Having spent her life playing and writing about video games, Ellie Gibson meets Professor Andrew Przybylski to talk about the impact video games might have on the mind. Show more
Ellie Gibson and Keza MacDonald discuss their respective careers as video games journalists, the sexism they faced and how the industry has improved over the years. Show more
Benji Webbe speaks to Aleighcia Scott about his relationship with Reggae, from growing up around the 'blues' house parties in Newport to fusing musical genres in the band Skindred. Show more
Political journalist Isabel Oakeshott nearly tried surrogacy when she had difficulty carrying her second child. She talks to Rekha, who had a baby through surrogacy in India. Show more
Exploring the topic of mixed marriage, Adrian Goldberg, who is married to a British Asian woman, meets Mandy, of Sikh and Hindu heritage and married to an Afro-Caribbean man. Show more
Exploring the nature of Britain's changing communities, journalist Zubeida Malik meets Raja Tahir Masood, a chronicler of Peterborough's Pakistani community. Show more
Christina Lamb explores the impact on those carrying on with a family legacy. She talks to Adam Hargreaves, whose father Roger created the Mr Men. Show more
The Sunday Times journalist Christina Lamb talks to the father of Malala, the school girl shot by the Taleban. Ziauddin's own legacy is now overshadowed by his daughter's fame. Show more
Christina Lamb, foreign correspondent with the Sunday Times, speaks to Lady Khadija, daughter of the Ugandan dictator Idi Amin, who grew up unaware of her father's brutal legacy. Show more
Interview series. Mark Lawson is writing a memoir but dislikes using the first person pronoun. He talks to author and critic Adam Mars Jones about this revelatory literary form. Show more
Mark Lawson dislikes using the first person pronoun in his work. He talks to Rachel Cusk who did, and created a furore when writing candidly about her experience of motherhood. Show more
Sathnam Sanghera sees himself as firmly middle class. He speaks to a Alpesh Chauhan, a conductor with the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, who feels his class is irrelevant. Show more