World Have Your Say | |
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Created by | BBC World News |
Presented by | Chloe Tilley Ros Atkins (until 2013) Nuala McGovern (relief) Lucy Hockings (relief) |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Original language(s) | English |
Production | |
Producer(s) | Simon Peeks Richard Pollins Charlie Humphreys |
Location(s) | Studio B, Broadcasting House, London |
Running time | 60 minutes |
Release | |
Original network | BBC World News |
Picture format |
576i (16:9 SDTV) 1080i (HDTV) |
Original release | February 2011 – present |
Chronology | |
Related shows |
BBC World News BBC World News America Newsday GMT Impact The Hub Global Focus on Africa World News Today Business Edition World Business Report |
External links | |
Website |
Genre |
Current events Discussion Debate |
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Running time | ~50 minutes |
Country |
International ( United Kingdom origin) |
Language(s) | English |
Home station | BBC World Service |
Syndicates | Public Radio International |
Hosted by | Ros Atkins Chloe Tilley Nuala McGovern |
Senior editor(s) | Mark Sandell |
Produced by | Ben Sutherland Ben Allen Simon Peeks Graham Evans |
Recording studio | Broadcasting House, London |
Air dates | since 2005 |
Audio format | Monophonic |
Website | World Have Your Say |
Podcast | BBC Radio Podcast |
World Have Your Say (WHYS) is an international BBC global discussion show, which broadcasts on BBC World Service every weekday at 1600 hours UTC and on BBC World News every Friday at 1500 hours UTC.
World Have Your Say won Gold in the 2008 Sony Radio Awards, in the category Listener Participation.
The show describes itself as "the BBC News programme where you set the agenda." Typically each edition addresses a question, or number of questions, raised by the users of its blog and Facebook site, as well as emailers to the BBC.
It encourages callers to talk to each other and directs questions asked by listeners to the guests on the programme, intervening as little as possible to keep the show more of a conversation than a talk show.
The show also occasionally works as a forum for the BBC World Service's global audience to put questions to a particular guest. Previous guests have included Aung San Suu Kyi,Philip Pullman and Thilo Sarrazin.
The BBC World Service launched the programme in October 2005, featuring Anu Anand and Steve Richards as presenters and Mark Sandell as editor. Ros Atkins replaced Richards in early 2006 and is now the main presenter.
Since February 2011 the programme has a weekly television edition on BBC World News on Fridays produced by the same production team.
Topics for discussions are set by listeners, who can email the show prior to its going on air every day, or even call into the studio office. Some of the comments left on the WHYS blog and Facebook site, together with emails, Tweets and SMS text messages, are read on the air. Callers from all over the world are the key part of the programme by calling in and debating the daily topic.
On occasion, the show leaves the studio and goes on the road, to discuss subjects from a particular country but often with a global impact. For example, in 2011, they went to Berlin to discuss the legacy of Nazism in Germany, Jakarta to talk about revolution in a Muslim country, and Bangkok to talk about sex tourism.