Share Sounds. presented by Simon Rose

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Simon Rose

The Business of Film: Everything Everywhere All At Once, Along For The Ride & The Contractor

Simon Rose
Original Broadcast:

The Business Of Film

The Business of Film: Everything Everywhere All At Once, Along For The Ride & The Contractor
James Cameron-Wilson on the UK box office chart, falling substantially for the second week in a row ahead of the release of the new Top Gun movie. James caught up with #2 Everything Everywhere All At Once which he found relentless, with an insufferable tone, but didn't see Benedictine, in at #10. On Netflix he enjoyed youth drama Along For The Ride, with excellent performances and dialogue. He was less impressed by Amazon's thriller The Contractor with Chris Pine, which he found utterly unsurprising.
Guest:

James Cameron-Wilson


Published:
Simon Rose

Gadgets & Gizmos: Water from thin air, solar power at night & the $2m jigsaw puzzle

Simon Rose
Original Broadcast:

Gadgets and Gizmos

Gadgets & Gizmos: Water from thin air, solar power at night & the $2m jigsaw puzzle
Steve Caplin, Share Radio's technology editor, tells Simon Rose of the Texas scientists who have worked out how to combine cellulose and konjac to make water from thin air while, in New South Wales, they've found a way to get solar panels to generate power at night! There's also a $2m jigsaw, though the puzzle itself is a QR code, Rolls Royce have a new $28m car while the Genesis GV60 comes with facial recognition, a fingerprint engine start and a crystal ball. After 45 years, Voyager 1 is 14.5 billion miles away but still transmitting, though nobody can understand it.
Guest:

Steve Caplin


Published:
Simon Rose

The Bigger Picture: The Sue Gray Report and Sunak's cost-of-living measures

Simon Rose
Original Broadcast:

The Bigger Picture

The Bigger Picture: The Sue Gray Report and Sunak's cost-of-living measures
Political commentator Mike Indian discusses the Sue Gray Report into Pandemic parties in Downing Street and how it reflects upon the culture there. Although he thinks that the PM might yet survive, he feels he's a two-dimensional figure in a world where 3,4 or even 5 dimensions are needed and wishes he was a student of history any later than Pericles. He also gives snap judgement on Rishi Sunak's measures to cope with the rising cost of living, the recording being made while the Chancellor was speaking.
Guest:

Mike Indian


Published:
Simon Rose

The Bigger Picture: Democracy on the march, groupthink at the BofE & the 1990s and culture

Simon Rose
Original Broadcast:

The Bigger Picture

The Bigger Picture: Democracy on the march, groupthink at the BofE & the 1990s and culture
Professor Tim Evans of Middlesex University agrees with Andrew Neil that, around the world, democracy is on the march again. Putin's Ukraine invasion is actually helping to bring the rest of the world together and reconsider the attractions of autocratic rule. Tim wonders if the Bank of England is plagued by groupthink and, as a result, has boxed itself into a corner and could be about to crash the economy. And he ends by asking why modern culture is so dull in the UK and wonders whether the 1990s were the last golden cultural age.
Guest:

Professor Tim Evans


Published:
Simon Rose

The Financial Outlook for Personal Investors: How far will central banks go before markets crack?

Simon Rose
Original Broadcast:

The Financial Outlook for Personal Investors

The Financial Outlook for Personal Investors: How far will central banks go before markets crack?
Russ Mould of A J Bell talks to Simon Rose about representatives of the US Federal Reserve talking up interest rates, while big American retailers like Walmart and Target have demonstrated the problems they are already facing as inflation rises. So far they don't seem to be passing on all the price rises they face, while stock appears to be piling up. For Russ, the question now is what central banks will do and how far they can go before markets break.
Guest:

Russ Mould


Published:
Simon Rose

The Business of Film: Everything Everywhere All At Once, Firestarter & Father Stu

Simon Rose
Original Broadcast:

The Business Of Film

The Business of Film: Everything Everywhere All At Once, Firestarter & Father Stu
James Cameron-Wilson looks at the UK box office, still dominated by the Doctor Strange film, now with £30.4m. Downtown Abbey is #2 with a £10.4m total. At #3 is Everything Everywhere All At Once with Michelle Yeoh while Steve King's Firestarter w. Zac Efron opened at #9 and, was says James, utterly unbelievable. At #16 is true story Father Stu with Mel Gibson and Mark Wahlberg, a film James found deeply unpleasant.
Guest:

James Cameron-Wilson


Published:
Simon Rose

Gadgets & Gizmos: Post by drone, pay with a smile, underwater parties & meat in space

Simon Rose
Original Broadcast:

Gadgets and Gizmos

Gadgets & Gizmos: Post by drone, pay with a smile, underwater parties & meat in space
Share Radio's tech expert Steve Caplin tells Simon Rose about the Royal Mail's drone delivery to the Isles of Scilly, Shetlands, Orkneys and Hebrides. Mastercard have a new payment system requiring you to smile, there are teeth-cleaning nanobots on the way, underwater robots are killing jellyfish, drugs will have chocolate sprinkles to defeat counterfeiters, there's a battery that produces electricity from moisture and another from algae, the Dutch have produced a submarine party venue and Israeli scientists have mastered meat in space.
Guest:

Steve Caplin


Published:
Simon Rose

The Business of Film: Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness & top 20 inflation-adjusted films

Simon Rose
Original Broadcast:

The Business Of Film

The Business of Film: Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness & top 20 inflation-adjusted films
James Cameron-Wilson explains that all existing films saw a box office collapse in the warm weather while new #1 Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness steamrollered all before it with a £19.8m opening. The new Downton film saw a 50% collapse in box office and all other films suffered a worse fate. With only one new film, James quizzed Simon on his knowledge of the film actresses in the top 20 inflation-adjusted winners at the UK box office. How would you fare in answering these?
Guest:

James Cameron-Wilson


Published:
Simon Rose

The Financial Outlook for Personal Investors: UK GDP, market volatility & Apple losing its crown

Simon Rose
Original Broadcast:

The Financial Outlook for Personal Investors

The Financial Outlook for Personal Investors: UK GDP, market volatility & Apple losing its crown
Victoria Scholar of Interactive Investor talks to Simon Rose about the latest UK GDP figures and the pound hitting a 2-year low. She discusses the sell-off in tech stocks around the world and the switch to value shares and those which provide decent dividend yields. She points out that Apple has lost its crown as the world's most valuable company to Saudi Aramco and takes a brief look at the plunge in crypto that debunks the idea Bitcoin might be an inflation hedge.
Guest:

Victoria Scholar


Published:
Simon Rose

The Bigger Picture: The Queen's Speech, cost of living, local elections & Northern Ireland

Simon Rose
Original Broadcast:

The Bigger Picture

The Bigger Picture: The Queen's Speech, cost of living, local elections & Northern Ireland
Political commentator Mike Indian looks at the Queen's Speech, with the Queen herself absent. What was in it and what wasn't? He also discusses the Government's response to the growing cost-of-living crisis before turning to the recent local election results and what they might mean for the three main political parties. Lastly, he turns to Northern Ireland, where Sinn Fein emerged as the largest party; dos their success increase the prospect of a united Ireland?
Guest:

Mike Indian


Published: