The messy sex lives of monkeys
A delightful mix of science, history and feminism, BBC Radio 4’s Political Animals explores what animal sexuality reveals about the…
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A delightful mix of science, history and feminism, BBC Radio 4’s Political Animals explores what animal sexuality reveals about the…
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This agenda-free agony aunt podcast doesn’t set out to change the world – and therein lies its charm.
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The shadow of Sarah Everard’s murder looms over this catalogue of women’s experiences of walking at night.
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Across ten episodes, Lynsey Hanley speaks to people who are shut out of the housing market. The picture is bleak.
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Perhaps the most futile of all questions is why some things make us laugh, which doesn’t bode well for BBC…
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Listening to musicians discuss their best travel experiences is both magical and otherworldly.
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The tenth series of Rufus Hound’s hit show opens with Jane Horrocks and an adventurous “coming of age” holiday to Sorrento.
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In this episode, authors Sarah Perry and Sinéad Gleeson reflect on how their relationships with their bodies have changed over lockdown.
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Does it move more slowly when we experience pain? Do we really see things “in slow motion” during a sudden…
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Episodes can be heavy in subject matter or dovetail with broader topical issues – the Windrush scandal, Brexit and Covid-19…
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Phil Tinline digs through history, journalism, fiction and film to try to understand why the idea of being “in on”…
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This four-episode series mixes winking chats between Keyes and Tara Flynn, with readings from Keyes’s non-fiction work.
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Although it covers important and sensitive issues, Chloe Combi’s “You Don’t Know Me” can feel exploitative in its approach.
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In this three-part adaptation of Tess of the D’Urbervilles, Tess relates her own story in a series of first-person monologues.…
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