Lydia Bright is part of 'The Bright's' podcast, covering the lives of her and her family. The find-the-party convoys are excellently described and I loved Smith’s explicitly political connection between the disused factories where he used to host his raves and the working-class kids who were dancing. First, a six-part documentary (plus a bonus episode), hosted by 5 Live’s Chris Warburton. Clubbers at the Haçienda in Manchester in 1988. Her speciality is ordinary people in extraordinary situations, and the first show has her talking to Cynthia Djengue, daughter of Judy White. "He tells you the important things you need to know about economics and money and savings but in this language that you understand, and you're like 'OK cool I get it now'. Presenter Ben van der Velde says: "Every time we put on the news we thought it was really scary and really depressing so we thought we'd start mining through history and modern culture to find some heroic failures and enormous idiots.

"Heroic failure is part of our creative process anyway so we wanted to look at other heroic failures to feel better about ourselves.". The first track on the podcast is Frankie Knuckles’s Your Love, not the Source track that sampled it. It can feel strange when a specific time in your life is deemed significant, when real life becomes history, something to be investigated and retold.

Initially, I found this incredibly jarring, not because Warburton doesn’t ask the right questions – he does – but because he’s such an outsider. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information. The result is never quite how you recall things. I would have liked a bit more of that. He really gives his presentation his all. So although we hear the music, it’s played without fanfare or announcement, underneath the interviewees, a subconscious reminder. There is some brilliant stuff in the series. White was on TV recently: she’s the old lady with the long grey hair who’s spent 40-plus years in a US jail.



Anyway, that’s just me being snotty. "It just makes you realise what incredible people are out there and how fortunate we all are. Chris Warburton presents BBC Radio 5 Live's End of Days podcast, about the British people who travelled to Waco, Texas, to join a cult. A history of UK acid house and rave recreates the scene’s drug-fuelled intensity, despite the BBC’s ‘newshound’ approach, Last modified on Mon 21 Sep 2020 14.12 BST, Ecstasy: The Battle of Rave (Radio 5 Live) | BBC Sounds. I Can’t Believe It’s Not Buddha A surprising one here: comedian Lee Mack is interested in Buddhism, so he’s decided to have a closer look, with his friend, the TV producer and writer Neil Webster. Listen now (38 min) | On this episode, I speak with Chris Warburton, Head of Marketing & Growth at Flippa, a peer-to-peer marketplace for digital assets, about their future product development and direction. And yes, we get some news reports, but they’re interwoven in a similar way. Her pick is Katie Piper's Extraordinary People - described as 'stories that will inspire you, making you laugh and cry'. This has now been corrected. And alongside some familiar voices, such as Happy Mondays’ Shaun Ryder and Haçienda DJ Graeme Park, we also hear from others – notably Genesis club promoter Wayne Anthony, Blackburn rave creators Tommy Smith and Jane Winterbottom, and drug dealer John Burton. (For a start, it’s not on BBC Four.) Which may well sound like not your cup of tea, but actually turns out to be a proper brew. Chris Warburton Presenter Weekend Breakfast + Beyond Reasonable Doubt/End Of Days podcasts for BBC Radio 5live. Bishop and Pitts are funny (obviously), but also open about their own lives and problems, and they know when to talk and when to shut up. Ecstasy: The Battle of Rave is not your usual hands-aloft-blow-yer-whistle-remember-the-good-times nostalgiafest. 4 of The Best Podcast Episodes for Chris Warburton. Five podcast presenters have picked their favourite podcasts for you to enjoy. Chattier and scattier than Three Little Words, this show actually comes from a similar place: that space where middle-aged men try to work out how to live life so it doesn’t kill them. "Like any good podcast you become part of the club in a way, there's that intimacy between you and them, and the more you listen to it the more you understand their sense of humour, you're like the third person in the room, and you look forward to what they're going to come up with next.". Vic says: "It's a girl who gets loads of different guests on and she talks about hot topics and people who are experts in their areas. Iain Lee's live on talkRADIO between 10pm-1am Monday to Fridays but, if for some inexplicable reason you miss the show, you can get the best bits every day right here.Or, to be absolutely certain you don't miss out, subscribe to the podcast on iTunes. If Burton’s trainers are anything other than absolutely on point, I’ll eat my Spezials. Reporter on The One Show United Kingdom 383 connections Chris Warburton is joined by Judas Priest lead singer Rob Halford as he talks about his memoir, Confess. I love the idea because the research they put into it is amazing.". Gabriel Ebulue presents The Three Track Podcast where he invites guests to come on and discuss three of their favourite music tracks. This article was amended on 21 September. Tolani Shoneye is one of the presenters of The Receipts podcast - available from BBC Radio 1Xtra. As the series progressed, I grew quite fond of Warburton’s wowsers, hammer-it-high approach.