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Hi everyone we’re live here with
Damon Rose from BBC Ouch
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And we’re just gonna have a little
chat with him and share with you all
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-Hi Damon
Hello
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-Thanks for joining us today
-Thanks for coming to our country
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Yes —It’s all brighter for it.
[Laughter]
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Thank you, it’s been quite lovely actually
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So, we can just get right into it? Maybe
you could tell us how you started BBC Ouch
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How did we get it started? Oh, it all
started with a meeting some years ago.
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[inaudible]
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I wouldn't be telling you but I am
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Good, so how did the name come to you?
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The name literally, I know people
say this, came to me in the shower.
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One morning we had, oh goodness,
the idea of coming up with a name
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for a disability website,
is a bit of a nightmare
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for any kind of disability project,
We desperately wanted, forgive me,
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but we didn't want anything with the word
"able" in it, for instance, because
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it was such a, people do it a lot.
Every single disability project
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is "able" this, "able" that, work "able",
media "able", radio "able".
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Whatever, you know.
So I was keen not to go through that
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and I wanted something that had a bit of
attitude as well.
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I'm trying to think of other things
we went through. Some of the ideas
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are probably worth dwelling on a bit.
Some of the names we came up with
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as we went along, I remember at one point,
when our working title was
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Disability Noodle, I don;t know where that
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came from.
[Laughter]
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Someone in the marketing
department once decided
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that a good name for it might be
"I Dance to my Own Song"
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and you sit there and you think,
that's a bit floaty
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It's a bit, I don't know, pretentious
or something
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[Laughter]
Don't know how that one came about
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but people come at disability from all
sorts of different angles, don't they.
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Clearly.
Someone even suggested that "Minefield"
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might be a really good name for Ouch
because people think of it as, you know,
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you can't say this, you can't say that.
It's a bit of a minefield.
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But, then we of course, had to point out
that there's plenty of disabled people
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that were unfortunately disabled in
minefields.
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So, perhaps it wasn't the best title.
[Laughter}
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So, what would you call a new disability
website, Leah, that's what I want to know.
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I would, just a period.
I don't know. I think you guys did a
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great job with what you came up with.
I think it's perfect,
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Thank you very much.
-Yeah, absolutely.
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-Can you think of the most memorable
reaction you've gotten from an audience
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or listener?
Most memorable?
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-Yeah, anything that really
stands out to you?
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-Funny, negative, positive, something that
just pops in your head.
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Oh, yeah, things aren't popping into my
head right now.
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I mean, it's always nice when we get
people now, course, podcast's been running
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10 years, but we get people who say,
"you changed our life with your podcast.
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We've never heard disabled voiced in that
way before."
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We had created a kind of radio show, that
had never been done before, in that way
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and it was really out there and really
said, horrible things some times but
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you know, quirky things and amusing things
and it had a but of an attitude so a lot
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of people have written to us over the
years and said if it wasn't for the
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podcast we wouldn't have the same kind of
self-esteem we have now and wouldn't
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really have gone down certain roads to
becoming happy, really.
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Which is, you know, very exciting.
I don't know if everybody thinks like that
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I'm sure they don't, but some are
particularly gratifying.
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They've happened. I guess that's why we do
this disability media stuff, isn't it?
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-Sure. Change attitudes, bring awareness.
Yeah.
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-So, anything else you want to add because
I am pleased with our chat.
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[Laughter]
What else can I add?
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Well, if anybody wants to come see
our staff, it's bbc.co.uk/ouch
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We do podcast, video, articles, you know.
-Thanks for joining us.
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Thank you.
-Yeah.