Look for any podcast host, guest or anyone
Showing episodes and shows of

Rosie Hancock

Shows

Sateli 3Sateli 3Sateli 3 - Heart Full of Texas II, por Carlos Rodríguez Duque (2/3) - 01/08/25Sintonía: Clouseaux - "Genie Versus Genie"01. Hot Club of Cowtown - "Ida Red"02. Sean Reefer and the Resin Valley Boys - "Light It, Don't Hide It"03. Nick Gaitán & Umbrella Man - "I've Found My Weakness In You"04. The Octanes - "Lousiana Radio"05. Wayne Hancock - "Thunderstorms and Neon Signs"06. Los Skarnales - "La minifalda de Reynalda"07. The ElOrbits - "The More I See You"08. Zydeco Dots - "Boudin Man"09. Rosie Flores - "Blues Keep Callin'"Todas las mú...2025-08-011h 00Uncommon SenseUncommon SenseChildhood, with Brenda HerbertHow do stereotypes of “the child” contribute to injustice? Why must we decolonise childhood? What can it mean to work with love, rather than just study it? And how can we think about children’s agency? Sociologist and counsellor Brenda Herbert, the Sociological Review Fellow for 2024-25, reflects on her in-depth research getting to know children who had experienced domestic abuse and social work intervention in London. Applying a “live methods” approach – working with photography, play, and simply hanging out – she looked beyond the typical trauma and social work gaze to create knowledge with them about what mattered to them in their...2025-07-2547 minThe IntellectualThe IntellectualRevolution, with Volodymyr Ishchenko Podcast: Uncommon Sense (LS 30 · TOP 5% what is this?)Episode: Revolution, with Volodymyr IshchenkoPub date: 2025-06-06Get Podcast Transcript →powered by Listen411 - fast audio-to-text and summarizationThe word “revolution” conjures powerful imagery. But what does it mean today? Do revolutions neatly promote the will of the people, forging radical transformation? Or is it more complicated? Sociologist Volodymyr Ishchenko joins us from Freie Universität Berlin to explain his take on “deficient revolutions” as he reflects on the 2014 Euromaidan uprising and recent events in Ukraine – where, he argues, conflict with roots in...2025-06-3045 minUncommon SenseUncommon SenseFree Speech, with Aaron WinterHow is the notion of “free speech” abused and misunderstood? What’s wrong with “debate me” culture – and with the value placed on appearing to be “controversial”? And what happens when people who are actually pretty powerful claim they “can’t say anything anymore”? Sociologist Aaron Winter, an expert on racism and the far right, joins Uncommon Sense to discuss all this and more.Showing what sociology has to offer to discussions of “freedom” often found in politics, Aaron describes how “free speech” has been invoked through the decades in North America and Europe, including in the victimisation narratives found...2025-06-2743 minUncommon SenseUncommon SenseRevolution, with Volodymyr IshchenkoThe word “revolution” conjures powerful imagery. But what does it mean today? Do revolutions neatly promote the will of the people, forging radical transformation? Or is it more complicated? Sociologist Volodymyr Ishchenko joins us from Freie Universität Berlin to explain his take on “deficient revolutions” as he reflects on the 2014 Euromaidan uprising and recent events in Ukraine – where, he argues, conflict with roots in class has become polarised along “ethnic” lines, with devastating consequences.Ukraine, he shows, is not an anomalous case on the periphery of Europe and the former USSR. Rather, its story is instructive for the study o...2025-06-0645 minUncommon SenseUncommon SenseFat, with Fady ShanoudaHow do we typically see fat, and how can thinking differently about it have emancipatory outcomes? Fady Shanouda of Carleton University’s Feminist Institute of Social Transformation introduces Fat Studies and their inextricable link to activism. Alert to the connection between living and other things, Fady unpacks his feminist new materialist approach, and explains what it means to say “I’m not fat in my house”, describing how our surroundings can liberate us or show bias. He also considers the harm caused by misconceptions of fat as simply “surplus”, “inanimate” or even “dead” material. How does such valuing get mapped onto whole bo...2025-04-1843 minHow Do You Cope?How Do You Cope?The Gratitude List: Rosie JonesIn this week’s bonus episode, comedian Rosie Jones shares the 5 things she is currently grateful for. There’s an in-depth conversation about central heating, and Rosie extols the virtues of long (and slightly erotic) hot water bottles.Head to the main episode to hear about Rosie’s coping mechanisms in the face of online hate and abuse, how she was able to stand up to Matt Hancock, and why she’s unwilling to shape her career around others’ expectations.You can send in your thoughts and reflections to hello@howd...2025-04-1026 minUncommon SenseUncommon SenseScars, with Ellen T. MeiserFrom TV’s “The Bear” to the simmering restaurant thriller “Boiling Point” we seem drawn to angry-but-vulnerable chefs in pop culture. But how do such stereotypes shape who works in kitchens and how they treat their colleagues? Is “kitchen culture”, with its macho rough and tumble norms, always so different from the work culture so many of us face – including in academia? Sociologist Ellen T. Meiser joins us from Hawaii to discuss this and more, reflecting on her new book Making It: Success in the Commercial Kitchen. She tells us about her lifelong fascination with kitchens – from teenage shift work in Anchorage...2025-03-2146 minX-Ray VisionX-Ray VisionNEWS: Wild Takes From Spidey, Netflix 2025, Plus Companion Director Drew HancockSome interesting quotes coming out of Marvel this past week. First, the new spider-man was concerned his NY neighborhood might be too woke. Then Anthony Mackie questioned whether or not America should be a term that defines Sam Wilson. Jason declares Netflix the winner of the streaming wars. Introducing del Toro's Frankenstein! Plus, Rosie sits down with an interview with the director of The Companion, Drew Hancock. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.2025-02-0129 minUncommon SenseUncommon SenseJoy, with Akwugo EmejuluWhat comes to mind when you think about joy? And can there be joy in protest and refusal? Someone who’s been asking and trying to answer questions about this is Akwugo Emejulu. She’s been investigating the relationship between Black feminist joy, ambivalence and futures, asking how Black feminists are remixing political media, meanings and messages to co-create manifestos for change. Akwugo has also been mapping the grassroots organising and activism of women of colour for more than 15 years, and in this episode shares her insights about the role of joy and other emotions in understanding soci...2025-01-2458 minUncommon SenseUncommon SenseLife Admin, with Oriana BernasconiLife admin often refers to the overwhelming and mundane paperwork that surrounds contemporary living. However, Oriana Bernasconi, a sociology professor at the Alberto Hurtado University in Chile, joins Uncommon Sense to talk about a more serious side of the term – that of paperwork documenting human rights abuse – as well as a living, breathing archive and the analogue spreadsheet.Author of “Resistance to Political Violence in Latin America: Documenting Atrocity”, Oriana talks about her substantial research in human rights archives documenting the atrocities that took place during the Pinochet dictatorship in Chile. She also talks us through “technologies of memory”...2024-11-2951 min卧房撸歌卧房撸歌落叶裹着一条Mixtape在风中跑 Premier Automne Chilly Gonzales - Neoclassical Massacre 00:01:08 Hania Rani - It Comes in Waves 00:04:58 Anton Friisgaard, Pande Made Gangga Sentana - Syrati 00:07:00 Saya Gray - SHELL (OF A MAN) 00:11:16 John Leyton - Johnny Remember Me 00:13:17 Saffet Gundeger - Segah Taksim 00:14:40 Colin Stetson - The Augur 00:16:26 Nubya Garcia, Esperanza Spalding - Dawn 00:18:50 Claude François - Comme d'habitude 00:23:06 David Bowie - Life on Mars? 00:23:50 The Flaming Lips, Neon Indian - Is David Bowie Dying? 00:25:16 Cornelius - Mic Check 00:28:30 Beastie Boys - Three MC's And One DJ 00:30:14 Herbie Hancock - Rockit 00:31:50 Mariah - 心臓の扉 00:34:10 Howie Lee - Hundred-Syllable Mantra of Vajrasattva 00:38:24 Oruã - Na...2024-11-071h 43Uncommon SenseUncommon SenseToxic, with Alice MahWhat comes to mind when we think about toxicity in everyday life? It could be toxic relationships or masculinity – through to consumption, waste, governance and environmental harm. Alice Mah joins Uncommon Sense to discuss toxic expertise, waste colonialism and more.The author of “Petrochemical Planet: Multiscalar Battles of Industrial Transformation” and “Plastic Unlimited: How Corporations are Fuelling the Ecological Crisis and What We Can Do About It”, Alice reflects on what the petrochemical industry has to do with sociology. From the impact on marginalised communities often having no choice but to live in a toxic environment through to the con...2024-11-011h 02Crossroads CantinaCrossroads CantinaThe Book of Choices: The Fate of Elowyn HancockEpisode NotesProduced by: Wolf Grove MediaEpisode Title: IntroductionStory Name: The Fate of Elowyn HancockAuthor: Peter CulbertBook of Choices Links:Amazon:https://www.amazon.com/Book-Choices-One-Redd-Herring-ebook/dp/B0DDXZQ9ZPWebsite: www.wolfgrove.mediaCast:Bartender: Michael ConnorJack Hawke: Red HerringNarrator: Beth ConnorEpisode Summary: In this episode of "Crossroads Cantina," Elowyn Hancock opens her dream bookstore in the quaint but eerie town of Sinners Pine. Despite a challenging past, Elowyn finds solace in her new venture with t...2024-10-0438 minUncommon SenseUncommon SenseMargins, with Rhoda ReddockWhat gets centred and what gets framed as marginal? Who decides? And what are the consequences? UN expert, feminist scholar and social historian Rhoda Reddock – Professor Emerita at The University of the West Indies – joins us from Trinidad and Tobago to discuss the theme of margins, reflecting on the importance of radical Caribbean thought, the contested meaning of the “global south” and the evolution and significance of Caribbean feminism from the 70s to today.As a member of the UN’s Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW), Rhoda shares her reflections of moving between Switzerlan...2024-09-2746 minUncommon SenseUncommon SenseCommunity, with Kirsteen PatonWhat’s meant – and who’s excluded – when community is invoked? Does membership take more than presence alone? How can seeing local crises through a global lens enrich our understanding? Kirsteen Paton joins Uncommon Sense to discuss community, class, resistance, solidarity and more – including her experience of community in the UK cities of Liverpool and Glasgow.As the author of “Class and Everyday Life”, Kirsteen gives hosts Alexis and Rosie a fascinating potted history of the study of “community” in sociology – moving from the early work of Emile Durkheim and Ferdinand Tönnies, concerned with industrial capitalism, to recent studies of...2024-07-1945 minBorderlines: Roots and Real Country MusicBorderlines: Roots and Real Country MusicBorderlines #1158: June 30, 2024Nels Andrews - Milk And Honey, Sunday Shoes Zoe Muth - Heart Like A Wheel, Old Gold Brock Zeman - Ridin' On The Rims, Cold Winter Comes Back Danny Barnes - Peanut Butter Is A Man's Best Friend, Dirt On The Angel Crybaby - A Melody Behind, Still John Anderson - Better News, Bigger Hands Whitney Rose - Minding My Own Pain, Rosie Terry Allen & The Panhandle Mystery Band - Gimme A Ride To Heaven Boy, Bloodlines Over The Moon - Turtle Mountain...2024-06-302h 03Uncommon SenseUncommon SenseCoffee Culture, with Grazia Ting DengThink you know “coffee culture”? Anthropologist Grazia Ting Deng discusses her research into the “paradox of Chinese Espresso” – or why and how coffee bars in Italy, seen as such distinctively “Italian” spaces, became increasingly managed by Chinese baristas since 2008. Grazia tells Rosie and guest host Amit Singh – who highlights the overlap with his own co-authored research into the UK’s desi pubs – about her ethnographic study and how she even trained as a barista to better grasp her subject. Painting a vivid picture of how management by Chinese baristas grew due to economic, social and cultural factors in Bologna, Italy, she describes...2024-06-2144 minUncommon SenseUncommon SenseMaking, with Kat JungnickelWhat does it mean to make things? Why are some people valorised as “makers”, while others are rendered invisible? And what duty do sociologists have as makers of knowledge and narratives? The “sewing cycling sociologist” Kat Jungnickel joins Uncommon Sense to discuss all this and more; including her years of research celebrating historic female cyclists as radical inventors, makers and hackers, responding to barriers to their freedom of movement and raising crucial questions about power and space.Rosie (no stranger to DIY) and Alexis (a lifelong fan of taking things apart) ask Kat: what exactly is “Science and Techno...2024-05-1740 minUncommon SenseUncommon SenseBurnout, with Hannah ProctorBurnout has become a byword for workplace exhaustion, but does it have a deeper history? Hannah Proctor joins us to explain how the notion emerged in the USA’s 1960s countercultural free clinics movement, at first relating to the emotional defeat of idealistic activists but came to be seen as simply the result of working too hard. It’s a story that tracks the trajectory of capitalism itself – as Hannah shows referencing thinkers from Luc Boltanski and Eve Chiapello to filmmaker Adam Curtis.Rosie and Alexis ask Hannah: are there gendered, classed and racialised aspects to how burnou...2024-04-1948 minUncommon SenseUncommon SensePrivilege, with Shamus KhanWhat does privilege look like today? How do the advantaged perform “ease”? And why do some of us feel at home in elite spaces, while others feel awkward? Princeton sociologist Shamus Khan joins Uncommon Sense to reflect on elites, entitlement and more. Reminding us that “poor people are not why there’s inequality; rich people are why there’s inequality”, he highlights the importance of studying elites for studying inequality, as the gap between the two grows.Being the author of Privilege: The Making of an Adolescent Elite at St Paul’s School (2011), Shamus tells Rosie and Alexis about h...2024-03-1548 minPolitical CurrencyPolitical CurrencyEMQs: Social media screw-ups and has Matt Hancock been misunderstood?On this week's Ex-minister’s Questions, a listeners asks if Matt Hancock has simply been misunderstood? No guesses for which way Ed and George fall on that one. They’re also tackling social care policy, Sunday opening hours, and the real meaning of 'Chatham House rules'. Speaking of which, we've had correspondence from an anonymous source with a revelation about Rishi Sunak and a disappearing video he filmed for social media's most successful foodie account; TOPJAW.Follow us on social media: @polcurrencyProducers: Rachel Balmer and Rosie StopherProduction Manager: Flick Heat...2024-02-0526 minUncommon SenseUncommon SenseRules, with Swethaa BallakrishnenWhat are rules for? What's at stake if we assume that they're neutral? And if we want rules to be progressive, does it matter who makes them? Socio-legal scholar Swethaa Ballakrishnen joins Uncommon Sense to reflect on this and more, highlighting the value of studying law not just in theory but in action, and drawing on a career spanning law and academia in India and the USA.As the author of "Accidental Feminism", which explores unintended parity in the Indian legal profession, Swethaa talks to Rosie and Alexis about intention and whether it is always needed for...2024-01-1945 minUncommon SenseUncommon SenseSpirituality, with Andrew SingletonWhat exactly is spirituality? How does it relate to religion? Are both misunderstood? And what stands beyond and behind the idea that it has all simply been commodified to be about wellness, big business and celebrity? Andrew Singleton joins Uncommon Sense to reflect on this and more, including his experience researching young people’s spiritual practices in Australia, and time spent in Papua New Guinea.Andrew describes how what has been called the “spiritual turn” emerged through the counterculture of the 1960s and 1970s and led to today’s “spiritual marketplace”. We ask whether the young people of today’s G...2023-12-1540 minUncommon SenseUncommon SenseAnxiety, with Nicky FalkofAnxiety is part of contemporary life, yet rarely seen as anything other than personal and intimately psychological. Cultural Studies scholar Nicky Falkof joins us to discuss her work on fear and anxiety in South Africa, and how such negative emotions are often collective and collectively constructed – and relate deeply to our identities. Indeed, as Nicky tells us, if you ask yourself what or whom you’re scared of, you quickly face the question of who you think you are. Hear about Nicky’s teenage engagement in goth culture as South Africa approached the end of apartheid, and how it...2023-11-1746 minThe Soloist LifeThe Soloist LifeStepping Fully Into Your Genius Zone with Rachel HuffYou're an expert at one thing that you know the market needs, but you’re feeling tugged to do something else—something that just might be in your genius zone. Do you go for it? Communication maven turned agency matchmaker Rachel Huff did—and she shares her experience.We discuss:The challenges of starting a new business on the cusp of a global pandemic (with two tiny children and no day care).Generating the courage to pivot from what you’re very good at to your genius zone.The importance of building...2023-11-0235 minUncommon SenseUncommon SenseSuccess, with Jo Littler“If you’re talented and work hard, success (whatever that is) will be yours!” – So says the powerful system and ideology known as “meritocracy”. But if only it were so simple! Jo Littler joins Uncommon Sense to reflect on where this idea came from, how it became mainstream, and how it gets used by elites to convince us we live in a system that is open and fair when the reality is anything but that.But Jo also shows things are changing. Since the crash of 2008 it’s been clear we’re living and working on a far from “level”...2023-10-2043 minUncommon SenseUncommon SensePerformance, with Kareem KhubchandaniFrom Shakespeare to RuPaul, we all love a performance. But what exactly is it? What are its boundaries, its powers, its potential, its stakes? Kareem Khubchandani, who also performs as LaWhore Vagistan – “everyone's favourite desi drag queen aunty” – joins Uncommon Sense to unpack the latest thinking on refusal, repetition and more. And to discuss “Ishtyle”, Kareem’s ethnography of gay Indian nightlife in Chicago and Bangalore, which attends to desire and fun in the lives of global Indian workers too often stereotyped as cogs in the wheels of globalisation.Kareem also reflects on the particular value of queer nightlif...2023-09-1553 minjarit alusjarit alus[Epub] [read] The Leviathan by Rosie AndrewsDownload [epub] The Leviathan by Rosie Andrews Download Book Here ==> https://jaranmlaku.blogspot.com/58645179-the-leviathanDownload [epub] The Leviathan by Rosie AndrewsRead Online The Leviathan by Rosie Andrews is a great book to read and that's why I recommend reading or downloading ebook The Leviathan for free in any format with visit the link button below.Read Book Here ==> https://jaranmlaku.blogspot.com/58645179-the-leviathan**Download Book Here ==> https://jaranmlaku.blogspot.com/58645179-the-leviathanBook Synopsis : The most beguiling debut...2023-09-0800 mindawet campurdawet campur[Epub] [read] The Leviathan by Rosie AndrewsDownload [epub] The Leviathan by Rosie Andrews**Download Book Here ==> https://jaranmlaku.blogspot.com/58645179-the-leviathanDownload [epub] The Leviathan by Rosie AndrewsRead Online The Leviathan by Rosie Andrews is a great book to read and that's why I recommend reading or downloading ebook The Leviathan for free in any format with visit the link button below.**Read Book Here ==> https://jaranmlaku.blogspot.com/58645179-the-leviathan**Download Book Here ==> https://jaranmlaku.blogspot.com/58645179-the-leviathanBook Synopsis : The most beguiling debut of 2022...2023-09-0800 minRock’n’Roll PartyRock’n’Roll PartyRock 'n' Roll Party Playlist été #2Une plongée dans les classiques des 50's, le jump blues des 40's, le rockabilly revival des 80's, la surf music des 60 's, du Hillbilly rock, du Swing ou du Doo Wop .... mais aussi toutes les nouveautés d'artistes qui affectionnent toujours ces styles de musiques. En attendant la rentrée voici la playlist PLAYLIST #2 The Wheelgrinders: Torque-flite baby Carl Perkins: Right string baby, wrong yo-yo B.B. King: She's dynamite Rose Maddox: Whoa, sailor Rusty and the Dragstrip Trio: Born to love one woman Huelyn Duvall: Pucker paint The Broadkasters: Try me one more time Vince Taylor: Long tall Sal...2023-08-171h 05dupakdupak[Epub] [DOWNLOAD] The Leviathan by Rosie Andrews[Epub] [DOWNLOAD] The Leviathan Download at https://karunggonisan.blogspot.com/58645179 The most beguiling debut of 2022, perfect for fans of The Essex Serpent, The Mermaid and Mrs Hancock and The Binding. She is awake...Norfolk, 1643. With civil war tearing England apart, reluctant soldier Thomas Treadwater is summoned home by his sister, who accuses a new servant of improper conduct with their widowed father. By the time Thomas returns home, his father is insensible, felled by a stroke, and their new servant is in prison, facing charges of witchcraft.Thomas prides himself on being a rational...2023-08-0700 minUncommon SenseUncommon SenseNature, with Catherine OliverIt is increasingly accepted that we cannot take nature for granted. But do we even know what nature is? Catherine Oliver brings her expertise in geography and sociology – plus her love of chickens – to the latest Uncommon Sense to reflect on what’s at stake in how we think of and relate to “nature” – and how we might do better. Along the way, she considers what happens when neoliberalism shapes what “good” nature is – whether in regeneration or meddling with metabolisms.Alexis and Rosie also ask Catherine: how might the chicken be “thriving” yet also “extinct”? What potential is there in spea...2023-07-1443 minUncommon SenseUncommon SenseEuropeans, with Manuela BoatcăDoes anyone know what European means? Manuela Boatcă thought she did, until a late 1990s move from Romania to Germany unsettled everything she had taken for granted. In this episode, she challenges mainstream ideas of “Europe” to show how its borders extend to the Caribbean (and beyond) – a fact that’s obvious if we acknowledge colonialism’s past and present, but is an inconvenient truth for some in political power.Alexis and Rosie ask Manuela: How has Brexit revealed the contradictions built into so much discourse about “Europe”? How does “Creolizing” theory differ from “Decolonising” it? And what is the legacy of e...2023-06-1649 minWho do we think we are?Who do we think we are?[SWAP] Uncommon Sense: Security, with Daria Krivonos Too often, talk about security seems to belong to politicians and psychologists; to discussions about terrorism and defence, individual anxiety and insecurity. But how do sociologists think about it? And why care?  Daria Krivonos – who works on migration, race and class in Central and Eastern Europe – tells Alexis and Rosie why security matters. What’s the impact of calling migration a “security threat”? How does the security of the privileged rely on the insecurity of the precarious? And, as Russia’s war in Ukraine continues, what would it mean to truly #StandwithUkraine – from ensuring better job security for its workers...2023-04-2147 minWho do we think we are?Who do we think we are?[SWAP] Uncommon Sense: Security, with Daria Krivonos Too often, talk about security seems to belong to politicians and psychologists; to discussions about terrorism and defence, individual anxiety and insecurity. But how do sociologists think about it? And why care?  Daria Krivonos – who works on migration, race and class in Central and Eastern Europe – tells Alexis and Rosie why security matters. What’s the impact of calling migration a “security threat”? How does the security of the privileged rely on the insecurity of the precarious? And, as Russia’s war in Ukraine continues, what would it mean to truly #StandwithUkraine – from ensuring better job security for its workers...2023-04-2147 minUncommon SenseUncommon SenseBreakups, with Ilana Gershon“Follow”? “Block”? “Accept”? Anthropologist Ilana Gershon joins us to reflect on breakups in both our intimate and working lives. She tells Alexis and Rosie how hearing her students’ surprising stories of using new media – supposedly a tool for connection – to end romantic entanglements led to her 2010 book “The Breakup 2.0”. She also shares insights from studying hiring in corporate America and describes how, in the febrile “new economy”, the very nature of networking and how we understand our careers have been transformed.Ilana also celebrates Marilyn Strathern’s influential article “Cutting the Network” for challenging our assumptions about endless and easy connection. She...2023-04-1447 minUncommon SenseUncommon SenseTaste, with Irmak Karademir HazirWhat makes “good” taste? Who decides? And what’s it got to do with inequality? Sociologist Irmak Karademir Hazir grew up watching women in her parents’ clothing boutique. She explains how her fascination for taste emerged from that and why talking about things like fashion, film and music is far from trivial – it’s how we distinguish ourselves from others; how we’re recognised, or dismissed.Irmak tells Rosie and Alexis how sociologists such as Pierre Bourdieu have theorised “distinction”, showing how “highbrow” taste is decided by those with money and other kinds of capital. They also discuss the idea of th...2023-03-2448 minNonCensoredNonCensored38: When Matt Hancock Met Isabel OakeshottNonCensored is  a weekly round up of Harriet Langley-Swindon's very popular, very real daily radio show, completely non-Censored (but with all of the rubbish edited out).This week Harriet and Producer Martin are joined by an expert on the small boats crisis - the chairman of P&O Ferries, Peter Andrew O'Ferry. The also get both sides of the Matt Hancock/Isabel Oakeshott WhatsApp leak by inviting both Matt and Isabel on to give their sides of the story.If you have a question for the next Time For Questions episode, send a voicenote or email t...2023-03-1032 minWright on the NailWright on the NailNews Roundtable: The Lockdown Files and The Windsor FrameworkIn this week's 'News Roundtable' episode, host Chris Wright is joined by Jean Monnet, Chair in European Integration at Maynooth University, political commentator John O’Brennan, Times Radio Presenter, Rosie Wright, political journalist, David Osland, and political commentator, Lee Harris.The conversation kicks off with the panel discussing “The Lockdown Files,” revealing former Health Secretary Matt Hancock’s private messages with other government ministers regarding important COVID decisions. Why were they leaked to the Telegraph by political journalist Isabel Oakeshott? Is Matt Hancock right to feel betrayed? The scandal r...2023-03-031h 01Sky News DailySky News DailyWhat do Matt Hancock's COVID messages actually tell us?The ex-health secretary faces fresh scrutiny after leaked WhatsApp messages alleged he rejected testing advice on care homes during the pandemic. With preliminary hearings for the UK COVID-19 Inquiry under way, the new revelations raise further questions around Westminster's response to the global pandemic. On the Sky News Daily Podcast, Niall Paterson is joined by science and technology correspondent Tom Clarke who has been digging into Mr Hancock's leaked messages and their wider implications. Also, Nick Martin, Sky’s people and politics correspondent, reflects on his experience reporting in care homes at the height of the pa...2023-03-0220 minSky News DailySky News DailyWhat do Matt Hancock's COVID messages actually tell us?The ex-health secretary faces fresh scrutiny after leaked WhatsApp messages alleged he rejected testing advice on care homes during the pandemic. With preliminary hearings for the UK COVID-19 Inquiry under way, the new revelations raise further questions around Westminster's response to the global pandemic. On the Sky News Daily Podcast, Niall Paterson is joined by science and technology correspondent Tom Clarke who has been digging into Mr Hancock's leaked messages and their wider implications. Also, Nick Martin, Sky’s people and politics correspondent, reflects on his experience reporting in care homes at the height of the pa...2023-03-0220 minNonCensoredNonCensored34: The Professional BroadcastNonCensored is a weekly round up of Harriet Langley-Swindon's very popular, very real daily radio show, completely non-Censored (but with all of the rubbish edited out).This week Harriet and Producer Martin are joined by actual "Presentician" Nadine Dorries, to talk about how guest-hosting this podcast launched her to TV stardom; Matt Hancock came to promote his book but ended up talking about charity and lawbreaking; and Eshaan Akbar returns to give a Hot & Spicy - or should that be a Heating & Spicy - Takeaway of the week. We are still after questions for a monthly "...2023-02-0333 minThe Sync ReportThe Sync ReportThe Sync Report | Lili HaydnLili Haydn contributed score to seasons 2 & 3 of the Emmy winning Amazon series Transparent; as well as the films ANITA, The House That Jack Built, DriverX, Broken Kingdom and Oscar winner Freida Mock’s documentary RUTH: Justice Ginsburg in Her Own Words, and Oscar nominee Michele Ohayon’s Netflix documentary Strip Down Rise Up Hear what it was like to be the child of oddball Hollywood luminaries David Jove & Lotus Weinstock, and how she now suspects her father wasn’t only a Hollywood dealer with a penchant for guns. From composing with Hans Zimmer, to touring with Robert Plant and Ji...2023-02-022h 14Uncommon SenseUncommon SenseListening, with Les BackWhat does it mean to really listen in a society obsessed with spectacle? What’s hidden when powerful people claim to “hear” or “give voice” to others? And what’s at stake if we think that using fancy recording devices helps us to neatly capture “truth”?Les Back – author of “The Art of Listening” – tells Alexis and Rosie why listening to society is crucial, but cautions that there’s nothing inherently superior about the hearing sense. Rather, we must “re-tune our ears to society” and listen responsibly, with care, and in doubt.Plus: why should we think critically before acc...2023-01-2045 minUncommon SenseUncommon SenseNatives, with Nandita SharmaIn this supposedly “post-colonial” age, the idea of the native continues to be distorted and deployed, whether in Narendra Modi’s India or calls for “British jobs for British workers”. How and why has this word – so powerful in the age of empire – lived on into the 21st century? Who gains? And how has it gone from being a term applied to those ruled over by colonisers, to a label chosen by people promoting their own interests against others?Nandita Sharma joins Alexis and Rosie to discuss all this and more, including the exclusionary logic at the heart of the p...2022-12-2347 minKnight-Majik PodcastKnight-Majik PodcastKnight-Majik Podcast 120422Welcome to  another edition of Knight-Majik the podcast!  I think we've put together a nice set of music for your enjoyment!!  Please like and share!! Peace!Wake Up Suite 3:21 Larence Fishburn & The Natural Spiritual Orchestra School Daze Seeds from the Underground 8:08 Kenny Garrett Seeds from the Underground Blind Baby 4:30 New Birth Blind BabyCircling 6:02 Terri Lyne Carrington, Julian Lage, Michael Mayo & Nêgah Santos New Standards, Vol. 1The Matrimony 5:05 Rhonda Thomas Breathe New Life Everytime I See You 3:38 Roy Ayers You Send MeVisions 7:12 SFJazz Collective Music of Stevie Wonder and...2022-12-042h 53Backstage - TV & FilmBackstage - TV & FilmGary Oldman, Warwick Davis and Ardal O'HanlonThis week's Backstage, the TV and film podcast from Sky News, features not one, not two, but three megastars of the big and small screen - as well as a look at all of this week's news and reviews.Host Claire Gregory is joined, as always, by our Hollywood man in the know Stevie Wong, as well as Sky News arts and entertainment reporter Chris Lockyer.This week the team look at the I'm A Celebrity final winners, and the rise in popularity of former health secretary Matt Hancock, as well as what is happening at...2022-12-0149 minUncommon SenseUncommon SenseEmotion, with Billy HolzbergEmojis! Feminism! Rage! Sociologist Billy Holzberg joins us to talk about emotion. Why is it dismissed as an obstacle to progress and clear thinking – and to whose benefit? How can we let anger into politics without sanctioning far-right violence? And why are some of us freer than others to play with emotional abjection? Billy reflects on all this and more with Alexis and Rosie, celebrating thinkers from Sara Ahmed to Karl Marx, W.E.B. Du Bois to Yasmin Gunaratnam.Billy also reflects on queerness, childhood and shame; the emotional precarity of TV’s Fleabag; the playfulness of e...2022-11-1846 minNonCensoredNonCensored23: She's A Braverman Than You, with guest James BarrNonCensored is a weekly round up of Harriet Langley-Swindon's very popular, very real daily radio show, completely non-Censored (but with all of the rubbish edited out).This week Harriet and Producer Martin are joined by current and former Home Secretary, and Britain's Best Lawyer, Suella Braverman, who explains why she quit, why she came back, and why the media aren't asking the real questions that actually matter. We also have Senior Technology Correspondent - or, Technologenius - Eshaan Akbar for a Hot & Spicy TECHaway Of The Week about Twitter, and former MP and I'm A Celebrity, Get Me...2022-11-0448 minSky News DailySky News DailyMatt Hancock: What is it about politicians and reality TV?Former health secretary Matt Hancock is going on I'm a Celebrity... Get Me Out of Here! He was suspended from the Conservative Party after news broke he was heading to the Australian jungle - but he's not the first politician, or probably the last, to risk political ruin for the bright lights of show business. On the Sky News Daily, Sally Lockwood gets the temperature in Westminster with Sky News' chief political correspondent Jon Craig and speaks to former MP and I'm A Celebrity contestant, Lembit Opik, about the pros and cons of doing reality TV as a...2022-11-0216 minSky News DailySky News DailyMatt Hancock: What is it about politicians and reality TV?Former health secretary Matt Hancock is going on I'm a Celebrity... Get Me Out of Here! He was suspended from the Conservative Party after news broke he was heading to the Australian jungle - but he's not the first politician, or probably the last, to risk political ruin for the bright lights of show business. On the Sky News Daily, Sally Lockwood gets the temperature in Westminster with Sky News' chief political correspondent Jon Craig and speaks to former MP and I'm A Celebrity contestant, Lembit Opik, about the pros and cons of doing reality TV as a...2022-11-0216 minUncommon SenseUncommon SenseCities, with Romit ChowdhuryLonely? Mean? Hostile? Cities get a bad rap. But why? Romit Chowdhury has lived in cities worldwide; from Kolkata to Rotterdam. He tells Alexis and Rosie about the wonder of urban “enchantment” found in a stranger’s smile, our changing ideas of the “urban”, and why anonymity is not always in fact the enemy of civility and friendship in the city.Plus: how did “walking the city” emerge as a revolutionary research method? And why is Romit so fascinated with public transport – from exploring auto-rickshaw drivers’ masculinity in Kolkata, to studying sexual violence on the busy trains of Tokyo.2022-10-2145 minUncommon SenseUncommon SenseBodies, with Charlotte BatesWe each have a body, but every body’s story is unique. In this intimate conversation, sociologist Charlotte Bates tells Alexis and Rosie why studying bodies – and how we talk about them – matters in a society where some are privileged over others, and why ableism harms us all.Charlotte talks about her co-authored work on wild swimming, arguing that despite its commodification, it holds subversive power. She also considers how the unwell body collides with the demands of capitalist life – revealing just how absurd it can be. Plus: what “wellness” fails to capture – and why health is not a lifestyl...2022-09-2340 minUncommon SenseUncommon SenseSecurity, with Daria KrivonosToo often, talk about security seems to belong to politicians and psychologists; to discussions about terrorism and defence, individual anxiety and insecurity. But how do sociologists think about it? And why care?Daria Krivonos – who works on migration, race and class in Central and Eastern Europe – tells Alexis and Rosie why security matters. What’s the impact of calling migration a “security threat”? How does the security of the privileged rely on the insecurity of the precarious? And, as Russia’s war in Ukraine continues, what would it mean to truly #StandwithUkraine – from ensuring better job security for its worker...2022-07-2242 minUncommon SenseUncommon SenseIntimacy, with Katherine TwamleyThink of intimacy and, pretty soon, you’ll probably think about sex. But, as sociologist Katherine Twamley explains, intimacy means much more than that: it’s woven through so many of our relationships – including with people whose names we might not even know. She tells Rosie and Alexis how an accidental trip to India got her thinking about the varied meanings of “love” across cultures and contexts, and reflects on whether, to quote the famous song, love and marriage really do “go together like a horse and carriage”.Plus: what could it mean to decolonise love? Why should we be w...2022-06-2441 minUncommon SenseUncommon SenseSchool, with Remi Joseph-SalisburySchool should be about play, fulfilment and learning. But it is also a place of surveillance, discipline and discrimination. Activist scholar Remi Joseph-Salisbury has researched policing, racism and education in the UK. He tells Rosie and Alexis what happens when policing enters the classroom, its impact on students and teachers of colour, and the need for wholesale reform – including a truly anti-racist curriculum.Plus: how can we break the “school-to-prison” pipeline? What is Critical Race Theory and why has it prompted a backlash? What does it mean to really receive “an education”? And what’s the harm in the trope...2022-05-2043 minThe GrooveThe GrooveThe Groove met Rob mangaEpisode - 65 feature: Amerie, Anthony Hamilton, Atjazz, Blackstreet, Blaze, Bon Garcon, Booker T. Feat. Kathy Brown, Central Line, Chic, Cosmic Force, D-Train, David Morales & Michelle Perera, Dennis Edwards, DJ Spen & Ann Nesby, Donna Summer, En Vogue, Erik Rico, Fat Larry’s Band, First Choice, Geoffrey C,. Grey & Hanks, Gwen Guthrie, Joey Negro, Herbie Hancock, Incognito, Instant Funk, John Morales, Janet Jackson, Jill Scott, Jocelyn Brown, Joe Smooth, Kanye West, Kenny Bobien, Kim English, Lady Wray, Luther Vandross, LyricL, Mary J. Blige, Michael Jackson, The Reflex, Musiq Soulchild, Omarion, Patrice Rushen, Philadelphia Int. All-Stars, Phyllis Hyman, Pockets, Quincy Jones & Patti Au...2022-04-303h 09Uncommon SenseUncommon SenseHome, with Michaela BensonHome means something to everyone. More than just bricks and mortar, it’s about security and belonging, citizenship and exclusion. Michaela Benson has researched it all: from the UK’s self-build communities, to people seeking a new lifestyle abroad. She tells Alexis and Rosie about this and her own experience of home, including her mother’s relationship to her place of birth: Hong Kong.Plus, Kwame Lowe and Alice Grahame introduce us to the Rural Urban Synthesis Society in London. What does it take to build your own “Grand Design” and why would anyone want to do that? What...2022-04-2240 minUncommon SenseUncommon SenseCare, with Bev SkeggsWhat does care really mean? For feminist sociologist Bev Skeggs, it should be at the heart of how we organise our society – from tax to health, to climate action. She talks to Alexis and Rosie about the costs of complacency, her own shocking experience of care (or lack of it) as her own parents faced the end of life, and why we have every right to expect the state to look after us. Care, she shows, is political: there’s no care without society; no society without care.Plus, Bev casts a sideways glance at “self-care” and explains...2022-04-2243 minThe Medium Next DoorThe Medium Next DoorA Visit with Midlife Revisionist Rosie Dalton - Part 22022-04-0433 minThe Medium Next DoorThe Medium Next DoorA Visit with Midlife Revisionist Rosie Dalton - Part 12022-03-2832 minUncommon SenseUncommon SenseIntroducing Uncommon SenseThis is Uncommon Sense, the podcast that sees our world afresh, through the eyes of sociologists. Brought to you by The Sociological Review, it’s a space for questioning taken-for-granted ideas about society – for imagining better ways of living together and confronting our shared crises. Hosted by Rosie Hancock in Sydney and Alexis Hieu Truong in Ottawa, featuring a different guest each month, Uncommon Sense insists that sociology is for everyone.Hosts: Alexis Hieu Truong, Rosie HancockFeatured Guests: Bev Skeggs, Michaela BensonExecutive Producer: Alice BlochSo...2022-03-2401 minShot At LoveShot At LoveFind Love At Any Age With Midlife Revisionist & Life Coach, Rosie DaltonSend us a textToday's guest is Rosie Dalton, and she’s a grief counselor, and lifestyle coach. Rosie knows first-hand how to handle hard times. She tragically lost her only son, got divorced, lost her home, even her car—although it was a heartbreaking time all was not lost. Rosie had her survival skills and the willingness for a better future! She understands that life is short and can be gone at any moment. Rosie became a quick learner called in her future self while learning the power of the word and. She found ways to live...2022-03-1536 minBoots & SaddleBoots & SaddleBoots & Saddle | March 8, 2022 w/ guest-host Brian SaundersonBoots & Saddle | March 8, 2022 w/ guest-host Brian Saunderson 1. Every Kind of Music But Country – Robbie Fulks (Country Love Songs – 1996) 2. The Buck Stops Here [Instrumental] – Redd Volkaert (Telewacker – 1998) 3. Take It All Out on You – Kelly Willis (Kelly Willis – 1993) 4. The Runaround – Roger Wallace (Hillbilly Heights – 1999) 5. Honky Tonk Hiccups – Neko Case & Her Boyfriends (The Virginian – 1997) 6. Lonely You, Lonely Me – Prairie Oyster (Different Kind of Fire – 1990) 7. Soulmates [Instrumental] – Flaco Jimenez (Said and Done – 1998) 8. Poet's Highway – Jr. Gone Wild (Too Dumb to Quit – 1990) 9. Our Town – Iris Dement (Infamous Angel – 1992) 10...2022-03-082h 00What The F*** Is Going On? with Mark SteelWhat The F*** Is Going On? with Mark SteelPATREON ONLY - Episode 33Mark is joined by Danny Wallace and Elliot Steel as he tries to make sense of Russian sanctions, Ukrainian refugees - and Matt Hancock's happy ending. Plus we're joined once again by the amazing Rosie Holt!Get ad-free episodes and bonus content on Patreonhttps://www.patreon.com/wtfisgoingonpodFollow What The F*** Is Going On? With Mark Steel on Twitter @wtfisgoingonpodFollow Danny Wallace @dannywallaceFollow Elliot Steel @elliotsteelcomFollow Rosie Holt @RosieisaHoltAnd visit our website www.whatthefisgoingonpodcast.co.uk for mo...2022-03-0740 minWhat The F*** Is Going On? with Mark SteelWhat The F*** Is Going On? with Mark SteelWhat The F*** Is Going On...? With Mark Steel Episode 33Mark is joined by Danny Wallace and Elliot Steel as he tries to make sense of Russian sanctions, Ukrainian refugees - and Matt Hancock's happy ending. Plus we're joined once again by the amazing Rosie Holt!Get ad-free episodes and bonus content on Patreonhttps://www.patreon.com/wtfisgoingonpodFollow What The F*** Is Going On? With Mark Steel on Twitter @wtfisgoingonpodFollow Danny Wallace @dannywallaceFollow Elliot Steel @elliotsteelcomFollow Rosie Holt @RosieisaHoltAnd visit our website www.whatthefisgoingonpodcast.co.uk for mo...2022-03-0742 minFront RowFront RowSamuel Bailey, Sensitivity Readers, Social Media SatireSamuel Bailey’s debut play, Shook, about three young men in a young offender's institution, won the Papatango New Writing Prize in 2019, glowing reviews, and a sell-out run. His new play, Sorry, You’re Not a Winner, explores the social price of higher education. Samuel Bailey talks to Tom Sutcliffe about the cost of great opportunities . Amid the current debate about the merits of sensitivity readers - a specialist editor who checks writers’ manuscripts for offensive content, misrepresentation, stereotypes, bias, lack of understanding - we talk to one: Philippa Willets, who advises on disability and LGBT issues, and a...2022-02-2242 minMostly Books Meets...Mostly Books Meets...Rosie AndrewsThis week, we’re speaking to debut author, Rosie Andrews. Rosie’s much anticipated debut novel, The Leviathan, was published on 3rd February. Historical fiction based in the 17th Century, the book has already received rave reviews with comparisons being made to novels such as The Essex Serpent, The Mermaid and Mrs Hancock and The Binding. The podcast is produced and presented by the team at Mostly Books. Find us on Twitter @mostlyreading & Instagram @mostlybooks_shop. Edited by Nick Short @alongstoryshorter. The Leviathan is published in the UK by @bloomsburypublishing Books mentioned in this episode include: The Leviathan by Rosie Andr...2022-02-1031 minThe Kitchen Sisters PresentThe Kitchen Sisters Present173 - Betty Reid Soskin—Celebrating the 100th Birthday of the Oldest Park Ranger in AmericaBetty Reid Soskin, the nation's oldest serving Park Ranger, works at the Rosie the Riveter Home Front World War II National Historical Park in Richmond, CA. Her tours and talks are hot ticket items. As a Black woman who worked in the segregated war effort, her perspective helps reveal a fuller, richer understanding of the World War II years on the home front as experienced by women and people of color. In celebration of Betty Reid Soskin’s 100th year we’ve curated a kind of mix tape of Betty stories—stories gathered and preserved by producers and ar...2021-09-2158 minRadio Arts CatalystRadio Arts CatalystThe School of Broadcasting | Mixtape 1 RESOLVE Collective’s \\\ INTERFERENCE, INTERRUPTION workshop sessions for The School of Broadcasting looked at the remote co-design of DIY instruments for ‘urban listening’ and ‘urban transmission’ and a collective mapping of different communities in Sheffield by locating and collating their sonic sense of place. Project influences spanned London’s 90’s Pirate Radio culture, Caribbean diasporic oral traditions and the gabinetes fonográficos of fin-de-siècle Spain, among others. Through a process of co-learning, the group of around thirty participants from across the UK addressed the questions: what happens when we own the means of production when it comes to sound? How can w...2021-05-2411 minThe Physics Teaching PodcastThe Physics Teaching PodcastBad Movies for Good Lessons We talk through bad movies to support good Physics Teaching. the aim is to talk through ones people suggest that are actually usable in lessons. As usual we get excited and make a few mistakes. Thomas is pretty sure that aeroplanes are made of aluminium, not steel and there were a few mentioned (Ant Man, Hulk) that we forgot to cover. Links are below. Sorry for the brief notes. Like you, we have a billion papers to mark for the TAGs/CAGs. Links Phineas and Ferb and the MagnetMr Incredible and his...2021-05-2446 minWith ReasonWith ReasonActivism and Belief, with Rosemary HancockWhat’s the relationship between people’s personal faith and their political activism? What extra dimension does religion bring to social movements and to contemporary cities? How might being a person of faith shape one’s attitude to environmentalism and to caring for life beyond the self? Moving way beyond the stereotypes of the peace-loving Quaker and the evangelical conservative Christian, Alice Bloch talks to Sydney-based sociologist Rosie Hancock about the fascinating intersection of religious belief and political action. Hosts: Alice Bloch and Samira ShackleProducer: Alice BlochMusic: Danoso...2021-03-1638 min