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Archives for April 2012

13 Questions: Ouch! co-host Rob Crossan

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Emma Tracey Emma Tracey | 13:54 UK time, Friday, 27 April 2012

Rob Crossan

Cheshire-born Rob Crossan, 33, began his professional working life as a stand-up comedian in South Africa. Now based in London, he is a freelance journalist specialising in travel, a job which has seen him visit over 100 countries since 1999.

When not globe-trotting, Rob can often be found reviewing the newspapers on the ´óÏó´«Ã½ London breakfast show.

For those who want to know, his other interesting 'credentials' include albinism and visual impairment.

In his role as intrepid reporter during the early days of the Ouch! podcast, Rob rose ably to the ever more dubious challenges laid down by the presenters. They ranged from worshipping a statue of a disabled woman through a loud hailer in Trafalgar Square, to counting the number of able-bodied people who used an accessible toilet at Heathrow Airport. But that was a long time ago and he's been doing news and guest presenting for us ever since.

Rob now joins Liz Carr as the co-host of Ouch! - the monthly disability talk show from the ´óÏó´«Ã½.

My earliest memory is ...
Getting a dressing down by my parents after I sneaked down to the living room in the middle of the night, took all their vinyl records out of their sleeves and scattered them around the room. I was looking for some Abba. It was 1981.

The three words I'd use to describe myself are ...
Gruff, loyal, curious. Gruff, because that's what everyone else says I am. I don't find that unattractive or pejorative, I take it to mean "doesn't suffer fools gladly", which I don't.

A little known fact about me is ...
That I have a pencil lead buried in my right hand, put there by a girl who hated me in primary school. I may have been teasing her a bit at the time.

Given half a chance I'd relish the opportunity to bore you stupid about ...
Non-league football or African politics. I know a ridiculous amount about Wrexham football club and my African politics obsession goes back to when I used to live in South Africa. I developed a nerdy interest in finding out all about military coups in countries like Guinea-Bissau.

I can't resist ...
A massive goldfish bowl sized glass of white wine, oysters and any kind of unexpected upgrade. You feel like you are getting one over on The Man when you suddenly find yourself travelling in business class.

I want to ban ...
Contemporary country and western music. I think it is a heinous sound from the bowels of Beelzebub. And people who think it's OK to spit on the pavement. It's the noises they make while doing it that get me. Oh and I'd like to ban Raw celery. When I've bitten into it I've felt like part of my brain has just died. And football phone-in shows. They are like standing in the pub for two hours beside the guy who knows nothing but shouts loudest.

The thing I've done but would never do again is ...
Go to Afghanistan. I went on night patrol on the streets of Kabul on foot with the British army for eight hours. We spent a lot of the time wading through sewage up to our knees. I'm glad I did it because I feel that it has given me an understanding of what soldiers are going through.

Before I die I want to ...
Go up in a hot air balloon, possibly over the Yorkshire Moors. I imagine it as being precarious, yet peaceful.

If I suddenly became able bodied I would ...
Drive a tractor. And I'd get on a Boris Bike, go to the cinema and sit in the very back row. Then I'd go to a fried chicken shop where the menu is written only on the wall and spend ages reading it.

Someone should invent ...
'Luxury' disabled portaloos at festivals - ones that come with a smartly dressed flunky to dispense soap, a Sunday Times Magazine on hand to read and Radio 2 piped in through the cistern.

My ideal dinner guests would be ...
Caligula and Eric Morecambe. As the most dissident and debauched Roman emperor of all time, Caligula would kick things off by killing some slaves and starting an orgy. Morecambe would then provide levity with a whoopee cushion joke.

The best thing about working on Ouch! is ...
That it has vindicated what I felt all along about disability. Before Ouch! came along I felt very constricted and that I couldn't talk about disability with some comedy and levity. I thought I had to toe the party line, that we are all brave etc.

My co-host Liz Carr is ...
Beguiling, demands a lot out of life and is wonderfully flippant. She is always there with the pithy, witty comment to bring lightness to very serious situations.

• A new Ouch! disability talk show is published every month. Visit the ´óÏó´«Ã½ podcasts page to subscribe or download the latest episodes. You'll find photos, behind the scenes news and a transcript of each show right here on the Ouch! Blog.

News round-up: Lord Ashley; protests over Remploy closures

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Vaughan | 09:00 UK time, Friday, 27 April 2012

Lord Ashley of Stoke, 1922-2012

There was sad news last weekend as the death of Lord Ashley of Stoke (formerly Labour MP Jack Ashley) was announced. He was 89. Two years after entering Parliament in 1966, Ashley lost his hearing. At first he planned to resign his seat, but instead took a crash course in lip-reading and continued to serve in the House of Commons until 1992, when he entered the Lords.

Tributes and obituaries throughout the media have focused on Ashley's major role as a disability campaigner through the years - including pushing for live captioning on TV for deaf people, fighting for Thalidomide survivors and, in the last bill he introduced to the Lords in 2007, arguing for people with autism to be given Blue Badges. Lord Ashley also founded and chaired the All Party Parliamentary Disablement Group for over four decades.

At the end of last week, hundreds of workers at Remploy, the state-owned company which provides employment and placement services for disabled people, in London and Sheffield. They were protesting against plans to close 36 of the 54 Remploy sites this summer, which will leave 1,500 disabled employees facing compulsory redundancy.

More of the week's headlines

Breivik case 'shows insanity misconceptions' (´óÏó´«Ã½ News, Friday 27 April)

The camera that says what it sees (´óÏó´«Ã½ News, Thursday 26 April)

Louis Theroux on dementia: The capital of the forgetful (´óÏó´«Ã½ News Magazine, Thursday 26 April)

Is this the year of disability on TV? (´óÏó´«Ã½ News, Thursday 26 April)

(Daily Mail, Thursday 26 April)

NHS reforms 'a risk to vulnerable children' (´óÏó´«Ã½ News, Thursday 26 April)

(Daily Mail, Thursday 26 April)

(The Telegraph, Wednesday 25 April)

Prospect of 'autism drug' raised after early tests (´óÏó´«Ã½ News, Wednesday 25 April)

(The Telegraph, Wednesday 25 April)

(Daily Mail, Thursday 26 April)

(The Independent, Wednesday 25 April)

'Vicious' attack on disabled man in Fife (´óÏó´«Ã½ News, Wednesday 25 April)

NHS care is 'disjointed' say family of anorexia victim (´óÏó´«Ã½ News, Wednesday 25 April)

Glengormley grandparents deny killing disabled teenager Rebecca McKeown (´óÏó´«Ã½ News, Tuesday 24 April)

(Daily Mail, Tuesday 24 April)

(The Guardian, Tuesday 24 April)

(The Guardian, Tuesday 24 April)

(Daily Mail, Tuesday 24 April)

(Daily Mail, Tuesday 24 April)

(The Guardian, Monday 23 April)

(´óÏó´«Ã½ News, Monday 23 April)

(The Independent, Sunday 22 April)

(The Telegraph, Sunday 22 April)

Obituary: Lord Ashley (´óÏó´«Ã½ News, Saturday 21 April)

Labour peer Lord Ashley, 89, dies (´óÏó´«Ã½ News, Saturday 21 April)

Paralysed woman to tackle marathon on robot legs (´óÏó´«Ã½ News, Saturday 21 April)

(Daily Mail, Saturday 21 April)

Half of all railway stations in Wales fail to meet accessibility standard (´óÏó´«Ã½ News, Friday 20 April)

Sheffield protest over Remploy factory closures (´óÏó´«Ã½ News, Friday 20 April)

Hundreds of disabled workers to protest over Remploy closure (´óÏó´«Ã½ News, Friday 20 April)

(The Independent, Friday 20 April)

(The Independent, Friday 20 April)

(The Guardian, Thursday 19 April)

Bullied autistic teenager 'failed by agencies' before death (´óÏó´«Ã½ News, Thursday 19 April)

Education system failing children with autism (´óÏó´«Ã½ News, Thursday 19 April)

(The Guardian, Thursday 19 April)

Father claims disability allowance for footballer soon (´óÏó´«Ã½ News, Thursday 19 April)

TV and Radio on ´óÏó´«Ã½ iPlayer: is there a link between mental health and artistic creativity?

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Vaughan | 14:30 UK time, Wednesday, 25 April 2012

There's long been a theory that being affected by mental health problems might, in turn, lead to greater artistic creativity, and it's this subject that the award-winning novelist AL Kennedy considers in the latest edition of ´óÏó´«Ã½ Radio 3's Sunday Feature.

It's a highly personal inquiry, which takes in figures like Russian dramatist Chekhov, the artist Van Gogh, writer Virginia Woolf and poet Sylvia Plath.

The programme includes contributions from psychologist Dorothy Rowe, psychotherapist Adam Phillips, writer Lisa Appignanesi, playwright John Byrne, pianist James Rhodes, performance artist Bobby Baker, sculptor and artist Cornelia Parker, actor Edward Petherbridge and patients and staff at Bethlem Psychiatric Hospital.

Also on iPlayer

Louis Theroux - Extreme Love: Autism (´óÏó´«Ã½ Two)
Louis visits one of the best schools in America for autism. He meets the students and their families to get a glimpse of what life is like for them and to experience the pleasures and the strains of one of the most extraordinary kinds of relationship. (Available until Sunday 6 May, 12.59am)

See Hear (´óÏó´«Ã½ Two)
See Hear honours an icon and a legend of the series. Clive Mason, who was recently presented with a prestigious Deaf Community Award by the BDA. The programme joins in the celebrations and finds out about Clive the person and the professional.

Sunday Morning with... (´óÏó´«Ã½ Radio Scotland)
Ouch's Liz Carr, plus Capability Scotland's Susie Fitton, discuss portrayals of disability on entertainment TV and whether they're ethical. Plus, in Depression Awareness Week, author and illustrator Matthew Johnstone shares his simple meditation techniques which can help to cope with depression. (Available until Sunday 29 April, 9.00am)

Today (´óÏó´«Ã½ Radio 4)
On Monday 23 April, the programme included a tribute to disablity rights campaigner Lord Ashley of Stoke. Louise Medus-Mansell, chair of the Thalidomide Society, reflected on his success getting compensation for people affected by Thalidomide and completely changing the legal basis for disability rights. (Available until Monday 30 April, 9.02am)

In Touch (´óÏó´«Ã½ Radio 4)
Peter White asks the Macular Disease Society for their reaction to Novartis's decision to seek a judicial review into the use by 4 PCTs of the drug Avastin, which is being used off-label to treat people with Age-related Macular Degeneration, and Lee Kumutat joins a ballet workshop designed to give blind people an enhanced experience of the performance.

You and Yours (´óÏó´«Ã½ Radio 4)
The consumer programme looks at what it's like to have diabetes, plus a report on how disability access to five of the major price comparison websites have been found to be non-compliant with European Human Rights guidelines and deemed illegal.

Lifeline (´óÏó´«Ã½ One)
One Show presenter and pop vocal coach Carrie Grant - who is also the mother of two children on the autistic spectrum - makes an appeal on behalf of Research Autism, a charity dedicated to improving the quality of life and outlook for people affected by autism. (Available until Wednesday 2 May, 1.39pm)

Something Special (CBeebies)
Educational series for four- to seven-year-old children with learning difficulties.

Coming up

Louis Theroux - Extreme Love: Dementia (´óÏó´«Ã½ Two, Thursday 26 April, 9.00pm)
Louis travels to Phoenix, Arizona - the capital of dementia care. He spends time at Beatitudes, a residential institution, and also with those looking after loved ones at home, to try and understand what it's like to live with such a complex condition - and how relationships are kept alive in such circumstances.

News round-up: autism, schooling and bullying; disability cuts protest hits London

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Vaughan | 09:00 UK time, Friday, 20 April 2012

Louis Theroux in Extreme Love: Autism

Autism has been making the headlines over the past week, in both positive and tragic ways. There's been a lot of press interest in a new documentary by Louis Theroux, shown on ´óÏó´«Ã½ Two on Thursday 19 April and now available on iPlayer, in which he visited one of America's best schools for children with autism and got a glimpse of what life is like for the students and their families. Sadly, back in the UK, an inquest into the suicide of an autistic Suffolk teenager has been told that Gareth Oates, 18, was routinely bullied and that his mother had struggled to get appropriate medical intervention for her son's suicidal condition.

Meanwhile, Wednesday 18 April saw the . The demonstration, organised by Disabled People Against the Cuts (DPAC), involved about 100 protestors and brought traffic to a halt in London's Trafalgar Square as wheelchair users chained themselves together across a busy junction.

More of the week's headlines

Louis Theroux on autism: A very different sort of school (´óÏó´«Ã½ News, Thursday 19 April)

(The Guardian, Thursday 19 April)

(The Telegraph, Thursday 19 April)

(The Telegraph, Thursday 19 April)

(The Guardian, Wednesday 18 April)

(The Guardian, Wednesday 18 April)

Disabled can rate tourist venues in Northern Ireland (´óÏó´«Ã½ News, Wednesday 18 April)

'Blind' mice eyesight treated with transplanted cells (´óÏó´«Ã½ News, Wednesday 18 April)

(The Guardian, Wednesday 18 April)

Deaf rapper gives flash mob performance (´óÏó´«Ã½ News, Wednesday 18 April)

Autistic Suffolk boy who killed himself 'was bullied' (´óÏó´«Ã½ News, Tuesday 17 April)

(The Guardian, Tuesday 17 April)

(The Guardian, Tuesday 17 April)

Travel challenge marks Disability Wales' 40th anniversary (´óÏó´«Ã½ News, Tuesday 17 April)

(Daily Mail, Monday 16 April)

(The Guardian, Monday 16 April)

Disabled man campaigns for Northern Rail scooter access (´óÏó´«Ã½ News, Monday 16 April)

Disability Living Allowance changes and cost-cutting (´óÏó´«Ã½ News, Monday 16 April)

(The Guardian, Monday 16 April)

(Daily Mail, Sunday 15 April)

(The Independent, Saturday 14 April)

England manager teaches Berkshire's blind footballers new skills (´óÏó´«Ã½ News, Saturday 14 April)

Police officers' mental health 'affected by forced retirement' (´óÏó´«Ã½ News, Saturday 14 April)

(Daily Mail, Saturday 14 April)

(Daily Mail, Saturday 14 April)

Walking could be a useful tool in treating depression (´óÏó´«Ã½ News, Friday 13 April)

(The Guardian, Friday 13 April)

Down's Syndrome trolling: Charity wants positive images (´óÏó´«Ã½ News, Friday 13 April)

Paying tribute to the man who started the Paralympic Games (´óÏó´«Ã½ News, Friday 13 April)

London mayoral election: Disabled people talk of transport pain (´óÏó´«Ã½ News, Thursday 12 April)

London 2012: Travelling Paralympic exhibition opens (´óÏó´«Ã½ News, Thursday 12 April)

TV and Radio on ´óÏó´«Ã½ iPlayer: young people and mental health

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Vaughan | 12:35 UK time, Wednesday, 18 April 2012

Aled Jones, presenter of ´óÏó´«Ã½ Radio 1's The Surgery

One in 10 young people aged between 5 and 16 are affected by some kind of mental health issue - that's around 3 children in every classroom. In a special edition of ´óÏó´«Ã½ Radio 1's The Surgery, the advice show for children and teenagers, host Aled Jones talks to guests including Chris Birch, a Welsh teenager who fell into a coma after a stroke and then woke up gay (as seen in a recent ´óÏó´«Ã½ Three documentary), and other young people who have experienced a whole range of mental health problems. But, of course, the main business of the show is to answer queries and concerns from callers, with psychotherapist Dr Aaron Balick on hand to provide advice and guidance.

Also on iPlayer

Woman's Hour (´óÏó´«Ã½ Radio 4)
Including a look at the impact the Welfare Reform Act will have on the relationships of disabled people.

In Touch (´óÏó´«Ã½ Radio 4)
In the latest edition of their Blindness 4 Beginners series, the team offers tips for keeping track of your essential personal belongings, which may also work in a new and unfamiliar environment.

See Hear (´óÏó´«Ã½ Two)
See Hear looks at the current status of sign language in the UK and across Europe. Almost nine years after it was officially recognised as a language in the UK, we look at what else is being done to try and achieve legal status via a BSL Act. (Available until Wednesday 27 June, 1.29pm)

Something Special (CBeebies)
Educational series for four- to seven-year-old children with learning difficulties.

Coming up

Louis Theroux - Extreme Love: Autism (´óÏó´«Ã½ Two. Thursday 19 April, 9.00pm)
Louis visits one of the best schools in America for autism. He meets the students and their families to get a glimpse of what life is like for them and to experience the pleasures, but also the strains, of one of the most extraordinary kinds of relationship. (Extreme Love is a two-part series, with the second episode looking at dementia.)

News round-up: disability on TV continues to make headlines, US court case over disabled teen given electric shock 'treatment'

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Vaughan | 09:00 UK time, Friday, 13 April 2012

As with last week's news round-up, the past seven days have seen disability on TV making the news, whether it's the wide variety of comment, criticism and controversy concerning Ricky Gervais's comedy-drama Derek (read more about it in this Ouch! blog post), continuing coverage of Channel 4's reality show The Undateables, a forthcoming disability comedy show which has dropped a sketch after police intervention, or a ´óÏó´«Ã½ Two drama which will tell the story of how the Paralympics began.

In more troubling news, a trial in the US has been shown footage, withheld since 2002, of a at a school in Massachusetts, and a for 'picking quarrels and provoking trouble' with the nation's government.

More of the week's headlines

C4 drop I'm Spazticus sketch after police called (´óÏó´«Ã½ News, Thursday 12 April)

(The Telegraph, Thursday 12 April)

(The Telegraph, Thursday 12 April)

(The Telegraph, Thursday 12 April)

Paralympic history set for drama (´óÏó´«Ã½ News, Thursday 12 April)

Dating and disability: Readers' stories (´óÏó´«Ã½ News Magazine, Thursday 12 April)

Web trolls: Mum's horror over abuse of Down's Syndrome daughter (´óÏó´«Ã½ News, Thursday 12 April)

(´óÏó´«Ã½ News, Thursday 12 April)

Adrenaline junkie conquers world's most extreme challenges...despite being paralysed from the neck down (Daily Mail, Thursday 12 April)

(The Guardian, Wednesday 11 April)

(The Telegraph, Wednesday 11 April)

(The Guardian, Tuesday 10 April)

(The Telegraph, Tuesday 10 April)

(The Guardian, Tuesday 10 April)

(The Guardian, Tuesday 10 April)

Postcards from another person's reality (´óÏó´«Ã½ News, Tuesday 10 April)

(The Guardian, Monday 9 April)

(Daily Mail, Monday 9 April)

Ricky Gervais defends comedy show Derek (´óÏó´«Ã½ News, Monday 9 April)

Obesity and diabetes link to child disorders (´óÏó´«Ã½ News, Monday 9 April)

(The Telegraph, Sunday 8 April)

(The Observer, Sunday 8 April)

(The Independent, Saturday 7 April)

(Daily Mail, Saturday 7 April)

(The Independent, Friday 6 April)

(The Guardian, Friday 6 April)

(The Guardian, Friday 6 April)

Derek: will you be watching?

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Vaughan | 10:51 UK time, Thursday, 12 April 2012

Karl Pilkington (left) and Ricky Gervais (right) in Channel 4's Derek

Karl Pilkington (left) and Ricky Gervais (right) in Channel 4's Derek

With Channel 4 still at the receiving end of equal parts praise and outrage over the dating series The Undateables, tonight they venture into the disability arena again with Derek, a new comedy-drama pilot which may later be turned into a full series.

It's written and directed by Ricky Gervais, who also plays the eponymous lead role - a careworker in an old people's home who, judged on first appearances, seems to have learning difficulties.

Ricky, of course, has something of a history when it comes to featuring disability in his TV comedies. There was Brenda, the wheelchair user in The Office, played by Julie Fernandez; Extras included appearances by both 'short' actor Warwick Davis and comedian Francesca Martinez, who has cerebral palsy; while Warwick returned to appear alongside Ricky and his comedy partner, Stephen Merchant, as the star of last year's Life's Too Short.

Like The Undateables before it, Derek has already provoked a huge amount of comment in the press and on social networks before it's actually been broadcast - frequently, though not always, by peple who are reacting to what they've read about the programme and the trails that have aired on Channel 4. As bad portrayals have dogged TV's past, it's perhaps not surprising that there is anxiety.

The headlines certainly reflect the diversity of opinion: writes Tanya Gold in The Guardian; in The Mirror; Jack Seale in the Radio Times says the ; while Tom Chivers in The Telegraph bluntly states that .

Many of the quotes attributed to Ricky Gervais in the above articles come from an with disability campaigner Nicky Clark, which she posted on her blog last Sunday. Nicky had previously criticised Ricky when, last year, , but having watched Derek herself she says: "Instead of it being a mocking disintegration of a learning-disabled man, paraded for the amusement of comfortable unaffected people, it's the story that really needs to be told at the moment".

In Nicky's interview itself, Ricky denies that the character of Derek has explicit learning difficulties, stating: "Derek is a fictional character and is defined by his creator. Me. If I say I don't mean him to be disabled then that's it. A fictional doctor can't come along and prove me wrong. He's different. But then so are a lot of people ... He's based on those people you meet who are on the margins of society. Nerds, loners, under achievers. If he had any specific and defined disability I would either get an actor with that disability to play the role or I would make sure I was an xpert in that disability and the best person for the job."

Ricky certainly seems to understand the politics of disability and has talked intelligently about the complexity at length on Richard Bacon's Radio 5 Live (he's a guest this afternoon's programme too) and other programmes, but campaigners might argue that he used similar arguments when justifying the word 'mong' which he later apologised for.

Meanwhile, if you're a keen Twitter user, take a look at the hashtag. It's already buzzing with comment ahead of the broadcast, and that's likely to reach fever pitch tonight when the programme airs. There are certainly huge numbers of excited Gervais fans eagerly anticipating the show, but elsewhere predicts that "Twitter is gonna be rife with opinion, debate and either love or hate for @rickygervais following tonight's screening of #Derek"; seems to think people have had enough of Derek already and instead offers a link to a "handy list of shows you can watch instead"; criticises Ricky Gervais's performance and says that "playing someone other than himself is just Ricky Gervais playing someone other than himself really badly"; and wonders "Is Ricky Gervais' new show a big pretend in-joke? It doesn't even look remotely funny. So disappointing".

We're interested to hear your thoughts about Derek, both before the programme - are you looking forward to it or concerned about how the central character might be portrayed? - and after. Let us know your views in the comments.

You can see Derek, and judge for yourself, tonight (Thursday) on Channel 4 at 10.00pm.

TV and Radio on ´óÏó´«Ã½ iPlayer: the assisted dying debate

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Vaughan | 12:59 UK time, Wednesday, 11 April 2012

If you're in the UK, you might not find yourself tuning in to the ´óÏó´«Ã½ World Service too often, but thanks to the iPlayer it's easy to listen to many of their programmes easily and at your own convenience. The Heart and Soul series, which explores different experiences of spirituality from around the world, is currently examining the assisted dying debate over two programmes.

In the first episode, Mark Dowd meets Alison Davis. She was born with spina bifida, but as her life progressed she developed other chronic symptoms which led to constant pain. For many years she wanted to end her life, but then she found a faith in God which, as she describes it, gave her a reason to live.

Also on iPlayer

Stark Talk (´óÏó´«Ã½ Radio Scotland)
Edi Stark talks to author Candia McWilliam about her life, including the two years of blindness she experienced, which were brought to an end by surgery which restored her sight. (Available until Friday 13 April, 6.32am)

Beyond Disability: Adventures of a Blue Badger (´óÏó´«Ã½ Radio 5 Live)
Nikki Fox sets out to discover whether her positive outlook on life as a disabled person is justified and shared by her fellow Blue Badge holders. (Available until Sunday 15 April, 8.02pm)

See Hear (´óÏó´«Ã½ Two)
Looking at the care provision and services available for older people from the UK's deaf and hard of hearing communities. (Available until Wednesday 27 June, 1.29pm)

Weekend Woman's Hour (´óÏó´«Ã½ Radio 4)
Including a discussion on the controversy surrounding the Channel 4 series The Undateables.

In Touch (´óÏó´«Ã½ Radio 4)
Dr Lin Berwick talks about her life as a blind wheelchair user.

Something Special (CBeebies)

Coming up on ´óÏó´«Ã½ TV

Hawking (´óÏó´«Ã½ Four. Tuesday 17 April, ´óÏó´«Ã½ Four, 12midnight)
Drama-documentary relating the remarkable story of Stephen Hawking's early years as a PhD student at Cambridge, and the first effects of his increasing illness and disability. Starring a pre-Sherlock Benedict Cumberbatch.

From wheelchair dancing to dating

Vaughan | 10:25 UK time, Wednesday, 11 April 2012

Carolyne Underwood in (left) Dancing on Wheels and (right) The Undateables

If you caught last night's episode of the Channel 4 reality TV series The Undateables, in which eight disabled people attempt to find love, you might have thought that one of the participants looked a little familiar. You'd be right. Wheelchair user Carolyne Underwood was last seen on our screens in February 2010, when she appeared as a contestant in ´óÏó´«Ã½ Three's wheelchair ballroom dancing competition, Dancing on Wheels. Here's her profile from the show's website, along with that of her dance partner, England rugby international Martin Offiah.

In Dancing on Wheels, six wheelchair users with no previous dancing experience received professional training with their non-disabled celebrity partners, competing over 6 weeks to win the chance of representing the UK in the Wheelchair Dance Sport European Championships. That honour eventually went to James O'Shea with his partner Caroline Flack, the TV presenter.

Unfortunately, Carolyne Underwood was eliminated in the very first round of the series, but in The Undateables it seems that she may be experiencing rather more success. Last night we watched as she clearly hit it off with her date, Wayne, and the evening ended with them making plans to see each other again.

With reality shows being such a popular format, it's perhaps not so surprising that we see members of the public cropping up in more than one programme, but have you spotted any other disabled people getting a second (or even third) bite of the reality TV cherry? Let us know in the comments.

Talk Show 84: Chocolate Dyslexic Paralympic

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Damon Rose Damon Rose | 15:00 UK time, Thursday, 5 April 2012

Mat Fraser and Liz Carr

Mat Fraser and Liz Carr

Features a disabled chocolatier, two members (one male, one female) from the GB wheelchair rugby team, disability euphemisms and a fond farewell to one of our presenters. Mat Fraser and Liz Carr present.

Listen to or download the show by following this link.

Read a transcript

• What do people call you when they're trying to avoid saying 'disabled'? Liz explains what the Americans say and Simon Minty joins the debate by phone.
• Meet Louis Barnett, who started his chocolate-making business when he was just 12 years old. He's now 20. Louis has dyspraxia, dyslexia, short-term memory loss and more. A role model and a half.
• Tony Garrett updates us on Paralympics news. And did you know that wheelchair rugby is a mixed sex sport? Ross and Kylie from the GB team tell us more and explain the rules of this roughest of disability games.
• We delve into the archives to play some classic Mat Fraser moments as we say goodbye to him on his last show.

Pod Talk

We were gripped by Louis Barnett's chocolate knowledge; he's a great talker and a real role model. We believe he's about to start doing work to encourage younger entrepreneurs, so watch this space. Mat and Liz were upset that he was down the line in Birmingham because they were hoping to sample some of his chocolate, or Chokolit as he spells it.

This show features the most amazing clip of Paralympian Ellie Simmons being interviewed after gaining a world record in the Olympic pool in Stratford. It's almost worth downloading the programme for this alone. I don't think you'll ever hear anyone sounding so overwhelmingly happy as the 17 year old GB swimmer.

... and finally Mat Fraser hung up his microphone for the last time. He's been on the show for six whole years now, co-hosting with Liz, but wants to concentrate more on acting and performing.

So, who will replace Mat from next month? Tune in and find out.

Disability exemption from the hosepipe ban

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Vaughan | 14:04 UK time, Thursday, 5 April 2012

Close-up of a hand holding a hosepipe

Because of water shortages following two very dry winters, from today seven water authorities across parts of southern and eastern England have introduced a hosepipe ban. Until the ban is lifted - which is unlikely to be before the end of summer - using a hosepipe to water your garden or your plants, to clean outdoor surfaces or to fill a pond are all prohibited.

There are a few exemptions - and you might be able to take advantage of one of them. If you're a keen disabled gardener or just prefer your lawn to remain lush and green in dry summers, the good news is that you can go on watering your garden using a hosepipe. This is in recognition of the fact that many disabled people might not be able to handle or carry heavy watering cans. The bad news is that the rules aren't entirely simple and straightforward.

First, there is no national policy on exemptions. It's up to each individual water authority to decide their approach. In recent years, most water authorities have permitted disabled people to carry on using hosepipes, but if your provider introduces a ban you should always check first to make sure you're exempt. Water authorities also reserve the right to impose the hosepipe ban on disabled people too if the drought becomes more severe.

Second, the exemption doesn't include all disabled people - just those who, in the words of some of the water companies involved, have "severe mobility problems" and hold a Blue Badge. The Blue Badge requirement doesn't, however, mean you can use a hosepipe to wash your car - it's still only to be used on gardens, plants and the like. It's also strictly limited to your own property, so if you were thinking of hiring yourself and your hosepipe out to the neighbours, think again.

Finally, if you don't have a Blue Badge, but believe that the nature of your impairment will cause you severe difficulties watering your garden by hand, you can apply to your local water authority for an exemption from the hosepipe ban.

The question is, though: how many disabled people were previously aware of this exemption? It certainly seemed to be new information to some of Ouch's followers on Facebook when we to the ´óÏó´«Ã½ News story earlier today, with the necessity to have a Blue Badge causing particular comment on both sides of the argument. Reader Louise Whittingham said: "Blue Badge holders are disabled and it's generally used to park a car. Being disabled myself I'm not sure why if we had a ban where I live I shouldn't abide by the ban too, Blue Badge or no Blue Badge", while Bekkie Clarke echoed a popular view: "I think it's great that it's recognised that a lot of people enjoy their gardens but can't carry around huge watering cans, but someone needs to spare a thought for those of us who don't have a blue badge but face the same difficulties day to day", and Angela Jane Shields suggested that the reason for using the Blue Badge as the reason for exemption is because it's "a way of monitoring who is exempt from the ban at a council level".

What do you think? When water is in such short supply, should disabled people be exempted from the hosepipe ban? And how could it be more easily applied so that it's not just Blue Badge holders who qualify? Let us know your thoughts in the comments.

• For more information on the hosepipe ban, check out the ´óÏó´«Ã½ News Q&A. If you live in an affected area, then the following water authority web pages contain more information on the ban, including their policy on exemptions for disabled people: , , , , , , .

Audioboo test post

Emma Tracey Emma Tracey | 09:49 UK time, Thursday, 5 April 2012

Thispost to Audioboo is all about sledge hockey.

Rob explains that it is most definitely a contact sport. Hoping to qualify for the 2014 Winter Paralympics.

News round-up: The Undateables, public transport and Gary McKinnon report

Post categories:

Vaughan | 15:39 UK time, Wednesday, 4 April 2012

Disability, dating and relationships have been making the news and comment pages over the past week, with debate surrounding both the title and the advertising campaign for Channel 4's new reality series about disabled people looking for love. The Undateables finally began on Tuesday 3 April, and reviews and reaction in the press the morning after ranged from critical to very favourable.

Elsewhere, following last week's story in which Baroness Grey-Thompson talked about being left to crawl off a train, disabled sailor Geoff Holt MBE has revealed that he was banned from boarding a train in his electric wheelchair; and a , the computer hacker with Asperger's who has fought a ten-year battle against extradition, reverses the findings of an earlier study and says that he is now mentally fit to face trial in the USA and should no longer be considered a suicide risk.

More of the week's headlines

Millions affected as tax and benefit changes come in (´óÏó´«Ã½ News, Thursday 5 April)

Rise in involuntary mental health admissions (´óÏó´«Ã½ News, Wednesday 4 April)

Charity cuts fear for those with learning disabilities (´óÏó´«Ã½ News, Tuesday 3 April)

(The Guardian, Tuesday 3 April)

The dating world of disabled people (´óÏó´«Ã½ News, Tuesday 3 April)

(The Guardian, Tuesday 3 April)

Brainfingers system allows disabled musician to play (´óÏó´«Ã½ News, Tuesday 3 April)

Charity chief quits government welfare panel over incapacity tests (´óÏó´«Ã½ News, Monday 2 April)

Disabled sailor Geoff Holt MBE barred from train (´óÏó´«Ã½ News, Monday 2 April)

France's autism treatment 'shame' (´óÏó´«Ã½ News, Monday 2 April)

(Daily Mail, Monday 2 April)

(The Guardian, Monday 2 April)

(Daily Mail, Monday 2 April)

(The Observer, Sunday 31 March)

(Daily Mail, Friday 30 March)

Autistic teen locked in padded room by special school (´óÏó´«Ã½ News, Friday 30 March)

(The Guardian, Friday 30 March)

(Daily Mail, Thursday 29 March)

(Daily Telegraph, Thursday 29 March)

(The Telegraph, Thursday 29 March)

(The Telegraph, Thursday 29 March)

TV and Radio on ´óÏó´«Ã½ iPlayer: disability dating and blue badgers

Post categories: ,Ìý

Vaughan | 09:17 UK time, Wednesday, 4 April 2012

The eight disabled people taking part in Channel 4's The Undateables

Channel 4's new series The Undateables, in which eight disabled people attempt to find love, provoked a huge amount of debate before it was even broadcast. This week audiences finally get the chance to view the first episode for themselves, and in the ´óÏó´«Ã½ News Magazine Damon Rose examines some of the complexities involved in dating when you're disabled. Meanwhile, on ´óÏó´«Ã½ iPlayer you can listen again to the Tuesday 3 April edition of Radio 4's Woman's Hour, which features a discussion about the programme.

Also on iPlayer

Beyond Disability: Adventures of a Blue Badger (´óÏó´«Ã½ Radio 5 Live)
Nikki Fox sets out to discover whether her positive outlook on life as a disabled person is justified and shared by her fellow Blue Badge holders. (Available until Thursday 5 April, 11.00pm)

See Hear (´óÏó´«Ã½ Two)
The new series begins with a look at the services available for older people from the UK's deaf and hard of hearing communities. What does the future hold, and is the current level of provision adequate?

Tony Livesey (´óÏó´«Ã½ Radio 5 Live)
As part of his show on Tuesday 29 March, Tony looked at what life is really like for families in the UK with disabled children. (Available until Friday 6 April, 1.00am)

Same But Different (´óÏó´«Ã½ Two/Learning Zone)
Short documentary portraits of primary children with a range of disabilities, learning differences and medical conditions. (Available until Thursday 5 April, 6.00am)

In Touch (´óÏó´«Ã½ Radio 4)

Something Special (CBeebies)

Coming up on ´óÏó´«Ã½ TV

Horizon: Defeating Cancer (Tuesday 10 April, ´óÏó´«Ã½ Two, 9.00pm)
A film following three cancer patients as they undergo remarkable new treatments at the Royal Marsden Hospital in London - from a billion pound genetically targeted drug designed to fight a type of skin cancer, to advanced robotic surgery.

´óÏó´«Ã½ iD

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