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Woman's Hour

Gossip: why we love it, why we do it, professional gossips, & its use in novels, films and television

Woman's Hour

BBC

Society & Culture, Health & Fitness, Personal Journals

4.22.9K Ratings

🗓️ 29 August 2022

⏱️ 57 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

What comes to mind when you hear the word gossip? You’re probably imagining two women together whispering or laughing. Gossip has a bad reputation, but it can be a way of forming and maintaining, friendships. Comedian Rachel Parris and improv-artist Lauren Shearing who she works with on 'Austentatious: An Improvised Jane Austen Novel, talk about the role gossip plays in their relationship. Why do we gossip and why's it get such a bad rap when we enjoy it so much? We hear from Dr Kathryn Waddington, Emerita Fellow in Psychology at Westminster University who's researched and written about gossip for 25 years. In the Middle Ages the word gossip meant ‘women who supported other women during childbirth’ so when did it change into the ‘gossip’ we know today? Historians Professor Melanie Tebbutt from Manchester Metropolitan University and Dr Natalie Hanley-Smith from Oxford Brookes University discuss. So what if the discovering and reporting of gossip is your profession? Journalist Marie Le Conte, a former diarist for the Evening Standard and Camilla Wright the founder of Popbitch look at the life of a professional gossip. Sex and relationships are a cornerstone of gossip. It’s often - ‘who is doing what?’ and ‘with whom!?’ But what happens if you broadcast your life to the world? Rubina Pabani and Poppy Jay are the hosts of BBC podcast Brown Girls Do It Too. In the days of social media - how do they find the judgemental gossip mill? Gossip is often a key strand in storylines in films, TV and novels. Whether it’s introduced for comic effect or used in the build up to the climax of a drama, or to build intrigue in a reality television series Literary critic Alex Clark and film and television critic, Hanna Flint illustrate how. Presenter: Emma Barnett Producer: Kirsty Starkey Guest: Rachel Parris Guest: Lauren Shearing Guest: Dr Kathryn Waddington Guest: Prof Melanie Tebbutt Guest: Dr Natalie Hanley-Smith Guest: Marie Le Conte Guest: Camilla Wright Guest: Rubina Pabani Guest: Poppy Jay Guest: Alex Clark Guest: Hanna Flint

Transcript

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0:00.0

BBC Sounds Music Radio Podcasts

0:05.3

Hello, I'm Emma Barnett and welcome to Woman's Hour from BBC Radio 4.

0:10.2

Good morning and welcome to the programme and one entirely dedicated to gossip, the good,

0:16.0

the bad and the ugly.

0:17.9

What comes to mind when you hear the word gossip?

0:21.5

Maybe you're imagining two people talking together, they might be whispering, they might

0:24.8

be laughing, they might be lowering their voices, they might be checking who's behind

0:28.8

them.

0:29.8

It has a bad reputation but it is also a key way of forming and maintaining friendships

0:35.2

and key bonds.

0:36.2

Today, we're going to explore the history of it, how it's changed, what we need it for,

0:41.0

why it's good and bad for us and how gossip is changing at the moment, especially in the

0:46.7

era of social media.

0:48.2

Plus, we separate fact from fiction or gossip, if you will, on the differences between women

0:52.6

and men when it comes to how we spread information about those around us.

0:57.8

As I mentioned, it does form a part of our social adhesive and can play a key role in certain

1:03.4

friendships.

1:04.4

So where better to start today's special programme than with two friends?

1:08.1

Comedian Rachel Parrisie might know from the late night mash report or her book, Advice

1:12.7

from Strangers, all the theatre show, ostentatious and improvised Jane Austen novel, which she

1:18.4

performs with her friend Lauren Shearing, also an improv actor.

1:23.0

And I am told that both of you are not adverse to a spot of gossip.

...

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