Why are so many late babies being induced? ", The other week, she presented a show from a Birmingham centre where women serve community sentences. Personally, I enjoy her sarcasm – it gives Woman's Hour some bite – but she has got the programme into hot water on occasion. Jane Garvey presents a programme that offers a female perspective on the world. We are so suprised to see us so little. We do say important things and uncover important truths, but that isn't the way forward. The listeners get aerated about many things, especially caring: for children and the elderly. What happens within you and with your relationship when you do any of these things? My rock bottom: 'I was still using drugs in that hospital' In recovery from addiction - Jade Wye, co-presenter of 5 Live's Hooked podcast. It still isn't, and it's been made worse now because girls are doing so brilliantly in education. Covid and working class women. If you 100 percent accepted your lack of control over the other person's intention and 100 percent accepted that you can't resolve anything when one person is closed, then you can take loving action in your own behalf. "This programme," tweets D, "has put me off my breakfast." Rinaa replied on 13 August, 2020 - 22:41 Albania. In with a state-funded, pheasant-shooting bullet it's HM the Queen, a woman who inherited her power and isn't allowed to have public opinions. Barry, your boyfriend at high school. Woman: Yes, but you can't use flash. Listen to four conversations to practise and improve your listening skills. Woman's Hour has been running since 1946. Is it genius marketing or emotional need? Are you smiling? Anyhow, Murray, who's been on the show since 1987, has heard all the criticism before. Then there are the regulars: Cook the Perfect… (why not a DIY feature, much more useful? This programme is available in two versions. Still. • Late Night Woman’s Hour is a spin-off from the long-running BBC Radio 4 daily magazine programme, Woman’s Hour. From here, the programme gives us the life of Zora Neale Hurston, whether being good-looking gives you an advantage in life, a young man commissioning a ring for his girlfriend, and finally, journalist Lulu Le Vay on how not being a mother can make you feel irrelevant. Man: Mine too, look at me! Woman: Oh, yeah, um ... let's see. "In 1946, the programme was accused of being 'dangerously radical' and 'laughably obsessed with domestic detail'," she points out to me. "Although I was annoyed by how few on the list were prepared to acknowledge themselves as powerful. Here, all lady topics are discussed seriously, cosily, by well-educated, thoughtful females who doggedly refuse to screech about blow jobs or footballers' muscly thighs.