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SlutWalk, Emma Banks, Michelle Ping

Jane Garvey talks to royal naval reservist and specialist paramedic Michelle Ping about her work training people to fight the Ebola virus in Sierra Leone.

Michelle Ping, Royal Navy Reservist, talks about her work training Armed Forces and health workers to fight the Ebola virus in Sierra Leone.

Emma Banks represents some of the world's leading musicians including Katy Perry, Bruno Mars, Red Hot Chili Peppers, and Florence and the Machine and many others. She's also Chair of Nordoff Robbins, a music therapy charity, which is approaching its 30th anniversary.

Marches against sexual violence have been happening for decades but have received little attention in the mainstream press. So why, when an anti-rape march took place in April 2011 called SlutWalk, subsequently repeated around the world, did the press pay so much attention?

Presenter: Jane Garvey
Producer: Lucinda Montefiore.

Available now

58 minutes

Media Representation of Slutwalk

Billed as an anti-rape march, the first SlutWalk took place in Toronto 2011 as a response to a Toronto policeman telling a group of law students that in order to avoid being raped "women should avoid dressing like sluts.  Before the first march took place, the movement went viral and by the end of 2011 SlutWalks took place in over 200 cities and 40 nations around the world. 
Not only did SlutWalk have a global reach, it also generated headlines in media outlets around the world.  So why were SlutWalks reported so widely in the mainstream media? And how helpful was the reporting in bringing feminism and feminist issues, in particular the notion of rape culture and victim blaming back into the public’s consciousness? Jane Garvey speaks to the author of SlutWalk: Feminism, Activism and Media, Dr. Kaitlynn Mendes, lecturer in Media and Communication. 

Emma Banks

Emma Banks is a Music Agent at Creative Artists Agency (CAA) which represents some of the world’s leading musicians, including Katy Perry, Bruno Mars, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Florence and the Machine and many others. She has won numerous industry awards including  the U.K.’s Woman of the Year Awards for the Music Industry, twice, the International Live Music Conference (ILMC) Second Least Offensive Agent Award six times, and Pollstar’s International Agent of the Year Award three times. She is also chair of Nordoff Robbins is a music therapy charity, dedicated to transforming the lives of vulnerable children and adults, which is approaching its 40th anniversary.

Michelle Ping

41 year old Royal Navy Reservist Michelle Ping has led a remarkable double career for the past 20 years as a military reservist and a specialist paramedic. She was on patrol as a volunteer combat paramedic with the Reservists in Helmand Province Afghanistan in 2011 when she saved the life of a colleague who had been shot in the head.  She jumped on the roof of the building where the soldier lay injured to shield him and give him first aid whilst still under fire. For her bravery she was awarded a Mention in Dispatches in 2012 and the Queen’s Volunteer Reserve Medal. 
On Tuesday she will be at another ceremony to receive an award for ‘Information Team of the Year’ for her civilian role in training the Armed Forces and health workers deployed in Sierra Leone to fight the Ebola virus. She joins Jane to talk about what it’s like to be a woman in the Royal Navy Reservist, how she juggles her two careers in the military and her civilian role and her future ambitions as an officer in the Royal Naval Reserve Service. 


Credits

Role Contributor
Presenter Jane Garvey
Interviewed Guest Michelle Ping
Interviewed Guest Emma Banks
Interviewed Guest Kaitlynn Mendes
Producer Lucinda Montefiore

Broadcast

  • Tue 30 Jun 2015 10:00

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