On my radar: Mo Gilligan’s cultural highlights

September142024
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Born in south London in 1988, the comedian and TV presenter Mo Gilligan started doing standup aged 19 and attracted wider attention with a series of viral sketches on YouTube.That landed him a co-hosting gig on The Big Narstie Show on Channel 4, followed by The Lateish Show With Mo Gilligan, for which he won Baftas in 2020 and 2022.He has also appeared as a judge on The Masked Singer UK.Gilligan, who lives in London, has just launched a podcast called Beginning, Middle and End, and he is currently touring the UK.Track Record: Me, Music and the War on Blackness by George the PoetI started reading this on tour and I felt like it was speaking directly to me.

It’s about black creativity and the forces that limit it.George gives his perspective on what blackness is and describes how black people are telling their stories through grime and drill music.He explains the music really wonderfully so that people who don’t know much about it will get what he’s talking about.I’ll be honest, I don’t read many books, but this one made me feel smart, empowered and strong.Supacell (Netflix)There are loads of superhero shows and movies, but to see one that connects so closely with my community is amazing.

With Supacell, I was like, Wow, I’m looking at Peckham High Street, I grew up there, and there are people flying around and doing telekinesis! It’s about ordinary black Londoners who start to realise they have superpowers, and they have them because of sickle cell disease.Sci-fi is very hard to execute in a way that feels real and attainable but this show pulled it off.I wish I could have seen it when I was 14.American Fiction (dir Cord Jefferson, 2023)I went to see this film on a whim and it really stuck with me.It’s about a black man writing very intellectual books that aren’t really selling.

Then he’s provoked into writing a book under a pseudonym that’s full of black stereotypes and it becomes a huge success.Everyone thinks he’s lived the gangster life it depicts.It’s a really fun film but it’s also got some deep moments and it gave me a lot of ideas for writing.I’ve been telling people to go see it ever since.ShxtsNGigs at the O2 Arena, LondonShxtsNGigs is a podcast where two guys who met at uni in Coventry play games and talk about relationship dilemmas.

It really encapsulates what I think “black boy joy” is – young black men being unapologetically themselves.When I heard they were doing a live show at the O2, I have to admit I was sceptical – would a podcast work in a space that big? But it was amazing.From the entrance, it was like watching big-time musicians with all the pyrotechnics, and then during the show you could hear a pin drop.Euro 24 finalI know we didn’t win the Euros for the second time running, but it’s really nice when everyone comes together for the love of football.I’ve got friends who never watch the game and they were talking about Gareth Southgate’s tactics.

Even my mum was interested.When the final happened, I was on tour in Australia.I watched it at 5am in a 24-hour casino in Melbourne absolutely packed with fans.Even though we didn’t win, the fact that we scored and got to celebrate something felt huge.It was such a special moment.

HYPHNT trainersI’ve always been big into trainers – it’s been my thing ever since I was a kid.When you grow up in a council house, being able to afford them feels like you made it in life.The artist J2K, who used to be in the grime crew Roll Deep, has created his own sneaker brand called HYPHNT (pronounced “hyphenate”).I bought three pairs, including the City Walker in brown and cream.It’s nice to support brands that are black-owned.

It made me feel as if I could do something similar one day.Mo Gilligan: Beginning, Middle & End is available to listen to on Global Player, or wherever you get your podcasts, with new episodes dropping weekly
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Unite aims to force vote on winter fuel payment at Labour conference

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September182024
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Starmer urged to appoint ‘mould-breaking’ outsider as civil service head

Keir Starmer is being privately urged to appoint a new cabinet secretary from outside the civil service who can “break the mould” of the traditional role, as internal battles continue over Simon Case’s replacement.The outgoing chair of the John Lewis Partnership, Sharon White, who is also a former chief executive of Ofcom, is thought to be among the favourites to head the civil service, along with Minouche Shafik, a former president of Columbia University in New York. However, there are others in No 10 who are wary of the outsiders who have been tipped.Oliver Robbins, the former Brexit negotiator who had been close to Starmer’s chief of staff, Sue Gray, had long been tipped for the job but is now in the frame for national security adviser.Others within the civil service who have been named by insiders as contenders are Tamara Finkelstein, the permanent secretary at the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, and Jeremy Pocklington, the permanent secretary at the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero

September182024
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UK must stop being naive over resetting relations with EU, thinktank says

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September182024
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NGOs call Home Office ‘unethical’ over £15m offer to help resettle deportees

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September182024
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Sue Gray’s £170,000 pay prompts fury among Labour advisers

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September182024
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Tom Tugendhat’s call for review of Huw Edwards’ sentence backfires after experts tell him law doesn’t allow it – as it happened

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September182024