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The Winter Olympics are facing an awkward little problem: winter is increasingly unreliable. In this episode of Mark and Pete, we explore the growing concern that the Winter Games may not have a long-term future, thanks to warming temperatures, shrinking snow seasons, and the rising cost of staging a global sporting spectacle in an era where snow has become a luxury item.

It’s a story that sounds absurd at first, almost like satire. How can the Winter Olympics exist without winter? Yet the facts are stacking up. Fewer countries are willing or able to host the Games, and even traditional alpine venues are struggling with shorter snow seasons, higher freezing lines, and the increasing dependence on artificial snow. Ski slopes once famous for natural snowfall are now being kept alive with snow cannons, refrigerated tracks, and industrial-scale infrastructure that feels less like sport and more like an engineering project.

We discuss how climate change, economics, and modern bureaucracy are colliding in real time. Hosting the Olympics is already ruinously expensive, and now the basic requirement of snow is no longer guaranteed. Could the Games be forced into a permanent rotation between only a handful of cold-weather nations? Could indoor mega-domes become the future of winter sport? Or will the Olympics simply shrink, retreating into something smaller, more regional, and less grand?

Along the way, Mark brings his poetic take on the disappearing season, while Pete offers a Christian worldview perspective, asking what it says about modern civilisation that we increasingly live in a synthetic world of manufactured experiences. Even nature itself is being replaced with artificial substitutes, while the organisers insist everything is “sustainable.”

Sharp commentary, British humour, cultural reflection, and a touch of theological realism—this is The Winter (Olympics) of Discontent.