Jessie J
Jessie J on pop stardom. Women's pivotal role in the history of cricket. How increased charges for employment tribunals will affect women. How to be a German mother. With Emma Barnett.
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Jessie J
Duration: 17:31
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Jessie J
Jessie J on pop stardom
Duration: 16:34
Employment Tribunals
How increased charges for employment tribunals will affect women
Duration: 08:09
Make me a German
How to be a German mother
Duration: 08:15
Women's Cricket
Women's pivotal role in the history of cricket
Duration: 07:53
Jessie J
Jessie J shot to fame when she won the ѿý Sound Of Poll and the Brits Critics Choice Award in 2011, quickly followed by her debut album Who You Are. She shot to instant chart success with in your face hit Do It Like A Dude and bold challenging image, and she’s been a cheerleader for self-belief in her own career and in mentoring others on TV’s The Voice. However she’s also had to work hard and overcome her own personal hurdles to get where she is today – not least a heart condition, and subsequent bullying as a child. She’s just left The Voice to concentrate on her own singing career, and so, as she prepares to release a new studio album and announces her new single It’s My Party, she joins Woman’s Hour to talk about the struggles she’s faced, being a role model and mentor, and the self-belief and talent that’s helped her make it to the top.
Jessie J’s new single It’s My Party is out on 16 September, and her new album is out soon. She’s playing the VFestival and the iTunes Festival in August, and goes on a nationwide arena tour from October.
Employment Tribunals
People wanting to bring employment tribunals must now pay a fee for the first time since they were created in the 1960s. Woman’s Hour investigates how these charges could affect women workers in cases of sexual discrimination or sexual harassment. Karen Jennings, assistant general secretary of Unison, and Cathy Rogan, rights advisor from Working Families, join guest presenter, Emma Barnett, to talk about their concerns.
Women's Cricket
Women’s cricket is enjoying unprecedented profile and popularity. The England team are one of the best in the world and the Women’s Ashes Series will be televised when it starts on the 11th August. But the women’s game also has a surprisingly long and colourful history, full of vicious competition and dazzling displays of sporting skill. Emma Barnett talks to leading cricketer Isabelle Duncan, who has brought some of these stories to light in her new book “Skirting the Boundary: A History of Women’s Cricket”.
Skirting the Boundary: A History of Women's Cricket by Isabelle Duncan is published by Robson Press.
Make Me a German
Have German women got it made? Writer Bee Rowlatt and Barbara Klimke,UK Correspondentat the newspaper Berliner Zeitung, debate the pros and cons of German life. When Bee Rowlatt moved to Germany she discovered cheap, excellent childcare, and generous tax breaks for stay-at-home mums. But, as she tells Emma Barnett, there is a darker side to this, for example the characterisation of women who do work as heartless “raven mothers”. Bee and her husband Justin took their two youngest children to the manufacturing city of Nuremberg to try to discover the secret of Germany’s success by living, working and socialising like an average German family.
The ѿý Two programme “Make Me a German”, which follows their experience, airs on ѿý Two, at 9pm on Tuesday 6th August.
Credits
Role Contributor Presenter Emma Barnett Interviewed Guest Jessie J Interviewed Guest Isabelle Duncan Interviewed Guest Bee Rowlatt Producer Kirsty Starkey Broadcast
- Tue 6 Aug 2013 10:00ѿý Radio 4
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Woman's Hour
Women's voices and women's lives - topical conversations to inform, challenge and inspire.