much for one person, often too much for two at a single sitting, and the unit price is far higher than a can’s,
which some younger potential wine drinkers in particular find off-putting. Cans are convenient: they can easily be popped
into a picnic bag or even, should we return to office life, a briefcase.
Made from steel or aluminium, they can also be recycled almost infinitely. Still, like glass, the manufacturing process
is heavy on energy and resources.
Glass, so usefully inert, will surely remain the material of choice for fine wine that deserves long ageing, but for the
sake of the planet we do need to look more favourably on the alternatives for that which is drunk within days or weeks of
purchase — which constitutes by far the majority of all wine sold.
Borough Wines in London deserves mention for its work founding Sustainable Wine Solutions, which offers a bottle return
scheme, a refillable box (a “zero-waste alternative to bag-in-box”) and what it claims are “the UK’s only 100 per cent
reusable kegs”. The latter are a fine solution for restaurants and bars — should they ever be in business again.
This article has been amended since publication to make clear that latest government figures show 68 per cent of glass in
the UK is recycled, not 50 per cent as originally stated
Tasting notes on Purple Pages of JancisRobinson.com
Follow Jancis on Twitter @JancisRobinson
Follow @FTMag on Twitter to find out about our latest stories first. Listen to our podcast, Culture Call, where FT
editors and special guests discuss life and art in the time of coronavirus. Subscribe on Apple, Spotify, or wherever you
listen.