Karl Sharro argues that the only way to overcome the housing crisis is to get rid of all planning regulations and let people build whatever they want. Four Thought is a series of thought-provoking talks in which speakers air their thinking, in front of a live audience, on the trends, ideas, interests and passions that affect culture and society. Presenter: Kamin Mohammadi Producer: Estelle Doyle.
Jun 25, 2014•19 min
The American author Sandra Newman explains why, while most of us would like to be cool, it is best not to try too hard. Four Thought is a series of thought-provoking talks in which speakers air their thinking, in front of a live audience, on the trends, ideas, interests and passions that affect culture and society. Presenter: Kamin Mohammadi Producer: Estelle Doyle.
Jun 18, 2014•17 min
Jono Vernon-Powell wonders why hitchhiking has fallen out of favour, arguing its revival would be good for travellers and good for society. Four Thought is a series of thought-provoking talks in which speakers air their thinking, in front of a live audience, on the trends, ideas, interests and passions that affect culture and society. Presenter:Rohan Silva Producer:Sheila Cook.
Jun 11, 2014•20 min
Jonathan Rée explains why he's never been happy with the idea of morality and warns against the current fashion for confusing it with politics. Four Thought is a series of thought-provoking talks in which speakers air their thinking, in front of a live audience, on the trends, ideas, interests and passions that affect culture and society. Presenter: Rohan Silva Producer: Sheila Cook.
Jun 04, 2014•19 min
Rachel Armstrong proposes we should harness the computing power of the natural world to create new sustainable ways of living. Four Thought is a series of thought-provoking talks in which speakers air their thinking, in front of a live audience, on the trends, ideas, interests and passions that affect culture and society. Presenter: Rohan Silva Producer: Sheila Cook.
May 28, 2014•18 min
Children's author SF Said believes the power of fiction can help to bridge the divide when people identify themselves as "Us" and reject everyone else as "Them". Four Thought is a series of thought-provoking talks in which speakers air their thinking, in front of a live audience, on the trends, ideas, interests and passions that affect culture and society. Presenter: Rohan Silva Producer: Sheila Cook.
May 21, 2014•20 min
Thought-provoking talks with a personal dimension.
May 14, 2014•20 min
Rebecca Mott says we should come to see prostitution exactly as we now see slavery - as an abuse of human rights - and therefore only total abolition is acceptable. Four Thought is a series of thought-provoking talks in which speakers air their thinking, in front of a live audience, on the trends, ideas, interests and passions that affect culture and society. Presenter: Ben Hammersley Producer: Sheila Cook.
May 07, 2014•19 min
Philippa Perry explains why story telling is so powerful and how the stories we tell to and about ourselves affect our mental wellbeing. Four Thought is a series of thought-provoking talks in which speakers air their thinking, in front of a live audience, on the trends, ideas, interests and passions that affect culture and society. Presenter: Ben Hammersley Producer: Sheila Cook.
Apr 30, 2014•20 min
Benet Brandreth argues that our current political discourse is bankrupt, so he proposes a novel solution: a legislature by lot. Four Thought is a series of thought-provoking talks in which speakers air their thinking, in front of a live audience, on the trends, ideas, interests and passions that affect culture and society. Presenter:Ben Hammersley Producer: Sheila Cook.
Apr 23, 2014•19 min
Becky Manson discusses the meaning of home as homeowning becomes less common. Becky has moved home numerous times over the last decade, and has used art to explore the relationship between the idea of 'home' and the architectural reality of the houses or flats where we live. As houses become increasingly expensive and the average age of homeowning rises, she suggests a different way of thinking about our home. Introduced by Kamin Mohammadi. Producer: Giles Edwards.
Mar 05, 2014•18 min
Sharon Kinsella explores the Japanese 'cult of girls'. Ranging from the surprising role of schoolgirls in Japanese culture to an unusual encounter with an intriguing figure in the Japanese men's movement, Sharon undermines the idea of a playful Japanese popular culture. Having studied Japan for 15 years, she describes how the almost warlike state of male-female relations instead plays out in unexpected ways. Introduced by Kamin Mohammadi. Producer: Giles Edwards.
Feb 26, 2014•19 min
Byron Vincent discusses nature versus nurture, and society's obligations to its weakest. In a powerful, personal talk, Byron tells the story of his own childhood on a troubled housing estate, of how his surroundings shaped him, and of the choices he felt forced to make. Faced with similar circumstances he asks who can say they would make different choices. Byron explores the moral consequences of this for the rest of our society. Introduced by Kamin Mohammadi. Producer: Giles Edwards....
Feb 19, 2014•18 min
Anne-Marie Imafidon argues that we need to think differently about role models. She believes we need to stop looking at them as superhuman and instead embrace their mistakes as well as their successes, their personal foibles as well as their strengths. Once we do that, we can understand that everyone has something to contribute, we can all be members of what she calls the 'role model club'. Presented by David Baddiel. Producer: Giles Edwards.
Feb 12, 2014•18 min
Heaven Crawley, Professor of International Migration at Swansea University, argues for compassion and curiosity in place of hostility in our attitude towards refugees and asylum seekers. Four Thought is a series of thought-provoking talks in which the speakers tell personal stories that give rise to their thinking on the trends, ideas, interests and passions that affect culture and society. Presenter: David Baddiel Producer: Sheila Cook.
Feb 05, 2014•20 min
Matthew Engel makes a secular case for reclaiming the peace and quiet of the Sabbath, arguing that a proper day of rest will make us healthier, happier and more productive. Four Thought is a series of thought-provoking talks in which the speakers tell personal stories that give rise to their thinking on the trends, ideas, interests and passions that affect culture and society. Presenter: David Baddiel Producer: Sheila Cook.
Jan 29, 2014•19 min
Former soldier Emile Simpson draws on his experience in Afghanistan to argue that we need to rethink the way we fight wars now the boundary with politics has been blurred. Four Thought is a series of thought-provoking talks in which the speakers tell personal stories that give rise to their thinking on the trends, ideas, interests and passions that affect culture and society. Presenter: David Baddiel Producer: Sheila Cook.
Jan 22, 2014•18 min
Curtis Blanc, a former prisoner turned award-winning sound and music entrepreneur, says prison works, but only if you want it to. Four Thought is a series of thought-provoking talks in which the speakers tell personal stories that give rise to their thinking on the trends, ideas, interests and passions that affect culture and society. Producer: Sheila Cook.
Jan 15, 2014•20 min
Agnes Woolley examines what is missing from the stories told by, and about, refugees. She laments what she calls the 'hard authenticity of testimony' - the way in which refugees to the UK are forced to tell their own stories, and never to change them, despite any number of changes in perspective. And she asks why the stories told about those seeking refuge - by politicians and newspapers - are equally unchanging. Producer: Giles Edwards.
Jan 08, 2014•19 min
Brian Lavery tells the remarkable story of Mrs Lillian Bilocca, and how a fishwife from Hull changed the country's most dangerous industry. He examines how the fame and misfortune she suffered as a result might have played out in our current social media age and asks how much life has really changed. Producer: Giles Edwards.
Dec 04, 2013•18 min
Mark Lorch asks why we are all so afraid of chemicals. Biology has plants, animals and David Attenborough. Physics has lasers, stars and Brian Cox. Meanwhile chemistry, by reputation, has chemical weapons, pollution and Walter White from Breaking Bad. Mark, himself a chemistry lecturer at Hull University, explores why we have the wrong end of the stick, and what can be done about it. Producer: Giles Edwards.
Nov 27, 2013•18 min
Mark O'Connell argues that in an age of strong opinions, we should embrace ambivalence. As a child, Mark's constitutional ambiguity meant his mother considered printing the phrase 'I might and I mightn't' on a t-shirt. Today, Mark's job as a writer for Slate magazine is to take strong positions. In this fascinating look at the role of ambiguity in our society, he attempts to square the circle - or should that be circle the square - in his determination to have the courage of his own ambivalence....
Nov 20, 2013•18 min
Jane Burston argues that by placing too much emphasis on profit, companies behave in an unethical way, and it is time for social purpose to take centre stage. Jane describes what she sees as a systematic problem in big companies and argues that only by viewing profit as a means to an end, rather than an end in itself, can we create an ethical business sector. And she believes that shareholders will embrace her plan, even if it means business leaders taking on the mantle of moral leaders and some...
Nov 13, 2013•19 min
Sam Edwards argues that we should think again about how and what we memorialise - including wars and other major events in our national history. Sam is a lecturer in American History at Manchester Metropolitan University, and has long been fascinated with memorials. He tells the story of how, as a young man, he would journey around the Suffolk countryside visiting the many memorials to the US 8th Air Force, and the effect it had on him. Producer: Giles Edwards.
Nov 06, 2013•19 min
Molly Naylor has spent years thinking how much she could teach her teenage self. But in this talk, Molly turns her thinking on its head. What if her teenage self has something to teach her? Producer: Giles Edwards.
Oct 30, 2013•18 min
Matt Locke traces the stories of three 'empires of attention' to examine how our attention, and the way it was measured, has shaped our culture. Producer: Giles Edwards.
Oct 23, 2013•19 min
Farrah Jarral puts the case for more cheekiness, arguing that it is a core British value and a creative, playful way of checking power and subverting the status quo. Farrah, a GP by day, tells the story of how one patient smashed the usual doctor-patient power gradient. She sets out to discover whether any other language has a concept quite like cheekiness, and she explains why she is convinced that there is far greater depth to it than first meets the eye. Producer: Giles Edwards....
Oct 16, 2013•19 min
Paul Dimeo argues that drugs made modern sport what it is today, and that we ought to take a more sympathetic view of those athletes whose will to win takes them outside the rules of the game. Paul believes the entire Olympic movement was saved by the drug-fuelled rivalry between the United States, Soviet Union and East Germany, and makes the case that drugs dramatically enliven sport as a spectacle and as a talking point. Producer: Giles Edwards.
Oct 14, 2013•19 min
Author and broadcaster Lindsay Johns argues that language is power, and makes the case for speaking English properly. Lindsay, who has mentored young people in Peckham, south London, for years, believes that street slang and what he calls 'ghetto grammar' disempower and limit the life chances of those who speak it. And he says that those who make excuses for this language, or argue that it is good for young people, are really just encouraging them to ostracize themselves even further from mainst...
Oct 02, 2013•19 min
As the first Muslim chair in Islamic and Interreligious Studies at the University of Edinburgh, Mona Siddiqui regularly engages on inter-faith issues. Reflecting on her own life, Mona says that far from being a private matter, friendship is more of a societal good that is achieving ever greater significance in the globalized world. Four Thought is a series of talks which combine new ideas and personal stories. Recorded during the Edinburgh festival, speakers explain their thinking on the trends ...
Sep 25, 2013•17 min