Royal Park in the City of Westminster, central London
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Welcome to our Podcast, we are London Visited, helping you to enjoy London more through our videos and tips, either as a new visitor or as a fan of London! In this episode we go to St James's Park, to learn about it's creation, history and facts - to enjoy this 57 acre park outside Buckingham Palace. To get in contact directly please either: Website https://www.londonvisited.co.uk Email londonvisited@gmail.com or on Twitter & Instagram @londonvisited or Facebook @thelondonvisited Visit our YouTube channel at https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCit1-VGh0IqfOO7wt0DKq0Q/videos We hope you enjoy our look at London, whether you live here, work here, are visiting, have visited or just love London from afar – London Visited is for you. Thanks for listening and please don't forget to subscribe to get new shows each week to your device Cheers Steve
Rúaidhrí O'Connor joins Sully to chat all things Champions Cup Final as Leinster and Saracens lock horns in St James's Park.
And there you were thinking there'd be no action at St James's Park on Transfer Deadline Day!As promised in the 12 Rambles of Christmas we’re back to shine a light on Mike Ashley’s reign of errors at Newcastle United, courtesy of competition winner Matt Baker!There’s the return (and subsequent mugging off) of Kevin Keegan, the Cockney Mafia, Joe Kinnear swearing, a lot, er Alan Pardew also swearing, Alan Pardew head-butting and, of course, POWER DRINKING.Here’s hoping a great club gets the ownership it deserves soon, but until then, well you've got to laugh haven't you? See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
A double-issue pod this week recounting the freedom of St James's Park that led to three unanswered goals at the weekend, and a six-but-could-have-been-sixteen-goal Tuesday night under the lights against Brand United. Spurs are next, but we gloss over that quickly. And, in a McCartneyesque manner at the end, 'We've got Doucoure, Hughes and Thomas, Cleverley...'
Host Phil Whelans is joined by Jim Grant, Rob Banks and James Kearns to discuss the loss at St James's Park and the future of Bilic at the club. Stop! Hammer Time is backed for the season by Ladbrokes. 'Bet £5 Get £20'. If you deposit £5, Ladbrokes will add another £20 to your account. You can get this offer by following the link at bet.westhampodcast.com westhampodcast.com @westhampodcast Engineered by Oli Slack Produced by Paul Myers A Playback Media Production playbackmedia.co.uk
On todays show Feargus Craig is joined by Paul Doolan and Dave Watson on the phone to discuss the recent games against Fulham, Reading, Huddersfield, and Brighton. Plus, would St James's Park have a better atmosphere with safe standing sections instead of flags? NewcastlePodcast.com Produced by Paul Myers and Mike Leigh Engineered by Joe Mason A Playback Media Production playbackmedia.co.uk
Kate Armstrong's debut novel, The Storyteller, is a compelling, innovative and at times disturbing tale of depression, recovery, and the fragility of the stories we tell ourselves. A young woman wakes up, paralysed by depression, in a psychiatric hospital; we follow her faltering, dreamlike steps back into life, but there's a twist. Her story is being told by another patient who has her own ideas about what makes a good narrative... I sat down with Kate in St James's Park in central London to talk about her book and the experiences which led her to write it. We talked about life, breakdowns, hope, art, love and everything in between. We compared notes on our experiences of depression and how it manifests; how it's possible to have imposter syndrome even about your own mental health (was I suicidal enough?); why it can actually be a relief to end up in hospital; what 'asylums' are all about; and the difficulty of communicating what these experiences are like to people who haven't experienced them. The recent explosion of articles in the mainstream media about depression and anxiety can make it seem like a modern epidemic, but the fact is it's all entirely normal. We talk about the history of 'melancholy' and other, older ideas of mental health issues, and wonder whether the medicalisation and endless prescriptions are an improvement on cultures of acceptance of different kinds of behaviour. Being ill, mentally as well as physically, is part of being human. Instead of rejecting these states, we need to find a balance between accepting and treating them. This is the kind of conversation that needs to happen in the open and be heard by more and more people. Depression isn't rare and isn't something to be ashamed of or hidden away. But more than that: we need to talk about how it feels, not only so other sufferers don't feel alone, but also to help people who've never experienced it understand how they can help their loved ones. This is the third episode of 'Talking the Walk', the show that brings you conversations with interesting people doing cool and unusual things. We'll talk about life, people, philosophy, music, politics... Quality pub conversations with a microphone, in short. Many thanks to Tom McRae for the beautiful theme music!
The Junior Astronomical Society's groundbreaking audio magazine -- forerunner of podcasts -- issued on reel-to-reel tape in 1966. In this issue, Peter Lancaster Brown talks about the Barwell Meteorite which fell on Christmas Eve, 1965, there's an interview with James Muirden about observing conditions in Crete, and we discover how society members held a public partial eclipse observing session in St James's Park, related by Ian Ridpath.