The Sink is not the kind of podcast that will have you guffawing immediately – in fact, you may be confused by this parody of sleep-inducing meditation shows. But once you get acclimated to its surreal conceit – the process of dredging up “what’s stuck in your tubes” and remedying the “bad smell” in your brain – Natasha Hodgson’s comedy-horror show is full of brilliantly unsettling laughs.
Hannah J Davies, Guardian deputy TV editor
Nicole Byer of Why Won’t You Date Me? Photograph: Willy Sanjuan/Invision/AP
Nicole runs the gamut from incredibly filthy and raunchy to deeply heartfelt in the conversations she has with her guests about therapy, the daily struggles of maintaining a relationship, grief, the realities of existing in a body that society sees as Other (fat, Black, POC, trans, etc). There’s no dating lately because of Covid, but it seems like the podcast is even better because the tangents run all over. One thing is for certain: it’s always so damn
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After Australia s bush fires, koala ark looks to future-proof populations
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Some countries will pay hefty premiums for products made in Britain, a study suggests
- Credit: Anthony Cullen
British made products are making their mark abroad with consumers willing to pay a good deal more for UK provenance, research by Barclays Bank suggests.
A study carried out by Barclays Corporate Banking suggests international customers are willing to pay more for goods that are made in Britain netting up to £3.5bn a year in price premiums.
Consumers in India, United Arab Emirates (UAE) and China were prepared to pay the most and British food and drink makers are able to charge the highest premiums, it found.