The Way We Roll

Simon Minty and Phil Friend

A seriously funny take on life from the disability driven duo... Simon Minty and Phil Friend.

  1. APR 24

    Tourette’s at the BAFTA’s, Less remote working. Our 10th anniversary.

    It was hard to miss the furore of the offensive language moment at the BAFTAs this year. A couple of months on, we take a cool, reflective look at what went wrong and how we can do better next time. We wonder whether this moment has progressed the inclusion of people with Tourette’s?  It seems the Covid impact on working from home is truly ending as remote work declines and more employees are expected to be in their workplaces. Does this have a disproportionate and negative impact on disabled employees? That said, we need to ensure we don’t argue for a world where disabled people only work from home.  Ten years ago, in April 2016, we recorded our first podcast. Back then, the Brexit referendum had just begun, there was a review of disability benefits and a doctors’ strike. Plus ça change! We remember the first pod and highlight a couple of favourite moments since. To wrap up, Phil has good news after MSPs rejected a law to introduce assisted suicide in Scotland, and Simon recommends the Disability And… podcast with Jack Thorne and Eli Beaton, who talk about disability and television.  Links BBC I Swear director says Baftas 'let down' Tourette's campaigner The Guardian letters re BAFTA  BAFTA Statement Feb 2026 BAFTA Tourette's row has 'reversed' film's message Tourettes Hero  Remote Jobs Are Disappearing — And Disabled Workers Are Paying The Price Scottish parliament votes against legalising assisted dying Disability and… Access to TV podcast  First show April 2016

    42 min
  2. FEB 20

    The Workplace Problem Nobody Talks About

    In this episode of The Way We Roll, we’re joined by Dr Georges Petitjean, founder of WARM (Workplace Addiction Recovery Movement). Georges set up WARM after years of seeing the same pattern play out: Employees struggling with substance use were too nervous to tell their employers because of the potential consequences, including discrimination or career damage, rather than support being offered. Although in recent years there’s been a rise in openness about work-related mental health conversations, addiction has largely been left out. That silence matters, with around 8–10% of employees affected by substance use disorders. Only a small fraction ever receives treatment; most are at work and coping alone. Our conversation explores why some organisations still insist “this isn’t happening here” – a familiar reaction to anyone who remembers when disability was hushed up. We talk about how stigma, language, and fear delay support, often until things reach a crisis point. Georges explains why WARM focuses on psychological safety rather than diagnosis or discipline. The aim is simple but powerful: make it safer to talk, easier to seek help, and more normal to access support early. That benefits individuals, teams, and organisations alike. We also dig into the overlaps – addiction, mental health, chronic pain, prescribed medication, disability, and work culture. Addiction itself isn’t recognised as a disability under the Equality Act, but the associated mental health conditions often are. Georges outlines plans for a pilot with employers who want to lead rather than look away. This means small changes, better language, clearer signposting and a willingness to know what’s really going on. It’s a thoughtful, honest conversation about something we don’t talk about enough – and why it needs to be discussed more. Links www.warmatwork.org

    24 min

Ratings & Reviews

4.7
out of 5
3 Ratings

About

A seriously funny take on life from the disability driven duo... Simon Minty and Phil Friend.

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