Broadcasting round-Up (Oxfordshire RTN, sex ed, body hair & Calendar Girls)

There have been a few radio ventures on the F-word front over the past week. You can catch Louise Livesey talking about last Friday’s Reclaim the Night in Oxford on BBC Radio Oxfordshire (2.04.15) and regular guest blogger Kate Smuthwaite discussing sex education with Stephen Nolan on his show on BBC Radio Five Live (1.54.29).

Along with this, I took part in two discussions on BBC Three Counties Radio last week. The first was on Jonathan Vernon Smith’s show and was about body hair, in the light of the Daily Mail’s vicious and gleeful criticism of model Danielle Bux for daring to go out with hair showing under her arms. (The topic begins from 2.01.32 and my contribution comes in at 2.43.35.) Jonathan quite rightly suggested that it didn’t matter whether or not Bux’s body hair was intentional or the result of her “forgetting to shave” and pointed out that, while it’s true that men are generally expected to shave their faces, people don’t tend to look at them and say “ugh!” the way many of them unfortunately do when talking about body hair on women. However, he also said he hadn’t heard from a male caller saying it was “disgusting” and brought up the apparent tendency for women to be the ones doing the disapproving during our discussion. I’m fairy sure there actually were some male callers making negative comments during the course of the show and, in any case, hairy women is sadly something I’ve seen women and men reacting badly to. Indeed, during a conversation before the show, Jonathan told me that Naomi Campbell had recently admitted to Jonathan Ross that she waxes her big toe, only for him to be taken aback that she even has it there in the first place!

The second discussion I got involved in was with Katherine Boyle and Tara Gungaphul on the Nine o’ Clock show. It was focused on the decision to replace Jerry Hall with the much younger Kelly Brook as the character “Celia” in a theatre production of Calendar Girls (0.04.40 and 1.05.30). Apart from naked calendars being extremely commonplace (i.e. banal rather than daring) at the moment and this not being helped by the rather obviously conventionally sexy slant being given by Brook, it also has to be said that the original plotline was about older women, so it seems decidedly suspect that a woman who is only just about to reach 30 should be in the cast. And that’s just one of the issues. We didn’t even get around to touching on a woman’s greatest asset apparently being her looks and that the need for older women to be included in that in order to feel “fabulous”, or whatever, is arguably flawed from the start…

Photo by vår resa, shared under a Creative Commons Licence.

Your Comments

Kath said:

Oh good lord. That barely counts as armpit hair! Sometimes I think I'm being paranoid when I feel self-concious about my 2-inch luscious ginger armpit hair but then I read this sort of nonsense in the Mail and remember why I do!

Posted on 11 November 2009 at 9:32 PM

Have your say

In order to keep this blog as a feminist and friendly space, comments will be subject to some rules. We do not seek to censor debate: the beauty of the internet is that anyone can set up their own blog or website to express their views.

  1. This blog is a safe and friendly space for feminists and feminist allies. Debate and critique are welcome where it is constructive and deepens analysis or understanding. Anti-feminist comments will not be approved. We get to decide what's anti-feminist.
  2. All comments must be approved by one of the bloggers. For this reason, there may be a delay before your comment appears.
  3. No sexist, racist, homophobic, transphobic, classist, ablist comments, comments which make personal attacks on any blogger or commenter, or comments that are otherwise deemed offensive by us will be posted.
  4. Trolls will be banned from commenting. We get to decide who is a troll.
  5. No anonymous comments - please feel free to use your real name or make one up, though.
  6. Be nice.

Please note that your email address will not be displayed on this website. All comments are checked, prior to being published on this site.

top ^

Latest Posts
What is feminism? First survey results
New feature: In conversation with Senzeni Marasela
New review: Daughters of Earth: Feminist Science Fiction in the Twentieth Century
Round-up!
What About Women?
New feature: Writing women back into punk
New feature: Painful vagina? Your poor husband!
Samira Ahmed, behind the scenes with C4 news
Hidden Herstories: Women of Change, see it for free!
New feature: Adventures in self-publishing
More posts
Latest Comments
Kate on International Women's Day, Million Women Rise, and trans inclusion
Paul on International Women's Day, Million Women Rise, and trans inclusion
J on The Second Sex: lost in translation?
Kate on International Women's Day, Million Women Rise, and trans inclusion
Maeve on International Women's Day, Million Women Rise, and trans inclusion
sianmarie on International Women's Day, Million Women Rise, and trans inclusion
Helen on International Women's Day, Million Women Rise, and trans inclusion
Politicalguineapig on International Women's Day, Million Women Rise, and trans inclusion
Shea on What About Women?
Amy Clare on What About Women?
More feminist bloggers
There are plenty of fantastic UK feminist bloggers around. For a fantastic introduction to feminist blogging, go to the Carnival of Feminists website, which showcases the finest feminist posts from around the blogsphere, including many from UK blogs.
How to contribute to The F-Word
Got something to say? Something to review? News to discuss? Well we want to hear from you! Click here for more info
Events
Check out our events listings for info on some of the fantastic feminist events going on up and down the country. Please get in touch to tell us about events we've not listed yet.
Small Print
All blog posts are the views of the individual post author, and not those of The F-Word.

Inside this section

Blog Home
Archives by Month
March 2010
February 2010
January 2010
December 2009
November 2009
October 2009
September 2009
August 2009
July 2009
More Archives
Archives by Author
Abby O'Reilly
Amy Clare
Anne Onne
Barbara Felix
Bill Savage
Carrie Dunn
Catherine Redfern
Grace Fletcher-Hackwood
Guest Blogger
Helen G
Holly Combe
Jess McCabe
Joanna Whitehead
Jolene Tan
Josephine Tsui
Kate Smurthwaite
Kit Roskelly
Laura Woodhouse
Lola Adesioye
Louise Livesey
Lynne Miles
Milly Shaw
Philippa Willitts
Samara Ginsberg
Sokari Ekine
Sunny Hundal
Suzi FemAcadem
Syma Tariq
Yvonne Howard
zohra moosa
News prior to April 2005
XML feed Feeds
Latest Blog Posts
Latest Comments

Contact Us

This webpage lives at: http://www.thefword.org.uk/blog/2009/11/broadcasting_ro