Category: Blog

  • Listen: the Midweek Drive Online, July 24th 2024

    Listen: the Midweek Drive Online, July 24th 2024

    From smart phone challenges to career “stuckiness”, good nutrition and more, Alex Lewczuk, Anna Lewis, Ana Cosconel, Merryn Hobson, Jessica Burtis and Kara Joubert speak with Dr Sanjiv Nichani, Adam Ferguson, Dave Gibson, speaker Helen Hanison, Melissa Snover, Hannah O`Brien, Charlotte Powell, Francis Da Silva, Andrew Haggar and David Hunt.


    More From Southside Broadcasting:

    TMD ONLINE Wed Dec 31st 2025 southsidebroadcasting

    Elly Sample, Kara Joubert, Victoria Simmonds, Ana Cosconel, Jonathan Linsley, Cathy Manso, Sarah Huntley & Alex Lewczuk with approx 90 mins of audio entertainment to wrap up 2025 AD
    1. TMD ONLINE Wed Dec 31st 2025
    2. FMTTM The Podcast Mid-Season thoughts
    3. Lorin Krenn `Love , Relationships and Awakening`
    4. Resonance Rewind Ep 283 `Casino Royale`
    5. Tricia Copeland, Lynda Williams, Patrick Sangimino, Publishing thoughts and avoiding phone scams
  • Review: Lincoln Jazz Festival & the James Taylor Quartet ★★★☆☆

    Review: Lincoln Jazz Festival & the James Taylor Quartet ★★★☆☆

    Did I enjoy or did I persevere?

    Before I answer the above question, I will say this: it was an interesting jazz experience.

    Everyone has their own jazz opinion, ranging from the humble to not-so-humble. Take for example, Ryan Gosling’s performance in La La Land as Sebastian, who romanticized traditional jazz and jabbed at the gentle forms that play in elevators and cocktail bars.

    As an enthusiast of gentle jazz and Astrud Gilberto’s often-called “elevator music”, I would need to have a word with him regarding that.

    But I doubt Sebastian would have listened. He loved chaos and excitement as a musical medium.

    With that in mind, I am not sure how he would have reacted to this event. On the one hand, it was adventurous, different, chaotic, and energized. He would have appreciated this. But on the other hand, it felt less like funky jazz and more like jazzy funk. Certainly, core jazz lovers might have needed a while for their ears to adapt to the music being played.

    To fans of the Starsky and Hutch soundtrack from the 1970s, this combo works well. Several songs sounded like something that would play in a detective’s montage scene, with dusty cigars and trench coats galore. To others, they might argue that the combination of jazz + funk = junk.

    Certainly, the organ was the core instrument throughout the evening. Unfortunately, this overpowered the rest of the instruments even if it did provide an interesting take on “jazz” itself. For that reason, I would say this both subtracted from and added to the experience.

    But with religious glass paintings and the gothic structure, it seemed fitting that an organ would be part of the musical ensemble.

    Some of the music performed seemed more like funk than jazz.

    The venue was unsurprisingly stunning, albeit an interesting choice. Like the organ, the Lincoln Cathedral comes with both its disadvantages and advantages, depending on where you sit.

    When I attended the London Film and TV Orchestra’s performance in the Lincoln Cathedral, the musicians were placed central to the venue. Like a small army, equipped with strings, trumpets, and more, they faced the long hall of the building, and their sound carried far with minimum reverberation and echoes from the walls. It did not matter where you were in the audience because the sound carried well.

    However, the James Taylor Quartet were placed against a wall, not facing the long hall, but facing another wall, which was directly behind the audience.

    The chairs were semi-circled around the stage. I sat center and back, close to the musicians in front and even closer to the wall behind me, and felt as the loud sound waves traveled through me, bounced from the stone walls behind, and zig-zagged in my ear canal.

    It was difficult to not get overwhelmed as the music pierced you at least two times over. I don’t think that speakers were completely necessary, and my drink agreed as I felt the liquid inside the can vibrate, as if a dinosaur from Jurassic Park were on its way.

    Another one of the disadvantages to the Lincoln Cathedral is it is often too cold to enjoy sitting in one place for too long, but thankfully that evening was warm and those stone walls served as a welcome fridge.

    There were drinks and snacks available, which certainly one-upped the London Film and TV Orchestra evening, in which no drinks or snacks were provided.

    Another area where the James Taylor Quartet won was in the audience engagement. James Taylor himself was something of a comedian. Not to the point where he became a key element of the evening, but he knew how to keep his audience feeling useful and entertained. People clapped their hands, danced, and sang.

    A clip of the event. The evening ended on a karaoke-meets-town-hall-disco party note.

    However, the variety of the music was a little stiff, and considering the general age demographic of the people attending, so were the dancing moves.

    Now, in answer to my question, I did both persevere and enjoy the evening.

    The experience of live music is always a fun one, and perhaps it is never truly comfortable. Maybe it should not be, in favor of La La Land Sebastian’s views.

    But if The Girl from Ipanema or more jazzy genres were performed that night, I would have enjoyed the performance little more and needed to persevere a little less.

    But that’s just my humble jazz opinion.

  • Listen: author of the week with Diann Floyd Boehm & Steffanie Costigan

    Listen: author of the week with Diann Floyd Boehm & Steffanie Costigan

    A discussion with authors and their projects.

    From wizarding world and language acquisition via emojis and the work of writers Diann Floyd Boehm and Steffanie Costigan in conversation with Alex Lewczuk, Merryn Hobson, Kara Joubert and Jessica Burtis. 



    More from Southside Broadcasting:

    TMD ONLINE Wed Dec 31st 2025 southsidebroadcasting

    Elly Sample, Kara Joubert, Victoria Simmonds, Ana Cosconel, Jonathan Linsley, Cathy Manso, Sarah Huntley & Alex Lewczuk with approx 90 mins of audio entertainment to wrap up 2025 AD
    1. TMD ONLINE Wed Dec 31st 2025
    2. FMTTM The Podcast Mid-Season thoughts
    3. Lorin Krenn `Love , Relationships and Awakening`
    4. Resonance Rewind Ep 283 `Casino Royale`
    5. Tricia Copeland, Lynda Williams, Patrick Sangimino, Publishing thoughts and avoiding phone scams
  • Listen: Laa-Laa the teletubby & York Maze

    Listen: Laa-Laa the teletubby & York Maze

    A wild listen with lots of laughs. Kara Joubert and Alex Lewczuk encounter the original Laa-Laa before connecting with Cathy Manso and Tom Pearcy and exploring this year`s Gruffalo themed York Maze!



    More from Southside Broadcasting:

    TMD ONLINE Wed Dec 31st 2025 southsidebroadcasting

    Elly Sample, Kara Joubert, Victoria Simmonds, Ana Cosconel, Jonathan Linsley, Cathy Manso, Sarah Huntley & Alex Lewczuk with approx 90 mins of audio entertainment to wrap up 2025 AD
    1. TMD ONLINE Wed Dec 31st 2025
    2. FMTTM The Podcast Mid-Season thoughts
    3. Lorin Krenn `Love , Relationships and Awakening`
    4. Resonance Rewind Ep 283 `Casino Royale`
    5. Tricia Copeland, Lynda Williams, Patrick Sangimino, Publishing thoughts and avoiding phone scams
  • Listen: Newark Book Festival July 13th 2024

    Listen: Newark Book Festival July 13th 2024

    Kara Joubert connects with ace author Tammy Cohen (or Argylle’s Ellie Conway) and together with Alex Lewczuk continues to explore the huge variety of authors at Newark 2024 including Gill Hart, Tim Rideout, Francis da Silva and Charlotte Powell.



    More from Southside Broadcasting:

    TMD ONLINE Wed Dec 31st 2025 southsidebroadcasting

    Elly Sample, Kara Joubert, Victoria Simmonds, Ana Cosconel, Jonathan Linsley, Cathy Manso, Sarah Huntley & Alex Lewczuk with approx 90 mins of audio entertainment to wrap up 2025 AD
    1. TMD ONLINE Wed Dec 31st 2025
    2. FMTTM The Podcast Mid-Season thoughts
    3. Lorin Krenn `Love , Relationships and Awakening`
    4. Resonance Rewind Ep 283 `Casino Royale`
    5. Tricia Copeland, Lynda Williams, Patrick Sangimino, Publishing thoughts and avoiding phone scams
  • Listen: Resonance Rewind Film & TV Reviews: 1966 Batman

    Listen: Resonance Rewind Film & TV Reviews: 1966 Batman

    Revisiting films from the past and the past long past.

    The Leslie Martinson directed movie from 1966 `Batman` gets the bat-critics from a Bat-themed Resonance Rewind engaged with Victoria Simmonds, Kara Joubert, Phil Leirness and Alex Lewczuk – Holy quartet of quality !!



    More from Southside Broadcasting:

    TMD ONLINE Wed Dec 31st 2025 southsidebroadcasting

    Elly Sample, Kara Joubert, Victoria Simmonds, Ana Cosconel, Jonathan Linsley, Cathy Manso, Sarah Huntley & Alex Lewczuk with approx 90 mins of audio entertainment to wrap up 2025 AD
    1. TMD ONLINE Wed Dec 31st 2025
    2. FMTTM The Podcast Mid-Season thoughts
    3. Lorin Krenn `Love , Relationships and Awakening`
    4. Resonance Rewind Ep 283 `Casino Royale`
    5. Tricia Copeland, Lynda Williams, Patrick Sangimino, Publishing thoughts and avoiding phone scams
  • Review: Batman (1966): A Fun and Light Slapstick Movie for Kids and the Young-at-Heart ★★★☆☆

    Review: Batman (1966): A Fun and Light Slapstick Movie for Kids and the Young-at-Heart ★★★☆☆

    Of course, to follow suit of the Batman lingo, this was a bat weird, bat film that made me question my bat sanity.

    Alongside the tight leggings, there were admittedly a lot of Dicks (of course I’m referring to the yacht captain’s reading habits and Robin’s real identity, nothing more…)

    But with the occasional random couple snogging, the instant outfit lever, and Catwoman’s need to randomly meow, I was often left asking, in a hazed state, “what was that?”

    My best guess: a slapstick movie, made to entertain the kids and make the parents ask themselves the same questions I have… Why the eyebrows on the mask? Why the shark bat-spray? Why the tight shorts?

    I can’t help but laugh at the dialogue. Like the Penguin’s facial prosthetics, it’s all a bit on the nose.

    In comparison, you can’t even consider Nolan’s and Robert Pattison’s Batman as surrounding the same character. If anything, this film was closer to The Lego Batman Movie, and with nearly as much plastic in the form of giant signs and toys to make Batman’s situation as obvious as possible for its presumably young and young-at-heart audiences.

    Minus the very sad (not really) off-screen death of a porpoise we never meet, and Batman’s punches that fall about a mile from his enemies’ faces, there is no real violence or emotional investment.

    And with the Pentagon busy playing board games, riddles in which the answer is absurdly “banana”, and lines such as “some days you just can’t get rid of a bomb…” it’s a strange mix.

    The biggest irk I had with this was the pace at which the film progresses. Now, perhaps I am not its target audience (although I’d be lying if I said I didn’t find the campness of Batman 1966 hilarious). However, I found that the stakes could have been higher (I didn’t care much for the world leaders), and the whole Kitka situation could have been condensed a bit.

    The story seemed all over the place, but maybe this was the idea?

    Either way, it was fun, it was light, and it was bat-shit crazy.

  • Listen: Newark Book Festival July 12th 2024

    Listen: Newark Book Festival July 12th 2024

    Kara Joubert and Alex Lewczuk explore the variety and range of creatives at this year`s Newark Book Festival and cover topics from steam punk to healthy eating and Nigerian welcomes.


    More from Southside Broadcasting:

    TMD ONLINE Wed Dec 31st 2025 southsidebroadcasting

    Elly Sample, Kara Joubert, Victoria Simmonds, Ana Cosconel, Jonathan Linsley, Cathy Manso, Sarah Huntley & Alex Lewczuk with approx 90 mins of audio entertainment to wrap up 2025 AD
    1. TMD ONLINE Wed Dec 31st 2025
    2. FMTTM The Podcast Mid-Season thoughts
    3. Lorin Krenn `Love , Relationships and Awakening`
    4. Resonance Rewind Ep 283 `Casino Royale`
    5. Tricia Copeland, Lynda Williams, Patrick Sangimino, Publishing thoughts and avoiding phone scams
  • Listen: the Midweek Drive Online, July 10th 2024

    Listen: the Midweek Drive Online, July 10th 2024

    Talking music, politics, acting, cancel culture and democracy with guests Anna Baghiani, music reviewing CEO Lewis Gio Pilato, Lib Dem candidate Jemma Joy, Chris Irwin, Sara Davies and Call the Midwife actress Taryn Lay,

    Hosted by Alex lewczuk, Cathy Manso, Kara Joubert, Merryn Hobson, Jessica Burtis and Ana Cosconel.


    More From Southside Broadcasting:

    TMD ONLINE Wed Dec 31st 2025 southsidebroadcasting

    Elly Sample, Kara Joubert, Victoria Simmonds, Ana Cosconel, Jonathan Linsley, Cathy Manso, Sarah Huntley & Alex Lewczuk with approx 90 mins of audio entertainment to wrap up 2025 AD
    1. TMD ONLINE Wed Dec 31st 2025
    2. FMTTM The Podcast Mid-Season thoughts
    3. Lorin Krenn `Love , Relationships and Awakening`
    4. Resonance Rewind Ep 283 `Casino Royale`
    5. Tricia Copeland, Lynda Williams, Patrick Sangimino, Publishing thoughts and avoiding phone scams
  • Opinion: why rock climbing rocks

    Opinion: why rock climbing rocks

    Don’t ask me to lift weights and expect me to enjoy it. And unless you can give me the lungs of a triathlete, you won’t find me on a treadmill.

    For me, most exercise is a chore, albeit a valid one to tend, but after studying at university and falling into the routine of wake – work – eat – work – sleep, I am generally too busy ‘working in’ to bother ‘working out’.

    But perhaps that’s more of an excuse than a reason. In truth, I find there is something so dull about taking myself away from my station, to go one-to-one with exercise machines made for people looking to complete their convenient, unaspiring fitness goals: half of which will never be fulfilled.

    Of course, you can listen to podcasts in your ears, or drum yourself into the energy of gym music in which lyrics of sex, success and break-ups blare from the gym playlist as if from a pumped DJ high on testosterone.

    But I still find it boring, and eye the gym clocks the moment I walk in.

    Now, if you’re a gym person then I won’t hold it against you. In fact, I recognise gym is a core element of many people’s lives for mental, physical and social wellbeing, and I salute those for their determination to get out of bed and intentionally cause discomfort on their bodies in this controlled environment.

    They will probably beat me at any arm wrestle, too.

    But here is the thing: nothing beats swimming and rock climbing.

    Why? Because if you stop swimming, you drown. And if you stop climbing a climbing wall… well, with the right safety equipment, you would be fine, but nobody wants to scare themselves by falling!

    Maybe I have a slight obsession with the sensation of soaring. Floating in the water, you feel weightless. High on a wall, you feel boundless. Running on a treadmill, I feel like a hamster in its wheel, stuck in the same place and going nowhere.

    Now, I am no adrenaline junkie but when it comes to climbing and swimming, I like the thrill.

    Getting into a pool, the first thing I feel is the cold. It’s uncomfortable, but I respect it as the medium on which I will float. Kicking off the edge of the pool, it’s as though I am kicking away the burdens of the day – moving, swimming, breathing, holding my breath – I don’t have the time to look at my problems, except to acknowledge they don’t exist in the water.  

    It’s difficult not to get caught in the symbolism of a physical challenge. Whether it is going to the gym, swimming, or climbing a wall, it is easy to think of the people that said you would never succeed, in life, studies and business, and then move through the pain as if with the resilience of someone saying, “watch me”.

    Rock climbing feels like that. It’s scary, sure. But there is no better time to feel so big and yet so vulnerable as when you have climbed a wall and look down to see how far you have come. The adrenaline, mixed with the strain on your shoulders, arms and hands is an intoxicating mix. It is very difficult not to feel a sense of accomplishment afterwards.

    That’s why I say these activities beat all.

    There is no high horse for me to sit on, and I won’t pretend it. This is an opinion piece, after all. Yes, these activities seem to align more with the primal instincts around exercise, and for that reason could be seen as “exercise with a purpose”.

    However, in the modern age, most of us don’t dangle from cliffs, chase after our food and commute across rivers. At least not in our daily routines. And with harnesses, running shoes and swimming pools, it’s not as if these activities bear any resemblance to cave-time activities.

    Similarly, with gym, few of us have a real reason to run anywhere, or to strengthen our glutes, except for the corresponding health benefits, which are very important.

    Let me be clear: I am not saying don’t go to gym. There are plenty of reasons why exercise is important, and I have already outlined a few. If gym is the best way to get it, then by all means: charge ahead!

    But if you’re like me, a guilty party of unused gym subscriptions, I would make a recommendation: find the sport that feels like a treat to do, and then do it whenever and wherever you can.

    There is a reason why so many gym goals never get fulfilled. Going to work out can be a difficult thing to commit to, especially for those with lots of business, home and personal responsibilities.

    But it’s much easier to put aside those daily tasks if you know you’re going to have a fun time doing something else.

    Rock climbing can be quite expensive, and as someone who cannot yet drive herself to the local swimming pool, I don’t go as much as I would like.

    But if I had my own swimming pool or wall to climb at home, well let’s just say, I would probably be the one beating you at an arm wrestle.