Toast - Series 6: BlackBerry Smartphones episode artwork

EPISODE · Nov 27, 2025 · 35 MIN

Toast - Series 6: BlackBerry Smartphones

from Sliced Bread · host BBC Radio 4

How did the company behind the revolutionary BlackBerry smartphone lose its grip on the handset market?The BBC Business journalist, Sean Farrington, investigates with special guest, Sir Stephen Fry, who has remained 'faithful' to the BlackBerry brand. Alongside them is the entrepreneur, Sam White, who at the end of the show has to reach her own conclusions on why BlackBerry handsets disappeared, based only on what she has just heard and her own business acumen. The first BlackBerry device freed business executives from their desks, allowing them to easily write, send and receive emails from almost anywhere. But that was not the only thing that made the BlackBerry, and its later iterations, extraordinary. The actor, comedian, author and broadcaster, Sir Stephen Fry, also used to be a tech blogger and wrote in glowing terms about BlackBerry devices...until they took a turn for the worse. Stephen explains why he was disappointed by a brand he loves and how he still hopes it might make a return. Jim Balsillie was a co-chief executive officer at Research in Motion, the company that created BlackBerry, and offers his insight into how it quickly became a $20billion business and why he felt compelled to resign from such a tremendously successful venture. The entrepreneur and tech blogger, Kevin Michaluk, witnessed how BlackBerry handsets soared and then sank. He's made a successful career out of building "spiritual successors" to them but can his attempts to bring them back under the original brand prove successful? The podcast version of this episode, available on BBC Sounds, includes a bonus interview at the end with Sir Stephen Fry on how he feels about technology and social media today.Produced by Jon Douglas / BBC Audio North

How did the company behind the revolutionary BlackBerry smartphone lose its grip on the handset market?The BBC Business journalist, Sean Farrington, investigates with special guest, Sir Stephen Fry, who has remained 'faithful' to the BlackBerry brand. Alongside them is the entrepreneur, Sam White, who at the end of the show has to reach her own conclusions on why BlackBerry handsets disappeared, based only on what she has just heard and her own business acumen. The first BlackBerry device freed business executives from their desks, allowing them to easily write, send and receive emails from almost anywhere. But that was not the only thing that made the BlackBerry, and its later iterations, extraordinary. The actor, comedian, author and broadcaster, Sir Stephen Fry, also used to be a tech blogger and wrote in glowing terms about BlackBerry devices...until they took a turn for the worse. Stephen explains why he was disappointed by a brand he loves and how he still hopes it might make a return. Jim Balsillie was a co-chief executive officer at Research in Motion, the company that created BlackBerry, and offers his insight into how it quickly became a $20billion business and why he felt compelled to resign from such a tremendously successful venture. The entrepreneur and tech blogger, Kevin Michaluk, witnessed how BlackBerry handsets soared and then sank. He's made a successful career out of building "spiritual successors" to them but can his attempts to bring them back under the original brand prove successful? The podcast version of this episode, available on BBC Sounds, includes a bonus interview at the end with Sir Stephen Fry on how he feels about technology and social media today.Produced by Jon Douglas / BBC Audio North

NOW PLAYING

Toast - Series 6: BlackBerry Smartphones

0:00 35:15

No transcript for this episode yet

We transcribe on demand. Request one and we'll notify you when it's ready — usually under 10 minutes.

48 - Chapter XI, part 01

Jul 10, 2026 ·28m

49 - Chapter XI, part 02

Jul 10, 2026 ·28m

50 - Chapter XI, part 03

Jul 10, 2026 ·30m

51 - Chapter XI, part 04

Jul 10, 2026 ·24m

52 - Chapter XI, part 05

Jul 10, 2026 ·26m

53 - Appendix II, part 01

Jul 10, 2026 ·24m

Silent G Chronicles Gzutek Where Get The Flame howled at the rubble, The Silent G Chronicles fixes its gaze on what comes after—money strain, family knots, and the resolve to keep building.Finance-backed storytelling – written alongside Flame, each cut tugs at rent notices, bread-winner fatigue, and generational hope.Executive production by Gzutek – lucid guitar swells, razor riffs, progressive grooves, and orchestral lifts let every verse breathe and heal.Heart-on-sleeve bars – reflective and unfiltered, charting hardship, heartache, and the quiet faith that tomorrow can clear today’s debts.Timeless weight – honest detail ages like oak, laying the concrete for the closing chapter Ghost of Gzutek and paving the runway for Robbie P’s Bitcoin-charged era of identity, autonomy, financial security, and self-sovereignty.Press play, zap sats, and trace the arc from Flame to Chronicles—the bedrock of Robbie P’s evolving Bitcoin bardage. Manna With Brad Hannink Brad Hannink Listen each week as the Manna class learns and grows together through their in-depth study of God's Word. This comprehensive, expository series is taught by Brad Hannink, a gifted and talented communicator of the Bread of Life. Coffee and Circuses David Walsh The Roman poet Juvenal once said people are entertained as long as they have 'bread and circuses'. Now we can go one better with 'coffee and circuses'! David Walsh chats to a range of people involved in the study of the Roman World: what led to their interest in this? what projects are they engaged in at the moment? where does the study of the Roman World go in future? You can contact the show at [email protected], and find David on Twitter and Instagram @d_j_walsh (https://twitter.com/d_j_walsh) Theme tune: 'La Calahorra' by Rolemusic (http://freemusicarchive.org/music/Rolemusic/~/calahorra) Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. The Pie: An Economics Podcast Becker Friedman Institute at UChicago Economists are always talking about The Pie – how it grows and shrinks, how it’s sliced, and who gets the biggest shares. Join host Tess Vigeland as she talks with leading economists from the University of Chicago about their cutting-edge research and key events of the day. Hear how the economic pie is at the heart of issues like the aftermath of a global pandemic, jobs, energy policy, and more.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long is this episode of Sliced Bread?

This episode is 35 minutes long.

When was this Sliced Bread episode published?

This episode was published on November 27, 2025.

What is this episode about?

How did the company behind the revolutionary BlackBerry smartphone lose its grip on the handset market?The BBC Business journalist, Sean Farrington, investigates with special guest, Sir Stephen Fry, who has remained 'faithful' to the BlackBerry...

Can I download this Sliced Bread episode?

Yes, you can download this episode by clicking the download button on the episode player, or subscribe to the podcast in your preferred podcast app for automatic downloads.
URL copied to clipboard!