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Celebrity Mastermind
Specialist subject: Laura Ingalls Wilder
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- Ecoutez et Repetez: Je suis en train de me geeker devant mon ordi. bbc.in/12S9sqc 12 hours ago
- Graphic violence,fear&airtime for extremists.Questions about Woolwich coverage @newswatchbbc is going to ask today: wp.me/p32gem-1gq 16 hours ago
- They’re playing Strawberry Switchblade on Radio 3. Well, technically it’s Sibelius’s symphony no 5…. Thanks @PetrocTrelawny 17 hours ago
- Talking journalistic ethics & the reporting of Woolwich with Head of BBC Newsroom tomorrow. Here’s why: wp.me/p32gem-1gq 1 day ago
- Excellent r4 doco on now on the history of the lie detector, invented by the bondage-obsessed creator of Wonder Woman. 1 day ago
Tag Archives: feminism
Billy Liar, Bradford and the birth of the dollybird
“A lazy, irresponsible young clerk in provincial Northern England lives in his own fantasy world and makes emotionally immature decisions as he alienates friends and family.” Everyone loves Billy Liar. Apart from whoever wrote imdb’s current bizarrely censorious plot summary … Continue reading
Posted in Books, Comedy, Film, Uncategorized
Tagged 60s, books, Bradford, cinema, culture, feminism, film, Helen Fraser, John Schlesinger, Julie Christie, kitchen sink drama, Peter Handford, tom courtenay
12 Comments
Malala, Muslim women and “misery” memoirs
I was reading memoirs and novels by the authors taking part in Thursday’s Asia House panel discussion about women, freedom and the Islamic world, when the multimillion pound book deal of Malala Yousafzai was announced. What does the apparent popularity … Continue reading
Posted in Books, Culture, Religion
Tagged books, feminism, Islam, literature, misery lit, publishing
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From avenger to screamer: How Dr Who assistants remain trapped in time
The Reunion programme for Radio 4, produced by Peter Curran, recently brought together some of the original cast and crew of the first episode of Doctor Who. The first Dr Who team was notable for its diversity — Waris Hussein … Continue reading
Posted in Children, Culture, Science Fiction/Fantasy, TV, Uncategorized
Tagged 60s, BBC, Carole Ann Ford, culture, Doctor Who, feminism, Matt Smith, tv, Verity Lambert, Waris Hussein, William Hartnell
6 Comments
Philip Larkin and how internet porn began in 1963 (sort of)
1963 was a remarkable year. Among the glut of cultural and historical anniversaries — Dr Who, the assassination of JFK, Billy Liar and Oh What Lovely War! — we should I reckon be marking 50 years since the invention of … Continue reading
Posted in Books, Culture, Media, Uncategorized
Tagged 60s, advertising, Betty Friedan, culture, feminism, junk food, media, Philip Larkin, The Feminine Mystique
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Poor Cows and Angry Young Men: 50 years of Kitchen Sink Drama
The director Ken Loach and the theatre critic Michael Billington remember the dawn of the 60s well. “The 50s weren’t bleak and depressing,” spluttered Loach, listening to art critic Rachel Campbell-Johnston explain the grim postwar era that spawned the new … Continue reading
Posted in Culture, Film, Theatre, TV, Uncategorized
Tagged 50s, 60s, British social realism, cinema, culture, elitism, feminism, film, FTW, Ken Loach, kitchen sink drama, music, Saturday Night and Sunday Morning, tv
1 Comment
The secret elite club of ex-Virgin Marys
“I was always the sort of child who got picked on to DO things, you know?” recalls Julie Christie’s Darling, in the 1965 film, as we see her as a 6 year old Mary in the school nativity play. (watch … Continue reading
Posted in Children, Culture, Religion, Theatre, Uncategorized
Tagged Christianity, culture, feminism, film, FTW, Nativity, Virgin Mary
2 Comments
The Curse of the Typewriter
The last typewriter was made in Britain yesterday at a factory in Wales. But has the stigma of typing for women really been lost? This was originally written earlier this year to look at how far the QWERTY keyboard might … Continue reading
Posted in Business/Economics, Design, History, Media, Uncategorized
Tagged feminism, qwerty keyboard, typewriters
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Troublesome slags: What Rochdale reveals about our attitudes to teenage girls
Heywood, Rochdale (Photo by Peter Byrne/PA) A provisional multi agency report into the scale of sexual abuse of young girls in Rochdale published today admitted there were issues about the legitimate sexual “consent” of 13 year old girls that the … Continue reading
Posted in Children, Crime and Justice, journalism, Uncategorized
Tagged crime, culture, feminism, media, Rochdale, tv
2 Comments
No Mr Bond, I expect you to cry.
This column (updated since it appeared in The Big Issue last week) explores whether old James Bond films can still be enjoyed in a more feminist, more racially equal society. And then Danny Boyle put him at the heart of … Continue reading
Posted in Culture, Design, Film, Uncategorized
Tagged 007, 60s, Anthony Horowitz, books, cinema, culture, feminism, film, FTW, George Lazenby, james bond
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Call Me Sir: Ben Kingsley, Anne Rice and novel erotica
A tech journalist once told me that if watching tv on your mobile phone was such a great idea, loads of people would have been walking around with a primitive giant tv on their brick sized phones long ago. By … Continue reading
Posted in Books, Culture, Film, Media, Uncategorized
Tagged 80s, books, cinema, culture, feminism, literature, media, Porn, publishing
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