Sideways

BBC Radio 4
Sideways
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109 episodes

  • Sideways

    79. The Scientist and the Miracle

    2026/2/11 | 28 mins.
    Joshua Brown, a respected neuroscience professor at Indiana University was diagnosed with an inoperable brain tumour in 2003. It was devastating news, Joshua was only 30, and a new father. And so, with nothing to lose, he and his wife pursued an unconventional path - especially for a scientist. Together with their newborn daughter, they travelled across America, praying for a miracle.
    Matthew Syed delves into instances where inexplicable recoveries have been interpreted as evidence of divine intervention. He examines the unexpected ways in which the Vatican works with scientists to deem certain events miraculous. The whole idea touches on something deeply personal to Matthew as someone who grew up in a family that believed in miracle healings. He now struggles with the idea and is a firm non-believer, but he reunites with a much-loved pastor from his childhood for a frank conversation and meeting of their two viewpoints. Through Joshua’s remarkable journey, Matthew probes at whether miracles can ever be compatible with scientific thinking.
    With Joshua Brown, Professor of psychological and brain sciences at Indiana University and Director of the Global Medical Research Institute; oncologist Dr Ranjana Srivastava; Jacqueline Duffin, haematologist, historian, and Professor Emerita at Queen’s University, Canada; and Matthew’s childhood pastor, Nigel Thompson.
    Presenter: Matthew Syed
    Producer: Vishva Samani
    Editor: Katherine Godfrey
    Sound Design and Mix: Mark Pittam
    Theme music by Ioana Selaru
    A Novel production for BBC Radio 4
    Featuring archive from the Reinhard Bonnke Legacy Collection -Something to Shout About, produced and distributed by Christ for All Nations (CfaN) ministry.
  • Sideways

    Sideways - Returning Soon

    2026/1/28 | 2 mins.
    Sideways returns with eight new stories of seeing the world differently and the ideas that shape our lives. Stories about everything from miracle healing and science, to the evolution of women's screams, explored through heavy metal music, to why male broodiness shouldn't be overlooked. Listen to the latest series of Sideways first on BBC Sounds.
    Presenter: Matthew Syed
    Producers: Julien Manuguerra-Patten and Vishva Samani
    Series Editor: Katherine Godfrey
    Sound Design and Mix: Mark Pittam
    Theme music by: Ioana Selaru
    Produced by: Novel for BBC Radio 4
  • Sideways

    78. Hide and Seek

    2025/9/10 | 28 mins.
    In 2014, Lydia Laurenson moved to San Francisco. As she struggled to find her place and her people in a new city, one mysterious invitation changed everything. After a compelling - if slightly bizarre - induction, she was welcomed into a secretive and exclusive group called The Latitude. Their aim? To experience life more creatively.
    There’s something undeniably powerful about being chosen. For centuries, secret societies have perfected a mix of mystery, camaraderie, and selectiveness. And that taps into something deeply human - the need to belong. From secret childhood clubs to private online groups, we’ve always created small, hidden worlds that feel like they’re just for us.
    Today, we ask what it is about being on the inside of something hidden that makes us feel seen.

    With writer Lydia Laurenson, Professor of History Rick Spence, and British author Tiffany Jenkins.
    Presenter: Matthew Syed
    Producer: Julien Manuguerra-Patten
    Editor: Hannah Marshall
    Sound Design and Mix: Mark Pittam
    Theme music by Ioana Selaru
    A Novel production for BBC Radio 4.
  • Sideways

    77. Crazy Cat Lady

    2025/9/03 | 28 mins.
    Anna Go-Go has always defied expectations - she was a drummer (still rare for a woman), then a comedian and now a mass Go-Go dance instructor - always with her beloved cats by her side. But when she turned 40, she noticed people’s attitudes changed towards her. They saw her as an older woman living alone with cats and really began to treat her like a ‘crazy cat lady’.
    The idea of a woman living alone with cats has caused cultural panic for centuries. In 2021 when US vice-president JD Vance was a Senate candidate, he described how his country was run by a bunch of ‘childless cat ladies’ - miserable at their lives and the choices they made. The comments went viral and were heavily criticised but they also drew attention to the modern-day use of the cat lady trope.
    In this episode, with the help of history and science, Matthew Syed explores how and why this centuries-old shaming tactic has travelled through time and still echoes today.
    With performer, mass dance master and author of Cat Lady Manifesto, Anna Go-Go; Dr Corey Wrenn, Lecturer of Sociology at the University of Kent; historian and author of the book Catland, Kathryn Hughes; and evolutionary biologist at Washington University in St Louis and author of The Age of Cats, Professor Jonathan Losos.
    Presenter: Matthew Syed
    Producer: Vishva Samani
    Editor: Hannah Marshall
    Sound Design and Mix: Mark Pittan
    Theme music by Ioana Selaru
    A Novel production for BBC Radio 4
  • Sideways

    76. When Time Slows Down

    2025/8/27 | 28 mins.
    Movie stuntman Brian Hite often experiences a dramatic slowing down of time while performing complex stunts in a matter of seconds, like car hits - entering the fabled place often described by top sportspeople as “the zone”. It’s something Matthew’s experienced himself during his professional table-tennis career. Brief, heightened moments in which the ball feels larger, the racquet becomes an extension of the body, and everything slows down.
    These intense slow-motion experiences are generally explained as a trick of memory. But could they be something more - could it be that time is less rigid than we think? After all, modern theories of physics already challenge our everyday experience of time. Civil engineer Philip Wade experienced time in slow-motion twice while on holiday skiing too. It was so powerful, it set him on a path of meditation, and entirely changed his perspective on time.
    Delving into new scientific theories and transpersonal psychology, Matthew Syed examines these experiences more deeply and asks whether such encounters suggest the way we think of time itself is an illusion.
    With professional stuntman and sports performance psychologist Dr Brian Hite; Transpersonal Psychologist at Leeds Beckett University and author of the book Time Expansion Experiences, Dr Steve Taylor; Emeritus Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy at Queen Mary University of London, Bernard Carr; and spiritual guide Philip Wade, creator of The Living Soul App.
    Presenter: Matthew Syed
    Producer: Vishva Samani
    Editor: Hannah Marshall
    Sound Design and Mix: Mark Pittam
    Theme music by Ioana Selaru
    A Novel production for BBC Radio 4

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About Sideways

Best-selling author Matthew Syed explores the ideas that shape our lives with stories of seeing the world differently.
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