• The Reason Why LIVE Bonus Episode #2
    Sep 22 2022

    Part 2 of The Reason Why LIVE Bonus Episode. 
    Six months on from it's initial release, Seamas Carey hosts a panel to continue conversations raised throughout The Reason Why podcast series. 

    Recorded at The Cornish Bank with a live audience - featuring frank,  passionate and thorny discussions which revisit familiar threads and cover new ground. 

    Seamas welcomes back three original interviewees; Michael Bunney (Cornwall councillor), Emma Frankland (performance artist) and Matthew Xia (London based theatre director) whilst introducing two new speakers; Mandy Spencer (Aspects Holidays) and Marcus Alleyne (Black Voices Cornwall). 

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    40 mins
  • The Reason Why LIVE Bonus Episode #1
    Sep 22 2022

    Six months on from it's initial release, Seamas Carey hosts a panel to continue conversations raised throughout The Reason Why podcast series. 

    Recorded at The Cornish Bank with a live audience - featuring frank,  passionate and thorny discussions which revisit familiar threads and cover new ground. 

    Seamas welcomes back three original interviewees; Michael Bunney (Cornwall councillor), Emma Frankland (performance artist) and Matthew Xia (London based theatre director) whilst introducing two new speakers; Mandy Spencer (Aspects Holidays) and Marcus Alleyne (Black Voices Cornwall). 

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    40 mins
  • Truly Local
    Apr 7 2022

    The final episode of The Reason Why asks what it means to have a 'sense of place' and how to be truly local?
    Seamas Carey investigates the social impact that Kneehigh Theatre had on Cornwall during the 1990's and how their work was shaped by the unique circumstances of a rural place. Then, after they achieved world wide fame (thanks to Emma Rice) Seamas wonders if people got left behind in the wake of ambition?
    He also looks at the work of Cornish playwright and lobster fisherman Nick Darke - a good example of someone who was passionately local and universal. 

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    42 mins
  • Holding Steadfast
    Mar 25 2022

    In the penultimate episode to this series, Seamas Carey looks at the Muslim community of Cornwall and investigates whether there's a mosque in this dominantly Christian place?

    Then he compares the absurd media frenzy of the G7 Summit in Carbis Bay to the actual lived reality of many people in 21st Century Cornwall - food banks, low wages, unemployment and suicide. 

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    32 mins
  • Queer Cornwall
    Mar 18 2022

    Seamas Carey begins to look at the queer community of Cornwall and what it's like if you don't fit the "gender or sexual norms". 
    In no way does he claim to feature all the voices of LGBTQIA, yet this episode does address the lack of representation, role models and services within Cornwall and asks; are there any specifically gay venues here? How progressive is this place? And can it feel unsafe, if you don't fit the status quo?

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    29 mins
  • Rural Racism
    Mar 11 2022

    Perhaps Cornwall isn't as welcoming and inclusive as Seamas Carey would like to think it is? But then again, how would he know? 
    This episode features four, honest conversations with people of colour, who have either visited, grown up, or moved away from Cornwall. 
    Is this a racist place? Can the word "emmet" be an othering term? And what does the future hold,  for a more inclusive Cornwall?

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    31 mins
  • Nationalism
    Mar 4 2022

    It's a BIG word with many meanings and different connotations. But what defines Cornish nationalism and is it OK to call yourself a nationalist? Seamas Carey talks about pride, identity and oppression with several Cornish nationalists. Along the way he starts to wonder whether he might be one too…

    He asks - what does it actually mean to be Cornish, where’s the line between pride and power and what happens when it all goes too far?

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    34 mins
  • Harking Back
    Feb 25 2022

    Seamas Carey is on a quest - to define what the culture of Cornwall actually is (and if there is such a thing) ?

    Firstly he looks at the impact of the Cornish mining industry on the rest of the world, particularly within the homelands of indigenous peoples. Then he investigates the Gorsedh Kernow, who maintain the Celtic spirit of Cornwall by giving out bardship for truly Cornish endeavours. However Seamas proves that a lot of Cornish culture has recently been invented, which begs the question; what makes something Cornish?


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    30 mins