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Geraldine Bedell

Geraldine Bedell

Agebomb is edited by Geraldine Bedell. Geraldine has for the last nine years been a writer and critic on The Observer; before that, she was a writer and columnist for The Independent on Sunday. She has also written for The Times, Telegraph, Mail and Express, and for many women's and general interest magazines. She is the author and presenter of radio documentaries, including I'm Doing It For Me, an exploration of the reasons underlying the desire for plastic surgery, and What Is A Wife? for Radio 4. Geraldine wrote a memoir about family and architecture, The Handmade House, (Penguin, 2005), and is the author of several novels, most recently The Gulf Between Us (Penguin, 2009), a story about prejudice, set in the Arabian Gulf. She co-edited The New Old Age for NESTA, and wrote the Make Poverty History Handbook. She is getting older.

Miriam O'Reilly

Wrinkle alert! Switch off the telly

By Geraldine Bedell on 13 January, 2011

There is little to add to the welter of commentary that has been written about Miriam O’Reilly since the former Countryfile presenter won her case for age discrimination against the BBC. Except….pretty much all the comment has supported O’Reilly, whose sacking is widely seen as an injustice, her stand brave and proper. The BBC has been [...]

Posted in Culture | Tagged Age discrimination, BBC, Countryfile, Miriam O’Reilly | 2 Responses

Thomas hammer Jakobsen

What do care home residents really want?

By Geraldine Bedell on 13 January, 2011

In this era of growing numbers of old people and little money, care home providers will always be aiming to supply their services more efficiently and cheaply. For the people on the receiving end, on the other hand, all that matters is quality of life. But in this relationship, they are definitely the vulnerable party  – [...]

Posted in Design, Health & Social Care | Tagged co-creation, Copenhagen, ethnography, Geoff Mulgan, innovation, Living Lab, Simon Roberts, Sølund, Thomas Hammer Jakobsen, User-centred design | 2 Responses

Normal service resumes

Normal service resumes

By Geraldine Bedell on 4 January, 2011

Normal service is about to resume – with apologies to anyone who noticed that Christmas has been quiet. In the meantime, here are some links: First, a piece I wrote for the Daily Telegraph, pegged to the news that nearly a fifth of people in the UK will live to be 100. Second, a New [...]

Posted in Blog, Culture, Health & Social Care, Politics | Tagged Daily Telegraph, happiness, New York Times, Peter Singer, Susan Jacoby, The Economist | 1 Response

The past is not another country

The past is not another country

By Geraldine Bedell on 7 December, 2010

Making conversation in a care home is hard work. The commonest opening gambit is probably, ‘What did you have for lunch?’ which is not a question to which the answer is going to be a) very interesting, unless Heston Blumenthal has popped in, or b) readily available to anyone with a cloudy memory, let alone [...]

Posted in Blog, Design, Health & Social Care | Tagged 1940s, 1950s, David Rubin, dementia, Heston Blumenthal, Many Happy Returns, reminiscence, Sarah Reed | Leave a response

Older people want to shop shock

Older people want to shop shock

By Geraldine Bedell on 1 December, 2010

It is a paradox that older people make up a large and growing number of consumers – presenting a tremendous opportunity – yet they are almost entirely ignored by marketing executives. Over-50s need and want to buy stuff like anyone else, but some 90% of marketing spend is directed at younger people. A report out [...]

Posted in Blog, Culture, Design, Marketing | Tagged Age UK, David Sinclair, Google, nternational Longevity Centre, The Golden Economy | 5 Responses

Of carers and careers

Of carers and careers

By Geraldine Bedell on 25 November, 2010

‘The most serious social policy issue in decades,’ is how the Centre for Social Justice (CSJ) describes the ageing population and, in particular, its need for social care. Yet there’s quite astonishing apathy when it comes to planning for what’s about to hit us – the 1.7 million more people who will need social care over [...]

Posted in Blog, Health & Social Care | Tagged Centre for Social Justice, Iain Duncan Smith, Interim Review of Older Age, ippr, social care | Leave a response

Nora Ephron

Worth remembering

By Geraldine Bedell on 23 November, 2010

If you’ve ever rummaged frantically through the accumulated rubbish in your brain for someone’s name at a party, you will relish Nora Ephron’s latest book, I Remember Nothing. Ephron, who wrote When Harry Met Sally, Sleepless in Seattle, Heartburn and, most recently, Julie and Julia (which she also directed) has published a new collection of [...]

Posted in Blog, Culture | Tagged Alzheimer’s, Heartburn, I Remember Nothing, Julie and Julia, Nora Ephron, Norman Mailer, Sleepless in Seattle, The Armies of the Night, The Huffington Post, When Harry Met Sally | Leave a response

Purpose Prize winners 2010

Purpose Prize winners 2010

By Geraldine Bedell on 11 November, 2010

A former homeless alcoholic and a housekeeper are among this year’s winners of The Purpose Prize, a $100,000 award for entrepreneurs over the age of 60. The five winners, announced today, were selected by a panel of judges chaired by Sherry Lansing, former CEO of Paramount Pictures and the first woman to head a Hollywood [...]

Posted in Blog, Health & Social Care, Politics, Work | Tagged Allan Barsema, Barry Childs, Carpenter’s Place, Community Collaboration, Inez Killingsworth, Judith B Van Ginkel, Margaret Gordon, pollution, Purpose Prize, Sherry Lansing, Tanzania, West Oakland | 2 Responses

Design for living

Design for living

By Geraldine Bedell on 10 November, 2010

People of 80 or 90 plus who are eking out their lives in nursing homes with very poor quality of life are, according to New York geriatrician Mark Lachs, an indictment of society’s priorities. ‘I would argue,’ he writes, ‘that the “life extension” these people have experienced – a good deal of it the result [...]

Posted in Blog, Design, Health & Social Care | Tagged Cornell, Environmental Geriatrics, Mark Lachs, This Caring Home, Treat Me Not My Age, Weill Medical College | Leave a response

But not if you're over-55?

Older and wiser?

By Geraldine Bedell on 4 November, 2010

A couple of items of news pose the intriguing question of what impact an older population will have on politics. To take the more trivial first, research in the UK suggests that over-55s are blocking the development of wind power, consistently leading campaigns against wind turbines that would benefit future generations. On a rather more [...]

Posted in Politics | Tagged Ed Pilkington, Florida, Fred Pearce, Guardian, Marco Rubio, Republican, tea party movement, The Making of An Elder Culture, Theodore Roszak, US midterm elections, wind power | 1 Response

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