By ROSIE GREEN, ASSISTANT EDITOR (BEAUTY) Updated: 16:49 BST, 30 May 2026

'Avid Archers fan’ is not something you want in your dating app bio. On a sliding scale of turn offs, it’s just above ‘loves a granny knicker’ and a few steps below a spider-web face tattoo. In my post-divorce foray into online mating, I knew that my love of the BBC radio drama was best kept on the down low.Because being a devotee of The Archers is definitely not cool. It doesn’t vibe subversive, youthful or insider. In fact, the only kids it’s down with are the baby-goat kind. A guy I know dumped a woman when he heard her listening to the Sunday omnibus. But The Archers was one of the things that saved my sanity mid heartbreak and for that I will be forever grateful.Some context. My marriage split wasn’t civilised or by mutual consent. There was no conscious uncoupling. I had my heart ripped out and stamped on. Hard. After 26 years together my husband walked out one bleak January day, leaving no forwarding address and me and my two children profoundly shocked.In the eye of the storm of my marriage implosion, when my negative thoughts were all-consuming (where is he and what is he doing, how are we going to live, how will I ever afford to house us, will I have to be naked in front of another man?) I struggled to find a distraction. I couldn’t bear the TV, songs were too painful, podcasts too stressful. As I’d stopped watching News At Ten, something my ex and I always did together, I began listening to Radio 4 in the morning to keep some kind of handle on world affairs. Often the radio would stay on and that was my gateway into Woman’s Hour and then, eventually, The Archers. The first few episodes were just background noise. But over the course of a few months, I found myself consciously seeking out the programme. My marriage split wasn’t civilised or by mutual consent, writes Rosie Green. There was no conscious uncoupling 'On the turn-offs scale it's just above granny knickers'The Archers delivered comfort in so many ways (and still does). Crucially, it’s consistent. The world’s longest running broadcast drama, it has been on the airwaves for 75 years. Such enduring popularity means it’s not going to get cancelled and leave me bereft any time soon. I knew, with certainty, that at 7pm every weeknight I could escape, for 13 minutes, to a world of farming and flapjacks. The distraction helped so much. On my worst days, when I was literally shaking with fear, it offered light relief. And a reassurance that some things in life are constant.I’ve jettisoned almost all my divorce crutches (the sleeping pills and the unsuitable men) but The Archers has stayed. I’ve grown attached to the characters. Even the annoying ones. I like the rhythm of the conversations, the family’s interconnectedness and the (mostly) gentle plots that feel very human. Those voices are also company as I complete the never-ending housework required of a single parent.I’m not the only fan. The King and Queen are regular listeners. Queen Camilla has even had a cameo role. (As has Rylan, Princess Margaret and Dame Edna Everage). The King and Queen are regular listeners of The Archers, with the Camilla even having had a cameo roleIt seems to appeal to people of all political persuasions. My father’s partner, who is left wing, loves it, as do righties John and Norma Major. I think it gives the listener tolerance and understanding of different lives and experiences. (Albeit the diversity is limited by its rural ‘Borsetshire’ setting.)Which makes me think I need to revise my opinion. The Archers is cool, just in a reverse kind of way. Granted it doesn’t command the same audience it did in its heyday (20 million tuned in to a 1955 episode when Grace Archer died after a barn fire) but still reaches five million ears weekly. And lots of its fans are millennials (in 2025 the BBC reported The Archers regularly tops the list of most-listened to on-demand programmes for under 35s). There’s even a national tour this year – The Archers: Live At 75, will run from 7 June to 26 November. (fane.co.uk/the-archers).For me, part of its appeal is nostalgia. It takes me back to my West Midlands childhood. I like to think of fictional Lakey Hill as the Lickey Hills where we went on outings when I was small. My kids associate the theme tune with tumultuous times and say it gives them PTSD, but I reckon in a few years they’ll be tuning in, too.Now I listen to The Archers in bed with my new(ish) boyfriend. (This marks the next stage in our relationship.) While I wouldn’t say he’s a superfan, he does consider it a great sleep aid. He usually drops off after five minutes.The Archers: all things to all people.