Why do we like things that are apparently so bad for us? Simon Evans runs the numbers. "I like a drink as much as the next man... about 11.6 litres of pure alcohol per year..." "I like a drink as ...
Here's everything published by this contributor on musicOMH. Simon Evans was the rock and pop correspondent of The Birmingham Post for eight years before taking up the post of music editor and books ...
He has also written and presented five series of the economics/comedy hybrid Simon Evans Goes to Market, on that same network. Simon Evans has been a regular face on the comedy circuit for the last ...
From the host of Radio 4’s Simon Evans Goes to Market, comes this humorous, even mischievous celebration of the friendship at the heart of the Scottish Enlightenment, and a wider examination of its ...
Does for politics, religion and philosophy what Simon Evans Goes to Market (BBC Radio 4) did for economics – makes it fresh, compelling and funny. From Gnosticism to Nihilism... come and enjoy an hour ...
Join Fringe stalwart, BBC Radio 4 regular, creator of Jokenomics and Economedy and general intellectual magpie and dilettante Simon Evans for a brisk canter through the 250-year legacy of The Sage of ...
Simon Evans, a comedian and writer with his own BBC Radio 4 show, is set to perform in Carlisle next year. After finally solving the mystery of his existence and true identity in Work of the ...
Reuters, the news and media division of Thomson Reuters, is the world’s largest multimedia news provider, reaching billions of people worldwide every day. Reuters provides business, financial ...
Simon Shuster is a senior correspondent at TIME. He covers international affairs, with a focus on Russia and Ukraine. For his first book, The Showman, he reported inside the Ukrainian President ...
In Series 2 Simon looked at four 'Bads' - coffee, alcohol, tobacco and sugar. Addictive, stress inducing, even deadly - but a big part of our daily life that we just can't do without. Simon looked at ...
Simon Evans is one of the UK's most respected and established comedians. His credits include BBC 1's Live at the Apollo, Michael McIntyre's Roadshow plus Channel 4's Stand Up for the Week.