Second Chance
En podcast av Raphael Rowe - Onsdagar
123 Avsnitt
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The Fingerprints
Publicerades: 2021-01-27 -
I spent 36 Years In Prison
Publicerades: 2021-01-20 -
Do Not Suffer in Silence
Publicerades: 2021-01-13 -
From Crime Boss to Dangerous Prisoner to Humanitarian
Publicerades: 2021-01-06 -
Mistakes Don’t Define Us
Publicerades: 2020-12-30 -
The Artful Dodger
Publicerades: 2020-12-23 -
Legalising Cannabis
Publicerades: 2020-12-16 -
The Green Wall
Publicerades: 2020-12-09 -
Do Black Lives Matter?
Publicerades: 2020-12-02 -
Inspired by a Death Row Prisoner
Publicerades: 2020-11-25 -
The Mother, The Prison, The Daughter
Publicerades: 2020-11-19 -
A Violent Man Reformed
Publicerades: 2020-11-11 -
Joint Enterprise Not Guilty By Association (JENGA)
Publicerades: 2020-11-04 -
Unsolved Murder of Jill Dando and The Sister of the Wrongly Accused, Michelle Diskin.
Publicerades: 2020-10-28 -
Drink, Drugs and The Ministry of Justice
Publicerades: 2020-10-21 -
One Killer Punch
Publicerades: 2020-10-14 -
Murderer turned Hero
Publicerades: 2020-10-02 -
Police Corruption Exposed
Publicerades: 2020-09-25 -
Life on the Doors
Publicerades: 2020-09-18 -
Surviving a Bombing
Publicerades: 2020-09-04
Award Winning Second Chance is a podcast series that explores the theme of second chance. It raises the questions who deserves a second chance, who decides who gets a second chance and what a second chance actually means. On this podcast we speak to people from all walks of life about their experiences, some who have been given a second chance in life, some who might be considered to be beyond deserving a second chance. The host of the podcast series is Raphael Rowe, host of the critically acclaimed series ‘Inside the World's Toughest Prisons’ on Netflix. He is also a former correspondent for the world's longest running BBC TV current affairs show Panorama the BBC Radio 4 Today programme as well as a regular contributor on The One Show and Sunday Morning Live on BBC One. In 1988, aged 20, he was sentenced to life imprisonment for a murder and robbery he did not commit. In July 2000, after 12 years in prison, the Court of Appeal quashed his wrongful convictions and he was freed. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.