エピソード

  • S1E9 - Peter Tatchell part 1: Fearless Activism and the Birth of Pride
    2026/02/04

    As LGBTQ+ history month begins, we are thrilled to share the final episodes of our first season.

    We sit down with Peter for the first of two episodes. Starting in 1960s Melbourne and the impossible choice between prison and the Vietnam war, which ultimately saw him move to London. On his second day in the UK he discovered the Gay Liberation Front, a movement that aimed to achieve cultural change, challenging the church, media, police and education.

    Peter walks us through the first London Pride in 1972 and the challenges faced by the GLF as its flame dimmed. Peter reflects on the personal costs of taking action, including arrests, assaults, PTSD and the fuel that keeps him going: love of people, freedom, equality and justice.

    If this story moved you, tap follow, leave a review, and share it with a friend. Your support helps these stories travel further.

    This episode was hosted by Jonathan Chambers and James Alexander

    Editing by Hannah Stewart

    Music: Mystify created by AlterEgo

    Visit our website, https://tvfh.co.uk

    Follow us on Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/theviewfromherepodcast

    続きを読む 一部表示
    58 分
  • S1E8: Nettie Pollard - GLF, Psychiatry and Telephone Helplines
    2026/01/28

    We sit with Nettie Pollard as she relives the early 1970s Gay Liberation Front, a movement that built a culture of collective courage, mutual care, and playful defiance. From secret ‘zaps’ at the Festival of Light to linking arms outside the Albert Hall, she reveals how the GLF protected one another, challenged the police, and made joy a tactic.

    Nettie takes us inside the Counter‑Psychiatry Group working to overcome the label of homosexuality as an “illness” and shares her experiences volunteering for Icebreakers, one of the first LGBTQ+ helplines.

    Nettie’s warning is clear: rights can be rolled back when hearts aren’t won. This conversation shows how culture, community, and care can move faster than laws and last longer than headlines.

    Since recording this episode, Nettie Pollard sadly died on Christmas Day, 2025

    Subscribe, share, and leave a review to help more people find these histories.

    This episode was hosted by Jonathan Chambers and James Alexander

    Editing by Hannah Stewart

    Music: Mystify created by AlterEgo

    Visit our website, https://tvfh.co.uk

    Follow us on Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/theviewfromherepodcast

    続きを読む 一部表示
    49 分
  • S1E7: Chris Smith - The first openly gay Cabinet Minister
    2026/01/21

    When Lord Chris Smith stood in a crowded hall in Rugby and said, “My name is Chris Smith... and I’m gay,” British politics took a giant leap forward. In this episode, we trace the path from coming out to the Blair-era equality reforms that reshaped life for LGBTQ people in the UK.

    Chris discusses tabloid hostility, the response of his constituents, and the small moments that mark a cultural shift. He walks us through some of his defining achievements in government: equalising the age of consent, repealing Section 28, ending bans in the armed forces, securing goods and services equality, and the arrival of civil partnerships. He shows how ordinary people coming out moved public opinion faster than politicians or headlines.

    Chris also shares how he chose to reveal his HIV status years later, inspired by a speech from Nelson Mandela.

    If this podcast was inspiring, follow us on social media, share the episode with a friend, and leave a review.

    This episode was hosted by Jonathan Chambers and James Alexander

    Editing by Hannah Stewart

    Music: Mystify created by AlterEgo

    Visit our website, https://tvfh.co.uk

    Follow us on Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/theviewfromherepodcast

    続きを読む 一部表示
    59 分
  • S1E6: The Bloolips - How Queer Theatre Fought Back
    2026/01/14

    We sit down with Stuart Feather, Paul Shaw, and Lavinia Co‑op to trace the raw and often outrageous path from the Gay Liberation Front’s early meetings at the LSE to the Bloolips’ radical drag that rattled London, conquered Amsterdam, and charmed New York.

    We revisit the infamous Festival of Light action at Methodist Central Hall, featuring slow handclaps, boxed mice under pews, can‑canning “nuns,” a balcony banner crowning “Cliff for Queen”, and a drag confession of being “saved” that froze an entire audience.


    This is queer theatre as a weapon - light, frothy, and full of tap‑dancing, but carrying the punch that keeps movements alive.

    Subscribe, share with a friend and leave a review telling us the boldest act of creative resistance you’ve ever witnessed.

    This episode was hosted by Jonathan Chambers and James Alexander

    Editing by Hannah Stewart

    Music: Mystify created by AlterEgo

    Visit our website, https://tvfh.co.uk

    Follow us on Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/theviewfromherepodcast

    続きを読む 一部表示
    1 時間 14 分
  • BONUS EPISODE: Adèle Anderson - Standing Strong Against a Backlash
    2026/01/09

    Following our main interview with Adèle Anderson, recorded before the April 2025 Supreme Court ruling on trans rights in the UK, we sit down with Adèle for a live recording at The View From Here's launch event in London.

    Adèle shares her thoughts on the negative progress we're seeing in trans rights in the UK, the impact of culture wars and the chilling effect this is having.

    If you enjoyed this episode, please consider subscribing and leaving a review, as well as sharing the word on social media

    This episode was hosted by Jonathan Chambers and James Alexander

    Editing by Hannah Stewart

    Music: Mystify created by AlterEgo

    Visit our website, https://tvfh.co.uk

    Follow us on Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/theviewfromherepodcast

    続きを読む 一部表示
    12 分
  • S1E5: Adèle Anderson - Radical Queen to Trans Trailblazer
    2026/01/07

    Adèle Anderson, a key voice of cabaret group, Fascinating Aida, takes us behind the spotlight to Britain in the 1970s, where a radical queen went on to face aversion therapy and a medical playbook that demanded a “ladylike” life before providing basic care.

    We explore how a newspaper headline threatened to push Adèle out of Fascinating Aida, GLF fractures, the politics of trans inclusion, and the echoes of the past in today's trans debate. Adele’s story offers both tears and joy.

    Note, this episode was recorded before the April 2025 UK Supreme Court ruling on trans rights in the UK. To hear Adèle's reaction to this case, tune in to our special bonus episode to be released on 9 January 2025.

    Subscribe, share this with a friend who needs to hear it, and leave a review to help more listeners discover this history.

    This episode was hosted by Jonathan Chambers and James Alexander

    Editing by Hannah Stewart

    Music: Mystify created by AlterEgo

    Visit our website, https://tvfh.co.uk

    Follow us on Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/theviewfromherepodcast

    続きを読む 一部表示
    1 時間 12 分
  • S1E4: Jill Nalder - From the Pink Palace to a Fight for Care
    2025/12/17

    We sit down with the activist and actor, Jill Nalder, whose real life shaped the TV series It’s a Sin, to uncover how a makeshift home in London became a blueprint for chosen family, mutual aid, and relentless care during the HIV crisis. From youth theatre in Wales to drama school in the city, Jill shows how safe spaces grow courage and how that courage fuelled nights of laughter, emergency phone calls, and the kind of honesty that saves lives.

    Jill opens up about the disorienting early days of HIV: rumours framed as “gay flu,” weeks-long waits for test results, and government messaging that stoked fear instead of clarity. She explains the grassroots network that filled the gap—helplines, the gay press, hospital leaflets, and blunt, shame-free sex education. Then the West End stepped in. Drawing inspiration from Broadway Cares, Jill and friends launched West End Cares, transforming late-night cabarets and bucket collections into hardship grants and research support. Actor, curtain calls, and queues at venues raised cash and delivered real change.

    Jill’s reflections on “going home,” chosen family, and the ethics of care show what happens when art becomes activism, bringing with it compassion, courage and hope.

    Subscribe, share this episode with a friend, and leave a review to help more listeners find these stories.

    This episode was hosted by Jonathan Chambers and James Alexander

    Editing by Hannah Stewart

    Music: Mystify created by AlterEgo

    Visit our website, https://tvfh.co.uk

    Follow us on Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/theviewfromherepodcast

    続きを読む 一部表示
    58 分
  • S1E3: Ted Brown - Civil Rights to Care Rights
    2025/12/10

    Ted Brown, veteran of the Gay Liberation Front and a driving force behind black gay activism in Britain, joins us to trace a path from a civil rights–inspired childhood to organising the first UK Pride, and to a battle many don’t see coming - staying out and safe in elderly care.

    We start with Ted’s mother, a Jamaican activist who stood with the US civil rights movement and taught him to read prejudice as a system, not a personal failing. From there, Ted walks us into the early GLF meetings at the LSE, where liberation meant more than law reform. He shares how drag, gender-nonconformity, and the idea of sexuality as a spectrum found space in rooms that were chaotic, joyous, and deeply political. We get inside the strategy debates—CHE’s legal focus versus GLF’s cultural transformation—and the reality of racism and sexism in early gay spaces.

    Ted details the founding of black queer institutions, including Europe’s pioneering Black Gay and Lesbian Centre, and the hard lessons from confronting media homophobia during the Justin Fashanu saga. His organising forced a powerful newspaper to rethink its stance, showing how targeted pressure can shift hostile narratives.

    Then comes a sharp turn to the present: the quiet violence of care homes that ignore or erase LGBTQ relationships. Ted recounts fighting for his partner Noel’s dignity, the systemic misrecognition of their civil partnership, and the ease with which abuse can hide in “care”. He lays out “Not Going In The Care Closet”, a campaign ensuring no one must hide at the end of life.

    This episode was hosted by Jonathan Chambers and James Alexander

    Editing by Hannah Stewart

    Music: Mystify created by AlterEgo

    Visit our website, https://tvfh.co.uk

    Follow us on Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/theviewfromherepodcast

    続きを読む 一部表示
    1 時間 5 分