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An insight into the character of an influential figure making news headlines

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An insight into the character of an influential figure making news headlines

    TImmy Mallett

    TImmy Mallett

    Timmy Mallett, former DJ and 1980s children's TV presenter, is creating a social media storm, during a cycle tour around Northern Ireland, in tribute to his late brother, Martin who had Down's Syndrome.
    Timmy Mallett was a massive star on children's TV in the 1980s and 90s. He honed his zany style of presenting on Piccadilly Radio in Manchester. Amongst his helpers were a teenage Chris Evans and the Today programme's Nick Robinson. He then went on to breakfast television where he presented the Wide Awake Club with Michaela Strachan and then Wacaday. A generation of children grew up watching him and his trusty foam mallet, Pinky Punky which he used to bonk competitors on the head when they stumbled or hesitated in his word association game Mallett's Mallet.
    Nowadays, he's swapped the Mallet for the artist's palette and is as successful at art as he was at children's TV presenting. At the age of 68, he's cycling round Northern Ireland, giving mini history lessons and tour guides on TikTok whilst painting scenes of his travels in memory of his late brother.
    PRESENTER: Mark Coles
    CONTRIBUTORS
    Mairia Cahill, Sunday Independent, Ireland
    Professor Brian Cox, Professor of Particle Physics, University of Manchester
    Helen and Peter Francis, family friends
    Tony Ingham, former Head of Entertainment, Piccadilly Radio, Manchester
    Michaela Strachan, TV presenter
    Nick Robinson, Zack the Zit
    PRODUCTION CREDITS
    Radio Luxembourg
    Piccadilly Radio, Manchester
    TV-AM Wide Awake Club and Wacaday
    PRODUCTION TEAM
    Producers: Julie Ball and Diane Richardson
    Editor: Tom Bigwood
    Sound: Neil Churchill
    Production Co-ordinators: Maria Ogundele and Ibtisam Zein

    • 14 Min.
    Paul Sinton-Hewitt

    Paul Sinton-Hewitt

    Paul Sinton-Hewitt, the founder of parkrun, was born in Zimbabwe and moved to South Africa at the age of five, where he was brought up in care with his two siblings. Always a keen middle distance runner, he was a second for a friend in one of South Africa's most gruelling road races. Eventually he moved to the UK to work in IT and raise a family.
    After a perfect storm of redundancy, marriage breakdown and an injury which prevented him from running with his own club, he decided he'd start a time trial in a local park, for his running club pals. The only proviso that they had to have coffee and cake with him afterwards.
    Twenty years later, that timed run that he started has outpaced anything he could have envisaged and turned into parkrun. The 5k run around local parks on a Saturday morning, has gone global and the parkrun community has hundreds of thousands of people running or volunteering as stewards every week. Stephen Smith finds out what makes Paul Sinton-Hewitt run.
    PRESENTER: Stephen Smith
    PRODUCTION TEAM
    Producers: Julie Ball, Natasha Fernandes, Farhana Haider
    Editor: Tom Bigwood
    Production Co-ordinators: Maria Ogundele and Sabine Schereck
    Sound: Neil Churchill
    CONTRIBUTORS
    Roun Barry, School friend
    Hugh Brasher, Director, London Marathon
    Bruce Fordyce, Marathon runner
    Duncan Gaskell, parkrunner and friend
    Russ Jeffereys - CEO, parkrun
    Eileen Jones, Author and parkrunner
    Joanne Sinton-Hewitt, Wife

    • 14 Min.
    Simon Harris

    Simon Harris

    Although Simon Harris reportedly describes himself as an 'accidental politician', he has managed to make a career out of it. His interest in politics was sparked at the age of 15 when he set up a support group in his local town to campaign for better secondary education for autistic people after he saw his parents struggle to get help for his younger brother. From then on his path was set. After a brief dalliance with Fianna Fail he joined the youth wing of the Fine Gael party at 17. He gave up his degree studies in year three of a four year course to work as an assistant to the then leader of the opposition in the Irish Parliament. By the age of 24 he was elected to parliament with the nickname 'Baby of the Dail' and was a junior minister by the age of 27. Since then he's held two further ministerial posts.
    Now, after the shock resignation of former Taioseach, Leo Varadkar in late March, he was elected unopposed as leader of the Fine Gael party and now is expected to be confirmed as the new Taoiseach when the parliament returns after the Easter break. With a new nickname, 'The Tik Tok Taoiseach' because of his use of social media he's on track to break another record, set by his predecessor as the youngest Taoiseach in history to date.
    Kate Lamble finds out what makes him tick outside of Tik Tok and his rapid rise to the top job in Irish politics.
    PRESENTER: Kate Lamble
    CONTRIBUTORS
    Frances Fitzgerald, MEP, Dublin, Ireland
    Councillor Ray McAdam, Fine Gael
    Alice O'Donnell, Triple A Alliance
    Jennifer O'Leary, BBC Ireland Correspondent
    Fionnan Sheahan, Ireland Editor, The Irish Independent
    PRODUCTION TEAM
    Producers: Julie Ball & Madeleine Drury
    Researcher: Jay Gardner
    Editor: Tom Bigwood
    Production Co-ordinators: Katie Morrison & Sabine Schereck
    Sound: Nigel Appleton

    • 15 Min.
    Bishop Rosemarie Mallett

    Bishop Rosemarie Mallett

    Rosemarie Mallett’s star has risen quickly in the Church of England. After a career in academia and a period of disenchantment with the institution, she became a priest in 2005, attracting the attention of senior members of the clergy for her engagement with communities and issues of social justice alike.
    Bishop Rosemarie was herself born into a situation shaped by slavery, in the then colony Barbados, before coming to the UK as a child. Now a senior cleric, she has co-authored a report on how the Church of England should make amends for its historic financial involvement in the transatlantic slave trade, which has attracted praise from some and criticism from others.
    Stephen Smith talks to those who know Mallett best, exploring how her life has shaped her approach to music, ministry, and racial justice.
    Presenter: Stephen Smith
    Producer: Nathan Gower
    Production team: Debbie Richford, Drew Hyndman
    Editor: Tom Bigwood
    Programme Coordinators: Sabine Schereck, Maria Ogundele
    Sound Engineer: Rod Farquhar

    • 14 Min.
    Vaughan Gething

    Vaughan Gething

    Vaughan Gething this week became Wales’ new First Minister, and the leader of Welsh Labour. He’s the fifth person to hold the post and the first black leader of a national government in Europe.
    No stranger to breaking barriers, this employment lawyer rose apace to the top of student and trades unions alike, before election to the Welsh Senedd and ministerial office, charged with overseeing first health and then the economy.
    Mark Coles looks back at how a cricket-mad schoolboy became First Minister of the land of his father - a journey from Zambia to Cardiff by way of rural Dorset - and finds out what drives him from those who know him best.

    Presenter: Mark Coles
    Producer: Nathan Gower
    Production Team: Debbie Richford, Drew Hyndman, Julie Ball
    Production Coordinator: Katie Morrison
    Editor: Tom Bigwood
    Sound Engineer: Graham Puddifoot

    • 14 Min.
    Michael Gove

    Michael Gove

    The current Secretary for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities, Michael Gove, first joined the cabinet in 2010 and has remained there for most of the past 14 years in various posts. He’s served four prime ministers.
    During that time he has provoked controversy from many areas - from teachers, lawyers, landlords for the policies he has championed. But he has also attracted friends and enemies in his own party due to his decisions over Brexit, leadership bids and party politics.
    Presenter: Mark Coles
    Producers: Charlotte McDonald and Debbie Richford
    Editor: Tom Bigwood
    Production Co-ordinator: Katie Morrison
    Sound Engineer: James Beard
    Credits
    Sky News
    ITV

    • 14 Min.

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