4.2 • 2.9K Ratings
🗓️ 14 March 2025
⏱️ 56 minutes
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The Grammy award-winning Lainey Wilson is a country music trailblazer. She has made her way from Hannah Montana impersonator to performing at the Grand Ole Opry and she's been awarded seven Country Music Association Awards, including Entertainer of the Year in 2023 and six Academy of Country Music Awards. As a prolific songwriter she’s scored seven No. 1 hits including: Watermelon Moonshine and Heart Like A Truck. Her latest album, Whirlwind, earned a Grammy nomination and she is currently on a world tour promoting the album. She will be headlining at the Country to Country Festival at the O2 in London this weekend. She joins Nuala McGovern to discuss why she thinks country is cool again.
In 2021, the Irish jockey Rachael Blackmore became the first female jockey to win the Grand National in the 182-year history of the race. The first woman to be leading jockey at the Cheltenham Festival with six victories, including the Champion Hurdle, and the following year she became the first female jockey to win the Cheltenham Gold Cup. Yesterday, she continued to make history winning the Stayers' Hurdle aboard Bob Olinger to complete a Cheltenham Festival double. All the more remarkable as she was sidelined for three months with a neck injury after a fall in September. We speak to Fern Buckley, BBC sports journalist, ahead of Blackmore's participation in Friday afternoon's Gold Cup race.
In Bangladesh, there's been shocking news that an eight-year-old girl who was raped last week, has died from her injuries. Fierce protests have erupted in the country following the girl's death yesterday with people demanding that the government expedite justice for rape victims and reform laws related to women and children's safety. We hear from the BBC's South Asia Correspondent Samira Hussain who is based in Delhi, India.
In the next of our Women’s Prize discussions, we hear from Clare Mulley on her book charting the life of Agent Zo – a courageous Polish female resistance fighter in World War Two, and VV Ganeshananthan about her novel Brotherless Night set during the Sri Lankan Civil War – winner of the Women’s Prize for Fiction last year. What can these writers in very different genres tell us about the experience of women in war?
Catherine Cox from Nottingham was one of thousands of women who took the epilepsy drug sodium valproate while pregnant, something which is now advised against. She’s been campaigning for compensation for more than 20 years. Her son Matthew, who’s now 23, was born with a range of conditions, including autism, ADHD, epilepsy and several learning disabilities. At 18 months old, he was diagnosed with foetal valproate syndrome, indicating the medication Catherine took was the cause of his problems. Catherine joins Nuala alongside Dr Henrietta Hughes, Patient Safety Commissioner, whose report, released just over a year ago, recommended the need to compensate those harmed by valproate.
Presenter: Nuala McGovern Producer: Kirsty Starkey Editor: Karen Dalziel
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0:00.0 | Hello, you're about to listen to a BBC podcast, so I'd like to tell you where you'll find more just like it. |
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0:46.9 | Hello, I'm Nula McGovern and welcome to Woman's Hour from BBC Radio 4. |
0:51.9 | Just to say that for rights reasons, the music in the original radio broadcast has been removed for this podcast. |
0:53.4 | Hello, welcome to Friday's program. |
0:55.6 | Well, this morning, country music. I love a bit of country and I am very much looking forward |
1:00.6 | to welcoming Grammy Award-winning singer-songwriter, Lainie Wilson, to this woman's hour studio. |
1:07.4 | She's actually bigger in the UK before she was in the US. |
1:11.0 | She is American. |
1:12.2 | But maybe you're a fan of country. |
1:14.4 | Why is that? |
1:15.4 | Convert your fellow listeners this morning. |
1:17.7 | What do you listen to and why? |
1:19.8 | You can text the programme 844-844 on social media. |
1:23.1 | We're at BBC Woman's Hour. |
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