The Podcast Show, the biggest international festival for the business of podcasting, is back for a third year. The one-of-a-kind event will bring together industry leaders, brands, platforms and the sharpest new creators from across the globe to celebrate and help shape the future of podcasting. The festival will take place across two days at The Business Design Centre in Islington, London on 22 & 23 May 2024, in the heart of the city’s media district.
In May 2023, the show brought together over 10,000+ visitors (day and night) from the audio industry globally, to learn, do business and network. It was an extraordinary international celebration of the industry, with 40% of visitors coming from outside the UK. Over 40 countries were represented including: the US, Germany, France, Netherlands, Sweden, Norway, Australia, Canada, Spain, Denmark, South Korea, Brazil and more. The show featured some of the most recognisable names in podcasting including: Emily Maitlis, Jon Sopel & Lewis Goodall,...
In May 2023, the show brought together over 10,000+ visitors (day and night) from the audio industry globally, to learn, do business and network. It was an extraordinary international celebration of the industry, with 40% of visitors coming from outside the UK. Over 40 countries were represented including: the US, Germany, France, Netherlands, Sweden, Norway, Australia, Canada, Spain, Denmark, South Korea, Brazil and more. The show featured some of the most recognisable names in podcasting including: Emily Maitlis, Jon Sopel & Lewis Goodall,...
- 2/28/2024
- Podnews.net
The Charlatans frontman Tim Burgess is returning for a second series of his podcast. Tim’s Listening Party hears from guest artists, sharing stories and insights about their seminal albums. The eight-part series is also broadcast on Absolute Radio. Guests on the first series included Fall Out Boy, U2’s the Edge and Skin from Skunk Anansie with The Observer’s Miranda Sawyer commenting about the show that ‘any band would kill to get their LP played and treated with such respect'.
- 7/20/2023
- by PodcastingToday
- Podcastingtoday
How To Fail’s Elizabeth Day will be the Chair of Judges for this year’s British Podcast Awards. Named the British Podcast Awards' Rising Star in 2019, Elizabeth's hugely successful podcast How To Fail has since reached over 40 million downloads and she launched Best Friend Therapy with psychotherapist Emma Reed-Turrell in 2022. The #1 Sunday Times bestselling author follows in the footsteps of Emily Maitlis and Jon Sopel, George The Poet, Dr Rangan Chatterjee and Miranda Sawyer.
- 5/2/2023
- by PodcastingToday
- Podcastingtoday
Simon Pegg, an actor best known for his roles in major action-adventure franchises like Star Trek and Mission: Impossible, has but one thing to say to people who criticize Black Lives Matter, and that’s: “Shut the f*** up!”
The star said as much in an interview with the British newspaper The Observer. Aside from discussing the recent political developments in the world, the actor also talked about the upcoming Mission: Impossible 7, as well as his interest in personal therapy and his latest picture, Lost Transmissions.
When Pegg brought up the subject of Black Lives Matter, he mentioned that he’s been attending meetings with Cephas Williams, a civil rights activist whose campaign 56 Black Men aims to challenge negative stereotypes of black culture. According to The Observer reporter Miranda Sawyer, these meetings are meant to “help make inroads for black performers, writers and directors.”
See Simon Pegg's Shocking Body...
The star said as much in an interview with the British newspaper The Observer. Aside from discussing the recent political developments in the world, the actor also talked about the upcoming Mission: Impossible 7, as well as his interest in personal therapy and his latest picture, Lost Transmissions.
When Pegg brought up the subject of Black Lives Matter, he mentioned that he’s been attending meetings with Cephas Williams, a civil rights activist whose campaign 56 Black Men aims to challenge negative stereotypes of black culture. According to The Observer reporter Miranda Sawyer, these meetings are meant to “help make inroads for black performers, writers and directors.”
See Simon Pegg's Shocking Body...
- 6/30/2020
- by Tim Brinkhof
- We Got This Covered
Donny Osmond's guest stint on Strictly Come Dancing didn't appear to go down too well with viewers, judging by reactions on Twitter.
Osmond, who has won Strictly's Us counterpart Dancing With The Stars, was a special guest fifth judge for Movie Week.
However, not everyone was impressed by the veteran American popstar, and he has been mocked by viewers for his over-generous and erratic scoring - which included the first '10' of the series for Frankie Bridge - and more embarrassingly, his hair.
A small sample of the cheekiest and angriest Twitter reactions are below.
Watching Strictly on catch up. Mrs E really not happy that Donny Osmond is dishing out real marks that may make a difference.
— Chris Evans (@achrisevans) October 11, 2014
I think Donny Osmond might have wrestled the "worst guest judge" trophy right out of Jennifer Grey's hands. #scd
— Steven Perkins (@stevenperkins) October 11, 2014
...an...
Osmond, who has won Strictly's Us counterpart Dancing With The Stars, was a special guest fifth judge for Movie Week.
However, not everyone was impressed by the veteran American popstar, and he has been mocked by viewers for his over-generous and erratic scoring - which included the first '10' of the series for Frankie Bridge - and more embarrassingly, his hair.
A small sample of the cheekiest and angriest Twitter reactions are below.
Watching Strictly on catch up. Mrs E really not happy that Donny Osmond is dishing out real marks that may make a difference.
— Chris Evans (@achrisevans) October 11, 2014
I think Donny Osmond might have wrestled the "worst guest judge" trophy right out of Jennifer Grey's hands. #scd
— Steven Perkins (@stevenperkins) October 11, 2014
...an...
- 10/11/2014
- Digital Spy
Picture taken as hint that Pegg in line for lead role in forthcoming Edgar Wright-directed superhero film
Watch Pegg, Wright and Nick Frost talk about The World's End
Read Miranda Sawyer's interview with Pegg and Frost
Simon Pegg has galvanised internet rumours surrounding his World's End collaborator Edgar Wright's upcoming Ant-Man movie by tweeting a picture of himself pointing at artwork of the character.
The picture, apparently taken on a trip to Marvel's HQ and one of a string Pegg tweeted last night, has been widely seized on as Pegg hinting that he is in line to take the lead role in the film.
Ant-Man is due to be Wright's next film after The World's End to be co-written with Attack the Block's Joe Cornish, and the director talked up the project at Comic Con, saying he would begin prepping the film in October. Ant-Man is...
Watch Pegg, Wright and Nick Frost talk about The World's End
Read Miranda Sawyer's interview with Pegg and Frost
Simon Pegg has galvanised internet rumours surrounding his World's End collaborator Edgar Wright's upcoming Ant-Man movie by tweeting a picture of himself pointing at artwork of the character.
The picture, apparently taken on a trip to Marvel's HQ and one of a string Pegg tweeted last night, has been widely seized on as Pegg hinting that he is in line to take the lead role in the film.
Ant-Man is due to be Wright's next film after The World's End to be co-written with Attack the Block's Joe Cornish, and the director talked up the project at Comic Con, saying he would begin prepping the film in October. Ant-Man is...
- 8/16/2013
- by Andrew Pulver
- The Guardian - Film News
The Us actor sparks a fresh debate about racial jokes – and isn't the only one. Meanwhile, could Ricky Gervais swing a record deal for David Brent? And Spotify launches a comedy app
This week's comedy news
Comedian and actor Tim Allen is in a spot of bother this week. Specifically for telling the Tampa Bay Times that he should be able to say the n-word as much as he likes. "If I have no intent, if I show no intent, if I clearly am not a racist, then how can 'nigger' be bad coming out of my mouth?" asked Allen. The comic, who claimed to use the word regularly in his standup, added that "[the phrase] 'the n-word' is worse to me than nigger." African-American commentators politely but firmly disagreed. "Here's a general rule of thumb to follow when using the n-word for white people," said sociologist, author and radio host Michael Eric Dyson on MSNBC: "Never.
This week's comedy news
Comedian and actor Tim Allen is in a spot of bother this week. Specifically for telling the Tampa Bay Times that he should be able to say the n-word as much as he likes. "If I have no intent, if I show no intent, if I clearly am not a racist, then how can 'nigger' be bad coming out of my mouth?" asked Allen. The comic, who claimed to use the word regularly in his standup, added that "[the phrase] 'the n-word' is worse to me than nigger." African-American commentators politely but firmly disagreed. "Here's a general rule of thumb to follow when using the n-word for white people," said sociologist, author and radio host Michael Eric Dyson on MSNBC: "Never.
- 7/30/2013
- by Brian Logan
- The Guardian - Film News
Comic hints that a high-profile hunger strike might be on the cards. And if that wasn't confusing enough, Sunday is now a day of atheism and Jo Brand a product of patriarchy
This week's comedy news
Is Frankie Boyle about to go on hunger strike? As reported by the Guardian last week, the human rights lawyer Clive Stafford Smith is currently hunger-striking in solidarity with his client Shaker Aamer, who is imprisoned at Guantánamo Bay and has been striking for 150 days. In an interview last Thursday on Radio Scotland, and again the following day on this website, Stafford Smith claimed the standup and ex-Mock the Week star is lined up to "take over from me when I fail" – ie starve himself to raise awareness of the plight of inmates at Guantánamo. The move would represent a strong break with Boyle's cynical public image, but all his management will say...
This week's comedy news
Is Frankie Boyle about to go on hunger strike? As reported by the Guardian last week, the human rights lawyer Clive Stafford Smith is currently hunger-striking in solidarity with his client Shaker Aamer, who is imprisoned at Guantánamo Bay and has been striking for 150 days. In an interview last Thursday on Radio Scotland, and again the following day on this website, Stafford Smith claimed the standup and ex-Mock the Week star is lined up to "take over from me when I fail" – ie starve himself to raise awareness of the plight of inmates at Guantánamo. The move would represent a strong break with Boyle's cynical public image, but all his management will say...
- 7/16/2013
- by Brian Logan
- The Guardian - Film News
Michael Palin, the travel documentary presenter and Monty Python comedian, has taken a swipe at some modern forms of documentary storytelling.
Palin, who has made several travel series for the BBC including Sahara, Himalaya and most recently Brazil, said: “TV production today is like selling toilet paper. You are selling a product.”
Speaking to journalist and broadcaster Miranda Sawyer at Sheffield Doc/Fest, Palin said he preferred films that “unfolded” over time rather than frontloading all the information.
“Documentaries are now selling the programme before it has even started,” he said.
“They tell you what you are going to see in the first three minutes. Documentaries seemingly aren’t allowed to unfold like they used to. Everything has to be pre-sold like toothpaste.”
He added that classic comedy series Monty Python would not have been commissioned today because executives “would ask for a description of what we were going to do and we couldn’t have told...
Palin, who has made several travel series for the BBC including Sahara, Himalaya and most recently Brazil, said: “TV production today is like selling toilet paper. You are selling a product.”
Speaking to journalist and broadcaster Miranda Sawyer at Sheffield Doc/Fest, Palin said he preferred films that “unfolded” over time rather than frontloading all the information.
“Documentaries are now selling the programme before it has even started,” he said.
“They tell you what you are going to see in the first three minutes. Documentaries seemingly aren’t allowed to unfold like they used to. Everything has to be pre-sold like toothpaste.”
He added that classic comedy series Monty Python would not have been commissioned today because executives “would ask for a description of what we were going to do and we couldn’t have told...
- 6/14/2013
- by michael.rosser@screendaily.com (Michael Rosser)
- ScreenDaily
Open thread: with Shane Meadows' documentary Made of Stone arriving next month, we'd like to hear your suggestions for the Madchester legends' ultimate track
In the Observer this Sunday, Miranda Sawyer speaks to director Shane Meadows about his new documentary, Made of Stone. The film follows the Stone Roses as they announce their 2012 reunion, rehearse for their first tour in more than 15 years and play three sellout homecoming gigs at Manchester's Heaton Park.
Despite their revered status, the band have released just two studio albums: their self-titled 1989 debut (which, Sawyer says, "seems to grow more beautiful as the years go by") and 1994's Second Coming. While that's not an impossibly vast back-catalogue to wade through, in today's age of Spotify-addled attention spans, the newcomer often needs to have a band's best work shoved under their nose before their interest is piqued.
With that in mind, what is the one...
In the Observer this Sunday, Miranda Sawyer speaks to director Shane Meadows about his new documentary, Made of Stone. The film follows the Stone Roses as they announce their 2012 reunion, rehearse for their first tour in more than 15 years and play three sellout homecoming gigs at Manchester's Heaton Park.
Despite their revered status, the band have released just two studio albums: their self-titled 1989 debut (which, Sawyer says, "seems to grow more beautiful as the years go by") and 1994's Second Coming. While that's not an impossibly vast back-catalogue to wade through, in today's age of Spotify-addled attention spans, the newcomer often needs to have a band's best work shoved under their nose before their interest is piqued.
With that in mind, what is the one...
- 5/24/2013
- by Guardian music
- The Guardian - Film News
As the documentary festival enters its 20th year with a record number of film submissions, Daniel Dylan Wray guides you through the programme and events
Last year's festival featured a surprise performance by the star of a film that would go on to win an Oscar, so you would think the organisers of 2013's Sheffield Doc/Fest would be feeling the pressure just one month from curtains-up.
But the festival's programmer, Hussain Currimbhoy, seems relatively calm on deadline day for the event's 20th anniversary programme. "It's pressure every year," he says. "We pressure ourselves to make it the best programme every year and the best festival every year".
That task is made harder by the festival's swelling attendance and growing film submissions, which this year topped 2,000 for the first time. These are whittled down to just 120 (including crossover platforms and shorts); only 80 of these will make it through as feature films.
Last year's festival featured a surprise performance by the star of a film that would go on to win an Oscar, so you would think the organisers of 2013's Sheffield Doc/Fest would be feeling the pressure just one month from curtains-up.
But the festival's programmer, Hussain Currimbhoy, seems relatively calm on deadline day for the event's 20th anniversary programme. "It's pressure every year," he says. "We pressure ourselves to make it the best programme every year and the best festival every year".
That task is made harder by the festival's swelling attendance and growing film submissions, which this year topped 2,000 for the first time. These are whittled down to just 120 (including crossover platforms and shorts); only 80 of these will make it through as feature films.
- 5/9/2013
- The Guardian - Film News
Also this week, Mrs Brown's Boys causes a heart attack and Harry Hill comes to the rescue
This week's comedy news
Johnny Vegas has claimed that Daniel Kitson made him quit standup – but is vowing to return and find "closure". "Kitson is the reason I stopped stand-up," the comedy website Chortle quotes Vegas as saying at the Leicester comedy festival. "I did three gigs with him. On the first, I thought, 'This is brilliant, I've got to pull my socks up and get my act together.' On the second, I felt I'd gone 15 rounds with the comedic Mike Tyson. And on the third, I felt I'd seen comedy take its next evolutionary step … I thought I would never have the talent to match that." Vegas also addressed his unease with fame, saying that "the most fun I had was with gigs where I was a complete unknown and...
This week's comedy news
Johnny Vegas has claimed that Daniel Kitson made him quit standup – but is vowing to return and find "closure". "Kitson is the reason I stopped stand-up," the comedy website Chortle quotes Vegas as saying at the Leicester comedy festival. "I did three gigs with him. On the first, I thought, 'This is brilliant, I've got to pull my socks up and get my act together.' On the second, I felt I'd gone 15 rounds with the comedic Mike Tyson. And on the third, I felt I'd seen comedy take its next evolutionary step … I thought I would never have the talent to match that." Vegas also addressed his unease with fame, saying that "the most fun I had was with gigs where I was a complete unknown and...
- 2/12/2013
- by Brian Logan
- The Guardian - Film News
Writers, critics and campaigners give their view of Danny Boyle's spectacular curtain-raiser to the sporting spectacular
Ai Weiwei: It was about real people
Brilliant. It was very, very well done. This was about Great Britain; it didn't pretend it was trying to have global appeal. Because Great Britain has self-confidence, it doesn't need a monumental Olympics. But for China that was the only imaginable kind of international event. Beijing's Olympics were very grand – they were trying to throw a party for the world, but the hosts didn't enjoy it. The government didn't care about people's feelings because it was trying to create an image.
In London, they really turned the ceremony into a party – they are proud of themselves and respect where they come from, from the industrial revolution to now. I never saw an event before that had such a density of information about events and stories...
Ai Weiwei: It was about real people
Brilliant. It was very, very well done. This was about Great Britain; it didn't pretend it was trying to have global appeal. Because Great Britain has self-confidence, it doesn't need a monumental Olympics. But for China that was the only imaginable kind of international event. Beijing's Olympics were very grand – they were trying to throw a party for the world, but the hosts didn't enjoy it. The government didn't care about people's feelings because it was trying to create an image.
In London, they really turned the ceremony into a party – they are proud of themselves and respect where they come from, from the industrial revolution to now. I never saw an event before that had such a density of information about events and stories...
- 7/28/2012
- The Guardian - Film News
Ben Drew, aka Plan B, grew up with an absent father and in the company of crack addicts. Fighting for respect, he never doubted himself. Now he is an award-winning rapper, actor, writer and director. He talks candidly to Miranda Sawyer about violence, girls, drugs, his mum, hope and the power of being an outsider
Today, at 6.15pm, Plan B will walk on to the main stage at the Glastonbury Festival as the number three headliner behind R&B goddess Beyoncé and pomp-tronica numpties Pendulum. Yet another highlight in an amazing year that's already seen the 27-year-old bag a Brit, three Ivor Novello awards and land the role of Carter in Nick Love's film of The Sweeney, opposite Ray Winstone.
Glastonbury! What does he think of Britain's maddest festival?
"It is mad," he says. "A city in a field with no police: and that's what's good and bad about it.
Today, at 6.15pm, Plan B will walk on to the main stage at the Glastonbury Festival as the number three headliner behind R&B goddess Beyoncé and pomp-tronica numpties Pendulum. Yet another highlight in an amazing year that's already seen the 27-year-old bag a Brit, three Ivor Novello awards and land the role of Carter in Nick Love's film of The Sweeney, opposite Ray Winstone.
Glastonbury! What does he think of Britain's maddest festival?
"It is mad," he says. "A city in a field with no police: and that's what's good and bad about it.
- 6/25/2011
- by Miranda Sawyer
- The Guardian - Film News
Critics reflect on how social media, such as Facebook, Twitter and myDigg, fit into the perennial debate on cultural elitism
Miranda Sawyer, broadcaster and Observer radio critic: 'Twitter has made it easier for critics to hear other people's opinions. Even then, though, you tend to hear similar views to your own'
When I was writing for the Face, during the 1990s, I went to interview some boy racers: young lads who spent all their money souping up their cars in order to screech around mini roundabouts or rev their engines in supermarket car parks until their tyres smoked. The kids asked me who I was writing for. When I said the Face – a magazine that prided itself on representing all aspects of British youth interests – every single one of them replied: "Never heard of it."
The point is that most people – especially those outside the high-culture capital of London – are...
Miranda Sawyer, broadcaster and Observer radio critic: 'Twitter has made it easier for critics to hear other people's opinions. Even then, though, you tend to hear similar views to your own'
When I was writing for the Face, during the 1990s, I went to interview some boy racers: young lads who spent all their money souping up their cars in order to screech around mini roundabouts or rev their engines in supermarket car parks until their tyres smoked. The kids asked me who I was writing for. When I said the Face – a magazine that prided itself on representing all aspects of British youth interests – every single one of them replied: "Never heard of it."
The point is that most people – especially those outside the high-culture capital of London – are...
- 1/30/2011
- The Guardian - Film News
Flytower Films, London
The BFI Southbank and IMAX are well-stocked enough, but you won't even have to go inside them to see some films over August. Just wander along the South Bank and look up at the National Theatre's flytower, where every Friday and Saturday, free movies will be projected on to this accidental outdoor screen. For a start, the idiosyncratic Matthew Robins will be performing/projecting his "shadow opera" The Death Of Flyboy (about an insectoid mutant who's in love with a robot) and other works, then there are screenings of archive material with an Anglo-Indian focus: rare documentary footage of pre-independence life in India and stunning "cast of thousands plus the odd tiger for good measure" 1929 Rajasthan epic A Throw Of Dice. On the British side is Free Cinema footage of lost 1950s London: sweaty jazz clubs, the Festival of Britain, or a surprisingly seedy sketch of Piccadilly Circus on a Saturday night.
The BFI Southbank and IMAX are well-stocked enough, but you won't even have to go inside them to see some films over August. Just wander along the South Bank and look up at the National Theatre's flytower, where every Friday and Saturday, free movies will be projected on to this accidental outdoor screen. For a start, the idiosyncratic Matthew Robins will be performing/projecting his "shadow opera" The Death Of Flyboy (about an insectoid mutant who's in love with a robot) and other works, then there are screenings of archive material with an Anglo-Indian focus: rare documentary footage of pre-independence life in India and stunning "cast of thousands plus the odd tiger for good measure" 1929 Rajasthan epic A Throw Of Dice. On the British side is Free Cinema footage of lost 1950s London: sweaty jazz clubs, the Festival of Britain, or a surprisingly seedy sketch of Piccadilly Circus on a Saturday night.
- 7/30/2010
- by Steve Rose
- The Guardian - Film News
The Culture Show | Springwatch High Seas With Gordon Buchanan | Outnumbered | Behind The Scenes At The Museum | Alaska State Troopers | Warehouse 13
The Culture Show
7pm, BBC2
His hair will flop in the spring heat, but somehow you doubt whether that will stop Mark Kermode enjoying himself as he heads for the 63rd Cannes film festival. Elsewhere, as the art series returns, Miranda Sawyer visits the Brighton festival to meet playwright Simon Stephens, who has written a musical, Marine Parade, with American Music Club mainman Mark Eitzel. There's also an interview with the festival's artistic director, Brian Eno. Plus Sue Perkins on an unusual production of Benjamin Britten's opera, Noye's Fludde; David Mitchell reads from his new novel, The Thousand Autumns Of Jacob de Zoet; and a performance from Seun Kuti, leading his father Fela's Afrobeat band, Egypt 80.
Springwatch High Seas With Gordon Buchanan
8pm, BBC2
Brand Springwatch discovers life...
The Culture Show
7pm, BBC2
His hair will flop in the spring heat, but somehow you doubt whether that will stop Mark Kermode enjoying himself as he heads for the 63rd Cannes film festival. Elsewhere, as the art series returns, Miranda Sawyer visits the Brighton festival to meet playwright Simon Stephens, who has written a musical, Marine Parade, with American Music Club mainman Mark Eitzel. There's also an interview with the festival's artistic director, Brian Eno. Plus Sue Perkins on an unusual production of Benjamin Britten's opera, Noye's Fludde; David Mitchell reads from his new novel, The Thousand Autumns Of Jacob de Zoet; and a performance from Seun Kuti, leading his father Fela's Afrobeat band, Egypt 80.
Springwatch High Seas With Gordon Buchanan
8pm, BBC2
Brand Springwatch discovers life...
- 5/20/2010
- by Jonathan Wright, Will Hodgkinson, Andrew Mueller, Phelim O'Neill
- The Guardian - Film News
The baby of the Baldwin acting clan was a 'badly behaved dumb jock' until he found the Lord. Now, days after his eviction from Celebrity Big Brother, he tells Miranda Sawyer about his 18 tattoos and how he saw the devil in two of his housemates
Stephen Baldwin, 43, has 18 tattoos. "They represent various moments in my life," he says. "Whether it be showing my love for my woman in a very macho way – there are three of those – to the ones which express my commitment to sobriety. I have one for my children. The 3.30 one on the back of my neck is the time I'm supposed to be home! No, it's a scripture in the Bible that I feel compelled to remind myself of: John 3.30. "I must decrease so that he may increase." It's about consciousness of humility. I'm walking this walk and my life has nothing to do with my perception of the world.
Stephen Baldwin, 43, has 18 tattoos. "They represent various moments in my life," he says. "Whether it be showing my love for my woman in a very macho way – there are three of those – to the ones which express my commitment to sobriety. I have one for my children. The 3.30 one on the back of my neck is the time I'm supposed to be home! No, it's a scripture in the Bible that I feel compelled to remind myself of: John 3.30. "I must decrease so that he may increase." It's about consciousness of humility. I'm walking this walk and my life has nothing to do with my perception of the world.
- 2/1/2010
- by Miranda Sawyer
- The Guardian - Film News
Broadcaster Miranda Sawyer has complained about the number of "clever-clever" comedians working at the BBC. The journalist and TV host claimed that the corporation prefers to hire presenters with similar styles rather than providing a wide variety of approaches on its programmes. Speaking to the Radio Times, she commented: "Paul Merton, Billy Connolly, Michael Palin, it's always the same people. "Waltzing around (more)...
- 7/28/2009
- by By Daniel Kilkelly
- Digital Spy
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