482 episodes

Seriously is home to the world’s best audio documentaries and podcast recommendations, and host Vanessa Kisuule brings you two fascinating new episodes every week.

Seriously..‪.‬ BBC Radio 4

    • Society & Culture
    • 4.1 • 143 Ratings

Seriously is home to the world’s best audio documentaries and podcast recommendations, and host Vanessa Kisuule brings you two fascinating new episodes every week.

    How Much Can You Say?

    How Much Can You Say?

    "The north London heroin trade is almost folklore at this stage."
    For decades, calculated gang warfare involving Turkish, Turkish Cypriot, and Kurdish heroin dealers has played out on the streets of north London, in the midst of dry cleaners, empty market stalls, and oddly abundant carpet shops. In this intimate documentary, we hear the careful accounts of women and young people on the edges of that world.
    "It is a life-or-death situation to say the wrong thing."
    Featuring creative direction and original poetry from Tice Cin, an award-winning interdisciplinary artist from Tottenham and Enfield.
    "The best way to put it is if you look at the Turkish word ‘suskunluk’ ... It's the honour thing, you can't be bad-mouthing your own community."
    Presented by Tice Cin
    Produced by Jude Shapiro with Tice Cin
    Executive Producer: Jack Howson
    Mixed by Arlie Adlington - including music composed by Tice Cin with Oscar Deniz Kemanci
    A Peanut & Crumb production for BBC Radio 4
    (Programme Image by Peri Cimen & Tice Cin; © Neoprene Genie)

    • 29 min
    Portugal’s Carnation Revolution

    Portugal’s Carnation Revolution

    25th April 2024 marked the 50th anniversary of Portugal's 'Carnation Revolution', which overthrew the authoritarian dictatorship of the Estado Novo ('New State') which had governed Portugal since the 1920s. A largely bloodless revolution, marked by the carnations that were placed in the rifles of the soldiers, it led to the successful establishment of democracy in Portugal and the integration of more than half-a-million 'retornados' - returnees - Portuguese citizens from its former African colonies.
    Portugal's revolution was indeed televised, and recorded in sound. One of those who bore witness to its aftermath was journalist, and former Channel 4 news presenter Jon Snow, who reported from Portugal at the time for LBC Radio. At this important anniversary, he remembers his time there, and tells the story of what unfolded, through archive and interviews with those who organised and lived through those heady days of April 1974.
    Presenter: Jon Snow
    Producer: Michael Rossi
    With thanks to RTP (Rádio e Televisão de Portugal) and LBC for archive.

    • 28 min
    Night Train

    Night Train

    In literature and film, night trains are the setting for intrigue and romance, espionage and sudden death. And in real life too they’re places of possibility and the expectation of new adventures. Writer Horatio Clare boards a train to Vienna for a night-time journey across Europe… and into the archive, aboard night trains of decades past.
    His journey begins at the Gare de l’Est in Paris, the departure point for the original Orient Express. He looks back to the golden age of the Wagons-Lits, sleeper trains with wood-panelled cabins, an attendant in every carriage ready to be summoned and dining cars where evening dress was obligatory. It was an era which provided rich inspiration for writers and Horatio evokes his predecessors who used night trains to tell stories of brief encounters, betrayal and, of course, murder.
    But luxurious Wagons-Lits are only one part of the story. Other travellers find themselves on very different night-time journeys. There are the rucksack-lugging student inter-railers of the ‘70s and ‘80s, sleeping in train corridors on expeditions of discovery (and self-discovery); the perils of sharing sleeping compartments with strangers; and the Ukrainian refugees reluctantly taking the ‘Rescue Express’ westward as they fled the Russian invasion.
    After a long period of decline, night trains are on the rise again as new routes open up across Europe. Maybe it’s because we’re tired of the indignities of budget air travel but it’s also driven by the “Flight Shame” and “Train Brag” movements - a growing awareness that travelling by train is better for the planet. “I’m on a train” is no longer an apology for a poor phone signal. Now it’s a claim to the moral high ground.
    Horatio’s journey doesn’t quite go to plan. But as he overcomes the challenges and navigates his way to Vienna, he discovers that night trains have always taken our imaginations to new destinations.
    Produced by Jeremy Grange for BBC Audio Wales and West

    • 57 min
    True Crime 1599

    True Crime 1599

    For the last decade, True Crime has become ubiquitous on television and podcasts. Yet despite its current popularity, it’s not a new phenomenon. In this programme, author Charles Nicholl take us back to a time before podcasts, TV, pulp magazines, even Penny Dreadfuls – all the way to the English stage 400 years ago when, for the first time, playhouses were putting contemporary news onstage.
    Presenter: Charles Nicholl
    Actors: Rhiannon Neads, John Lightbody, Michael Bertenshaw, Josh Bryant-Jones, Ian Dunnett Junior
    Sound design: Peter Ringrose
    Producer: Sasha Yevtushenko

    • 28 min
    About the Boys - Episode 1

    About the Boys - Episode 1

    In this series, teenage boys from all over the UK talk frankly to Catherine Carr about sex, consent, life online, fun and friendship. They discuss porn, their struggles at school and becoming men.
    In the first episode, they talk candidly about what it is like to be a boy in 2024. They reflect on where they get their ideas about masculinity from, and whether those might be different if they lived elsewhere in the country. They also discuss the importance of role models - if they have them. Catherine also hears from adults making a difference in boys’ lives and finds out how examples of masculinity online can put real pressure on boys thinking about what it means to be a ‘successful man’.
    To listen to the rest of the series, just search for About the Boys on BBC Sounds.
    Thanks to
    South Dartmoor Community College
    Dr Martin Robb, Open University
    DRMZ Carmarthen Youth Project
    Thomas Lynch from Dad's Rock
    Elliott Rae Founder of MusicFootballFatherhood
    Cambridge St Giles Cricket Club
    Dance United Yorkshire
    Movember
    Rebecca Asher Author ‘Man Up How Do Boys Become Better Men?’
    Producer: Catherine Carr
    Researcher: Jill Achineku
    Executive Producer: Marie Helly
    A Whistledown production for BBC Radio 4

    • 15 min
    Haiti - Descent Into Anarchy

    Haiti - Descent Into Anarchy

    With criminal gangs now controlling most of Haiti's capital and no function government, Mike Thomson explores what caused this spiralling descent to Anarchy in this predominately Christian, Caribbean country, where more than half its eleven million French and Creole speaking people live below the poverty line. Mike looks for answers with help from Haitians, experts and political leaders who’ve lived through many of their nation’s recent social upheavals and natural disasters.
    Producer: Ed Prendeville
    BBC Audio in Cardiff

    • 28 min

Customer Reviews

4.1 out of 5
143 Ratings

143 Ratings

TheRunningStitcher ,

Fantastic but where are the follow-up episodes?

I have just come across this podcast and looking forward to listening to the vast back catalogue of some great topics, but have found they have published only the first episode of many multi-part series. Am I missing something????

Calijanthe ,

Your grandmother wouldn’t like it?

This comment on the likely appeal v lack of appeal of Lee Lozano’s untitled 1963, the still life of a hammer, is a little unfair, as is the comment that middle class people don’t want this kind of thing in the living room. It’s a 7 foot painting, for heaven’s sake. I like it well, but how many middle class people have a room that would hold it? And getting back to the artistic appreciation of grandmothers as a class; moving from the standpoint of an outright bourgeoise to speaking as a grandmother, I still like it. Maybe the critic was talking about his own grandmother, or maybe the grandmothers of baby boomers. And it’s true that my grandma, who was born around the turn of the 20th century and whose taste in art didn’t extend much beyond the illustrations in cowboy novels and Saturday Evening Post, would not have liked it. Best avoid the ageism and classism unless you want lots of this kind of comment.

JagoRay ,

Variety

Such a variety of subjects and ideas explored and discussed.

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