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Daliso Chaponda: Citizen of Nowhere
Daliso Chaponda: Citizen of Nowhere
Oct 26, 2024 2:38 AM

Author:Daliso Chaponda,Daliso Chaponda,James Quinn

Daliso Chaponda: Citizen of Nowhere

Britain’s Got Talentstar Daliso Chaponda takes a comic look at the relationship between the UK and Africa in these two BBC Radio 4 series

The UK and Africa have had a long and complicated past. These two series look at the history of this relationship, with Daliso as our relationship guidance counsellor, helping us navigate the rocky historical waters between the two places.A Malawian comedian who grew up all over the world, Daliso straddles cultural divides. He will help us all better understand how to sort out our differences. Or not...

Along with his sidekick ‘The Other Guy’ (James Quinn), Daliso explores how the UK and Africa first met; looks at the people on both sides who don't want the relationship to work; considers charities and organisations who want to help and discusses the process of immigration. In addition, he talks about his personal experience of both cultures, from growing up in Africa to his experiences of racism in England.

Shrewd, daring and irreverent, Daliso Chaponda finds the comedy in complex issues, raising awareness as well as laughs in this hilarious and thought-provoking show.

Nominated for the 2019 Rose d'Or Award for Audio Entertainment.

Written and performed by Daliso Chaponda

The Other Guy: James Quinn

Additional material: Scott Bennett

Voice of: Dylan Morris

Theme music by Lawi

Producer: Carl Cooper

Production Coordinator: Beverly Tagg

A BBC Studios Production

Photo by Steve Ullathorne

First broadcast on BBC Radio 4, 2-23 May 2018 (Series 1), 23 Oct - 13 Nov 2019 (Series 2)

Reviews

A life-changing book

—— Viv Groskop

Frank, funny and feminist, she [Meltzer] describes her struggles with charm and honesty, questioning how a (mostly) happy person can be made so miserable by calories, portion sizes and scales

—— Eithne Farry , Sunday Express

This is the anti-diet book I have been waiting for. I loved its honesty, charm and celebration of an unlikely but compelling feminist heroine. I think many women -- me included -- really struggle to find a voice in a culture where wellness and body positivity both noisily vie for our attention. For the first time I feel seen and heard

—— Daisy Buchanan

Sharp... frank and incisive

—— Charlotte Lytton , The Telegraph

For anyone who has ever felt defeated by food, betrayed by their own body, embarrassed for not only lacking the willpower to change their habits but also embarrassed by the desire to change their own body, Marisa Meltzer sees you, has written this book for you because she is you. While simultaneously delving into the history of the woman who started Weight Watchers and bravely and honestly examining her own complicated relationship with food and weight, Marisa has written a book that perfectly captures our country's obsession with THIN and the struggle with obesity at this moment in history

—— Busy Philipps, author of This Will Only Hurt A Little

This is Big is a brave, bold, funny, honest, riveting book that made me have every kind of feeling in the world

—— Jami Attenberg, author of All Grown Up

Fascinating... Meltzer's whistle-stop history of America's body image is both effortlessly informative and efficiently selective

—— Eleanor Halls , Daily Telegraph

Meltzer has created a singular companionate text for those who know the agony of frustration surrounding weight as an issue, both personal and political. People — women, especially — who ping-pong around the weight spectrum will feel less alone when they read it... Nidetch may be long gone, but Meltzer carries on her legacy of putting a public face on the challenge of weight management. Acerbic, culturally astute and genuine, she makes exquisite company in the struggle, and that is no small thing.

—— Lily Burana , New York Times

At once a biography and a memoir, this heartfelt, incisive book layers the story of Weight Watchers founder Jean Nidetch with the author’s own lifelong journey through various fad diets. What emerges is a surprising portrait of a remarkable but little-known life in business, as well as a thoughtful critique of America’s obsession with thinness. Meltzer, who has herself subscribed to Weight Watchers, brings a personal angle to this fascinating, far-reaching story of a phenomenon that has touched the lives of hundreds of thousands of women

—— Esquire

This book is an incredible hybrid: both a detailed study of an extraordinary American life, and a candid and revealing memoir. Meltzer is the biographer Jean Nidetch deserves, crafting a portrait of the woman and the world in which she lived. She’s also a bracing memoirist, a warm and honest voice unafraid to offer readers the stuff of her own life to help us better understand the culture we now share. It’s a remarkable feat

—— Rumaan Alam, author of That Kind of Mother

This Is Big is an inventive memoir that examines Meltzer’s own experience with weight loss alongside Nidetch’s lucrative belief that community, not secretive shame, could transform people’s bodies and lives

—— Bitch Media

Marisa Meltzer is an ingenious writer. This is Big expertly weaves together two engaging tales: the charming, funny, and often heartbreaking account of Meltzer’s lifelong attempts at bodily transformation, attempts that will have many readers nodding along in recognition, especially when she decides to join an unforgettable group of Weight Watchers in Park Slope, Brooklyn; and the little-known story of a largely forgotten American icon whose lasting accomplishments deserve to be known: Jean Nidetch, the irrepressible, path-breaking entrepreneur who founded the now billion-dollar company Weight Watchers in her modest living room in 1963

—— Nancy Jo Sales, author of The Bling Ring

This book was so good that I devoured it (with no guilt)! Meltzer shows us, through honesty, rawness and deep vulnerability, the complexities of living in a body that doesn't adhere to society's narrow beauty standards in an era that holds up body positivity as gospel

—— Mara Altman, author of Gross Anatomy

A witty and meaningful look at our obsession with weight and dieting; blending the story of the founder of Weight Watchers with her own saga, Marisa Meltzer crafts an amusing story with universal insights

—— Sheila Weller, author of Girls Like Us

A fascinating deep dive into the insatiable rise of the multibillion-dollar food and diet industries... What's particularly pleasing about this warm book is the weighing up of what "success" can look like for different types of people

—— Jewish Chronicle

A unique memoir on dieting and body politics... Funny and thoughtful, this is both an inspiring anti-diet book and a biography of an idiosyncratic entrepreneur whose impact is still felt strongly today

—— Eastern Daily Press, *Book of the Week*

[Barnes] liberates us from the shallowness of our absorption in the present, and reminds us that we always know less than we think about what we’re doing.

—— Tessa Hadley , Guardian

Barnes is as freewheeling in his painting of a hedonistic period as Pozzi was free-thinking - and presents it as a mirror to our own "hysterical" age.

—— i

[The Man in the Red Coat is] top international tittle-tattle… sparkling and very enjoyable.

—— Sue Prideaux , The Times

[A] richly illustrated, witty and detailed tour d’horizon of the belle époque period… Julian Barnes conveys all the joie de vivre and the decadence of the period as well as the rich array of intellectual and artistic life shared between France and Britain… a book that should fascinate many a Francophile.

—— Euan Cameron , Tablet

Timely stuff.

—— Dan Brotzel , UK Press Syndication

An intricate biographical essay.

—— Ruth Scurr , Times Literary Supplement

[A] richly entertaining study.

—— Metro, *Books of the Year*

A masterful portrayal of the Belle Epoque.

—— Lady, *Books of the Year*

A personal meditation on the belle époque… The Man in the Red Coat is one long, meandering essay in Montaigne mode.

—— William Doyle , Times Literary Supplement

The book is at once a biography of Pozzi in the context of his time and a picture of the time as refracted by Pozzi. Barnes constructs it as a kind of mosaic.

—— Luc Sante , London Review of Books

Elegant and resonant.

—— Simon Callow , Daily Telegraph

I’ve just started Julian Barnes’s The Man in the Red Coat, and I am already hooked.

—— Peta Leith , i

A tour de force… Dr Pozzi may not be remembered in medical history but his legacy is an artwork of himself in his prime that has transcended time.

—— Nigel Masters , BJGP

Steeped in the luxury and scandal of Belle Epoque Paris and London, Barnes resurrects the charming, philandering Pozzi.

—— Connie Sjödin , Royal Academy Magazine *10 novels about art you won't put down*
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