In the last episode of Arctic Dreams, read by Kyle Soller, Lopez considers how man’s relationship with the frozen north has changed over time and exhorts us to rise to the ever more urgent challenges of climate change and to cherish and protect this most fragile of continents. As industry encroaches ever further into the polar regions Lopez insists we must not regard the Arctic merely as a resource for us to exploit.
In his breath-taking natural, social and cultural history of the Arctic, Lopez reveals the essential mystery and beauty of a continent that has enchanted man's imagination and ambition since time immemorial.
Written well over a quarter of a century ago, Lopez's visionary account of his journey across the polar caps is a celebration of the Arctic in all its guises. A hostile landscape of ice, freezing oceans and dazzling skyscapes, home to millions of diverse animals and people, it is also the backdrop to massive migrations by land, sea and air and the setting of epic exploratory voyages.
In timeless, prophetic prose, as meditative and memorable as the land it describes, Arctic Dreams poses fundamental questions about how we should cherish our ever more vulnerable planet.
Arctic Dreams was written by Barry Lopez.
BBC Radio 4 presents a selection of news and current affairs, arts and science programmes from the BBC World Service.
Spiritual reflection to start the day with the Rev Dr Lezley Stewart of the Church of Scotland.
Dr. Tamsin Ellis is a GP who looks for ways to improve her patients' health and the environment.
Welcoming us into her consulting room to meet her patients, Tamsin describes her journey to climate activism, and why she's convinced that looking for 'double wins' is the way forward. From giving a lecture about the environment to a sea of faces all sipping coffee from plastic cups, to the challenges of winning over already hard-pressed colleagues, in this witty talk Tamsin describes the realities of climate activism on the NHS frontline. As she prescribes health interventions with positive side-effects for the planet, she offers a new way to talk about climate change.
Tamsin is introduced by host Olly Mann.
The latest news headlines. Including the weather and a look at the papers.
Monique Gudgeon is on a mission to create a botanic garden. And what better way to get started than to build a new National Plant Collection. In creating a garden from scratch, one of her priorities is to bring in species which both work with the surrounding Dorset landscape and that are in need of conservation. There is a huge diversity of garden plants that need to be looked after so cultivars aren’t lost when they go out of fashion. National Plant Collections were created by the charity Plant Heritage to ensure these plants are preserved and documented for the future.
Of the plant groups that don’t currently have a custodian, Monique decided to choose forsythia - deciduous shrubs often overlooked as just a hedging plant which burst into vibrant yellow flowers in early spring. In the process of sourcing and propagating all the varieties needed for a collection, Monique has become utterly fascinated by them and their history. Helen Mark hears the story of Monique’s successes and failures so far, and explores what it takes to build and maintain a National Plant Collection.
We also meet people behind other collections and hear what drives their particular fascination with a group of plants, and how they fit in to their landscapes. We hear the stories of Benjamin Matthews, one of the youngest holders of a National Collection and how his love of hostas led to an unlikely friendship; Lucy Skellorn who has been collecting the irises bred by her great-great grandfather Sir Michael Foster; and Anne Greenall who has a spectacular collection of hydrangeas which thrive in her windswept coastal garden in west Scotland.
It's been an exciting week for some farmers as they gathered at an actual real life show. Charlotte Smith joined them at Groundswell to talk soil and trade.
Also this week there are stark warnings from the Climate Change Committee that both farmers and consumers need to change.
And we delve into the into the soft fruit sector, worth £1.7 billion in Britain.
Presented by Charlotte Smith and produced by Beatrice Fenton for BBC Audio in Bristol.
Radio 4's Saturday morning show brings you extraordinary stories and remarkable people.
Greg James, host of the Radio 1 Breakfast show and self-confessed 'proud radio nerd', uses his access-all-areas pass to the BBC Archives to track down audio gems, using listener requests and current stories as a springboard into the vast vaults of past programmes.
This week, a listener request starts a search for possible fakes in the archives: in the last series Greg played a scratchy recording, apparently from 1890, of the poet Tennyson reading his Charge of the Light Brigade - but was it the real thing or a cunningly constructed counterfeit, dating from the early 1960s? And who was the eccentric performance artist responsible for this trickery?
Summer is here, and with it comes the return of Wimbledon. Greg serves up some of tennis's pioneering women, from the French player who changed the game forever, to a more contemporary national treasure.
Greg also looks back at the disastrous opening night of BBC2, when a calamitous power cut stopped transmission of the launch and left a kangaroo stuck in a lift.
And to mark the tenth anniversary of Amy Winehouse's death, Greg takes a look back at the life of a once in a generation talent.
Insight, wit and analysis from BBC correspondents, journalists and writers from around the world
Age UK warns that despite the rise of digital payments, millions of people still rely on cash and the charity says it should be seen as an essential service - like electricity, water, or the post.
Barclays bank is to repay millions of pounds to customers miss-sold loans to pay for a timeshare scheme in Malta, but hundreds of others say they should be getting their money back too.
The UK’s biggest insurance firm and a major housebuilder have agreed to refund customers who have overpaid for freeholds and ground rents. It’s a major breakthrough for some leaseholders but will the industry follow suit.
And one listener tells us his story of emerging from the black hole of debt.
If you've been affected by any of the issues in this programme, you can find a list of support organisations at bbc.co.uk/actionline
There’s a surprising new role for Professor Chris Witty, and Liz Truss is on the verge of her best ever trade deal.
Performed by, Jon Culshaw, Lewis Macleod, Jan Ravens, and Duncan Wisbey.
The writers were: Nev Fountain & Tom Jamieson, Laurence Howarth, Ed Amsden & Tom Coles, James Bugg, Simon Alcock, Jane McCutcheon & Vivienne Riddoch, Sophie Dickson, & Nastassia Dhanraj.
Chris Mason presents political discussion from Christ Church in Winchester with the Secretary of State for Housing, Communities and Local Government Robert Jenrick MP, the SNP's Culture Spokesperson at Westminster John Nicolson MP, the broadcaster and GB News presenter Alastair Stewart and the Shadow International Trade Secretary Emily Thornberry MP.
What do you think of when you hear the words "A.I." or "Artificial Intelligence"? Thanks to science-fiction it's often strange-looking humanoids or futuristic robots hell-bent on destruction. But as Kriti Sharma points out, we are probably using A.I. hundreds of times a day without even thinking about it. It could be, she says, a bank deciding whether to accept or reject your application, or an algorithm might decide whether you get a job interview or what exam grade you receieve. She made her first robot when she was a teenager, and has gone on to use A.I. to help the victims of domestic abuse and to challenge the rise of what she sees as subservient female online assistants. Kriti is now an advisor on A.I. to the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport.
Marcus Smith is a content creator from Bristol and a digital native. He is fascinated by technology's impact on us and has studied the effects of online gambling on young people. For 'One to One', Marcus is looking at the 'tech for good' movement and speaks to two leading figures in the tech industry - one who argues that it is currently a force for bad, and one who tries to work with tech to harness the good.
For this second programme, Marcus asks Kriti why she thinks A.I. often has in-built gender and race biases, and hears how she is tackling this by inviting more people from varied backgrounds into the design process.
Hawk Wounded: Albert the One-Eyed of Habsburg has displaced Norbert and become Holy Roman Emperor, but Wenceslas plots revenge. Disappointed by his philosophical son, Albert takes John of Swabia into his inner circle and Ibrahim settles an old score.
Mike Walker's epic chronicle of the Habsburg dynasty which was to rule most of Europe - as well as much of the New World - for 600 years.
Female wildlife rangers; Chief Inspector of Ofsted; Lady Boss: Jackie Collins story; Transgender athletes
The work of female rangers protecting wildlife from poachers. Collet Ngobeni of The Black Mambas and Holly Budge of How Many Elephants discuss.
The Chief Inspector of Ofsted, Amanda Spielman on the problem of sexual harassment and abuse in schools, and what needs to be done to bring about change.
Jackie Collins was one of the most successful female authors of all time but often just dismissed as the Queen of Sleaze. We hear from Jackie's eldest daughter, Tracy Lerman and from Laura Fairrie, director of the new film Lady Boss: The Jackie Collins story.
Laurel Hubbard will be the first transgender athlete to compete at the Olympics. She's part of the New Zealand women's weightlifting team. She qualifies on the basis that her testosterone levels have been kept below a certain level for at least a year. But how does a reduction in testosterone affect other aspects of the body - such as muscle mass and strength? We hear from Joanna Harper, a PhD researcher at Loughborough University.
A new £50 note featuring the Bletchley Park codebreaker Alan Turing has just been launched. Debbie Marriott is the first ever female banknote designer at the Bank of England, and explains the work that goes into making the notes.
Elizabeth Packard was an ordinary 19th century American housewife and mother of six, whose husband had her declared 'slightly insane' and put in an asylum after daring to voice her opinions. Elizabeth embarked on a ceaseless quest for justice, both inside and outside the asylum. Kate Moore has written 'The Woman They Could Not Silence' about this fascinating but little known woman.
Nick Robinson talks to Culture Secretary Oliver Dowden in a personal and political interview.
Tim Minchin, Karin Slaughter, Jenny Seagrove, Amanda Wilkin, The Glare, Attawalpa, Yasmeen Khan, Clive Anderson
Clive Anderson and Yasmeen Khan are joined by Tim Minchin, Karin Slaughter, Jenny Seagrove and Amanda Wilkin for an eclectic mix of conversation, music and comedy. With music from The Glare and Attawalpa.
An insight into the character of an influential person making the news headlines
The light hearted interview show where Victoria Coren Mitchell interviews a well known woman about the cars she has known and uses them as a vehicle to talk about her life. This week Esther Rantzen tells the story of her journey from her first memories of her grandmother's sedate Hawker Siddely limousine through to the intensity of the That's Life years and helming one of the nation's most popular television programmes through to the joys of becoming a grandmother herself. And you can find out what no driving test examiner should ever say to a successful candidate.
With contributions from the audience and readings by Morwenna Banks.
Rory Sutherland explores perhaps the most influential and successful charitable campaign of recent times: the Motor Neurone Disease / ALS Ice Bucket Challenge. Spread virally by social media, yet decried by some as mere vanity and "slacktivism", the campaign nevertheless proved hugely valuable to both the fight against disease, and understanding attitudes to altruism in the age of Facebook.
We hear powerful testimonies from the families who created it, with insights into our attitudes to giving unravelled by experimental psychologist Nichola Raihani, one of the UK's leading experts in altruism.
Why do certain marketing campaigns - from Nike's "Just Do It" to the MND Ice Bucket Challenge - cast such a spell over us? Rory Sutherland explores the story - and the psychology - behind ten of the most influential campaigns in history - with first-hand accounts from the creative minds that conceived them, and contributions from the worlds of evolutionary biology, behavioural psychology, socio-economics and anthropology.
Marketing. It's come to be one of the most misunderstood - and maligned - disciplines of our age: perceived variously as the Emperor's New Clothes, an emblem of the ills of capitalism, a shadowy dark art designed to steal away our hard-earned money and make us do (or buy, or vote for) things we don't want.
Yet marketing is undeniably a key part of contemporary culture. It's a science that's fundamentally about human behaviour - marketers, to some extent, understand us better than we know ourselves - and in the most successful campaigns we find our deepest emotions and urges, from altruism to shame, hope to bravado, systematically tapped into and drawn upon.
But what are these primal behaviours that the best campaigns evoke in us - and how do they harness them? Is marketing purely about commercial gain or can it underpin real common good and societal progress? And does the discipline manipulate our subconscious instincts and emotions - or simply hold a mirror to them?
Over ten episodes, senior advertising creative and Spectator writer Rory Sutherland unravels the story of some of the most powerful, brilliant and influential campaigns of our age. Set alongside personal testimonies from the brilliant minds that created them, we'll hear from a host of experts - from biologists to philosophers, novelists to economists - about how these campaigns got under our skin and proved to be so influential.
Contributors include: writer and former copywriter Fay Weldon; social behaviourist and expert on altruism Nicola Raihani; Alexander Nix, CEO of big data analysts Cambridge Analytica; philosopher Andy Martin; writer on Islamic issues and advisor to the world's first Islamic branding consultancy, Shelina Janmohamed; and evolutionary psychologist Geoffrey Miler.
While the history of electronic music includes many notable men whose stories have been frequently celebrated, the genre has also provided a space for a wide range of extraordinary women to create a musical room of their own.
Working with machines meant being able to sidestep many of the hurdles that stood in the way of women aspiring to a musical career, such as access to orchestras, commissions and concert halls, and an over-riding failure to be taken seriously by the male musical gate-keepers. Elizabeth Alker examines the connections between early pioneers such as Eliane Radigue and Daphne Oram (who gained access to studios thanks to the second world war), those musicians who followed in their immediate wake such as Suzanne Ciani and Laurie Spiegel, and today’s generation of female composers.
Anna Meredith, Holly Herndon, Afrodeutsche and JLin all speak with Elizabeth about their own work and the debt they owe their predecessors. Central to the story is the composer and academic Pauline Oliveros, who founded the San Francisco Tape Music Centre, and whose theories around deep-listening as a feminist act shape so much of the texture of the music created by the women and men who followed her.
This is music, Elizabeth argues, which has an emphasis on tone and texture. This lends it a particular quality making it both distinct from its male equivalent and also profoundly beautiful and rich.
William Palmer must do what he can to prevent the marriage of Mr Delancey’s daughter to the King of the Greyfolk. But the king has laid his plans...
Pilgrim ..... Paul Hilton
Delancey ..... David Schofield
Mr Hibbens ..... Joe Kloska
Moira ..... Carolyn Pickles
India ..... Scarlett Brookes
Frank ..... Nick Underwood
Boris ..... Ewan Bailey
Zach ..... Sean Baker
Leila ..... Nicola Ferguson
Anne-Marie Duff continues Daisy Johnson's series of deliciously unsettling ghost stories, set in a remote hotel on the Fens.
Today, in 'Infestation'', it is the late 1960s, and a young girl is staying at the Hotel with her parents. Bored and restless, she decides to explore...
Writer: Daisy Johnson is a British novelist and short story writer. Her debut novel, Everything Under, was shortlisted for the 2018 Man Booker Prize, making her the youngest nominee in the prize's history.
The New Zealand weightlifter Laurel Hubbard looks set to make history after being confirmed as the first transgender athlete to compete at an Olympic Games. Hubbard previously competed in men’s events before transitioning in 2013. She is eligible due to a change in International Olympic Committee guidelines on testosterone levels in 2015, and after qualifying requirements were modified by the International Weightlifting Federation. For many campaigners this is a landmark moment for trans people, whose participation at grassroots level sport is shamefully low. Moreover, while there are many different male and female body types, they see elite sport as reflecting society’s obsession with gender stereotypes and worry about the implications for anyone who does not meet ‘conventional standards’ of femininity. Opponents think that allowing transgirls, who were assigned male at birth, to compete with cis girls is unfair. They argue that, in the vast majority of cases, males are stronger, faster and more powerful than females – if that were not the case we would not have had to segregate sport in the first place. The New Zealand Olympic Committee chief executive, Kereyn Smith, said this complex issue required, “a balance between human rights and fairness on the field of play”. This raises a deeper philosophical question: what is the relationship between rights and rules? And which of these is best placed to achieve fairness – not just in sporting competition but between competing demands? When should rules and laws be challenged and when does a person’s sense of their natural rights go too far? With Dr Dafydd Mills Daniel, Joanna Harper, Debbie Hayton and Adam Wagner.
A funny, lively and dynamic quiz presented by Steve Punt and recorded on location at a different university each week, pitting three undergraduates against three of their professors. This week the show comes from the Anglia Ruskin University.
The rounds vary between specialist subjects and general knowledge, quickfire bell-and-buzzer rounds and the Highbrow and Lowbrow round cunningly devised to test not only the students’ knowledge of current affairs, history, languages and science, but also their Professors’ awareness of television, sport, and quite possibly Ed Sheeran. And the Head-to-Head rounds, in which students take on their Professors in their own subjects, offer plenty of scope for mild embarrassment on both sides.
The specialist subjects this week are Sociology, Optometry and Psychology - and it's your chance to find out about the Pole Of Ignorance, the Tumbling E and a CGI lion.
The other universities in this series are Southampton, Nottingham Trent, Northampton, Brasenose College Oxford and Cumbria.
Poet Yomi Sode shares a selection of his favourite poems, including Roger Robinson, Sinéad Morrissey, Casey Bailey and Raymond Carver. Yomi also reads a poem from his upcoming collection MANORISM, which explores fatherhood and masculinity.
SUNDAY 27 JUNE 2021
SUN 00:00 Midnight News (m000xdgn)
The latest news and weather forecast from BBC Radio 4.
SUN 00:30 From Fact to Fiction (m000x7v7)
Takotsubo
Award-winning writer Julia Blackburn creates a fictional response to a story in this week's news about breakthrough research into Broken Heart Syndrome, which is brought on by an acute emotional shock. Researchers have identified two molecules linked to high stress which make the condition more likely. An alternative name for the syndrome is 'takotsubo cardiomyopathy', because the shape of the damaged left ventricle of the heart resembles a traditional Japanese octopus trap, or takotsubo.
Her story tells of a lifelong love affair, a broken heart, and an encounter with an octopus.
Julia has been described as one of the most original writers in Britain. Her work includes 'Timesong' a 'magical, mesmerising book that makes you feel giddy at the thought of the deep gulf of history hidden just beneath your feet'; the winner of the J R Ackerley Award for Memoir for the 'remarkable' 'The Three of Us', as well as innovative, imaginative and revelatory biographies of Goya, Napoleon and Billie Holliday.
Reader...Diana Quick
Producer for BBC Audio in Bristol: Mary Ward-Lowery
SUN 00:48 Shipping Forecast (m000xdgq)
The latest weather reports and forecasts for UK shipping.
SUN 01:00 Selection of BBC World Service Programmes (m000xdgs)
BBC Radio 4 presents a selection of news and current affairs, arts and science programmes from the BBC World Service.
SUN 05:20 Shipping Forecast (m000xdgv)
The latest weather reports and forecasts for UK shipping.
SUN 05:30 News Briefing (m000xdgx)
The latest news from BBC Radio 4
SUN 05:43 Bells on Sunday (m000xdgz)
The church of St Mary’s, Bitton in Gloucestershire.
Bells on Sunday comes from the church of St Mary’s, Bitton in Gloucestershire. In 1821 the Vicar, the Reverend Henry Ellacombe, devised and installed a novel apparatus enabling the six bells of St Mary’s to be chimed by a single ringer that can still be seen today in the church porch. In 1936 the old bells were retuned and augmented by Taylors of Loughborough to become a ring of eight bells with a tenor weighing fourteen and a quarter hundredweight and tuned to E. We hear them ringing Call Changes on eight bells.
SUN 05:45 Profile (m000xdgg)
[Repeat of broadcast at
19:00 on Saturday]
SUN 06:00 News Summary (m000xdrn)
The latest national and international news from BBC Radio 4
SUN 06:05 Something Understood (b04n2fmh)
Embracing The Classical
Luciano Pavarotti said it was "so important at a young age to be invited to embrace classical music and opera." Mark Tully and composer James MacMillan discuss the cross-cultural benefits of sharing classical traditions with new audiences and the power of music to unite.
The two first met during the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra's tour of India earlier this year. Most of the music in this programme is taken from those concerts, as well as from the family concerts which accompanied them, where young audiences got their first introduction to Western classical traditions.
Mark and James compare the classical traditions of East and West and consider the exciting opportunities for music in a new global culture.
With music by Bizet, Schoenberg and Tchaikovsky and readings from Coleridge, Joyce Grenfell and Alice Herz-Sommer.
The readers are Jane Whittenshaw, David Westhead and Francis Cadder.
Produced by Frank Stirling
A Unique production for BBC Radio 4
SUN 06:35 Natural Histories (b05w99j5)
Sharks
Who can hear the word shark and not the music from the film Jaws? This 1975 film, based on a book from the previous year, is defined as a “watershed moment for sharks.” From being little thought about by most people sharks were suddenly propelled into the lime light as fearsome, ruthless killers whose intent was to harm us humans. An entertaining film became the death warrant for millions of sharks. Our terminology is not helpful.
We find it impossible to speak about sharks without using emotive language: seas are “infested,” sharks “menace” they “cruise around looking for a victim, they “invade” our swimming beaches etc. Crooks are “loan sharks.”
In Hawaiian culture they are often seen as protectors or brave fighters in battle.
We have a difficult relationship with sharks. We have traded their teeth and eaten their fins, so much so that millions are now killed annually for this delicacy for the aristocracy. Damien Hurst has tried to capture the fear of the shark in his famous tank, allowing the viewer to stand next to an open mouth without being in danger. We will always be challenged by this supreme predator, if we allow it to survive in the wild.
SUN 06:57 Weather (m000xdrr)
The latest weather reports and forecast
SUN 07:00 News and Papers (m000xdrt)
The latest news headlines. Including a look at the papers.
SUN 07:10 Sunday (m000xdrw)
Fatima the Film; Tik Tok Anti-Semitism and Methodist Gay Marriage Vote
Marco Pontecorvo director best known for his award winning work on television, including Rome and Game of Thrones, talks to Sunday about his new film Fatima. It tells the story of three Portuguese shepherds who reported visions of the Virgin Mary more than a hundred years ago.
Jewish TikTok video makers say measures to protect them against anti-Semitism on the app are actually stopping them speaking about their faith. BBC digital journalist, and TikTok user, Sophia Smith-Galer tells William what's going on.
And an exclusive interview with the first Black female president of the Methodist Conference ahead of a momentous vote on same-sex marriage. William discusses the vote with Reverend Sonia Hicks as well as her hopes of what she'll achieve in post.
Photo Copyright Republic Film Distribution 2021
Editor: Gill Farrington
Producers:
Carmel Lonergan
Olive Clancy
SUN 07:54 Radio 4 Appeal (m000xdry)
Sightsavers
Actress Sunetra Sarker makes the Radio 4 Appeal on behalf of Sightsavers.
To Give:
- Freephone 0800 404 8144
- Freepost BBC Radio 4 Appeal. (That’s the whole address. Please do not write anything else on the front of the envelope). Mark the back of the envelope ‘Sightsavers’.
- Cheques should be made payable to ‘Sightsavers’.
- You can donate online at bbc.co.uk/appeal/radio4
Registered Charity Number: 207544
SUN 07:57 Weather (m000xds0)
The latest weather reports and forecast
SUN 08:00 News and Papers (m000xds2)
The latest news headlines. Including a look at the papers.
SUN 08:10 Sunday Worship (m000xds4)
Exile and Return
A service from Rugby School which explores the parallels between the experience of those in education during the Coronavirus pandemic in the UK and themes of exile and return in the bible.
The readings follow the Israelites' conquest by Babylon, the exile, their protection by God during times of despair and loss, the unity of the community, the promise of return, and the rebuilding of Jerusalem. The School's Chaplain reflects on parallels with the national experience over the last 18 months; those - for many - of loss, fear, sacrifice, community cohesion, hope, restoration, and rebuilding.
The music is led by the Temple Consort, and includes the hymns 'I vow to thee my country' and Jerusalem, and the lessons and prayers are read by members of the School community.
Leader: The Reverend Richard Horner; Director of Music: Richard Tanner; Organist: James Williams; Producer: Ben Collingwood.
SUN 08:48 A Point of View (m000x7vr)
The Culture War
Zoe Strimpel argues that the culture war is no fake or proxy war - but rather ideas about what is acceptable to know, to teach and to think.
Thirty years after the US sociologist James Davison Hunter wrote his book 'Culture Wars: The Struggle to Define America', Zoe looks at how those ideas are playing out around the world today.
'There is a sense of menace about,' she writes, 'of pent-up, complicated grievance. I worry that the culture war could tip into something far more deadly.'
Producer: Adele Armstrong
SUN 08:58 Tweet of the Day (b08sndpm)
David Lindo on the Honey Buzzard
David Lindo the Urban Birder tells the story of one magical early morning in central London, spotting a honey buzzard flying over the face of Big Ben. He urges people in cities to 'always look up' as there is an amazing variety of birds to be spotted even in the most concrete of jungles.
Tweet of the Day has captivated the Radio 4 audience with its daily 90 seconds of birdsong. But what of the listener to this avian chorus? In this new series of Tweet of the Day, we bring to the airwaves the conversational voices of those who listen to and are inspired by birds. Building on the previous series, a more informal approach to learning alongside a renewed emphasis on encounter with nature and reflection in our relationship with the natural world.
Producer Maggie Ayre.
SUN 09:00 Broadcasting House (m000xds6)
The Sunday morning news magazine programme. Presented by Paddy O'Connell
SUN 10:00 The Archers Omnibus (m000xds8)
Writers, Sarah McDonald- Hughes & Nick Warburton
Director, Kim Greengrass
Editor, Jeremy Howe
Brian Aldridge … Charles Collingwood
Lee Bryce … Ryan Early
Alice Carter … Hollie Chapman
Neil Carter … Brian Hewlett
Susan Carter … Charlotte Martin
Ian Craig … Stephen Kennedy
Justin Elliott … Simon Williams
Rex Fairbother … Nick Barber
Clarrie Grundy … Heather Bell
Eddie Grundy … Trevor Harrison
Shula Hebden- Lloyd … Judy Bennett
Alistair Lloyd … Michael Lumsden
Adam Macy … Andrew Wincott
Lynda Snell … Carole Boyd
SUN 10:54 Tweet of the Day (m000xdsb)
Tweet Take 5 : Three Doves
The differing fortunes of three dove species found in Britain is the subject of this extended episode of Tweet of the Day. We hear fom actor and keen birdwatcher Samuel West on the now rare turtle dove; presenter Kate Humble on the often overlooked stock dove and Sir David Attenborough on the collared dove whose expansion across the country began in the 1950's.
Producer : Andrew Dawes for BBC Audio in Bristol
SUN 11:00 Desert Island Discs (m000xdsd)
Margaret Busby, publisher
Margaret Busby is a publisher and editor who was the chair of the Booker Prize jury in 2020.
She has spent a life time in the literary world and was the youngest person and first black woman to set up a publishing house when she was twenty three years old. Together with Clive Allison, she created Allison and Busby based in Soho, London.
Margaret was born in Ghana in the 1940s and spent her childhood at a boarding school in the UK whilst her parents ran a medical practice in rural Ghana. She studied English at Bedford College, University of London before embarking on her career in publishing.
Margaret’s love of poetry was the catalyst for setting up Allison and Busby. They were both totally new to publishing and did not know the usual industry rules. She and her business partner had fifteen thousand, five shilling poetry magazines printed without any means of distributing them . They went on to be an eclectic publishing house championing new work and also reprinting classic texts from writers of all backgrounds.
In recent years, Margaret has made time to be a literary judge and has compiled two landmark anthologies Daughters of Africa and New Daughters of Africa which pull together writings by women of African descent from Ancient Egypt to the present day.
Presenter: Lauren Laverne
Producer: Sarah Taylor
SUN 11:45 Marketing: Hacking the Unconscious (b08nq9wm)
Series 1
A Campaign for 'Real' Women?
Rory Sutherland looks at advertising's often harmful portrayal of women, and explores how the aspiration to show "real beauty" can be reconciled with real profit.
In 2004, Unilever unveiled a marketing campaign that went against every received norm of the beauty industry. Instead of images of skinny, retouched, fashion models, the "Dove Campaign For Real Beauty" showcased women of every age, colour, shape and size - acknowledging the artifice, and psychological harm, of generations of fashion and cosmetics ads.
But can a campaign that empowers women's "real beauty" be trusted: when its ultimate aim is to sell you more stuff? Rory discusses how and why the industry represents women the way it does with writer and comedian Sara Pascoe, with contributions from evolutionary psychologist Geoffrey Miller, and marketing executive Daryl Fielding, who helped mastermind the original Dove campaign.
Producer: Steven Rajam
---
Why do certain marketing campaigns - from Nike's "Just Do It" to the MND Ice Bucket Challenge - cast such a spell over us? Rory Sutherland explores the story - and the psychology - behind ten of the most influential campaigns in history - with first-hand accounts from the creative minds that conceived them, and contributions from the worlds of evolutionary biology, behavioural psychology, socio-economics and anthropology.
Marketing. It's come to be one of the most misunderstood - and maligned - disciplines of our age: perceived variously as the Emperor's New Clothes, an emblem of the ills of capitalism, a shadowy dark art designed to steal away our hard-earned money and make us do (or buy, or vote for) things we don't want.
Yet marketing is undeniably a key part of contemporary culture. It's a science that's fundamentally about human behaviour - marketers, to some extent, understand us better than we know ourselves - and in the most successful campaigns we find our deepest emotions and urges, from altruism to shame, hope to bravado, systematically tapped into and drawn upon.
But what are these primal behaviours that the best campaigns evoke in us - and how do they harness them? Is marketing purely about commercial gain or can it underpin real common good and societal progress? And does the discipline manipulate our subconscious instincts and emotions - or simply hold a mirror to them?
Over ten episodes, senior advertising creative and Spectator writer Rory Sutherland unravels the story of some of the most powerful, brilliant and influential campaigns of our age. Set alongside personal testimonies from the brilliant minds that created them, we'll hear from a host of experts - from biologists to philosophers, novelists to economists - about how these campaigns got under our skin and proved to be so influential.
Contributors include: writer and former copywriter Fay Weldon; social behaviourist and expert on altruism Nicola Raihani; Alexander Nix, CEO of big data analysts Cambridge Analytica; philosopher Andy Martin; writer on Islamic issues and advisor to the world's first Islamic branding consultancy, Shelina Janmohamed; and evolutionary psychologist Geoffrey Miler.
SUN 12:00 News Summary (m000xdty)
National and international news from BBC Radio 4
SUN 12:04 I'm Sorry I Haven't A Clue (m000x501)
Series 75
Episode 2
The 75th series of Radio 4's multi award-winning ‘antidote to panel games’ promises yet more homespun wireless entertainment for the young at heart. This series is coming to you from the Radio Theatre in Broadcasting House but with a 1000-strong remote audience drawn exclusively from the Midlands. Regular panellists Tony Hawks and Marcus Brigstocke are once again joined by first-timers Vicki Pepperdine and Henning Wehn, with Jack Dee in the chair. At the piano – Colin Sell.
Producer - Jon Naismith
A BBC Studios production
SUN 12:32 The Food Programme (m000xdsj)
Cyrus Todiwala: A Life Through Food
From Mumbai childhood to pioneering London chef, Mr Todiwala's Life Through Food; a story involving the legendary dish Bombay Duck and an important connection with Freddie Mercury.
After years spent cooking in India, first at the prestigious Taj Mahal hotel and then in Goa, Cyrus Todiwala moved to London with his wife Pervin and created one of the most influential south Asian restaurants in the UK, Café Spice Namaste.
With an emphasis on authentic regional classics including lamb dhaansaak and Goan prawn curry, for twenty five years Café Spice helped reshape Britain's understanding of Indian food. Cyrus and Pervin tell the story of how it all happened, why they were forced to close the original restaurant in 2020 and how it's being reborn and reinvented in another part of east London.
An important driving force in Cyrus's life (and his cooking) is his faith (Zoroastrianism) and his identity (as a member of India's Parsee community). He explains how they have both shaped his outlook on life and his work as a chef.
Produced and presented for BBC Audio in Bristol by Dan Saladino.
SUN 12:57 Weather (m000xdsl)
The latest weather forecast
SUN 13:00 The World This Weekend (m000xdsn)
Jonny Dymond looks at the week’s big stories from both home and around the world.
SUN 13:30 The Listening Project (m000xdsq)
Shared histories
Fi Glover presents friends, relatives and strangers in conversation.
This week: childhood friends Iain and David share their experiences of losing their wives to cancer, six months apart; former footballers Leah and Dana discuss how the experience for female players has changed in the last 50 years; and solo mum Liv speaks to Carl, whose daughter has two mums and two dads.
The Listening Project is a Radio 4 initiative that offers a snapshot of contemporary Britain in which people across the UK volunteer to have a conversation. The conversations are being gathered across the UK by teams of producers from local and national radio stations who facilitate each encounter. Every conversation lasts up to an hour, and is then edited to extract the key moments of connection between the participants. Most of the unedited conversations are being archived by the British Library and used to build up a collection of voices capturing a unique portrait of the UK in this decade of the millennium. You can learn more about The Listening Project by visiting bbc.co.uk/listeningproject
Producer: Ellie Bury
SUN 14:00 Gardeners' Question Time (m000x7v5)
GQT at Home: Tiny Pots and Floppy Crops
Kathy Clugston hosts the horticultural programme featuring a group of gardening experts. Bob Flowerdew, James Wong and Christine Walkden are on hand to answer questions sent in by green-fingered listeners.
This week, panel answers dilemmas on stubborn peonies, floppy potatoes, and alternatives for a recently converted bamboo addict.
Away from the questions, Peter Gibbs takes a trip to RHS Wisley's brand new Science Centre - he gets shown around by regular GQT panellist Matthew Pottage and Head of Plant Health, Glen Powell.
Producer - Jemima Rathbone
Assistant Producer - Millie Chu
A Somethin' Else production for BBC Radio 4
SUN 14:45 Thought Cages (m0001b8z)
The Virtue of Commitment
Why do humans go to such lengths to show their commitment to others? Rory Sutherland continues his exploration of behavioural quirks and mind hacks with a look at how businesses thrive on our susceptibility to be swayed by commitment, from the ‘Knowledge’ exams of a London cabbie to the strange rituals of upper-class British etiquette.
Produced by Michael Surcombe for BBC Wales
SUN 15:00 DH Lawrence: Tainted Love (m000xdss)
The Rainbow
'DH Lawrence: Tainted Love’ dynamically puts centre stage Lawrence's daring writing on the complexity of love and desire.
The Rainbow dramatised by Linda Marshall Griffiths.
It is the dawn of female suffrage and Ursula, now a young woman, strives for sexual and financial independence. Ursula refuses to be tied down by the confines of her gender and the expectations of her family as she searches for sexual and intellectual fulfilment beyond the boundaries of her small town.
Ursula ..... Cassie Bradley
Anton ..... Nico Mirallegro
Anna ..... Rosalie Craig
Will ..... Lee Ingleby
Winifred ..... Tala Gouveia
Harby ..... Graeme Hawley
Young Ursula ..... Florence Hunt
Directed by Nadia Molinari
BBC Audio Drama North Production
Part of 'DH Lawrence Tainted Love’ linking two novels 'The Rainbow' and 'Women in Love' that dynamically put centre stage Lawrence's daring writing on the complexity of human love. Sexual awakening, transgression and repression are explored as his characters try to find happiness and fulfilment in uncertain times. Set in a mining town in Nottinghamshire, 'Tainted Love' is a celebration of Lawrence at his most bold, pushing the boundaries of sexuality in the dawning of the Twentieth Century.
Upon publication in 1915 'The Rainbow' was suppressed on the grounds of obscenity, all copies were destroyed and it remained banned in Britain for 11 years under the Obscene Publications Act 1857.
With thanks to the Estate of Frieda Lawrence Ravagli.
SUN 16:00 Open Book (m000xdsv)
Damon Galgut
Elizabeth Day speaks to Damon Galgut about his new novel, The Promise, a family saga spanning decades of upheaval in South Africa. The promise of the title is both literal and metaphorical. Amor, the youngest daughter of the white Swarts family overhears her father vowing to Amor’s dying mother that he will handover a house on their land to their Black maid, Salome. Whether he fulfills this promise or not provides the propulsive focus of a multi-generational, multi-voice story filled with unresolved promises that can be read as an allegory for South Africa itself.
And we’re looking ahead to the best books coming in July. Ore Agbaje Williams, an editor at The Borough Press, recommends Build Your House Around My Body by Violet Kupersmith.
Presenter: Elizabeth Day
Producer: Kirsten Locke
Book List – Sunday 27 June and Thursday 1 July
The Promise by Damon Galgut
The Good Doctor by Damon Galgut
Artic Summer by Damon Galgut
In a Strange Room by Damon Galgut
Build Your House Around My Body by Violet Kupersmith
SUN 16:30 Poetry Please (m000xdsx)
Cecilia Knapp
The Young Poet Laureate Cecilia Knapp delves into the listener requests and shares a selection of her favourite poems, including Danez Smith, Rachel Long and Frank O'Hara. And we'll hear Cecilia read one of her own poems.
Producer: Caitlin Hobbs for BBC Audio in Bristol
SUN 17:00 File on 4 (m000x6bh)
Contracts of Interest
The COVID-19 pandemic led to an urgent need for a range of new government contracts which resulted in billions of pounds of public money being spent under emergency powers which suspended usual procurement rules around competition.
This new regime created an unprecedented situation where commercial firms were able to secure large contracts quickly. But did this mean that money was spent without due diligence, regard for transparency - and potentially value for the taxpayer?
In a joint investigation with The Guardian and the non-profit investigative organisation Source Material, File on 4 investigates whether some firms were given preferential treatment when lucrative contracts were being awarded.
Reporter: Paul Connolly
Producer: Anna Meisel
Editor: Gail Champion
SUN 17:40 Profile (m000xdgg)
[Repeat of broadcast at
19:00 on Saturday]
SUN 17:54 Shipping Forecast (m000xdsz)
The latest weather reports and forecasts for UK shipping.
SUN 17:57 Weather (m000xdt1)
The latest weather reports and forecast
SUN 18:00 Six O'Clock News (m000xdt3)
The latest national and international news from BBC Radio 4
SUN 18:15 Pick of the Week (m000xdt5)
Chris Hawkins
Presenter: Chris Hawkins
Producer: Elizabeth Foster
Production support: Ellen Orchard
Studio Manager: Chris Hardman
SUN 19:00 Short Works (b07w6j2v)
Lay Not Thy Hand Upon the Head by Ned Beauman
One of five stories originally commissioned from some of the UK's rising writers to accompany the 2016 shortlist for the BBC National Short Story Award:
LAY NOT THY HAND UPON THE LAD by Ned Beauman
On the island, at the command of the Algorithm, father and son carry out the culling of the Woolly Anteater. But one day their work is interrupted by a new set of instructions..
Reader Allan Corduner
Producer Duncan Minshull
SUN 19:15 Hennikay (m000xdt7)
Bill Bailey stars in this brand new comedy special about a middle aged man who, after 45 years, and for reasons quite unknown to him, suddenly meets up with his imaginary childhood friend, Hennikay.
It's the biggest day in his career and he is on the brink of closing the biggest deal in the history of Maidstone but, when Guy Starling strides into his office at Solutify Technology, a software house that develops games for grown-ups to waste their time playing on their phones, he is confronted with an 11 year old boy playing keepy-uppies.
And to make matters worse, no one else can see or hear him. Because he is Hennikay, Guy’s imaginary friend from his lonely childhood.
Neither of them know why he is there after all these years but he refuses to leave and, even though he sees the world through the naïve eyes of a child from 1976, Hennikay might just be there to help his oldest (and only) friend in the world save the day and close the deal.
Acclaimed comedian (and reigning Strictly Come Dancing Champion) Bill Bailey leads a cast which includes Sanjeev Bhaskar and Elizabeth Carling in this warm, funny look at childhood, adulthood and some of the follies of modern life - where a man with a confused child in his head might just be the sanest man in the room.
Cast:
Guy – Bill Bailey
Tony – Sanjeev Bhaskar
Marika – Elizabeth Carling
Kallie – Anna Leong Brophy
Don – John Schwab
Hennikay – Max Pattison
Written by David Spicer
Producer: Liz Anstee
A CPL production for BBC Radio 4
SUN 19:45 The Chronicles of Burke Street (m000xdt9)
3: Tara's Story
The next in the brilliant new short story series by the award-winning author of 'Love After Love', Ingrid Persaud.
Set on an everyday street in Port of Spain, Trinidad, 'The Chronicles of Burke Street' follows the lives and loves of its unusual residents. Burke Street might seem like an ordinary street, but behind its closed doors lurk secrets, superstitions and barely concealed lies.
Today, in 'Tara's Story', read by Jade Anouka, a young teacher wrestles with her dating apps in her search for Miss Right....
Writer: Ingrid Persaud is the winner of the 2018 BBC National Short Story Award, and her novel Love After Love won the 2020 Costa First Novel Award.
Reader: Jade Anouka
Producer: Justine Willett
SUN 20:00 More or Less (m000x4vn)
Delta cases, blue tits and that one-in-two cancer claim
The Delta variant is behind the big increase in the number of new Covid 19 cases in the UK since April. We take a look at what impact vaccines have had on infections, hospitalisations and deaths.
Chris Packham told viewers on the BBC’s Springwatch that blue tits eat 35 billion caterpillars a year. We get him onto the programme to explain.
How much does Type 2 diabetes cost the NHS a year? While exploring a dubious claim we find out why its hard to work that out.
Is it true that on in two people will get cancer? We’ve looked at this statistic before but listeners keep spotting it on TV.
We also ask: if the SarsCov2 RNA is 96% similar to the RNA of a virus found in bats - is that similar, or not?
SUN 20:30 Last Word (m000x7v9)
Kenneth Kaunda, Janet Malcolm, Penny Kemp, Bob Swash
Pictured: President Kenneth Kaunda
Matthew Bannister on
The Zambian President Kenneth Kaunda who fought for independence then ruled his country for nearly thirty years, but was voted out of office in the first multi-party elections of 1991.
Janet Malcolm, the American writer whose works questioned the ethics of journalists and biographers, including herself.
Penny Kemp, who brought passion and professionalism to the campaigns of the Green Party.
Bob Swash, the theatre producer whose hits included Evita and Blood Brothers.
Producer: Neil George
Interviewed guest: Maureen Nkandu
Interviewed guest: Katie Roife
Interviewed guest: Darren Johnson
Interviewed guest: Caroline Lucas
Interviewed guest: Michael Coveney
Interviewed guest: Willy Russell
Archive clips used: Zambian Independence Celebrations, BBC Archives, October 1964; Reading Chekhov, Radio 3 08/07/2004; A Brunch Conversation with Janet Malcolm, Kelly Writers’ House 19/03/2013; Today, Radio 4 13/09/2002; Greens On The Record, BBC One 24/09/1989; The World This Weekend, Radio 4 16/04/2006; Taking Issue, BBC Radio Scotland 30/01/1986.
SUN 21:00 Money Box (m000xdfr)
[Repeat of broadcast at
12:04 on Saturday]
SUN 21:25 Radio 4 Appeal (m000xdry)
[Repeat of broadcast at
07:54 today]
SUN 21:30 Analysis (m000x507)
A New Unionism?
Unionism in Northern Ireland is facing a highly uncertain future. Its divided party politics make the headlines. But beyond that, post-Brexit border rules and talk of a possible vote on Irish reunification is causing much anxiety. Even more profoundly, changes in the province’s population and attitudes among different generations are weakening traditional loyalties. Pessimists fear all this could be seriously destabilising. Others argue that a new kind of unionism, focused on the practical benefits of links to Britain, can revive the cause. Chris Bowlby listens in to a debate with major implications for the UK as a whole.
Producer: Jim Frank
Editor: Jasper Corbett
SUN 22:00 Westminster Hour (m000xdtc)
Radio 4's Sunday night political discussion programme.
SUN 23:00 The Film Programme (m000x6w1)
Iron Curtain Directors
With Francine Stock
What was it like working behind the Iron Curtain, when every dot and comma of a script had to be passed by the censor. Francine delves into the archives and hears from Milos Forman, Andrzej Wajda, Agnieszka Holland, Miklos Jancso, Jerzy Skolimowski, Krzysztof Zanussi, Jiri Menzel and Andrei Konchalovsky.
SUN 23:30 Something Understood (b04n2fmh)
[Repeat of broadcast at
06:05 today]
MONDAY 28 JUNE 2021
MON 00:00 Midnight News (m000xdtf)
The latest news and weather forecast from BBC Radio 4.
MON 00:15 Sideways (m000x4wh)
Originality Armageddon
Bonfire night, November 5th 2015,
9.30pm. An agent fires off an email. An author is accused of plagiarism. His new book lies ready to be pulped.
In the first of a new series of Sideways, Matthew Syed asks why we’re doomed to be unoriginal and why it hurts so much to be, well, not that special.
In 1998, Hollywood directors Matthew Bay and Mimi Leder went head to head with suspiciously similar disaster movies - Armageddon and Deep Impact. Allegations of late-night spying flew around. But could there have just been something in the air? Matthew reveals that, four years earlier, fragments of the Shoemaker-Levy 9 Comet smashed into Jupiter and right into the American consciousness.
This is the thing... As Matthew discovers, our brains are wired for unoriginality, we evolve as a collective brain, absorbing our shared cultural cues and looking for what has worked in the past. But if that’s the norm, why do we feel so disappointed when our ideas seem unoriginal, when someone else beats us to it? And is there a way out of this - to rekindle our originality?
Presenter: Matthew Syed
Producer/Series Editor: Katherine Godfrey
Executive Producer: Max O'Brien
Music, Sound Design and Mix: Nicholas Alexander
Research and Development: Gavin Haynes and Madeleine Parr
Theme Music: Seventy Times Seven by Ioana Selaru
A Novel production for BBC Radio 4
MON 00:45 Bells on Sunday (m000xdgz)
[Repeat of broadcast at
05:43 on Sunday]
MON 00:48 Shipping Forecast (m000xdth)
The latest weather reports and forecasts for UK shipping.
MON 01:00 Selection of BBC World Service Programmes (m000xdtk)
BBC Radio 4 presents a selection of news and current affairs, arts and science programmes from the BBC World Service.
MON 05:20 Shipping Forecast (m000xdtm)
The latest weather reports and forecasts for UK shipping.
MON 05:30 News Briefing (m000xdtp)
The latest news from BBC Radio 4
MON 05:43 Prayer for the Day (m000xdtr)
Spiritual reflection to start the day with the Rev Dr Lezley Stewart of the Church of Scotland.
MON 05:45 Farming Today (m000xdtt)
The latest news about food, farming and the countryside.
MON 05:56 Weather (m000xdtw)
The latest weather forecast for farmers.
MON 05:58 Tweet of the Day (b03bkt5h)
Shore Lark
Tweet of the Day is a series of fascinating stories about the British birds inspired by their calls and songs.
Wildlife Sound Recordist, Chris Watson, presents the Shore Lark. Shore Larks are also known as horned larks because in the breeding season the male birds sprout a pair of black crown feathers which look like satanic horns, but at any time of year the adult larks are striking birds. They are slightly smaller than a skylark but with a yellow face, a black moustache and a black band on the chest.
MON 06:00 Today (m000xdx2)
News and current affairs, including Sports Desk, Weather and Thought for the Day.
MON 09:00 Start the Week (m000xdx4)
Ali Smith
Ali Smith talks to Andrew Marr about Summer, the finale to her ambitious, ground-breaking Seasonal quartet of novels. Since 2016, the prize-winning writer has been working on a cycle of novels that not only explore the changing seasons, but reflect the times we are living in. With the tightest turnaround from manuscript to book, Smith’s ambition was to create real contemporaneous ‘state of the nation’ works. She reflects on a country voting on its future, people and families on the brink of change, and now living through a pandemic, while also understanding how art, nature and landscape speak of a deeper truth.
Producer: Katy Hickman
Photograph by Sarah Wood
MON 09:45 Unfollow by Megan Phelps-Roper (m000xdyr)
Episode 1: Obey
Megan Phelps-Roper reads from her brutally frank memoir about growing up in the fire-and-brimstone Westboro Baptist Church, in Kansas - often called 'the most hated family in America' – a religious sect aggressive in its homophobia and antisemitism, and notorious for picketing the funerals of American soldiers.
From the age of five Megan was protesting daily, believing that she was doing God's work. But, aged 26, she came to a realisation: Westboro’s teachings were a monstrous lie and she must leave, turn her back on her family, her church — her entire world - and start over.
Today: Megan recalls her early protests, and growing up under Westboro's doctrine of absolute obedience.
Abridged by Sara Davies
Produced by Elizabeth Allard
MON 10:00 Woman's Hour (m000xdx8)
Anne Robinson; Millennial relationships; WWII female resistance fighters; Breastfeeding in public
The presenter, journalist and “Queen of Mean”, Anne Robinson, is best known for her acerbic style of presenting on 'The Weakest Link'. In the 1960s she was the first young female trainee on the Daily Mail, worked at the Sunday Times and the Daily Mirror, and went on to host programmes from Points of View to Watchdog. Today Anne takes up the Countdown reins as the first female host of Channel 4’s longest running series. She will join numbers whizz, Rachel Riley and wordsmith, Susie Dent, to make a formidable female trio. She joins Chloe Tilley.
Last week the government voted down proposals to make it illegal to film or photograph someone breastfeeding without their consent. MP’s like Stella Creasy, who has experienced this herself when teenage boys took photos of her as she breast fed her baby while on a train, and the MP Jeff Smith, wanted to make an amendment to the Voyeurism Act of 2019 - more commonly known as the Up-skirting Act - which focused on making it illegal to take photos and films of the lower part of the body or ‘up a skirt’. This recent proposal is for a simple amendment to be made to the 2019 Act to include the upper body and so protect breastfeeding mums. In April this year Julia Cooper found a man taking photos of her as she breast fed her baby in the park.
When Gwen Strauss' aunt Hélène was in her 80's she nonchalantly mentioned at lunch that she had led a band of women in an escape from a Nazi death march, in the dying days of the war in Europe in 1945. The women were all members of the French Resistance, although two were Dutch and one Spanish. Gwen embarked on a search for these women, scouring France and Germany to track down their records, their families and their memories. Gwen – an award-winning children’s book author - has now painstakingly reconstructed what happened in her new book 'The Nine'.
The reality TV dating show Love Island is back on our screens. The show is undeniably popular and creates many water cooler moments, but what can it actually tell us about modern love and dating? We speak to journalist, podcaster, and author of new book Modern Love, Olivia Petter and Nichi Hodgson, author of The Curious History of Dating, about how important the series might be in helping millennials and Gen Z find true love after lockdown.
Presenter: Chloe Tilley
Producer: Kirsty Starkey
Interviewed Guest: Anne Robinson
Interviewed Guest: Julia Cooper
Interviewed Guest: Gwen Strauss
Interviewed Guest: Olivia Petter
Interviewed Guest: Nichi Hodgson
MON 11:00 Elon Musk: The Evening Rocket (m000xdxb)
Dimension X
Jill Lepore untangles the strange sci-fi roots of Silicon Valley's extreme capitalism - with its extravagant, existential and extra-terrestrial plans to save humanity. In this world, stock prices can be driven partly by fantasies found in blockbuster superhero movies, but that come from science fiction, some of it a century old. If anyone personifies this phenomenon, it's Elon Musk, the richest or second-richest person in the world on any given day. "The bare facts of Musk’s life, the way they’re usually told, make him sound like a fictional character, a comic-book superhero," says Lepore. He says he hopes to colonize Mars, create brain-hacking implants and avert an AI apocalypse. He even has a baby named X. In this first of five episodes Lepore looks at the early origins of ‘Muskism’, and explores how the science fiction stories that today’s techno-billionaires grew up on have shaped Silicon Valley’s vision of the future.
Jill Lepore is Professor of American History at Harvard University, a staff writer at The New Yorker and an acclaimed author. Her latest book is If Then: How the Simulmatics Corporation Invented the Future. She is also the host of The Last Archive, a podcast from Pushkin Industries.
Producer: Viv Jones
Researcher: Oliver Riskin-Kutz
Editor: Hugh Levinson
Sound: Graham Puddifoot
Original music by Corntuth
MON 11:30 Loose Ends (m000xdgd)
[Repeat of broadcast at
18:15 on Saturday]
MON 12:00 News Summary (m000xdz6)
National and international news from BBC Radio 4
MON 12:04 Zennor in Darkness by Helen Dunmore (m000xdxj)
Episode 6
Helen Dunmore’s prize-winning first novel is set in the late spring, early summer of 1917. War haunts the Cornish coast and ships are being sunk by U-boats, strangers are treated with suspicion, and newspapers are full of spy stories.
Into this uneasy landscape, to a hamlet just outside St Ives, come DH Lawrence and his German wife, Frieda. They are hoping to escape the war-fever that grips London and also to live as cheaply as possible in a rented cottage. The pacifist Lawrence is reeling from his latest novel, The Rainbow, having been banned for obscenity, and is struggling to finish and publish its sequel, Women in Love.
They befriend Clare Coyne, a young artist who has lived alone with her father since her mother died when she was a child.
Written by Helen Dunmore
Read by Louise Brealey
Abridged by Jill Waters and Isobel Creed
Produced by Jill Waters
A Waters Company production for BBC Radio 4
MON 12:18 You and Yours (m000xdxl)
News and discussion of consumer affairs
MON 12:57 Weather (m000xdxn)
The latest weather forecast
MON 13:00 World at One (m000xdxq)
Forty-five minutes of news, analysis and comment, with Sarah Montague.
MON 13:45 The Kindness Experiment (m000xdxs)
It All Starts in Ali's Corner Shop
A series of people in Bristol embark on a journey of doing something kind for someone else. Along the way they reflect on what it is to be kind and to receive kindness. What stops us from being kind sometimes and how does it feel to do something nice for a stranger, expecting nothing in return?
In the first episode we meet a random group of people in the local shop in St Werburghs in Bristol run by Ali. Everyone in the neighbourhood knows him and talks about how kind he is to all of his customers. Setting up shop in his store Ella Scotland Waters meets some of those customers and engages them in conversations that ask them to reflect on kindness and what it means to them. Some of them will take up the challenge across the week to do something kind for someone they don't know and don't neccessarily even like and to see what effect that has both on the recipient but also on themselves and their wellbeing.
With the participation and advice of Professor Bruce Hood from the School of Psychological Science, University of Bristol. His Happiness courses have helped his students during lockdown. Can he help us all to be kinder?
Presenter: Ella Scotland Waters
Producer for BBC Audio Bristol: Maggie Ayre
MON 14:00 Takeover (m000xdxv)
Episode 1
High-stake deals and sibling rivalry set in the world of the super wealthy. Meet the Majumdars, a family at war… with itself. A new drama serial starring Rajit Kapur. Self-made billionaire, Ravi Majumdar, risks losing everything to defeat a man he once considered his friend and mentor, while his four children - Amit, Zara, Shaan and Maya - fight for their father’s affections and fortune.
A drama on a grand scale, played out like a Shakespearean tragedy.
Recorded both in the UK and in India.
Cast:
Ravi Majumdar......Rajit Kapur
Anya......Dolya Gavanski
Ash......Abhin Galeya
Maya......Amrita Acharia
Zara......Munirih Grace
Shaan......Danny Ashok
Ian......Finbar Lynch
Seraphina......Jennifer Armour
Dr Lincoln......Emma Carter
Jeet......Ronny Jhutti
All other parts were played by:
Neil D’Souza
Ash Hunter
Philip Desmeules
Natalie Simpson
Lola Ogunyemi
Matthew Solon and
Nadir Khan
With original music by Sacha Puttnam
Written by Ayeesha Menon and Matthew Solon
Sound Design by Eloise Whitmore
Sound recording by Paul Clark, Ashyar Bulsara and Ayush Ahuja
Assistant Producer, Eleanor Mein
Production Assistant, Anna Calandra
Produced by Emma Hearn and Nadir Khan
Director and Executive Producer, John Scott Dryden
A Goldhawk production for BBC Radio 4
MON 14:45 The Why Factor (b06810pv)
Why do so many men wear a tie?
It's mundane. About 150 centimetres long, often made of satin or silk and worn by millions, mostly by men, every day. Mike Williams explores the enduring appeal of the tie.
It's a paradoxical item of clothing: One the one hand, it expresses a desire to fit in and conform - to belong - yet it also says something about our need to demonstrate our individuality. Historically, wearing a tie has meant many different things: from being seen as being anti-Islamic in the wake of the Iranian Revolution in 1979, to representing subversion and being a symbol of sub-cultural cool.
Producer: Jim Frank
MON 15:00 The 3rd Degree (m000xdxx)
Series 11
The University of Northampton
A funny, lively and dynamic quiz presented by Steve Punt and recorded on location at a different university each week, pitting three undergraduates against three of their professors. This week the show comes from the University of Northampton.
The rounds vary between specialist subjects and general knowledge, quickfire bell-and-buzzer rounds and the Highbrow and Lowbrow round cunningly devised to test not only the students’ knowledge of current affairs, history, languages and science, but also their Professors’ awareness of television, sport, and quite possibly Ed Sheeran. And the Head-to-Head rounds, in which students take on their Professors in their own subjects, offer plenty of scope for mild embarrassment on both sides.
The specialist subjects this week are International Development, Law and Organized Crime, and Nursing - and the questions range from piercings and postage to erythema and smokeballs.
The other universities in this series are Southampton, Nottingham Trent, Anglia Ruskin, Brasenose College Oxford and Cumbria.
Producer: David Tyler
A Pozzitive production for BBC Radio 4
MON 15:30 The Food Programme (m000xdsj)
[Repeat of broadcast at
12:32 on Sunday]
MON 16:00 Written in Scotland (m000x6v5)
Episode 1: Nationalism and Unionism
A four-part series about the relationship that Scotland’s writers have with Scotland itself. Presented by Kirsty Wark. Episode 1 – Nationalism and Unionism.
How did the writers of Scotland respond to the Union with England? Kirsty looks at the way in which Scottish poets and novelists have uniquely and sometimes controversially reflected the political turmoil around them. She hears about James MacPherson, the poet who produced supposed translations of Ossian, claimed as an ancient Gaelic bard, which became a European sensation. Yet at the same time as the poems appeared, the Highland clan life the poems reflected was being destroyed as the Jacobite uprising of 1745 was put down, and James MacPherson himself ended his life as a wealthy Member of Parliament.
We also hear about Robert Burns, a proud Scottish nationalist, who castigated the 'powers that be of Scotland for being bought and sold for English gold' but who was also a government employee for the excise.
And on the other side of the coin, Sir Walter Scott was a proud supporter of the union with England who probably did more than anyone else to preserve Scotland’s distinctiveness in writing.
Producer: Brian McCluskey
A Whistledown Scotland production for BBC Radio 4
MON 16:30 The Digital Human (m000xdy0)
Series 20
Vilify
Aleks Krotoski explores what it’s like be 'villain of the day' on social media
It seems every day an individual rightly or wrongly becomes the object of the online world's condemnation. What's that like and what motivates people to pile on? Are the criticisms always made in good faith or is there something more complex going on with what the critics are trying to signal.
Producer: Peter McManus
MON 17:00 PM (m000xdy2)
Afternoon news and current affairs programme, reporting on breaking stories and summing up the day's headlines.
MON 18:00 Six O'Clock News (m000xdy6)
The latest national and international news from BBC Radio 4.
MON 18:30 I'm Sorry I Haven't A Clue (m000xdy8)
Series 75
Episode 3
This edition in the 75th series of the nation's favourite wireless entertainment comes to you from the Radio Theatre in Broadcasting House but with a 1000-strong remote audience drawn exclusively from Wales. Welshman Rob Brydon leads an all-star panel comprising Miles Jupp, Pippa Evans, Rory Bremner and the show’s reluctant host, Jack Dee. At the piano - Colin Sell
Producer Jon Naismith
A BBC Studios production
MON 19:00 The Archers (m000xdyb)
Lily regrets her actions and Vince makes his presence felt.
MON 19:15 Front Row (m000xdyd)
Live magazine programme on the worlds of arts, literature, film, media and music
MON 19:45 Two Minutes Past Nine (m000msvk)
Episode 1: April 19th
On April 19th 1995 a 26-year-old named Timothy Mcveigh steered a yellow rental truck into downtown Oklahoma city. Inside was a two-ton homemade explosive.
Oklahoma City Bombing is the deadliest act of domestic terrorism in US history, killing 168 people and leaving 680 injured. Journalist Leah Sottile investigates the legacy of the attack.
Recorded over some of the most divisive and turbulent months in recent American political history, Two Minutes Past Nine explores and questions the changing face of far right extremism in all its chaos and conspiracism.
Presenter: Leah Sottile
Producer: Georgia Catt
Editor: Philip Sellars
Narration recorded by Joe Preston
Additional Research by Robbie Wojciechowski
MON 20:00 The New Deal - A Story For Our Times (m000nd0b)
2: Thunder From the Left
Marybeth Hamilton explores the New Deal's most progressive & controversial period. Was a new alliance between workers and government really emerging for the first time in American history? Might they be fashioning a world together that, if not entirely free from fear & want, was becoming a more just & equitable America? By 1935 millions were working for the government on the W.P.A. . Building the nation's infrastructure. Anything from airports to dog pounds whilst artists & writers documented the voiceless & the land itself. For the first time in history labor's voice was being heeded in Washington. Could this 'fragile' juggernaut stay on course?
With the voices of: Tony Badger, Ken Byndas, Zach Carter, Kristin Downey, Steve Fraser, Gary Gerstle, Tom Girdler Jr, Kiran Klaus Patel, Ahmed White.
Reader: Roger Ringrose
Producer: Mark Burman
MON 20:30 Analysis (m000xdyg)
A Hundred Glorious Years?
The first, modest Congress of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) took place in late July 1921. Of the twelve original members, only Mao Zedong and one of his closest aides survived to take part in the founding of the People's Republic in 1949. The others were killed by political opponents, lost factional struggles or took up other creeds. And the CCP's history has been punctuated by in-fighting, purges, jailings, defections and sudden deaths.
The Party itself sees things differently. Only it was able to push China into the future, the CCP claims, after earlier abortive attempts to modernise the country - and to secure the global eminence that it now enjoys. Its narrative also insists on the CCP's seamless triumph over obstacles placed in its path by malevolent foreign powers and reactionary domestic forces.
A hundred years on from the CCP's foundation, the eminent China-watcher Isabel Hilton assesses the importance of the Party's centenary and asks why control of its view of its history is so important. She shows which events and ideological shifts the CCP prefers not to highlight or to ignore altogether. She considers why so much of the Party's history swings between periods of repression and liberalisation. And she explores how Xi Jinping, its current leader, is using the centenary. What will preoccupy the CCP in the years ahead?
Producer Simon Coates
Editor Jasper Corbett
MON 21:00 Detoxifying the Classics (m000x72t)
Why are white nationalists and the far right so fond of Ancient Greece and Rome? Katherine Harloe, Professor of Classics and Intellectual History at the University of Reading, looks at the ways in which the classical world is both used to lend respectability to the politics of hate, and distorted to give the false impression that it was an all-white space.
But this is not just a modern problem - from British colonial India to fascist Italy, Katherine delves into the last 300 years of history to explain how the ancient world and white supremacy became entwined, and asks what classicists today can do about it.
Produced by Nathan Gower
An Overcoat Media production for BBC Radio 4
MON 21:30 Start the Week (m000xdx4)
[Repeat of broadcast at
09:00 today]
MON 22:00 The World Tonight (m000xdyk)
In depth reporting, intelligent analysis and breaking news from a global perspective
MON 22:45 Zennor in Darkness by Helen Dunmore (m000xdxj)
[Repeat of broadcast at
12:04 today]
MON 23:00 Rewinder (m000xdfh)
[Repeat of broadcast at
10:30 on Saturday]
MON 23:30 Today in Parliament (m000xdym)
News, views and features on today's stories in Parliament
TUESDAY 29 JUNE 2021
TUE 00:00 Midnight News (m000xdyp)
The latest news and weather forecast from BBC Radio 4.
TUE 00:30 Unfollow by Megan Phelps-Roper (m000xdyr)
[Repeat of broadcast at
09:45 on Monday]
TUE 00:48 Shipping Forecast (m000xdyt)
The latest weather reports and forecasts for UK shipping.
TUE 01:00 Selection of BBC World Service Programmes (m000xdyw)
BBC Radio 4 presents a selection of news and current affairs, arts and science programmes from the BBC World Service.
TUE 05:20 Shipping Forecast (m000xdyy)
The latest weather reports and forecasts for UK shipping.
TUE 05:30 News Briefing (m000xdz0)
The latest news from BBC Radio 4
TUE 05:43 Prayer for the Day (m000xdz2)
Spiritual reflection to start the day with the Rev Dr Lezley Stewart of the Church of Scotland.
TUE 05:45 Farming Today (m000xdz4)
The latest news about food, farming and the countryside.
TUE 05:58 Tweet of the Day (b04t0syn)
Poorwill (American Nightjar)
Michael Palin presents the common poorwill from an Arizona desert. In the dead of night, loud calls pierce the stillness on a moonlit track, a small shape suddenly sprouts wings and flutters into the darkness ... a Common Poorwill is hunting.
Poorwills are small nightjars that breed mainly in western North America, often in deserts and dry grassland. By day the poorwill sits in the open or among rocks relying on its mottled plumage for camouflage. By night, it emerges to hawk after insects snapping them up with its large frog-like mouth.
This technique works if it's warm enough for insects to be active, but in some places where poorwills live there are sudden cold snaps. Instead of migrating, the poorwill slows down its metabolism and goes into torpor for days or even weeks . This hibernation-like state is very rare among birds and allows the poorwill to get through lean periods and was first scientifically described in 1948, although the phenomenon had been recorded more than 140 years earlier by the great explorer Meriwether Lewis, during the Lewis and Clark Expedition to discover western side of America in 1804.
TUE 06:00 Today (m000xd1p)
News and current affairs, including Sports Desk, Weather and Thought for the Day.
TUE 09:00 The Long View (m000xd1t)
Air Hijacking
After a plane carrying a Belarussian dissident was recently hijacked Jonathan Freedland examines a similar incident 50 years ago when a British plane was forced to land in Libya.
Victor Mallet was an 11 year old boy flying to the Sudanese capital Khartoum to join his parents when the BOAC plane he was travelling on was forcibly landed by Libyan authorities in July 1971. Sudanese dissidents involved in a recently successful coup were ordered off the plane by Colonel Gaddafi's forces and were later executed. An international furore was triggered by this violation of international air regulations putting a passenger plane in danger. The story bears a remarkable resemblance to that of the Ryan Air plane forced to land in Belarus and where the dissident journalist Roman Protasevich was seized by the authorities.
Victor joins Jonathan to explore the Long View of air hijacking.
Producer Neil McCarthy
TUE 09:30 A Show of Hands (m000xd1w)
Communication
We use our hands to explore the world around us; to manipulate and change it; to communicate; to signify aggression, submission or gratitude; to comfort or arouse; to make music, craft and create. We point, punch, tweak and text. We ball our fists, spread our palms, give someone the thumbs up and close our hands in prayer.
More than anything else, is it our hands which make us human?
This series considers the human hand from five different angles: manipulation, creativity, gesture, communication and touch. In each programme we hear from people who have a very particular perspective on hands and the way we use them, including a surgeon, a massage therapist, a harpist, a blacksmith and the recipient of a hand transplant. Each of them takes a long look at their own hands, describes what they see and considers the relationship with the world which their hands give them.
As we encounter healing hands, steady hands, talking hands, holding hands and the laying-on of hands we come to understand just how much our hands identify and define us.
Today we explore the ways we use our hands in communication. Hand gestures are a key part of the sign languages used by Deaf people. British Sign Language is as complex as spoken English, with its own grammar and syntax. Dr. Robert Adam, head of BSL at Heriot Watt University, considers how Deaf people learn fluency and ‘diction’ with their hands to create clear, unambiguous communication.
Clear, unambiguous communication is also essential for soldiers. For infantry in combat or observing radio silence, hands are a vital tool. Former Royal Marine Gary Mapletoft talks through the hand signals infantry use in the field to signal information about patrol formations, enemy positions and ambushes. He also reflects on the many other ways a soldier’s hands are used – from handling a weapon in extreme weather conditions to 'knife hands' – a way of pointing which is characteristic of many ex-infantry soldiers.
And, of course, every time we speak we all use our hands, whether it’s the unconscious signals of everyday conversation or the carefully thought-out gestures of actors or public speakers like politicians. Body language expert Allan Pease analyses what we’re saying about ourselves when we gesture with our hands.
Producer: Jeremy Grange
Photograph courtesy of Tim Booth
TUE 09:45 Unfollow by Megan Phelps-Roper (m000xd2s)
Episode 2: Something Is Wrong
Megan Phelps-Roper reads from her brutally frank memoir about growing up in the fire-and-brimstone Westboro Baptist Church - often called 'the most hated family in America' - and how she came to question its doctrine of hate.
Megan Phelps-Roper was raised in Topeka, Kansas in the Westboro Baptist Church – the religious sect aggressive in its homophobia and antisemitism, and notorious for picketing the funerals of American soldiers. From the age of five Megan was protesting daily, believing that she was doing God's work. But, aged 26, she came to a realisation: Westboro’s teachings were a lie and she must leave, turn her back on her family, her church — her entire world - and start over.
In this episode, Megan is now a teenager and Westboro's protesting activities are gathering momentum. For the first time Megan senses that something is very wrong.
Abridged by Sara Davies
Produced by Elizabeth Allard
TUE 10:00 Woman's Hour (m000xd20)
Women's voices and women's lives - topical conversations to inform, challenge and inspire.
TUE 11:00 Lost for Words (m000xf0l)
Struggling to find words might be one of the first things we notice when someone develops dementia, while more advanced speech loss can make it really challenging to communicate with loved ones. And understanding what’s behind these changes may help us overcome communication barriers when caring for someone living with the condition.
When Ebrahim developed Alzheimer’s Disease, for example, he’d been living in the UK for many years. Gradually his fluent English faded and he reverted to his mother tongue, Farsi - which made things tricky for his English-speaking family who were caring for him. Two decades on, his son, the journalist and author David Shariatmadari, seeks answers to his father’s experience of language loss. What can neuroscience reveal about dementia, ageing, and language changes? Why are some aspects of language more vulnerable than others - and, importantly, what are the best approaches to communicating with someone living with dementia?
David reflects on archive recordings of his dad, and speaks to a family in a similar situation to theirs, to compare the ways they tried to keep communication alive. And he discovers there are actually clear benefits to bilingualism when it comes to dementia: juggling two or more languages can delay the onset of symptoms by around four years. So while losing one of his languages posed practical difficulties for Ebrahim, it’s possible that by speaking two languages in the first place, he was able to spend more valuable lucid years with his family.
Presented by David Shariatmadari and produced by Cathy Edwards
TUE 11:30 Guide Books (m000xf0n)
On Nature with Helen Macdonald and Melissa Harrison
A new series about how books might help us navigate everyday life, presented by writer and broadcaster Damian Barr.
Each episode takes a life experience - such as grief - and talks to writers about they handle it through their own reading, writing and lived experience. We explore the fiction, non-fiction, memoir and poetry that might help us better understand our own stories.
This week - how can we deepen our engagement with the natural world around us? Many of us experienced a shift in our relationship with nature during the pandemic; how can we stay tuned in to nature, and keep looking with fresh eyes, as the world grows busier once more? Damian is joined by Helen Macdonald (Vesper Flights; H is for Hawk) and Melissa Harrison (The Stubborn Light of Things; By Ash, Oak and Thorn; All Among the Barley) to talk about the poetry, field guides and fiction that have guided them.
Produced by Mair Bosworth for BBC Audio in Bristol
TUE 12:00 News Summary (m000xf0q)
National and international news from BBC Radio 4
TUE 12:04 Zennor in Darkness by Helen Dunmore (m000xd2j)
Episode 7
Helen Dunmore’s prize-winning first novel is set in the late spring, early summer of 1917. War haunts the Cornish coast and ships are being sunk by U-boats, strangers are treated with suspicion, and newspapers are full of spy stories.
Into this uneasy landscape, to a hamlet just outside St Ives, come DH Lawrence and his German wife, Frieda. They are hoping to escape the war-fever that grips London and also to live as cheaply as possible in a rented cottage. The pacifist Lawrence is reeling from his latest novel, The Rainbow, having been banned for obscenity, and is struggling to finish and publish its sequel, Women in Love.
They befriend Clare Coyne, a young artist who has lived alone with her father since her mother died when she was a child.
Written by Helen Dunmore
Read by Louise Brealey
Abridged by Jill Waters and Isobel Creed
Produced by Lizzie Davies
A Waters Company production for BBC Radio 4
TUE 12:18 You and Yours (m000xf0s)
News and discussion of consumer affairs
TUE 12:57 Weather (m000xf0v)
The latest weather forecast
TUE 13:00 World at One (m000xf0x)
Forty-five minutes of news, analysis and comment, with Sarah Montague.
TUE 13:45 The Kindness Experiment (m000xf0z)
James and Granny Eves
In this episode James who works in construction admits he was unkind to a woman who was shouting at him in the street. He regrets shouting back at her but says that people get what they give. But then his conversation with Ella in the corner shop in St Werburghs is interrupted by the same woman who barges past angry and distressed. What happens when Ella and James intervene to try and make amends?
Presenter: Ella Scotland Waters
Producer: Maggie Ayre
With Professor Bruce Hood of the School of Psychological Science at the University of Bristol
TUE 14:00 The Archers (m000xdyb)
[Repeat of broadcast at
19:00 on Monday]
TUE 14:15 Takeover (m000xf11)
Episode 2
High-stake deals and sibling rivalry set in the world of the super wealthy Business titan Ravi Majumdar brings his four privileged children back to India so that they may see first-hand where he came from and he can decide which one of them could be his successor. But there are others making a bid for the Majumdar empire - Ravi’s companion and “spiritual guide” Seraphina, and Amit their ambitious Indian cousin.
A fast-paced, globe-trotting story of power, addiction, revenge and karma with helicopters, private jets and a tiger reserve. Starring Rajit Kapur.
Recorded both in the UK and in India.
Cast:
Ravi Majumdar...... Rajit Kapur
Ash......Abhin Galeya
Maya......Amrita Acharia
Zara......Munirih Grace
Shaan......Danny Ashok
Amit......Tavish Bhattacharyya
Ian......Finbar Lynch
Seraphina......Jennifer Armour
Jai......Vincent Ebrahim
Karan......Zafar Karachiwala
Jeet......Ronny Jhutti
Sharma......Neil D’Souza
All other parts were played by:
Ash Hunter,
Philip Desmeules,
Natalie Simpson,
Lola Ogunyemi,
Aseem Hattangady,
Ayeesha Menon,
Emma Carter
Nadir Khan
With original music by Sacha Puttnam
Written by Ayeesha Menon and Matthew Solon
Sound Design by Eloise Whitmore
Sound recording by Paul Clark, Ashyar Bulsara and Ayush Ahuja
Assistant Producer, Eleanor Mein
Production Assistant, Anna Calandra
Produced by Emma Hearn and Nadir Khan
Director and Executive Producer, John Scott Dryden
A Goldhawk production for BBC Radio 4
TUE 15:00 Short Cuts (m0001hwm)
Series 17
Seasons
Josie Long presents new short documentaries and audio adventures tied to the changing of the seasons.
Laura Barton offers an ode to the sticky heat of summer, we hear the beat of hummingbird wings in autumn and a love story tied to cold British winters and Colombia's 'spring city'.
On Music Overheard
Produced by Phil Smith
Heat
Featuring Laura Barton
Tiny Jalopy
Produced by Michelle Macklem
Olga
Produced by Phil Smith
Series Producer: Eleanor McDowall,
A Falling Tree Production for BBC Radio 4 first broadcast in December 2018.
TUE 15:30 Made of Stronger Stuff (p0957q54)
The Eyes
Psychologist Kimberley Wilson and Dr Xand van Tulleken take a journey around the human body, to find out what it can tell us about our innate capacity for change.
In episode one, Kimberley and Xand take a closer look at the peepers, the mince pies… the eyes! They discover why we don’t always see reality, experience the power of sensory illusions, and hear the amazing story of Jason Esterhuizen, whose sight has been partially restored with the help of a brain implant.
Producer: Dan Hardoon
Executive Producer: Kate Holland
A Whistledown Production for BBC Radio 4
TUE 16:00 Cultural Exchange: Bristol (m000sqss)
Radio 4 documentary.
TUE 16:30 A Good Read (m000xf13)
Yanis Varoufakis and Patrick McGrath
The Greek politician Yanis Varoufakis chooses Margaret Atwood's treatise on debt - Payback: Debt & The Shadow Side of Wealth as his go to book for students of economics. It examines money lending throughout the ages and how it has been portrayed in classic literature.
Patrick McGrath's choice is a novel by Nigel Balchain set during the London Blitz: Darkness Falls From The Air which he loves for its humour and for its stoic main character Bill Sarratt, a civil servant whose attempts to get anything done are thwarted by bureaucracy. Yanis describes Bill as a 'Sir Humphrey' from Yes Minister character and was unexpectedly delighted to discover the novel.
Harriett's choice is by Kiley Reid: a smart look at race politics in the USA through the story of a young black nanny and her white employer, white boyfriend and black friends. Such A Fun Age was longlisted for the Booker Prize in 2020.
Producer: Maggie Ayre
TUE 17:00 PM (m000xf15)
Afternoon news and current affairs programme, reporting on breaking stories and summing up the day's headlines.
TUE 18:00 Six O'Clock News (m000xf17)
The latest national and international news from BBC Radio 4.
TUE 18:30 Ed Reardon's Week (m000xf19)
Series 14
Battleaxe
Episode 4: Battleaxe
Ed is introduced to Ping’s granny, Lady Ruddington, who has recently made her maiden speech in the House of Lords highlighting the plight of the mole. Ping is convinced that her granny has great British Battleaxe potential so enlists Ed’s skills to produce Lady R’s memoirs. Thus, Ed is handed a plastic carrier bag containing granny’s thoughts and observations, and all he needs to do is “pull it all together”.
Cast list ep 4
Ed Reardon………..Christopher Douglas
Ping…………….……..Barunka O’Shaughnessy
Maggie……………….Pippa Haywood
Granny……………….Maggie Steed
Olive…………………..Stephanie Cole
Pearl…………………..Brigit Forsyth
Stan……………………Geoffrey Whitehead
Newsreader/TV host….Nicola Sanderson
Written by Andrew Nickolds and Christopher Douglas
Produced by Dawn Ellis
Production Co-ordinator: Cherlynn Andrew-Wilfred
Sound Recordist and Editor: David Thomas
A BBC Studios Production
TUE 19:00 The Archers (m000xd24)
Rex offers a shoulder and Freddie comes to the rescue.
TUE 19:15 Front Row (m000xd26)
Live magazine programme on the worlds of arts, literature, film, media and music
TUE 19:45 Two Minutes Past Nine (m000mt16)
Episode 2: The First April 19th
25 years on from the largest domestic terror incident in American history, journalist Leah Sottile works to understand what made Timothy McVeigh the home-grown terrorist he was – and how that informs what’s unfolding today.
In episode 2, April 19th 1775 was the day the American Revolution began. And, in some ways, the story of the Oklahoma City Bombing started that day too, 220 years before Timothy Mcveigh steered the yellow Ryder truck into Oklahoma City.
Recorded over some of the most divisive, turbulent, and quite frankly dangerous feeling months in recent American political history, Two Minutes Past Nine aims to understand the changing face of far right extremism in all its chaos and conspiracism.
Presenter: Leah Sottile
Producer: Georgia Catt
Editor: Philip Sellars
Narration recorded by Joe Preston
Additional Research by Robbie Wojciechowski
TUE 20:00 File on 4 (m000xd28)
A Death Sentence?
A death sentence? The inmates dying after poor prison healthcare.
More prisoners are dying in jail – even after you account for the growing - and ageing -prison population. Many of those found to be so-called ‘natural cause deaths’ are relatively young: more than a third are aged between 35 and 54.
Those who’ve been behind bars a short time are at greatest risk…with health records often not consulted and vital medication delayed, sometimes for months.
File on 4 investigates cases where failings in the prison healthcare system contributed to the deaths of inmates – all aged under 50. Their deaths followed basic, shocking, errors: unopened medical records, hospital appointments missed, prisoners not given vital medication - or given the wrong medication that made their condition worse. Prisoners who became gravely ill accused of ‘faking it’.
The programme hears from the family of prisoners, a prison health worker who’s concerned about a lack of resources and the impact of measures to contain Covid. And from experts who say recommendations made time and time again following avoidable deaths simply aren’t being implemented – putting more prisoners at risk in the future.
Reporter: Jane Deith
Producer: Ben Robinson
Editor: Nicola Addyman
TUE 20:40 In Touch (m000xd2b)
News, views and information for people who are blind or partially sighted
TUE 21:00 All in the Mind (m000xd2d)
Programme exploring the limits and potential of the human mind. Producer: Deborah Cohen.
TUE 21:30 The Long View (m000xd1t)
[Repeat of broadcast at
09:00 today]
TUE 22:00 The World Tonight (m000xd2g)
In depth reporting, intelligent analysis and breaking news from a global perspective
TUE 22:45 Zennor in Darkness by Helen Dunmore (m000xd2j)
[Repeat of broadcast at
12:04 today]
TUE 23:00 Fortunately... with Fi and Jane (m000xd2l)
195. You'll Never Catch the Death Stare, with Reeta Chakrabarti
This week on Fortunately, Fi and Jane speak to Reeta Chakrabarti. The leading BBC Newsreader talks them through some celebrity mastermind tips, how to fill for time on air, memories of the moon landing and Jane takes credit for Reeta's career. Earlier on there's a surprising new crush and the pancake report from Atlanta 1996 Olympic Games.
Get in touch: fortunately.podcast@bbc.co.uk
TUE 23:30 Today in Parliament (m000xd2n)
News, views and features on today's stories in Parliament
WEDNESDAY 30 JUNE 2021
WED 00:00 Midnight News (m000xd2q)
The latest news and weather forecast from BBC Radio 4.
WED 00:30 Unfollow by Megan Phelps-Roper (m000xd2s)
[Repeat of broadcast at
09:45 on Tuesday]
WED 00:48 Shipping Forecast (m000xd2w)
The latest weather reports and forecasts for UK shipping.
WED 01:00 Selection of BBC World Service Programmes (m000xd2y)
BBC Radio 4 presents a selection of news and current affairs, arts and science programmes from the BBC World Service.
WED 05:20 Shipping Forecast (m000xd30)
The latest weather reports and forecasts for UK shipping.
WED 05:30 News Briefing (m000xd32)
The latest news from BBC Radio 4
WED 05:43 Prayer for the Day (m000xd34)
Spiritual reflection to start the day with the Rev Dr Lezley Stewart of the Church of Scotland.
WED 05:45 Farming Today (m000xd36)
The latest news about food, farming and the countryside.
WED 05:58 Tweet of the Day (b04hkypv)
Echo Parakeet
Tweet of the Day is the voice of birds and our relationship with them, from around the world.
Miranda Krestovnikoff presents the echo parakeet found only in Mauritius, a bird which has brushed extinction by its wingtips. This once familiar bird of the island of Mauritius will only nest in large trees with suitable holes, few of which remain after widespread deforestation on the island. A close relative of the more adaptable ring necked parakeet found now across southern Britain where it's been introduced, by the 1980's the wild population of echo parakeets numbered around ten birds. Threatened with extinction in the wild, captive breeding and successful releases into the wild have stabilised the population to about three hundred birds.
WED 06:00 Today (m000xdpg)
News and current affairs, including Sports Desk, Weather and Thought for the Day.
WED 09:00 More or Less (m000xdpj)
Tim Harford explains the numbers and statistics used in everyday life
WED 09:30 Four Thought (m000xdpl)
Mums in Prison
Dr Shona Minson argues that we shouldn't punish children if their parents go to prison.
Years ago, as a barrister specialising in care cases, Shona was familiar with the Children Act, and in particular its central principle: that the child's best interests are the paramount consideration of the court. And so when she was asked to write about what happened to children when their mums were imprisoned, she assumed something similar would apply, or at least that she could find some research about what happened to them. She was shocked to find almost nothing, and even more shocked when she started doing the research herself.
In this talk she describes some the change she believes is needed - from major institutions thinking properly about the problem, to the judgement children face from their schoolmates' parents, and how she works with judges and other criminal justice professionals to achieve it.
Shona is introduced by host Olly Mann.
Producer: Giles Edwards
WED 09:45 Unfollow by Megan Phelps-Roper (m000xdpn)
Episode 3: Ungodly Affection
Megan Phelps-Roper reads from her brutally frank memoir about growing up in the Westboro Baptist Church - often called 'the most hated family in America' – the religious sect aggressive in its homophobia and antisemitism, and notorious for picketing the funerals of American soldiers.
From the age of five Megan was protesting daily, believing that she was doing God's work. Aged 26, however, she came to a realisation: Westboro’s teachings were a monstrous lie and she must leave, turn her back on her family, her church — her entire world - and start over.
Today: through social media, Megan gets a glimpse of life beyond Westboro’s fire-and-brimstone confines...
Abridged by Sara Davies
Produced by Elizabeth Allard
WED 10:00 Woman's Hour (m000xdpq)
Women's voices and women's lives - topical conversations to inform, challenge and inspire.
WED 11:00 Mitchell on Meetings (m000tdy8)
Double Zoom
Technology makes it easier to hold a meeting than ever before. No-one needs to leave home. David Mitchell thinks it's all spinning out of control and wants to know what we can do about it. He visits a council Zoom meeting in Cheshire (not that one); he picks the brains of Imperial College Business School meetings expert Sankalp Chaturvedi, and hears from the former Leader of the House of Commons, Sir David Lidington.
Producer: Chris Ledgard
WED 11:30 Mark Steel's in Town (b09l068v)
Series 8
Ventnor
Mark Steel visits Ventnor on The Isle of Wight and performs at the Winter Gardens, the venue of his first ever gig when he got up and told some jokes in a talent contest on a childhood holiday.
Ventor has a microclimate, subsidence, and the residents claim that on some days they can see France reflected upside down in the sky.
Mark concludes the 8th series of his award winning show that travels around the country visiting towns that have nothing in common but their uniqueness. After thoroughly researching each town, Mark writes and performs a bespoke evening of comedy for the local residents.
Written and performed by ... Mark Steel
Additional material by ... Pete Sinclair
Production co-ordinator ... Hayley Sterling
Sound Manager ... Jerry Peal
Producer ... Carl Cooper
Picture Credit ... Tom Stanier
A BBC Studio production for BBC Radio 4 first broadcast in January 2018.
WED 12:00 News Summary (m000xdps)
National and international news from BBC Radio 4
WED 12:04 Zennor in Darkness by Helen Dunmore (m000xdpv)
Episode 8
Helen Dunmore’s prize-winning first novel is set in the late spring, early summer of 1917. War haunts the Cornish coast and ships are being sunk by U-boats, strangers are treated with suspicion, and newspapers are full of spy stories.
Into this uneasy landscape, to a hamlet just outside St Ives, come DH Lawrence and his German wife, Frieda. They are hoping to escape the war-fever that grips London and also to live as cheaply as possible in a rented cottage. The pacifist Lawrence is reeling from his latest novel, The Rainbow, having been banned for obscenity, and is struggling to finish and publish its sequel, Women in Love.
They befriend Clare Coyne, a young artist who has lived alone with her father since her mother died when she was a child.
Written by Helen Dunmore
Read by Louise Brealey
Abridged by Jill Waters and Isobel Creed
Produced by Lizzie Davies
A Waters Company production for BBC Radio 4
WED 12:18 You and Yours (m000xdpx)
News and discussion of consumer affairs
WED 12:57 Weather (m000xdpz)
The latest weather forecast
WED 13:00 World at One (m000xdq1)
Forty-five minutes of news, analysis and comment, with Sarah Montague.
WED 13:45 The Kindness Experiment (m000xdq3)
Random Acts
Today she meets Jill and challenges her to think about kindness and to do something kind for a stranger. The responses are mixed. Some people are wary of strangers offering them gifts sensing ulterior motives. Others don't believe that doing a random act of kindness for a stranger is genuine because we often don't know what people actually need. So it sets Ella and Jill thinking about how to overcome some of the barriers to being kind, and how to be kind to people who are not deserving and in some cases being hostile and aggressive. It leads to some interesting discussion about the complexities of being kind.
Professor Bruce Hood of the University of Bristol's School of Pyschological Science is on hand to guide us through the results of research that prove the benefits of kindness outweigh any obstacles.
Ella sets out to track down a young man who stopped to offer her kindness when she was in need. She's heard he works on a local building site and goes there in search of him.
Producer for BBC Audio Bristol: Maggie Ayre
WED 14:00 The Archers (m000xd24)
[Repeat of broadcast at
19:00 on Tuesday]
WED 14:15 Takeover (m000xdq6)
Episode 3
High-stake deals and sibling rivalry set in the world of the super wealthy. Billionaire Ravi Majumdar finds his business empire and family start to unravel as he single-mindedly tries to destroy his lifelong adversary. A drama on a grand scale, played out like a Shakespearean tragedy. Starring Rajit Kapur.
Recorded both in the UK and in India.
Cast:
Ravi Majumdar...... Rajit Kapur
Ash......Abhin Galeya
Maya......Amrita Acharia
Zara......Munirih Grace
Shaan......Danny Ashok
Amit......Tavish Bhattacharyya
Ian......Finbar Lynch
Seraphina......Jennifer Armour
Jai......Vincent Ebrahim
Karan......Zafar Karachiwala
Jeet......Ronny Jhutti
Venitia......Laurel Lefkow
All other parts were played by:
Ash Hunter
Philip Desmeules
Emma Carter
Natalie Simpson,
Lola Ogunyemi,
Aseem Hattangady,
Ayeesha Menon
Nadir Khan
With original music by Sacha Puttnam
Written by Ayeesha Menon and Matthew Solon
Sound Design by Eloise Whitmore
Sound recording by Paul Clark, Ashyar Bulsara and Ayush Ahuja
Assistant Producer, Eleanor Mein
Production Assistant, Anna Calandra
Produced by Emma Hearn and Nadir Khan
Director and Executive Producer, John Scott Dryden
A Goldhawk production for BBC Radio 4
WED 15:00 Money Box (m000xdq9)
Paul Lewis and a panel of guests answer calls on personal finance. Producer: Emma Rippon
WED 15:30 All in the Mind (m000xd2d)
[Repeat of broadcast at
21:00 on Tuesday]
WED 16:00 Sideways (m000xdqc)
Under the Influence
It's 1990 and Birmingham metal band Judas Priest are on trial in court in Reno, Nevada. The band are accused of influencing the suicide and suicide attempt of two of their young fans by placing subliminal messages in their track Better By You, Better Than Me.
What follows is a six week trial - the first to be filmed for Court TV - in which the lives of the boys’ families are devastatingly pulled apart in front of the cameras, junk science is flung around the courtroom. The band will have to prove their innocence, in a classic piece of courtroom theatre, by explaining the suspicious nonsense phrases found when they play their music backwards.
Matthew Syed tells the story of the case and examines the stubborn myth of mind control and hidden influences. From the fascination with subliminal messages in mid-century advertising, to self-help tapes in the 1980s and the fear for the minds of young YouTube fans falling asleep to strange sounds in order to wake up with glowing skin, Matthew considers the misconceptions about the way we’re influenced.
With David Van Taylor, filmmaker and director of Dream Deceivers: Heavy Metal on Trial; Timothy E. Moore, professor in the Department of Psychology, Glendon College, York University; and Hugo Mercier, research scientist at the CNRS Institut Jean Nicod, Paris.
BBC Action Line
If you or someone you know are experiencing emotional distress, help and support is available here: https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/articles/4WLs5NlwrySXJR2n8Snszdg/emotional-distress-information-and-support2
Presenter: Matthew Syed
Producer/Series Editor: Katherine Godfrey
Executive Producer: Max O'Brien
Music, Sound Design and Mix: Nicholas Alexander
Theme Music: Seventy Times Seven by Ioana Selaru
A Novel production for BBC Radio 4
WED 16:30 The Media Show (m000xdqf)
Social media, anti-social media, breaking news, faking news: this is the programme about a revolution in media.
WED 17:00 PM (m000xdqh)
Afternoon news and current affairs programme, reporting on breaking stories and summing up the day's headlines.
WED 18:00 Six O'Clock News (m000xdqk)
The latest national and international news from BBC Radio 4.
WED 18:30 Unite (m000xdqm)
Series 1
The Party and the Proposal
New sitcom series starring Radio 4 favourite Mark Steel (Mark Steel's in Town, The News Quiz), Claire Skinner (Outnumbered), Elliot Steel and Ivo Graham.
When Tony (Mark Steel), a working class, left wing South Londoner, falls in love and moves in with Imogen (Claire Skinner), an upper middle class property developer, their sons - disenfranchised Croydon rude boy Ashley (Elliot Steel) and Eton and Oxbridge-educated Gideon (Ivo Graham) - are forced to live under the same roof and behave like the brothers neither of them ever wanted.
In this episode, Tony takes Imogen away for a romantic weekend. Gideon and Ashley take the opportunity to have a party at the house, but Gideon's pet Bearded Dragon suddenly falls ill.
Tony - Mark Steel
Imogen - Claire Skinner
Ashley - Elliot Steel
Gideon - Ivo Graham
Rebecca - Ayesha Antoine
Nigel/Dutch waiter - Simon Greenall
Tamsin - Susannah Fielding
Sarah - Ruth Bratt
Terry the vet - Kevin Eldon
Kevin/Cab driver - Kae Kurd
Marcus/ Protester - Michael Odewale
Stefan/ Rose seller - Naz Osmanoglu
Gabriel - Milo McCabe
Written by Barry Castagnola, Elliot Steel and Mark Steel
(additional material from the cast and Sian Harries)
Executive Producer Mario Stylianides
Producer/Director Barry Castagnola
Sound recordist and Editor Jerry Peal
Broadcast Assistant Sarah Tombling
Production Co-ordinator George O'Regan
Golden Path and Rustle Up production for BBC Radio 4
WED 19:00 The Archers (m000xdqp)
Elizabeth receives a surprising visitor and Lily has a confession to make.
WED 19:15 Front Row (m000xdqr)
Live magazine programme on the worlds of arts, literature, film, media and music
WED 19:45 Two Minutes Past Nine (m000mr5k)
Episode 3: Manual of Hatred
25 years on from the largest domestic terror incident in American history, journalist Leah Sottile and producer Georgia Catt work to understand what made Timothy McVeigh the home-grown terrorist he was – and how that informs what’s unfolding today.
Episode 3: Leah Sottile explores the influence of a man considered America's most dangerous white nationalist on Timothy McVeigh.
As Leah and Georgia start recording the series in early 2020 the world changed: a global pandemic, calls for racial justice that rang out around the globe, conspiracy theories suddenly going mainstream. Reacting to events as they unfolded, Leah and Georgia didn’t realise quite how relevant and on point it would be to examine the Oklahoma City Bombing right now, at this exact moment in world history. As one journalist tells them: ‘McVeigh would have loved this’.
Recorded over some of the most divisive, turbulent, and quite frankly dangerous feeling months in recent American political history, Two Minutes Past Nine aims to understand the changing face of far right extremism in all its chaos and conspiracism.
Presenter: Leah Sottile
Producer: Georgia Catt
Editor: Philip Sellars
Narration recorded by Joe Preston
Additional Research by Robbie Wojciechowski
WED 20:00 Moral Maze (m000xdqt)
Combative, provocative and engaging live debate chaired by Michael Buerk. With Anne McElvoy, Mona Siddiqui, Matthew Taylor and Ella Whelan. #moralmaze
WED 20:45 Four Thought (m000xdpl)
[Repeat of broadcast at
09:30 today]
WED 21:00 Made of Stronger Stuff (p0957q54)
[Repeat of broadcast at
15:30 on Tuesday]
WED 21:30 The Media Show (m000xdqf)
[Repeat of broadcast at
16:30 today]
WED 22:00 The World Tonight (m000xdqx)
In depth reporting, intelligent analysis and breaking news from a global perspective
WED 22:45 Zennor in Darkness by Helen Dunmore (m000xdpv)
[Repeat of broadcast at
12:04 today]
WED 23:00 Heidi Regan: No Worries (m000xdqz)
Episode 1
As someone who tends to worry in 'normal' times, the pandemic has of course offered some exciting new areas of exploration for the anxious mind. Having a partner who is a GP has both helped and not helped Heidi with that: worrying about her being safe, but also, yay, on tap medical advice! That said, examining rashes of a loved one over dinner isn’t really the romance her partner signed up for. As Heidi and her partner ponder some of the big questions in life, Heidi's brain resorts, as it always does, to distracting them (and the audience) with increasingly silly jokes as she makes an argument for the pros and cons of joking your way through life.
In this episode she ponders whether repressing her worries is better than sharing them.
Written and performed by Heidi Regan.
With thanks to Nick Elleray
Production co-ordinator... Caroline Barlow.
Producer...Julia McKenzie
A BBC Studios Production
WED 23:15 The Skewer (m000xdr2)
Series 4
Episode 5
Returning to twist itself into - and remix - the news. Jon Holmes presents The Skewer.
WED 23:30 Today in Parliament (m000xdr4)
News, views and features on today's stories in Parliament
THURSDAY 01 JULY 2021
THU 00:00 Midnight News (m000xdr6)
The latest news and weather forecast from BBC Radio 4.
THU 00:30 Unfollow by Megan Phelps-Roper (m000xdpn)
[Repeat of broadcast at
09:45 on Wednesday]
THU 00:48 Shipping Forecast (m000xdr8)
The latest weather reports and forecasts for UK shipping.
THU 01:00 Selection of BBC World Service Programmes (m000xdrb)
BBC Radio 4 presents a selection of news and current affairs, arts and science programmes from the BBC World Service.
THU 05:20 Shipping Forecast (m000xdrd)
The latest weather reports and forecasts for UK shipping.
THU 05:30 News Briefing (m000xdrg)
The latest news from BBC Radio 4
THU 05:43 Prayer for the Day (m000xdrj)
Spiritual reflection to start the day with the Rev Dr Lezley Stewart of the Church of Scotland.
THU 05:45 Farming Today (m000xdrl)
The latest news about food, farming and the countryside.
THU 05:58 Tweet of the Day (b020vp4h)
Little Egret
Tweet of the Day is a series of fascinating stories about our British birds inspired by their calls and songs.
Miranda Krestovnikoff presents the Little Egret. The colonisation of the UK by these small brilliant-white herons with black bills and yellow feet, has astonished ornithologists because of its speed.
THU 06:00 Today (m000xfg9)
News and current affairs, including Sports Desk, Weather and Thought for the Day.
THU 09:00 Across the Red Line (m000xfgc)
Series 6
Has the centrist dad had his day?
Anne McElvoy presents the debate programme which invites two people who disagree on an issue to listen closely to each other's arguments - and then to find out what drives them.
In each edition, Anne works with one of our two regular conflict resolution specialists, Gabrielle Rifkind and Louisa Weinstein, to foster a more exploratory conversation, to encourage both speakers to probe the values and experiences that underpin each other's beliefs.
In the first edition of the new series, the journalists Daniel Finkelstein (the Times) and Mary Harrington (Unherd) debate whether, in an age of upheaval, political centrism is obsolete - or more vital than ever. And then Anne and Gabrielle invite each guest in turn to try to discover what drives the other's viewpoint - and to articulate it back to its holder.
Producer: Phil Tinline
THU 09:30 Metamorphosis - How Insects Transformed Our World (m000sqry)
Jumping Fleas
Dr Erica McAlister of London's Natural History Museum takes a look at some of the entomological pioneers, whose groundbreaking observations and experiments have led to some truly innovative developments.
She first sets out to examine the jump of the humble flea. Most flea legs average just 3mm and so, without much length, they really don’t have much time to generate energy to push off the ground. So how do these tiny insects achieve jumps of over 20cm? Dame Miriam Rothschild had a life-long fascination with these acrobatic insects. Through intricate dissections of the flea anatomy and innovative high speed filming, she claimed a flea’s jump was not just down to their muscles. Her insights, along with fellow entomologists, have led to discoveries of the most elastic substance in the natural world and a means of acceleration that is fuelling the development of innovative jumping micro robots.
Producer Adrian Washbourne
THU 09:45 Unfollow by Megan Phelps-Roper (m000xfgg)
Episode 4: A Moment of Clarity
Megan Phelps-Roper reads from her brutally frank memoir about growing up in the Westboro Baptist Church - often called 'the most hated family in America' – the religious sect aggressive in its homophobia and antisemitism, and notorious for picketing the funerals of American soldiers.
From the age of five Megan was protesting daily, believing that she was doing God's work. Aged 26, however, Megan came to a realisation: Westboro’s teachings were a monstrous lie and she must leave, turn her back on her family, her church — her entire world - and start over.
Today: Megan is forced to question everything that Westboro stands for - and makes the hardest decision of her life...
Abridged by Sara Davies
Produced by Elizabeth Allard
THU 10:00 Woman's Hour (m000xfgj)
Women's voices and women's lives - topical conversations to inform, challenge and inspire.
THU 11:00 From Our Own Correspondent (m000xfgl)
Insight, and analysis from BBC correspondents around the world
THU 11:30 Written in Scotland (m000xfgn)
Episode 2: Rural Scotland
A four-part series about the relationship that Scotland’s writers have with Scotland itself. Presented by Kirsty Wark. Episode 2 – Rural Scotland.
Scotland’s scenery is a huge part of its appeal, but how writers use the natural world is imbued with politics. Do you depict the countryside realistically or sentimentally and what are the implications of this?
Kirsty Wark hears how JM Barrie paved his way to success with Peter Pan by sentimentalising his rural upbringing for the popular entertainment of a very urban readership. She also hears about Màiri Mhòr, a hugely popular singer and poet, whose sentimental songs about her own past served a different and far more radical political purpose. More recently, Graeme Macrae Burnet's novel His Bloody Project has revealed the darker side of crofting life in contrast with its romantic image.
With the Highland setting of Outlander captivating audiences around the world, we meet Alasdair MacMhaighstir, (also known as Alexander MacDonald) a real life Jacobite soldier, the Gaelic tutor to Bonnie Prince Charlie and the author of poems which were so rude they were burnt in public by Edinburgh’s public executioner. Even Outlander’s Jamie Fraser would struggle to compete with him.
Producer: Brian McCluskey
A Whistledown Scotland production for BBC Radio 4
THU 12:00 News Summary (m000xfgq)
National and international news from BBC Radio 4
THU 12:04 Zennor in Darkness by Helen Dunmore (m000xfgs)
Episode 9
Helen Dunmore’s prize-winning first novel is set in the late spring, early summer of 1917. War haunts the Cornish coast and ships are being sunk by U-boats, strangers are treated with suspicion, and newspapers are full of spy stories.
Into this uneasy landscape, to a hamlet just outside St Ives, come DH Lawrence and his German wife, Frieda. They are hoping to escape the war-fever that grips London and also to live as cheaply as possible in a rented cottage. The pacifist Lawrence is reeling from his latest novel, The Rainbow, having been banned for obscenity, and is struggling to finish and publish its sequel, Women in Love.
They befriend Clare Coyne, a young artist who has lived alone with her father since her mother died when she was a child.
Written by Helen Dunmore
Read by Louise Brealey
Abridged by Jill Waters and Isobel Creed
Produced by Lizzie Davies
A Waters Company production for BBC Radio 4
THU 12:18 You and Yours (m000xfgv)
News and discussion of consumer affairs
THU 12:57 Weather (m000xfgx)
The latest weather forecast
THU 13:00 World at One (m000xfgz)
Forty-five minutes of news, analysis and comment, with Sarah Montague.
THU 13:45 The Kindness Experiment (m000xfh1)
Good Samaritans
Has the pandemic made us kinder? Many people report an increased feeling of connection and kindness towards the people in their neighbourhoods since we began to be locked down last year. Today Ella meets Simon and Sarah who've become friends over the last year. Architect Simon signed up as an NHS Volunteer last Spring and has been shopping and collecting medication for Sarah who has been shielding. Simon says he has been surrounded by kindness all of his life so it's instinctive for him to want to be kind to others. He's less keen on being labelled 'kind' though but admits that helping other people enriches his life. Could he be an example of the concept of eudemonia, the Ancient Greek idea of living well through altruism?
Earlier in the week Ella set out to find a young man who'd stopped for her when she was upset in a park. She wants to repay his kindness. She remembers he said he worked on a building site so she goes there to thank him and to talk to him about kindness
Producer: Maggie Ayre for BBC Audio, Bristol
THU 14:00 The Archers (m000xdqp)
[Repeat of broadcast at
19:00 on Wednesday]
THU 14:15 Takeover (m000xfh3)
Episode 4
Billionaire Ravi Majumdar finds his business empire and family starting to unravel as he single-mindedly tries to destroy his lifelong adversary. Concerned for their inheritance, his four children, Ash, Zara, Shaan and Maya, join forces to finally see off their rival to the Majumdar empire, their Indian cousin Amit.
A drama on a grand scale, played out like a Shakespearean tragedy. Starring Rajit Kapur.
Recorded both in the UK and in India.
Cast:
Ravi Majumdar...... Rajit Kapur
Ash......Abhin Galeya
Maya......Amrita Acharia
Zara......Munirih Grace
Shaan......Danny Ashok
Amit......Tavish Bhattacharyya
Ian......Finbar Lynch
Seraphina......Jennifer Armour
Jai......Vincent Ebrahim
Sharma......Neil D'Souza
Jeet......Ronny Jhutti
John Myson.....Ash Hunter
Ben......Philip Desmeules
Beth Mitchell......Natalie Simpson
All other parts were played by:
Emma Carter
Lola Ogunyemi,
Aseem Hattangady,
Ayeesha Menon,
Nadir Khan
With original music by Sacha Puttnam
Written by Ayeesha Menon and Matthew Solon
Sound Design by Eloise Whitmore
Sound recording by Paul Clark, Ashyar Bulsara and Ayush Ahuja
Assistant Producer, Eleanor Mein
Production Assistant, Anna Calandra
Produced by Emma Hearn and Nadir Khan
Director and Executive Producer, John Scott Dryden
A Goldhawk production for BBC Radio 4
THU 15:00 Open Country (m000xfh5)
Rare British breeds and their owners
Lincoln Longwools, Dorset Horns, Chillingham wild cattle and Gloucester Old Spot pigs – photographer Amanda Lockhart has been travelling the country looking for rare British breeds. She has approximately 200 markers on her map and is slowly ticking them off. We catch up with her on a very hot day looking for Large Black pigs.
With contributions from Liz and Cameron from Edington Pigs; plus Annabelle and Jonathan Crump who own Gloucester cows.
Presented by Helen Mark
Produced by Miles Warde
THU 15:27 Radio 4 Appeal (m000xdry)
[Repeat of broadcast at
07:54 on Sunday]
THU 15:30 Open Book (m000xdsv)
[Repeat of broadcast at
16:00 on Sunday]
THU 16:00 The Film Programme (m000xfh7)
Film programme looking at the latest cinema releases, DVDs and films on TV.
THU 16:30 BBC Inside Science (m000xfh9)
A weekly programme that illuminates the mysteries and challenges the controversies behind the science that's changing our world.
THU 17:00 PM (m000xfhc)
Afternoon news and current affairs programme, reporting on breaking stories and summing up the day's headlines.
THU 18:00 Six O'Clock News (m000xfhf)
The latest national and international news from BBC Radio 4.
THU 18:30 Sarah Kendall: Talking Story (m000xfhh)
Episode 3
Sarah Kendall talks to fellow storytellers about storytelling
THU 19:00 The Archers (m000xfhk)
Writer, Naylah Ahmed
Director, Julie Beckett
Editor, Jeremy Howe
Elizabeth Pargetter … Alison Dowling
Freddie Pargetter … Toby Laurence
Lily Pargetter … Katie Redford
Russ Jones … Andonis James Anthony
Rex Fairbrother … Nick Barber
Vince Casey … Tony Turner
Mrs Casey … Susan Jameson
Paul … Nick Barber
Sol … Luke Nunn
THU 19:15 Front Row (m000xfhm)
Live magazine programme on the worlds of arts, literature, film, media and music
THU 19:45 Two Minutes Past Nine (m000mqp0)
Episode 4: Don't Tread on Me
25 years on from the largest domestic terror incident in American history, journalist Leah Sottile and producer Georgia Catt work to understand what made Timothy McVeigh the home-grown terrorist he was – and how that informs what’s unfolding today.
Episode 4: After he left the army, Timothy Mveigh became steeped in gun shows, conspiracies and government distrust. Leah Sottile investigates that world.
As Leah and Georgia start recording the series in early 2020 the world changed: a global pandemic, calls for racial justice that rang out around the globe, conspiracy theories suddenly going mainstream. Reacting to events as they unfolded, Leah and Georgia didn’t realise quite how relevant and on point it would be to examine the Oklahoma City Bombing right now, at this exact moment in world history. As one journalist tells them: ‘McVeigh would have loved this’.
Recorded over some of the most divisive, turbulent, and quite frankly dangerous feeling months in recent American political history, Two Minutes Past Nine aims to understand the changing face of far right extremism in all its chaos and conspiracism.
Presenter: Leah Sottile
Producer: Georgia Catt
Editor: Philip Sellars
Narration recorded by Joe Preston
Additional Research by Robbie Wojciechowski
THU 20:00 The Briefing Room (m000xfhp)
David Aaronovitch presents in-depth explainers on big issues in the news.
THU 20:30 The Bottom Line (m000xfhr)
Evan Davis chairs a discussion providing insight into business from the people at the top.
THU 21:00 BBC Inside Science (m000xfh9)
[Repeat of broadcast at
16:30 today]
THU 21:30 Across the Red Line (m000xfgc)
[Repeat of broadcast at
09:00 today]
THU 22:00 The World Tonight (m000xfht)
In depth reporting, intelligent analysis and breaking news from a global perspective
THU 22:45 Zennor in Darkness by Helen Dunmore (m000xfgs)
[Repeat of broadcast at
12:04 today]
THU 23:00 Extinction Compendium (m000xfr3)
In a new show produced by Jon Holmes, Comedian (and actual council Waste Education Officer) Jon Long and Biologist Gillian Burke take on green issues in this fast paced new enviro-comedy.
The topic - Plastic. Scourge of the planet, or synthetic scapegoat?
Featuring sketches, songs, and expert interviews. Tonnes of questions, and even one or two answers.
Producer: Jon Holmes
An unusual production for BBC Radio 4
THU 23:30 Today in Parliament (m000xfhw)
News, views and features on today's stories in Parliament
FRIDAY 02 JULY 2021
FRI 00:00 Midnight News (m000xfhy)
The latest news and weather forecast from BBC Radio 4.
FRI 00:30 Unfollow by Megan Phelps-Roper (m000xfgg)
[Repeat of broadcast at
09:45 on Thursday]
FRI 00:48 Shipping Forecast (m000xfj0)
The latest weather reports and forecasts for UK shipping.
FRI 01:00 Selection of BBC World Service Programmes (m000xfj2)
BBC Radio 4 presents a selection of news and current affairs, arts and science programmes from the BBC World Service.
FRI 05:20 Shipping Forecast (m000xfj4)
The latest weather reports and forecasts for UK shipping.
FRI 05:30 News Briefing (m000xfj6)
The latest news from BBC Radio 4
FRI 05:43 Prayer for the Day (m000xfj8)
Spiritual reflection to start the day with the Rev Dr Lezley Stewart of the Church of Scotland.
FRI 05:45 Farming Today (m000xfjb)
The latest news about food, farming and the countryside.
FRI 05:58 Tweet of the Day (b04mlvyx)
Flightless Cormorant
Tweet of the Day is the voice of birds and our relationship with them, from around the world.
Chris Packham presents the flightless cormorant adapted to its Galapagos world. The isolated Galapagos Islands are famous for their unique wildlife which has evolved to adapt to a landscape free of predators. This absence of predators has allowed the native cormorant to dispense with the need to fly, why waste energy when there's nothing to fly away from? This is the only flightless member of the cormorant family, which feeds on fish and for that reason it has developed stronger feet for swimming after its prey. They nest on the rocky coasts of Fernandina and Isabela islands and the population can dip below a thousand birds especially after hurricanes or collapses in local fish numbers. They recover quickly though, but are vulnerable to introduced dogs which nearly eliminated the cormorants on Isabela Island.
FRI 06:00 Today (m000xfzt)
News and current affairs, including Sports Desk, Weather and Thought for the Day.
FRI 09:00 Desert Island Discs (m000xdsd)
[Repeat of broadcast at
11:00 on Sunday]
FRI 09:45 Unfollow by Megan Phelps-Roper (m000xg24)
Episode 5: Deadwood
Megan Phelps-Roper reads from her brutally frank memoir about growing up in the Westboro Baptist Church - often called 'the most hated family in America' – the religious sect aggressive in its homophobia and antisemitism, and notorious for picketing the funerals of American soldiers.
From the age of five Megan was protesting daily, believing that she was doing God's work. Aged 26, however, Megan came to a realisation: Westboro’s teachings were a monstrous lie and she must leave, turn her back on her family, her church — her entire world - and start over.
Today: a daring escape for Megan and her sister, and new beginnings...
Abridged by Sara Davies
Produced by Elizabeth Allard
FRI 10:00 Woman's Hour (m000xg00)
Women's voices and women's lives - topical conversations to inform, challenge and inspire.
FRI 11:00 Descendants (p09jjsq5)
Chidi, Than and The Bolton School
Narrated by Yrsa Daley-Ward, the poet and writer introduces us to a network of lives, each one connected in one way or another through the legacy of Britain's role in slavery.
Chidi grew up in London, and learned at an early age that he was descended from a late 19th Century Nigerian slave trader called Nwaubani Ogogo. He describes how he came to terms with this and the impact racial stereotyping has had on his life, while his history takes us back in time to a moment in the aftermath of the abolition of slavery, when his ancestor still had a license to trade enslaved people. The rush for Africa was beginning; Britain had turned its attention from the slave trade to palm oil. Nwaubani traded both, and was licensed to a British Corporation.
British businesspeople were desperate to gain access to the palm oil which Nwaubani sold. One man in the North West of England had been trying to strike deals in Nigeria - he wanted to be able to control production and prices himself - and his company would eventually buy the corporation which was licensing Nwaubani. But in the meantime, he turned his attention to the Belgian Congo where King Leopold offered him everything he wanted. The man's name was William Lever - whose company, the Lever Brothers, would eventually become Unilever. Famous across the North of England for his philanthropic endeavours, students and alumni at the school re-founded by him - The Bolton School - are just coming to terms with his legacy. Not technically slavery, but not free labour either.
Producers: Polly Weston, Candace Wilson, Rema Mukena
Editor: Kirsten Lass
Academic consultants: Matthew Smith and Rachel Lang of the Centre for the Study of the Legacies of British Slavery at UCL
Additional genealogical research by Laura Berry
FRI 11:30 Prepper (m000xg03)
Series 2
Queen of the North
Preppers are a large and rapidly growing global community who have taken Armageddon readiness one step further than most. They’re actively skilling up, laying down supplies and readying themselves for ‘the end of the world’, in whatever form it comes. If people in south Manchester are prepping, it’s probably time to worry.
Sylvia Garrett, a cut-throat shop-managing baby boomer, and 27 year old Rachel Olende, self-obsessed and having a quarter-life crisis, continue their podcast for anyone interested in surviving the coming breakdown of society - Prepper.
This week on Prepper, the only podcast that Bear Grylls listens to in the bath, an in-depth examination of the dating scene post-apocalypse, the ups and downs of Faraday Cages - will a tin foil hat suffice? - and a peep inside Sylvia's "bag of pain". All this and Rachel's report into the menace of fly-tipping and its impact on the South Manchester lapwing community.
The first series of Prepper won the Writers Guild of Great Britain Award for Best Comedy 2020.
On this new series: "A comic book and kitchen sink drama" - The Radio Times; "A timely return for the sharply written comedy" - The Guardian; "As enjoyably unhinged as the first series" - Daily Mail.
In this series, while Sylvia continues to broadcast from her well-appointed double garage in south Manchester, Rachel is banished to a duvet-lined gazebo in the garden. It's secure against COVID but, sadly, not against the rain.
Cast:
Sylvia is played by Sue Johnston OBE
Rachel is played by Lydia West
Written by Caroline Moran
Technical Presentation: Jerry Peal
Producer: Steve Doherty
A Giddy Goat production for BBC Radio 4
FRI 12:00 News Summary (m000xg2j)
National and international news from BBC Radio 4
FRI 12:04 Zennor in Darkness by Helen Dunmore (m000xg07)
Episode 10
Helen Dunmore’s prize-winning first novel is set in the late spring, early summer of 1917. War haunts the Cornish coast and ships are being sunk by U-boats, strangers are treated with suspicion, and newspapers are full of spy stories.
Into this uneasy landscape, to a hamlet just outside St Ives, come DH Lawrence and his German wife, Frieda. They are hoping to escape the war-fever that grips London and also to live as cheaply as possible in a rented cottage. The pacifist Lawrence is reeling from his latest novel, The Rainbow, having been banned for obscenity, and is struggling to finish and publish its sequel, Women in Love.
They befriend Clare Coyne, a young artist who has lived alone with her father since her mother died when she was a child.
Written by Helen Dunmore
Read by Louise Brealey
Abridged by Jill Waters and Isobel Creed
Produced by Lizzie Davies
A Waters Company production for BBC Radio 4
FRI 12:18 You and Yours (m000xg09)
News and discussion of consumer affairs
FRI 12:57 Weather (m000xg0c)
The latest weather forecast
FRI 13:00 World at One (m000xg0f)
Forty-five minutes of news, analysis and comment, with Edward Stourton.
FRI 13:45 The Kindness Experiment (m000xg0j)
Keeping Kindness Going
In this episode Ella Scotland Waters rounds off her week of kindness experiments meeting strangers and asking them about kindness. Today she meets a young man who grew up as a Jehovah's Witness. When he left the faith five years ago he moved to Bristol and relied on the kindness of strangers to settle. He talks about the meaning of kindness as he now sees it having moved away from the religious concept of being a good and kind person. He meets Margaret who Ella met in the corner shop at the beginning of the week and surprises her when she returns home with a small gift of tea and biscuits. He reflects on how he used to knock on doors as a Jehovah's Witness offering eternal life, and how now knocking on strangers' doors to give them a small gift as a token of kindness is an uplifting way of making connections in your community.
The young man who stopped to offer Ella kindness a few months ago returns to reflect on how the story of his act of kindness has reverberated through his workplace with positive results and how the praise he has received for doing something however small for someone has given him a lot to think about.
Professor Bruce Hood of the School of Psychological Science sets out the physical and mental benefits to us of being kind and says that these small acts help not only other people but also ourselves. And if we can practise kindness regularly it can have profound effects on our wellbeing.
Producer: Maggie Ayre
FRI 14:00 The Archers (m000xfhk)
[Repeat of broadcast at
19:00 on Thursday]
FRI 14:15 Limelight (p09h4wvx)
The System
The System - Level 6: Judgement Day Question Mark.
By Ben Lewis.
A witty and propulsive six-part thriller about a group of young radicals and the hunt for their leader. Starring Siena Kelly, Jack Rowan and Iain de Caestecker.
Level 6: Judgement Day Question Mark
The Past: Alex’s story comes into focus.
The Present: Maya goes in search of Jake, hoping together they can stop the System before things get totally out of control. But can they? And who’s really in charge?
Cast:
Alex … Iain de Caestecker
Maya … Siena Kelly
Coyote…Divian Ladwa
Beau…Matthew Needham
DI Cohen / Jess …Chloe Pirrie
Jake …Jack Rowan
Original music and sound design by Danny Krass
Featuring tracks from Equiknoxx music collective
A BBC Scotland Production directed by Kirsty Williams
With thanks to Dr Joel Busher at the Centre for Trust, Peace and Social Relations, University of Coventry.
FRI 14:45 Chinese Characters (b0b01vgy)
Hong Xiuquan v Zeng Guofan: The Duellists
This was the duel that shaped China. Hong Xiuquan was a poor boy who went into a trance and became convinced he was Jesus's younger brother, with a mission to conquer China. Zeng Guofan was a loyal Confucian bureaucrat who rose up the imperial hierarchy. In the mid-19th century, Hong's visions led him to launch a war under the name "Taiping" - heavenly kingdom of great peace. He created a quasi-state in some of China's richest heartlands, run on Christian principles, imposed on pain of death. The ruling house sent in Zeng to beat the rebels. The result was one of the bloodiest, most savage civil wars in Chinese history, shaped by the rivalry between two men, one set to conquer China, and one to save the old regime.
Presenter: Rana Mitter
Producer: Ben Crighton
Researcher: Elizabeth Smith Rosser.
FRI 15:00 Gardeners' Question Time (m000xg0q)
GQT at Home
Kathy Clugston hosts this week's gardening Q&A with her panel of experts - Pippa Greenwood, Matthew Wilson and Matt Biggs. Together they answer questions emailed by listeners.
Producer - Jemima Rathbone
Assistant Producer - Millie Chu
A Somethin' Else production for BBC Radio 4
FRI 15:45 From Fact to Fiction (m000xg0v)
John Godber brings his wit and his gimlet eye to Radio 4, in this fictional response to a story in the week's news.
Godber is one of Britain's most popular and prolific playwrights, 'hilarious and heart-breaking', whose unique talent is to make you laugh uproariously and in the same breath feel like you've been punched in the belly. A champion of Yorkshire talent and culture, he has won many awards and his plays are performed all over the world.
Producer...Mary Ward-Lowery
FRI 16:00 Last Word (m000xg0z)
Matthew Bannister tells the life stories of people who have recently died, from the rich and famous to unsung but significant. Prod: Eleanor Garland (Beverley Purcell Apr-July)
FRI 16:30 More or Less (m000xdpj)
[Repeat of broadcast at
09:00 on Wednesday]
FRI 17:00 PM (m000xg14)
Afternoon news and current affairs programme, reporting on breaking stories and summing up the day's headlines.
FRI 18:00 Six O'Clock News (m000xg1d)
The latest national and international news from BBC Radio 4.
FRI 18:30 Dead Ringers (m000xg1j)
Series 21
Episode 4
The writing squad for the series: Tom Jamieson and Nev Fountain, Laurence Howarth, Tom Coles & Ed Amsden, Jeffrey Aidoo, Simon Alcock, James Bugg, Sarah Campbell, Nastassia Dhanraj , Athena Kugblenu, Sophie Dickson, Rajiv Karia, Vivienne Riddoch & Jane Mccutcheon , Edward Tew.
Producer: Bill Dare
Production Coordinator: Sarah Sharpe
A BBC Studios Production for Radio 4.
FRI 19:00 Front Row (m000xg1n)
Live magazine programme on the worlds of arts, literature, film, media and music
FRI 19:45 Two Minutes Past Nine (m000ms05)
Episode 5: The Second April 19th
25 years on from the largest domestic terror incident in American history, journalist Leah Sottile and producer Georgia Catt work to understand what made Timothy McVeigh the home-grown terrorist he was – and how that informs what’s unfolding today.
Episode 5: How standoffs at Waco and Ruby Ridge became flash-points for Timothy McVeigh.
As Leah and Georgia start recording the series in early 2020 the world changed: a global pandemic, calls for racial justice that rang out around the globe, conspiracy theories suddenly going mainstream. Reacting to events as they unfolded, Leah and Georgia didn’t realise quite how relevant and on point it would be to examine the Oklahoma City Bombing right now, at this exact moment in world history. As one journalist tells them: ‘McVeigh would have loved this’.
Recorded over some of the most divisive, turbulent, and quite frankly dangerous feeling months in recent American political history, Two Minutes Past Nine aims to understand the changing face of far right extremism in all its chaos and conspiracism.
Presenter: Leah Sottile
Producer: Georgia Catt
Editor: Philip Sellars
Narration recorded by Joe Preston
Additional Research by Robbie Wojciechowski
FRI 20:00 Any Questions? (m000xg1s)
Carolyn Harris MP, Simon Hart MP, Professor Patrick Minford, Liz Saville-Roberts MP
Chris Mason presents political debate and discussion from the Queen's Hall in Narberth with the Deputy Leader of Welsh Labour Carolyn Harris MP, the Secretary of State for Wales Simon Hart MP, Professor of Applied Economics at Cardiff University Patrick Minford and Plaid Cymru's Westminster Leader Liz Saville-Roberts MP.
Producer: Camellia Sinclair
Lead broadcast engineer: Simon Tindall
FRI 20:50 A Point of View (m000xg1w)
Weekly reflections on topical issues from a range of contributors.
FRI 21:00 Archive on 4 (b078mvwj)
Tennant Looks Back At Osborne
Sixty years ago, one small play shocked British theatre to its core and started a cultural revolution. John Osborne, a writer from an unfashionable Midlands city, put ordinary lives on stage and made them an extraordinary comment on post-war Britain. As he prepares to star in a new production for Radio 4, David Tennant explores John Osborne's own papers to uncover how he put his own life and relationships into Look Back in Anger.
Along the way, we look back at the anger which greeted the play from many critics. The BBC's theatre critic Ivor Brown called it, "unspeakably dirty and squalid. It is difficult to believe that a colonel's daughter, brought up with some standards, would have stayed in this sty for a day." He went on to fume, "I felt angry because it wasted my time." He was one of many who hated the play.
David Tennant hears interviews with John Osborne, reads his personal letters, as well as archive of critic Kenneth Tynan and director Tony Richardson. He also plays extracts from previous productions, including a classic with Richard Burton as Jimmy Porter.
Contributors include playwright David Hare, critic Michael Billington, and actors Gary Raymond and George Devine.
Producer: Jo Wheeler
Executive Producer: David Morley
A Bite Media production for BBC Radio 4
FRI 22:00 The World Tonight (m000xg1y)
In depth reporting, intelligent analysis and breaking news from a global perspective
FRI 22:45 Zennor in Darkness by Helen Dunmore (m000xg07)
[Repeat of broadcast at
12:04 today]
FRI 23:00 A Good Read (m000xf13)
[Repeat of broadcast at
16:30 on Tuesday]
FRI 23:30 Today in Parliament (m000xg20)
Today in Parliament
News, views and features on today's stories in Parliament
LIST OF THIS WEEK'S PROGRAMMES
(Note: the times link back to the details; the pids link to the BBC page, including iPlayer)
A Good Read
16:30 TUE (m000xf13)
A Good Read
23:00 FRI (m000xf13)
A Point of View
08:48 SUN (m000x7vr)
A Point of View
20:50 FRI (m000xg1w)
A Show of Hands
09:30 TUE (m000xd1w)
Across the Red Line
09:00 THU (m000xfgc)
Across the Red Line
21:30 THU (m000xfgc)
All in the Mind
21:00 TUE (m000xd2d)
All in the Mind
15:30 WED (m000xd2d)
Analysis
21:30 SUN (m000x507)
Analysis
20:30 MON (m000xdyg)
Any Answers?
14:00 SAT (m000xdfy)
Any Questions?
13:10 SAT (m000x7vp)
Any Questions?
20:00 FRI (m000xg1s)
Archive on 4
20:00 SAT (m000xdgj)
Archive on 4
21:00 FRI (b078mvwj)
Arctic Dreams by Barry Lopez
00:30 SAT (m000x7w1)
BBC Inside Science
16:30 THU (m000xfh9)
BBC Inside Science
21:00 THU (m000xfh9)
Bells on Sunday
05:43 SUN (m000xdgz)
Bells on Sunday
00:45 MON (m000xdgz)
Broadcasting House
09:00 SUN (m000xds6)
Castle of the Hawk
15:00 SAT (b0b9vgds)
Chinese Characters
14:45 FRI (b0b01vgy)
Cultural Exchange: Bristol
16:00 TUE (m000sqss)
DH Lawrence: Tainted Love
15:00 SUN (m000xdss)
Dead Ringers
12:30 SAT (m000x7vk)
Dead Ringers
18:30 FRI (m000xg1j)
Descendants
11:00 FRI (p09jjsq5)
Desert Island Discs
11:00 SUN (m000xdsd)
Desert Island Discs
09:00 FRI (m000xdsd)
Detoxifying the Classics
21:00 MON (m000x72t)
Ed Reardon's Week
18:30 TUE (m000xf19)
Elon Musk: The Evening Rocket
11:00 MON (m000xdxb)
Extinction Compendium
23:00 THU (m000xfr3)
Farming Today
06:30 SAT (m000xdf5)
Farming Today
05:45 MON (m000xdtt)
Farming Today
05:45 TUE (m000xdz4)
Farming Today
05:45 WED (m000xd36)
Farming Today
05:45 THU (m000xdrl)
Farming Today
05:45 FRI (m000xfjb)
File on 4
17:00 SUN (m000x6bh)
File on 4
20:00 TUE (m000xd28)
Fortunately... with Fi and Jane
23:00 TUE (m000xd2l)
Four Thought
05:45 SAT (m000x4vq)
Four Thought
09:30 WED (m000xdpl)
Four Thought
20:45 WED (m000xdpl)
From Fact to Fiction
00:30 SUN (m000x7v7)
From Fact to Fiction
15:45 FRI (m000xg0v)
From Our Own Correspondent
11:30 SAT (m000xdfm)
From Our Own Correspondent
11:00 THU (m000xfgl)
Front Row
19:15 MON (m000xdyd)
Front Row
19:15 TUE (m000xd26)
Front Row
19:15 WED (m000xdqr)
Front Row
19:15 THU (m000xfhm)
Front Row
19:00 FRI (m000xg1n)
Gardeners' Question Time
14:00 SUN (m000x7v5)
Gardeners' Question Time
15:00 FRI (m000xg0q)
Guide Books
11:30 TUE (m000xf0n)
Heidi Regan: No Worries
23:00 WED (m000xdqz)
Hennikay
19:15 SUN (m000xdt7)
I'm Sorry I Haven't A Clue
12:04 SUN (m000x501)
I'm Sorry I Haven't A Clue
18:30 MON (m000xdy8)
In Touch
20:40 TUE (m000xd2b)
Last Word
20:30 SUN (m000x7v9)
Last Word
16:00 FRI (m000xg0z)
Limelight
14:15 FRI (p09h4wvx)
Loose Ends
18:15 SAT (m000xdgd)
Loose Ends
11:30 MON (m000xdgd)
Lost for Words
11:00 TUE (m000xf0l)
Made of Stronger Stuff
15:30 TUE (p0957q54)
Made of Stronger Stuff
21:00 WED (p0957q54)
Mark Steel's in Town
11:30 WED (b09l068v)
Marketing: Hacking the Unconscious
19:45 SAT (b08nq5wq)
Marketing: Hacking the Unconscious
11:45 SUN (b08nq9wm)
Metamorphosis - How Insects Transformed Our World
09:30 THU (m000sqry)
Midnight News
00:00 SAT (m000x7vz)
Midnight News
00:00 SUN (m000xdgn)
Midnight News
00:00 MON (m000xdtf)
Midnight News
00:00 TUE (m000xdyp)
Midnight News
00:00 WED (m000xd2q)
Midnight News
00:00 THU (m000xdr6)
Midnight News
00:00 FRI (m000xfhy)
Mitchell on Meetings
11:00 WED (m000tdy8)
Money Box
12:04 SAT (m000xdfr)
Money Box
21:00 SUN (m000xdfr)
Money Box
15:00 WED (m000xdq9)
Moral Maze
22:15 SAT (m000x4x2)
Moral Maze
20:00 WED (m000xdqt)
More or Less
20:00 SUN (m000x4vn)
More or Less
09:00 WED (m000xdpj)
More or Less
16:30 FRI (m000xdpj)
Natural Histories
06:35 SUN (b05w99j5)
News Briefing
05:30 SAT (m000x7w9)
News Briefing
05:30 SUN (m000xdgx)
News Briefing
05:30 MON (m000xdtp)
News Briefing
05:30 TUE (m000xdz0)
News Briefing
05:30 WED (m000xd32)
News Briefing
05:30 THU (m000xdrg)
News Briefing
05:30 FRI (m000xfj6)
News Summary
12:00 SAT (m000xdl2)
News Summary
06:00 SUN (m000xdrn)
News Summary
12:00 SUN (m000xdty)
News Summary
12:00 MON (m000xdz6)
News Summary
12:00 TUE (m000xf0q)
News Summary
12:00 WED (m000xdps)
News Summary
12:00 THU (m000xfgq)
News Summary
12:00 FRI (m000xg2j)
News and Papers
06:00 SAT (m000xdf3)
News and Papers
07:00 SUN (m000xdrt)
News and Papers
08:00 SUN (m000xds2)
News and Weather
13:00 SAT (m000xdfw)
News
22:00 SAT (m000xdgl)
One to One
14:45 SAT (m000vwqk)
Open Book
16:00 SUN (m000xdsv)
Open Book
15:30 THU (m000xdsv)
Open Country
06:07 SAT (m000x6vz)
Open Country
15:00 THU (m000xfh5)
PM
17:00 SAT (m000xdg2)
PM
17:00 MON (m000xdy2)
PM
17:00 TUE (m000xf15)
PM
17:00 WED (m000xdqh)
PM
17:00 THU (m000xfhc)
PM
17:00 FRI (m000xg14)
Pick of the Week
18:15 SUN (m000xdt5)
Pilgrim by Sebastian Baczkiewicz
21:00 SAT (b071vlmq)
Poetry Please
23:30 SAT (m000x6d2)
Poetry Please
16:30 SUN (m000xdsx)
Political Thinking with Nick Robinson
17:30 SAT (m000xdg4)
Prayer for the Day
05:43 SAT (m000x7wc)
Prayer for the Day
05:43 MON (m000xdtr)
Prayer for the Day
05:43 TUE (m000xdz2)
Prayer for the Day
05:43 WED (m000xd34)
Prayer for the Day
05:43 THU (m000xdrj)
Prayer for the Day
05:43 FRI (m000xfj8)
Prepper
11:30 FRI (m000xg03)
Profile
19:00 SAT (m000xdgg)
Profile
05:45 SUN (m000xdgg)
Profile
17:40 SUN (m000xdgg)
Radio 4 Appeal
07:54 SUN (m000xdry)
Radio 4 Appeal
21:25 SUN (m000xdry)
Radio 4 Appeal
15:27 THU (m000xdry)
Rewinder
10:30 SAT (m000xdfh)
Rewinder
23:00 MON (m000xdfh)
Sarah Kendall: Talking Story
18:30 THU (m000xfhh)
Saturday Live
09:00 SAT (m000xdff)
Selection of BBC World Service Programmes
01:00 SAT (m000x7w5)
Selection of BBC World Service Programmes
01:00 SUN (m000xdgs)
Selection of BBC World Service Programmes
01:00 MON (m000xdtk)
Selection of BBC World Service Programmes
01:00 TUE (m000xdyw)
Selection of BBC World Service Programmes
01:00 WED (m000xd2y)
Selection of BBC World Service Programmes
01:00 THU (m000xdrb)
Selection of BBC World Service Programmes
01:00 FRI (m000xfj2)
Shipping Forecast
00:48 SAT (m000x7w3)
Shipping Forecast
05:20 SAT (m000x7w7)
Shipping Forecast
17:54 SAT (m000xdg6)
Shipping Forecast
00:48 SUN (m000xdgq)
Shipping Forecast
05:20 SUN (m000xdgv)
Shipping Forecast
17:54 SUN (m000xdsz)
Shipping Forecast
00:48 MON (m000xdth)
Shipping Forecast
05:20 MON (m000xdtm)
Shipping Forecast
00:48 TUE (m000xdyt)
Shipping Forecast
05:20 TUE (m000xdyy)
Shipping Forecast
00:48 WED (m000xd2w)
Shipping Forecast
05:20 WED (m000xd30)
Shipping Forecast
00:48 THU (m000xdr8)
Shipping Forecast
05:20 THU (m000xdrd)
Shipping Forecast
00:48 FRI (m000xfj0)
Shipping Forecast
05:20 FRI (m000xfj4)
Short Cuts
15:00 TUE (m0001hwm)
Short Works
19:00 SUN (b07w6j2v)
Sideways
00:15 MON (m000x4wh)
Sideways
16:00 WED (m000xdqc)
Six O'Clock News
18:00 SAT (m000xdgb)
Six O'Clock News
18:00 SUN (m000xdt3)
Six O'Clock News
18:00 MON (m000xdy6)
Six O'Clock News
18:00 TUE (m000xf17)
Six O'Clock News
18:00 WED (m000xdqk)
Six O'Clock News
18:00 THU (m000xfhf)
Six O'Clock News
18:00 FRI (m000xg1d)
Something Understood
06:05 SUN (b04n2fmh)
Something Understood
23:30 SUN (b04n2fmh)
Start the Week
09:00 MON (m000xdx4)
Start the Week
21:30 MON (m000xdx4)
Sunday Worship
08:10 SUN (m000xds4)
Sunday
07:10 SUN (m000xdrw)
Takeover
14:00 MON (m000xdxv)
Takeover
14:15 TUE (m000xf11)
Takeover
14:15 WED (m000xdq6)
Takeover
14:15 THU (m000xfh3)
The 3rd Degree
23:00 SAT (m000x6pm)
The 3rd Degree
15:00 MON (m000xdxx)
The Archers Omnibus
10:00 SUN (m000xds8)
The Archers
19:00 MON (m000xdyb)
The Archers
14:00 TUE (m000xdyb)
The Archers
19:00 TUE (m000xd24)
The Archers
14:00 WED (m000xd24)
The Archers
19:00 WED (m000xdqp)
The Archers
14:00 THU (m000xdqp)
The Archers
19:00 THU (m000xfhk)
The Archers
14:00 FRI (m000xfhk)
The Bottom Line
20:30 THU (m000xfhr)
The Briefing Room
20:00 THU (m000xfhp)
The Chronicles of Burke Street
19:45 SUN (m000xdt9)
The Digital Human
16:30 MON (m000xdy0)
The Film Programme
23:00 SUN (m000x6w1)
The Film Programme
16:00 THU (m000xfh7)
The Food Programme
12:32 SUN (m000xdsj)
The Food Programme
15:30 MON (m000xdsj)
The Hotel
21:45 SAT (m000ndjd)
The Kindness Experiment
13:45 MON (m000xdxs)
The Kindness Experiment
13:45 TUE (m000xf0z)
The Kindness Experiment
13:45 WED (m000xdq3)
The Kindness Experiment
13:45 THU (m000xfh1)
The Kindness Experiment
13:45 FRI (m000xg0j)
The Listening Project
13:30 SUN (m000xdsq)
The Long View
09:00 TUE (m000xd1t)
The Long View
21:30 TUE (m000xd1t)
The Media Show
16:30 WED (m000xdqf)
The Media Show
21:30 WED (m000xdqf)
The New Deal - A Story For Our Times
20:00 MON (m000nd0b)
The Skewer
23:15 WED (m000xdr2)
The Week in Westminster
11:00 SAT (m000xdfk)
The Why Factor
14:45 MON (b06810pv)
The World This Weekend
13:00 SUN (m000xdsn)
The World Tonight
22:00 MON (m000xdyk)
The World Tonight
22:00 TUE (m000xd2g)
The World Tonight
22:00 WED (m000xdqx)
The World Tonight
22:00 THU (m000xfht)
The World Tonight
22:00 FRI (m000xg1y)
Thought Cages
14:45 SUN (m0001b8z)
Today in Parliament
23:30 MON (m000xdym)
Today in Parliament
23:30 TUE (m000xd2n)
Today in Parliament
23:30 WED (m000xdr4)
Today in Parliament
23:30 THU (m000xfhw)
Today in Parliament
23:30 FRI (m000xg20)
Today
07:00 SAT (m000xdf9)
Today
06:00 MON (m000xdx2)
Today
06:00 TUE (m000xd1p)
Today
06:00 WED (m000xdpg)
Today
06:00 THU (m000xfg9)
Today
06:00 FRI (m000xfzt)
Tweet of the Day
08:58 SUN (b08sndpm)
Tweet of the Day
10:54 SUN (m000xdsb)
Tweet of the Day
05:58 MON (b03bkt5h)
Tweet of the Day
05:58 TUE (b04t0syn)
Tweet of the Day
05:58 WED (b04hkypv)
Tweet of the Day
05:58 THU (b020vp4h)
Tweet of the Day
05:58 FRI (b04mlvyx)
Two Minutes Past Nine
19:45 MON (m000msvk)
Two Minutes Past Nine
19:45 TUE (m000mt16)
Two Minutes Past Nine
19:45 WED (m000mr5k)
Two Minutes Past Nine
19:45 THU (m000mqp0)
Two Minutes Past Nine
19:45 FRI (m000ms05)
Unfollow by Megan Phelps-Roper
09:45 MON (m000xdyr)
Unfollow by Megan Phelps-Roper
00:30 TUE (m000xdyr)
Unfollow by Megan Phelps-Roper
09:45 TUE (m000xd2s)
Unfollow by Megan Phelps-Roper
00:30 WED (m000xd2s)
Unfollow by Megan Phelps-Roper
09:45 WED (m000xdpn)
Unfollow by Megan Phelps-Roper
00:30 THU (m000xdpn)
Unfollow by Megan Phelps-Roper
09:45 THU (m000xfgg)
Unfollow by Megan Phelps-Roper
00:30 FRI (m000xfgg)
Unfollow by Megan Phelps-Roper
09:45 FRI (m000xg24)
Unite
18:30 WED (m000xdqm)
Weather
06:57 SAT (m000xdf7)
Weather
12:57 SAT (m000xdft)
Weather
17:57 SAT (m000xdg8)
Weather
06:57 SUN (m000xdrr)
Weather
07:57 SUN (m000xds0)
Weather
12:57 SUN (m000xdsl)
Weather
17:57 SUN (m000xdt1)
Weather
05:56 MON (m000xdtw)
Weather
12:57 MON (m000xdxn)
Weather
12:57 TUE (m000xf0v)
Weather
12:57 WED (m000xdpz)
Weather
12:57 THU (m000xfgx)
Weather
12:57 FRI (m000xg0c)
Westminster Hour
22:00 SUN (m000xdtc)
Woman's Hour
16:00 SAT (m000xdg0)
Woman's Hour
10:00 MON (m000xdx8)
Woman's Hour
10:00 TUE (m000xd20)
Woman's Hour
10:00 WED (m000xdpq)
Woman's Hour
10:00 THU (m000xfgj)
Woman's Hour
10:00 FRI (m000xg00)
Women Talking About Cars
19:15 SAT (b0952zlp)
World at One
13:00 MON (m000xdxq)
World at One
13:00 TUE (m000xf0x)
World at One
13:00 WED (m000xdq1)
World at One
13:00 THU (m000xfgz)
World at One
13:00 FRI (m000xg0f)
Written in Scotland
16:00 MON (m000x6v5)
Written in Scotland
11:30 THU (m000xfgn)
You and Yours
12:18 MON (m000xdxl)
You and Yours
12:18 TUE (m000xf0s)
You and Yours
12:18 WED (m000xdpx)
You and Yours
12:18 THU (m000xfgv)
You and Yours
12:18 FRI (m000xg09)
Zennor in Darkness by Helen Dunmore
12:04 MON (m000xdxj)
Zennor in Darkness by Helen Dunmore
22:45 MON (m000xdxj)
Zennor in Darkness by Helen Dunmore
12:04 TUE (m000xd2j)
Zennor in Darkness by Helen Dunmore
22:45 TUE (m000xd2j)
Zennor in Darkness by Helen Dunmore
12:04 WED (m000xdpv)
Zennor in Darkness by Helen Dunmore
22:45 WED (m000xdpv)
Zennor in Darkness by Helen Dunmore
12:04 THU (m000xfgs)
Zennor in Darkness by Helen Dunmore
22:45 THU (m000xfgs)
Zennor in Darkness by Helen Dunmore
12:04 FRI (m000xg07)
Zennor in Darkness by Helen Dunmore
22:45 FRI (m000xg07)