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Weekend Woman's Hour: Naomi Campbell; Cressida Dick; Amanda Holden

Supermodel Naomi Campbell on making the catwalk more diverse. Metropolitan Police assistant commissioner Cressida Dick. Amanda Holden. The appeal of teenage vloggers. Lynne Segal.

Supermodel Naomi Campbell on making the catwalk more diverse. Woman's Hour powerlister, Assistant Commissioner Cressida Dick, the most senior female police officer in the Metropolitan Police Force.

Amanda Holden on Piers Morgan, Simon Cowell, marriage, divorce, and her risky pregnancy. YouTube star Ben Cook on the teenage obsession with vlogging - what you need to know.

Anne Scargill on the occupation of Parkside Colliery on Merseyside in 1993 alongside three miners' wives which has inspired the Radio 4 play Queens of the Coal Age.

Lynne Segal, feminist writer and activist, on the Perils and Pleasures of Ageing. Journalist Rachel Cooke on ten extraordinary characters who challenge the traditional view of women in the 1950s.

And what impact might the proposed Anti-Social Behaviour, Crime and Policing Bill have on children's play? Cath Prisk, the director of Play England, and social commentator Angela Epstein discuss.

Presented by Jane Garvey
Produced by Jane Thurlow.

Available now

58 minutes

Naomi Campbell

One of the five original supermodels of the 1980鈥檚, joins Jane in the Woman鈥檚 Hour studio to talk about why she enjoys the role of mentor for young model hopefuls on her new series, The Face; her continued commitment to the campaign for a better diversity of models used in fashion, and how she feels about her treatment at the hands of the media.

Teen YouTube Stars

Why are teenagers so obsessed with YouTube stars like Jacksgap, Zoella and Charlieissocoollike?聽 From comedy sketches, beauty advice to answering life鈥檚 unanswerable questions, 13-24 year olds are spending more and more time watching such 鈥榁loggers鈥. 聽Jane talks to the chronicler of Britain's YouTube generation, Ben Cook, a teenage 鈥榮uper-fan鈥 and her mum.聽 This is the ultimate parent鈥檚 guide to the world of Vlogging.

Assistant Commissioner Cressida Dick

Assistant Commissioner Cressida Dick serves as the most senior female officer within the Metropolitan Police, a rank equivalent to that of Chief Constable outside London. During the Olympic and Paralympic games, she was national director for counter terrorism, an extension of her role leading on the long-term threat of terrorism across the UK.聽 A trained hostage negotiator, she has extensive experience in public order, firearms and security. In 2005, she was the officer in charge of the operation which led to the fatal shooting of Jean Charles de Menezes. A jury cleared her of blame at the end of the prosecution of the Metropolitan Police under health and safety laws. Three years ago she was awarded the Queen鈥檚 Police Medal.

Amanda Holden

- actress, singer, and Britain鈥檚 Got Talent judge - has been a fixture in the British tabloid papers for over 20 years.聽 They followed her career, her marriage and divorce to Les Dennis, her affair with Neil Morrissey, and her new role as a TV talent show superstar.聽 In her autobiography, No Holding Back, she talks about life in the public eye, the private heartbreak of miscarriage and stillbirth, and reveals how she tricked her husband into the pregnancy which nearly killed her.

No Holding Back by Amanda Holden is published by Simon & Schuster

The Perils and Pleasures of Ageing

Jenni speaks to the feminist writer and activist Lynne Segal who says that the question of how old she is frightens her.聽 But she says this is also maddening because feminists like her, approaching their sixth or seventh decade, have spent their lives combating prejudices on all sides but聽little has been said or done for older generations of women. 聽In her new book Out of Time: The Perils and Pleasures of Ageing she explores assumptions about ageing and how to age well and examines the representation of ageing in the work of writers including Simone de Beauvoir, Alice Walker, Adrienne Rich, Philip Roth, Diane Athill, Jo Brand and others.

Extraordinary Women of the Fifties

The journalist Rachel Cooke joins Jane to discuss ten extraordinary characters who challenged the traditional view of women in the 1950s - from a rally car driver, to a film producer, an architect, and the first woman to sit at the Old Bailey.

Her Brilliant Career: Ten Extraordinary Women of the Fifties by Rachel Cooke is published by Virago on 31 October

Anti-Social Behaviour

On Tuesday members of the House of Lords debated the Anti-Social Behaviour, Crime and Policing Bill. The bill has already been through the House of Commons and, if it is passed, could mean an overhaul of the way incidents of Anti-Social Behaviour are dealt with by police and the criminal justice system. At the moment, Anti-Social Behaviour is defined as that which has caused 鈥渉arassment, alarm and distress鈥, but the bill proposes that it is changed to 鈥渃onduct capable of causing nuisance and annoyance鈥. Anyone over the age of 10 deemed to be doing this can be brought before a judge and served with an IPNA 鈥 an Injunction to Prevent Nuisance or Annoyance 鈥 which replaces the current ASBO.聽

Critics say the change will mean children end up penalised just for playing outdoors and potentially 鈥渁nnoying鈥 their neighbours, and that minor disputes will be escalated to the police too quickly. The government says the bill will tighten the law on Anti-Social Behaviour, making it easier for victims to get positive action in their community. Jenni is joined by Cath Prisk, the director of Play England, and social commentator Angela Epstein.

Credits

Role Contributor
Presenter Jane Garvey
Editor Jane Thurlow
Interviewed Guest Naomi Campbell
Interviewed Guest Cressida Dick
Interviewed Guest Amanda Holden
Interviewed Guest Benjamin Cook
Interviewed Guest Anne Scargill
Interviewed Guest Cath Prisk
Interviewed Guest Angela Epstein
Interviewed Guest Lynne Segal
Interviewed Guest Rachel Cooke

Broadcast

  • Sat 2 Nov 2013 16:00

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