Main content
Sorry, this episode is not currently available

Corporate Film Fame

Chris Evans wants to hear from Hollywood stars in the world of corporate films.

On today's wonderful Wednesday show, young Heidi gets a fanfare for telling us about her first ever guitar lesson.
Chris Evans talks to country music connoisseur Bob Harris about 'Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 2 Country' - the forthcoming pop-up radio service.
Vicki Pol, organiser of TankFest 2015, explains our fascination for these military machines.
The Top Tenuous takes in your claims to the fame of Sir Winston Churchill, and our Pause For Thought comes courtesy of Senior Rabbi Julia Neuberger.

Today's show is dedicated to anyone who's ever starred in a corporate video.
And today's show is entitled: If you can't be funny, be quick!

2 hours, 59 minutes

Last on

Wed 28 Jan 2015 06:30

Music Played

  • Talk Talk

    It's My Life

    • More Greatest Hits Of 80's (Various).
    • Disky.
  • Hozier

    Take Me To Church

    • (CD Single).
    • Island.
  • Blue Swede

    Hooked On A Feeling

    • Tarantino's Favourites (Various Artists).
    • Disky.
    • 7.
  • Amy Winehouse

    Tears Dry On Their Own

    • (CD Single).
    • Island.
  • Voice of the Beehive

    Don't Call Me Baby

    • Now 12 (Various Artists).
    • Now.
  • 10cc

    Life Is a Minestrone

    • The Singles.
    • Mercury.
  • Meghan Trainor

    Lips Are Movin

    • (CD Single).
    • Epic.
    • 001.
  • Frankie Goes to Hollywood

    Relax

    • Fantastic 80's - 3 (Various Artists).
    • Sony Tv/Columbia.
  • Sam Smith

    Stay With Me

    • (CD Single).
    • Capitol.
    • 001.
  • Joe Brown & The Bruvvers

    A Picture Of You

    • The Greatest Hits Of 1962.
    • Premier.
  • Mark Ronson

    Uptown Funk (feat. Bruno Mars)

    • (CD Single).
    • Columbia.
    • 001.
  • The Jam

    A Town Called Malice

    • Jam Story.
    • Universal.
  • The Zutons

    Valerie

    • (CD Single).
    • Deltasonic.
  • Aztec Camera

    Oblivious

    • The Best Of Aztec Camera.
    • Warner E.S.P..
  • Elton John

    Saturday Night's Alright (For Fighting)

    • Diamonds.
    • Virgin EMI Records.
  • JD McPherson

    Let The Good Times Roll

    • (CD Single).
    • Rounder Records.
    • 001.
  • The Shires

    Nashville Grey Skies

    • (CD Single).
    • Decca.
    • 001.
  • The Lightning Seeds

    The Life Of Riley

    • Sense - The Lightning Seeds.
    • Virgin.
  • Joan Armatrading

    Drop The Pilot

    • The Very Best Of Joan Armatrading.
    • A&M.
  • Duran Duran

    Hungry Like The Wolf

    • Fantastic 80's - 3 (Various Artists).
    • Sony Tv/Columbia.
  • Iggy Pop

    The Passenger

    • Screen Cuts (Various Artists).
    • Virgin.
  • Noel Gallagher's High Flying Birds

    Ballad Of The Mighty I

    • (CD Single).
    • Sour Mash Records.
  • Billy Ocean

    Red Light Spells Danger

    • Billy Ocean - Love Is For Ever (L.I.F.
    • Jive.
  • Blondie

    Union City Blue

    • Atomic: The Very Best Of Blondie.
    • EMI.
  • Gretchen Peters

    When All You Got Is A Hammer

    • (CD Single).
    • Proper Records.
    • 1.
  • The Kinks

    You Really Got Me

    • The Journey - Part 1.
    • BMG.
    • 7.
  • Sting

    If You Love Somebody Set Them Free

    • The Very Best Of Sting & The Police.
    • A&M.

Pause for Thought

Pause for Thought

From Julia Neuberger, Senior Rabbi at the west London Synagogue:

Tonight, on Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ1, there’s a remarkable documentary being shown, The Holocaust: A Story of Remembrance. Kitty Hart-Moxon tells us her memories of Auschwitz, as she displays the numbers once branded on her arm and her mother’s, that she had removed because people asked stupid questions about it- your boyfriend’s telephone number? Judith Kerr, acclaimed author of When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit, tells of her family’s escape from the Nazis, and Rabbi Laura Janner-Klausner goes to Lithuania to see what became of her family. All make the point that it happened to them, to their people, to their families- and mine- and should never be forgotten.

Yesterday was Holocaust Memorial Day, the 70th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz. In a decade, many Auschwitz survivors will be dead. Their stories will no longer be told in person. So how can we be sure the world will remember?  For people like me, who grew up with the awareness of what had happened to my family members, that now seems an urgent question. My mother didn’t talk about how most of her family had perished, until the fiftieth anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz. Then it all came flooding out, in the last few years of her life. Her father could not leave memories behind, even though he escaped Germany. In old age, with a particularly cruel form of dementia, he could see in his mind’s eye the Nazis chasing him around his home town, Heilbronn.

So this Sunday evening my synagogue is taking part in a joint service with Westminster Abbey to commemorate this 70 year anniversary, hearing from survivors, recording the Roma, gays, left wingers and others who were targeted, but always coming back to the key point that it was the Jews whom the Nazis wanted to remove from the earth. The only comfort amongst the sorrow and the memories is that we have survived, and there are enough people around to remind us what human beings are capable of. But all these accounts need to be written down urgently, whilst their owners are still alive. The imperative is to remember. For only by remembering have we any chance of preventing such genocide happening again.Β 

Broadcast

  • Wed 28 Jan 2015 06:30

Farewell Chris Evans: The best bits from his last shows at Radio 2

After eight years of hosting the Breakfast Show, Chris Evans leaves Radio 2.

500 Words

Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 2's story-writing competition for kids.