110 episodes

Have you ever locked eyes with a stranger and wondered, "What’s their story?" Step into someone else’s life and expect the unexpected. Extraordinary stories from around the world.

Lives Less Ordinary BBC World Service

    • Society & Culture
    • 4.6 • 153 Ratings

Have you ever locked eyes with a stranger and wondered, "What’s their story?" Step into someone else’s life and expect the unexpected. Extraordinary stories from around the world.

    How I convinced police my dad was a murderer

    How I convinced police my dad was a murderer

    On the day his mother disappeared in December 1989, 11-year-old Collier Landry started looking for evidence.
    He suspected his father, a rich and well-respected town doctor, had something to do with it. This is the story of Collier's fight to get justice for his mother, and the detective who believed him.
    Collier's film is called A Murder in Mansfield.
    Presenter: Asya Fouks
    Producer: Helen Fitzhenry
    Get in touch: liveslessordinary@bbc.co.uk or WhatsApp: 0044 330 678 2784

    • 50 min
    Balochistan’s mystery benjo man, part 2

    Balochistan’s mystery benjo man, part 2

    How Ustad Noor Bakhsh, a Pakistani shepherd in his 70s, became a folk music star
    After hunting for four years, Pakistani ethnomusicologist Daniyal Ahmed finally finds Ustad Noor Bakhsh, an elderly shepherd and master of the electric benjo – an obscure stringed instrument with typewriter keys. With Daniyal’s help, Ustad Noor would go from serenading his goats in the jungles of Balochistan to performing for revellers on the European festival circuit.
    Presenter: Mobeen Azhar
    Producer: Maryam Maruf
    Translation: Wajid Baloch
    Get in touch: liveslessordinary@bbc.co.uk or WhatsApp: 0044 330 678 2784

    • 38 min
    Balochistan’s mystery benjo man, part 1

    Balochistan’s mystery benjo man, part 1

    The epic quest to find an elderly Pakistani musician and his unusual stringed instrument
    Daniyal Ahmed is a flute player and anthropologist who spends his time searching out and documenting folk music across Pakistan. In 2018, he was mesmerised by a video clip of an elderly man – described as a “poor fisherman” – expertly playing a benjo, an obscure stringed instrument that looks like a cross between a guitar and a typewriter. So began Daniyal’s hunt for this mystery master musician.
    Presenter: Mobeen Azhar
    Producer: Maryam Maruf
    Get in touch: liveslessordinary@bbc.co.uk or WhatsApp: 0044 330 678 2784

    • 40 min
    Exposing Silicon Valley's multimillion dollar fraud

    Exposing Silicon Valley's multimillion dollar fraud

    Erika Cheung went from a trailer park to a top tech company job, but something was off.
    She knew how to work hard, growing up in a one-bedroom trailer, she dreamed of pursuing her passion for science and helping others. So Erika was thrilled to land her first job out of university at a booming tech company promising a revolution in healthcare. Fronted by the glamorous and wealthy Elizabeth Holmes, Theranos claimed to have the technology to be able to tell from a few drops of blood whether someone had a range of diseases. That was not true. And it took Erika, one of their most junior employees, to blow the whistle – at great personal risk.
    Presenter: Jo Fidgen
    Producer: Mary Goodhart
    Editor: Munazza Khan
    Get in touch: liveslessordinary@bbc.co.uk or WhatsApp: 0044 330 678 2784

    • 49 min
    Bonus: The Black 14

    Bonus: The Black 14

    A bonus episode from the Amazing Sport Stories podcast – The Black 14. Sport, racism and protests are about to change the lives of “the Black 14” American footballers. It’s 1969 in the United States. They’ve arrived on scholarships at the University of Wyoming to play for its Cowboys American football team. It was a predominantly white college. The team is treated like a second religion. Then, the players make a decision to take a stand against racism in a game against another university.

    This is episode one of a four-part season from the Amazing Sport Stories podcast.

    Content warning: This episode contains lived experiences which involve the use of strong racist language

    • 32 min
    My grandmother walked the rabbit-proof fence

    My grandmother walked the rabbit-proof fence

    Maria's grandmother was forcibly taken by Australian officials, but made a daring escape.
    As children Maria Pilkington's mother and grandmother were both among the Stolen Generation, removed from their homes to be trained as domestic servants for white families. It was part of an Australian policy dating back to the 1930s to remove mixed-race children from any Aboriginal influence. But Maria's 14-year-old grandmother escaped, with her sister and cousin, by following a pest-control barrier that went right through Western Australia back to their home. The girls' extraordinary three-month, 1400km walk home became the Hollywood film Rabbit-Proof Fence, based on a book written by Maria's mother.
    Presenter: Jo Fidgen
    Producer: Sarah Kendal

    Get in touch: liveslessordinary@bbc.co.uk or WhatsApp 0044 330 678 2784

    • 40 min

Customer Reviews

4.6 out of 5
153 Ratings

153 Ratings

LSyogi ,

Amazing

This is one of my new favourite shows. So many interesting, riveting, heart wrenching

jamaisdelavie ,

Extraordinary stories

This podcast has been a real find for me. The enthusiasm displayed by the interviewers and the amazing stories of people impress me so much. A truly captivating series!

Jazz_Man ,

Inspired every day

I am in wonder every day from the amazing stories I hear and the incredible journalists. I can’t imagine life without the BBC. Monique O’Dea Sydney I’m addicted to Outlook and have been for years. There’s no such thing as an ordinary day when hears such incredible real life stories. Inspiring and uplifting What Susan did on death row brought me to tears. I have to listen to it again and I have sent it to my family, saying whatever you do, listen to this first. Outlook and many other BBC podcasts have opened the world to me Your podcasts are amazing and I am so impressed with the sensitivity and intelligence of the journalists. Jo Fidgeon, Emily Webb, all of you. Saving Pakistan’s Condemned Prisoners brought me to tears. I had to stop what I was doing and just sit and listen, in floods of tears.

The Fisherman and the spy whale is a very moving story. Incredible!!!!

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