Global News Podcast - The Happy Pod: All aboard the Bike Bus

Episode Date: June 27, 2026

We find out about bike buses - an increasingly popular way for children to cycle to school safely. They involve travelling in a large group, escorted by adults, and stopping for pick ups and drop offs... along the way. The idea started in Spain and Portugal a few years ago, but has seen a recent boom - thanks in part to some celebrity supporters.Also: the woman who's been encouraging acts of kindness by spelling the word in a cycle route across the US states of Minnesota and Iowa. Nahla Summers also encouraged people to join her on her two seated quadricycle to talk about the importance of being kind.How the vaccine against HPV has almost eliminated cervical cancer among women in the UK.The professor whose memoir on losing her mother to dementia and her grief over climate change has won the highest prize in Caribbean literature.The dogs helping in the battle against an invasive species threatening crops and ecosystems in the US.Plus a moment of pure joy for Cape Verde fans at the FIFA Men's World Cup.Our weekly collection of inspiring, uplifting and happy news from around the world.Presenter: Holly Gibbs. Music composed by Iona Hampson

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Starting point is 00:00:23 He's widely recognised as one of the greatest footballers in history. He's won the prestigious Ballandour Award, He's the all-time leading goal scorer in professional football. And according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, he's the first active footballer in history to achieve billionaire status. Guess who we're talking about yet? That's right. Good Bad Billionaire is exploring the life and fortune of football icon Cristiano Ronaldo.
Starting point is 00:00:47 That's Good Bad Billionaire from the BBC World Service. Listen now, wherever you get your BBC Podcasts. This is the Happy Pod from the BBC World Service. I'm Holly Gibbs and in this edition, all aboard the bike bus. It's kind of fun because you can see like everyone riding, talking and riding with your friends and stuff. I love the bike bus because it's always really friendly and it's always really communal. It's good for the environment and it gives us so much energy. We hear about the success of this trend which has gone viral across the world.
Starting point is 00:01:33 Also on this podcast, how one woman spelt out kindness across more than 3,000 kilometres. People were emotional about what I was doing and I have never had, in all of the challenges that I've done, I've never had the amount of support and emotion over what I was doing. Plus, the success of the cervical cancer vaccine. The new research demonstrates that HPV vaccination works and saves lives, reduces the number of deaths from cervical cancer and we have the possibility of eliminating cervical cancer. And it's wonderful. It's really, and specifically because it's this prize, because I feel it was for my mom. The prize was awarded in Trinidad and she went to Trinidad every year.
Starting point is 00:02:21 The writer awarded a prize for the book she wrote about losing her mother to dementia. Have you ever heard of a bike bus? It's a trend which is going viral on social media. It involves a group of children cycling to school in a large group following an adult for safety. And like a bus, the group makes stops along the way to drop people off. Bike buses started a few years ago in Spain and Portugal, and the movement has gathered momentum in the United States lately thanks to Sam, known as Coach Balto online. As well as hundreds of thousands of followers,
Starting point is 00:02:58 he's also got various celebrities to join his bike bus in Portland. Take a listen to this. It's Friday. Let's go ride in a bike bus. Four minutes till we leave. Does anybody want a sticker? Okay. All right, bike bus. I think bike buses are a really wonderful way to help build kids' independence.
Starting point is 00:03:18 We know that being physically active before school for children helps them focus better. They do better academically. They get in trouble less. They have better social relationships. And you get the fresh air. You're not in the back seat of a car being sedentary. It's good for the environment. There's so many benefits. The bike bus is a great tool to help bring the community together and also to advocate for safer streets.
Starting point is 00:03:40 Just finished the Camden bike bus. Now we're heading to Lisbon for the bike bus summer. I was telling you the other day. You're so supportive. Thank you. So, yeah, I mean, I just, and I will tell you, I see more people biking. That's awesome. Well, we wanted to see what all the fuss was about. So we sent our very own Richard Hamilton to get on his bike and join a bike bus, here in London.
Starting point is 00:04:09 Number one, you must be... Clad in a fluorescent pink, yellow and green one-see, Charlotte Claydon leads the Camden bike bus. The second row, well done. Bike. Bike. We're actually going along on the bike bus at the moment. Of course, it's not a physical bus.
Starting point is 00:04:52 There's about 20 children with little fluorescent bibs on, all following Charlotte. It's a bit like a mother duck and her little ducklings following along behind. and it's great fun. It's perfectly safe because there's people stewarding at the back. And you can hear in the background all the chanting and the excitement and the whistles and they all seem to be really enjoying it. The school run can be a bit of a headache for everyone.
Starting point is 00:05:20 And I used to, I'm afraid, drive. And it just used to cause me enormous amounts of stress and anxiety. So I started cycling with my two daughters in the back of my cargo bike. Eventually, a lot of parents will know this. They suddenly get too big for the cargo bike. So I was looking at ways to take my older daughter independently on the road. And it was literally that day that my friend sent me a video of an old, old, old friend that I used to work with in Pennsylvania in 2008 called San Baltho. And he was doing these extraordinary images of this guy with kind of two would look like 200 kids shouting, singing, laughing.
Starting point is 00:05:55 It looked like a disco on wheels, standing up on their bikes, waving and shouting and screaming, having the best time of their lives, getting to school together. It's so simple, it's so obvious when you see it. Of course that's how we should be getting to school. Sam Balto, who's a PE teacher, set up his first bike bus in Portland, Oregon, back in 2022. He began with just five to ten children and a handful of volunteers. But it became so popular that within three months, a third of the school was cycling in. He has now founded Bike Bus World, which recently held a global conference in Lisbon in Portugal. And thanks to stars and celebrities like the American singer and actor Justin Timberlake
Starting point is 00:06:37 and the Swedish pop star Zara Larson, bike bus has gone viral on social media. And the kids in North London seem to love it too. It's kind of fun because you can see like everyone riding, talking and riding with your friends and stuff. First, I thought it was going to be embarrassing, but maybe it's going to be a bit fun if we have, music. I like how you can ride along with all your friends and you can chat and you don't have to be worried about all the cars because they're always marshalling us to make sure there's no angry car drivers. Yes, it's really good. What do you like about it? Well, I like how when you go to school, like it wakes you up instead of just like if you drive to school you just
Starting point is 00:07:22 be really tired. Okay, well enjoy this morning. Thanks. And what do you like about it? You get to school faster and it uses less energy. Less energy than what? Walking. I love the bike bus because it's always really friendly and it's always really communal. It's good for the environment and it gives us so much energy because you can do it in a group and it gives us much more exercise. My name's Liam Frost. I am the head teacher at Primrose Hill Primary School. At a bike bus, the children are there with their whistles, they're smiling, they're going,
Starting point is 00:08:01 Hello, how you doing? Good morning, Liam. Everyone stops in their tracks when they hear the children coming, the music, they turn around, and then what you see is a wave of smiles go down the street as people realize what's happening. It's massively empowering for the children as well to be reclaiming the streets. That was Richard Hamilton reporting, and staying with bikes, a woman has just finished an unusual cycling challenge, spelling out the word kindness across the US states of Minnesota. and Iowa. Nala Summers completed the more than 3,000 kilometre journey on a quadricycle,
Starting point is 00:08:34 with four wheels and two seats, inviting strangers to join her. Nala says her research has shown a drop in levels of kindness, but she told my colleague James Copnell she was pleasantly surprised by the reactions to her challenge. People were emotional about what I was doing and I have never had, in all of the challenges that I've done, I've never had the amount of support and emotion. over what I was doing. There was many tears, many emotional connections after a very short period of time over 24 hours and people who would share
Starting point is 00:09:09 how important they thought what I was doing was going to have on the world. I don't know whether that's true, but that's how they felt. I came to America not knowing anybody in this area and now I know 100 people who have all supported and become part of this challenge. So while I can say it was me that was doing cycling over those 2,000 miles,
Starting point is 00:09:33 it wouldn't have happened without everybody coming on board. And there was a chap that I stayed with who talked about how he had done personality profiling. And he had seen a decline in the way that people felt within their mental health and the way they felt about themselves, really, in their personalities. And we see that within the emotional intelligence as well as a decline. It has an effect on the way that people feel, the way that they interact, the way that we manage difficult conversations, conflict, differences of opinion. And unless we start focusing on that, we are only going to see a trajectory of decline. So, yeah, those sorts of conversations, political conversations, they were deep-rooted and there's a real understanding that we need to come back together.
Starting point is 00:10:23 You mentioned staying with someone. So on your mission to highlight kindness, did you yourself receive lots of little and perhaps big acts of kindness? It was in fact overwhelming and I'm continuing to receive it now. So I arrived. I had never ridden the bike before and got on it and started riding the route of kindness and the 2,000 miles untrained. So I wasn't really sure what to expect. And by day two, a couple had supported me through headwinds. And then they became this focal point for the K, because they lived right in the middle of it. And they put me up, supported me, fed me.
Starting point is 00:11:10 And that was really where the chain of kindness started. They then put me in touch with somebody they knew further down. And then they put me in touch with somebody else further down. And so it continued through Minnesota and into Iowa. And it was quite incredible, really, the people coming together and us all really working together. And it was a real kind of symbolic thing for me around kindness. You know, we were literally and figuratively making kindness happen throughout America. It seems like there are almost two things happening here from your research and work over well over a decade.
Starting point is 00:11:49 You have real concerns about a lack of kindness, or at least the amount of kindness declined. and yet you also seem to encounter it a lot. So is it that we all have the capacity to be kind, but we're just not pressing the right button sometimes? We absolutely have the capacity to be kind, and it's what people want to do first and foremost. But if we are feeding our minds with the division, people are fearful, scared, divided.
Starting point is 00:12:18 But actually, when you're just two people in a room, kindness will always prevail, and particularly in those smaller communities which I've been going through, kindness is still very much prevalent. Nala Summers. A professor here in the UK has been awarded the highest prize in Caribbean literature for her book which explores her grief of losing her mother to dementia, whilst also feeling the impact of climate change.
Starting point is 00:12:44 Here's Tessa McWatt reading us some of her book, The Snag. Today is the last day of the hottest year in recorded history. I stare at the insect black letters of that sentence in my fresh notebook and wonder how many others are writing the same to their friends, their lovers, on a screen, in diaries, in sand, on walls. The earth is vast, but black letters march purposefully like laden ants to connect us. Why bother? Why try to capture two years of events, bulletins, reports, and singed images, the cops 27 and 28 when scribbles on paper, are fanciful and flammable, why even try at the end of this first of the hottest years to come? Because although loss is immeasurable, words march in patterns towards meaning. I spoke to Professor McWatt and started by asking her why she wanted to write her book.
Starting point is 00:13:39 The book started, first of all, during COVID in my head, really, because it became a time where, you know, everybody was grieving some loss in some way, I think. you know, just our daily lives were something that we were kind of had left and were grieving. But also the situation with the climate became much more acutely in our awareness. And I became very depressed about and had deep climate grief. But at the same time, my mother was also losing her cognitive abilities to a certain extent that we had to move her out of her home where she had been living on her own for over 30 years. So it became something that I explored in tandem, this planetary global grief, as well as my personal grief and her grief, as we started to lose her from dementia.
Starting point is 00:14:31 Do you think that it helped your grief journey writing this book? Absolutely, yeah. The book covers a trajectory of two years in which I would go back and forth to visit my mom from London to Toronto, and I would be looking after her to give my sister a break, because she was sort of looming out of her house and then living with my sister, it allowed me to ground myself in something very, very whole and wholesome, my mom's spirit, even though she was losing her memory. So I was tracking all the things that I was experiencing on the planetary level, those negative things, and it helped to balance the love that came out of me caring for my mom over those two years. So the book kind of interweaves those things.
Starting point is 00:15:19 and ends up in quite a hopeful space as a result. I think as a result of me tracing it along with my mom. Could you tell us a bit about your mum? My mom is this incredible spirit of a woman. Her essence, it was almost like the loss of her memory and the loss of that grief was counterbalanced by the fact that she's just a very happy person. So she didn't experience some of the anxiety
Starting point is 00:15:45 that some people who get dementia do. like she was very easygoing. I mean, one of the recurring statements in the book is that my mum would, you know, get up and go goody-goody to whatever we're doing next. You know, let's go to the store, mum, goody-goody. What's the feedback been from your book? Because I imagine writing about things in a vulnerable way.
Starting point is 00:16:05 You've probably helped a lot of people. That is true. That seems to be what has happened. I've had incredible responses from people saying, oh my goodness, this is all the things I've felt and you've put it into words and about the grief, sort of a kind of global grief, but also a lot from people who have parents with dementia or who have parents who are, they're moving out of their homes. And it seems to have really touched people's hearts, which is the best possible thing I can
Starting point is 00:16:37 imagine for a book and what I wanted most about this book. It's incredible. It feels like the reason I'm a writer. And now this book has been awarded one of the highest prizes for Caribbean literature. How does that feel? It's wonderful. It's really, and specifically because it's this prize, because I feel it was for my mom. The prize was awarded in Trinidad, and she went to Trinidad every year from Canada when we lived in Canada to carnival every year.
Starting point is 00:17:08 And so for her, that's a special place. And so for me to have won that prize in that place was a special. satisfying. Do you have a favorite line in the book? I'm just going to look for it here. It's, what is the song that this howl will eventually become? It's a kind of dismantling of the purpose of grief. In other words, you know, grief is evidence of love. And so if we look at why we're grieving, then maybe we can understand the love that we need to, um, hold or hold on to or recapture. Professor Tessa McWatt.
Starting point is 00:17:56 Coming up on The Happy Pod. I think it can be overwhelming and you don't know where to step in and help your community. And I think these little things, like teaming with your dog for a local detection target, could be really useful. And you feel like we get enough of these together, right? And we can have a big impact. The dogs helping to protect America's ecosystems from an invasive species. He's widely recognized as one of the greatest football.
Starting point is 00:18:25 He's won the prestigious Ballandor Award five times. He's the all-time leading goalscorer in professional football. And according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, he's the first active footballer in history to achieve billionaire status. Guess who we're talking about yet? That's right. Good Bad Billionaire is exploring the life and fortune of football icon Cristiano Ronaldo. That's Good Bad Billionaire from the BBC World Service.
Starting point is 00:18:49 Listen now, wherever you get your BBC podcasts. You're listening to The Happy Pod. A vaccine designed to prevent cervical cancer has shown clear evidence of success. Since 2008, teenage girls in the UK have been offered the jab and a study has shown that those who took it have close to a zero risk of dying from the disease before the age of 30. Across the world, more than 2,000 women are diagnosed with cervical cancer every day. Professor Peter Sassany from Queen Mary University London is the lead author of the report.
Starting point is 00:19:30 In 2008 is when we introduced the vaccine and it was really targeted 12, 13 year old. So people born in 1996 and onwards are the ones who've fully benefited. And we've seen that essentially there were no deaths under the age of 25 in that group. And then there was also a catch-up campaign. So women born between 1990 and 1995 may have been vaccinated. they may have been vaccinated after they'd already been infected with the virus. It might not be quite as good. But we've seen a big fall in the number of those women who've been dying for cervical cancer,
Starting point is 00:20:10 but it's not down to zero. Michelle Mitchell is the chief executive of the charity Cancer Research UK, which funded the study. It's a remarkable day. The new research demonstrates that HPV vaccination works and saves lives, reduces the number of deaths from cervical cancer, and we have the possibility of eliminating cervical cancer as a public health issue here in the UK.
Starting point is 00:20:36 The BBC's health correspondent, Kath Byrne, says the research also has wider global implications. It is so rare to hear experts or scientists talk about elimination. You want that kind of conversation, you just don't get it. And they're also calling it an incredible milestone. So they're saying that these figures are actually going to be the tip of the iceberg, because as more generations get vaccinated and protected, more lives are going to be saved. I think really, though, the best example for us to look at is Australia,
Starting point is 00:21:05 because they were the first country worldwide to come up with this vaccine, and they are not seeing any new cases in women under 25. Their aim is to eliminate cervical cancer by 2035, and they think they're going to do it early. Well, cancer researchers will be looking at this vaccine and thinking, right, what are they doing and we can copy it? So some of the clinical trials I can tell you about are also looking at preventative vaccines. So they're trying to stop cancer before it starts. One of them is for lung cancer.
Starting point is 00:21:34 Now, this one is targeting people who are at high risk of developing lung cancer. It essentially uses the same technology as COVID vaccines, and it trains the immune system to recognize certain proteins that are linked to the disease. There's another one with ovarian cancer. And again, this is targeted at women who are at high risk of getting it. And it's going to prime the immune system. to recognise certain abnormal cell changes before they turn into cancer. So there is a lot of work here and a lot of hope to.
Starting point is 00:22:04 Kath Burns. A team of researchers in the US are turning to our furry friends to help them tackle an invasive species. The spotted lanternfly can threaten ecosystems and is thought to have reached America through international trade. The Happy Pod's Riley Farrell has been to Virginia to find out more. There's an invasion spreading across the United States that could cost millions. But today, standing on a berry farm in the Blue Ridge Mountains, I'm witnessing one of the most unexpected defenses against it,
Starting point is 00:22:41 a group of very good dogs. Okay, so this is Fazi. He was a puppy trained to be a service dog and then washed out of the program. How are you in a little? My dog is Finch. She is a lovely mixed breed dog that I rescued about eight years ago. Yes, good girl. This is Hermes, and he is almost 10, Border Collie.
Starting point is 00:23:11 He has a birthday on Sunday. These pet pooches are trained to detect the egg masses of spotted lanternflies, an invasive bug species ravaging the U.S. Spotted lanternflies feed on plant sap, excreeding a substance called honeydew, which causes the growth of thick, black, city mold. This mold ruins the vegetation. With basically no natural predators here and a broad diet, these insects threaten vineyards, orchards, hardwood forests, and urban ecosystems.
Starting point is 00:23:46 This problem calls for a creative solution, And for Dr. Erica Fyrobaacher, a professor at Virginia Tech, the idea struck her on a hike. So my background is in canine behavior, but I would go hiking with my dogs, and I knew about conservation dogs. And I always thought, me as a citizen, wouldn't it be fun if I could contribute to, you know, solving environmental issues while I'm playing with my dog? And I figured there were more people than just me that was interested in that. Any breed can be an olfactory detection dog. So they're all really useful. dogs are detecting one lanternfly at a time. It's kind of a slow process, but with the egg
Starting point is 00:24:24 masses, we can get, you know, 50 or 60 that we can scrape off at a time. So we're going to get a little more bang for our buck. How do the dogs actually do it? Well, it comes down to stimulus pairing, which trains a dog to recognize a scent and signal it to their handlers. That's according to Dr. Sally Dickinson, who helped develop this citizen science model. Very simply, we say, okay, I want to be able to target this odor. The first job of the human is to isolate that odor. So after we've got that, then we say to the dog, what is your most favoritest thing in the whole wide world?
Starting point is 00:24:59 I will give you that in conjunction with this odor. Show me? Yes, good boy. These dogs have their noses down, tails up. You see the animation? That's that excitement that comes with building. The most favorite thing with the odor at the very beginning of the training. As soon as he hit that odor, his whole body language changed. He's like, oh, I know what I've got to do now.
Starting point is 00:25:23 So what is Fazi's most favorite thing? Food. He says, I will work for food all day long, forever. It honestly looks like a game, but it is early detection. Stopping them early can stop the spread. The egg masses are oftentimes how they are being moved around. So they've laid egg masses on a lumber shipment that's moving somewhere else. So if you can detect that egg mass, on that lumber shipment and be able to scrape it off. We're going to prevent the lantern flies from spreading further. I think it can be overwhelming and you don't know where to step in and help your community. And I think these little things, like teaming with your dog for a local detection target,
Starting point is 00:26:02 could be really useful. And you feel like we get enough of these together, right? And we can have a big impact. Good boy. That was Riley Farrell reporting. And before we go, we must bring you this moment of pure joy. The World Cup brings fans many different. emotions, not to mention stress and disappointment, but it can also bring moments of elation.
Starting point is 00:26:24 That's what happened to this Cape Verde fan when his team scored their first ever World Cup goal against Uruguay. The BBC's Paul Njia was speaking to him as it happened. What's your appraisal of the way the Cape Verde has been playing so far? I personally think so far, Cabo Verde has been playing great. It's been matching Uruguay's pressure. Get to go. Not to go. Oh, one. The King Verre has broken.
Starting point is 00:26:53 He has made history tonight. Scoring a live goal here. And you can see. Macella, what can you? Go on to the next day. History. We are going to go along, man. You just saw it.
Starting point is 00:27:11 I'm on the live on the BBC. KVaird has just made history scoring the first ever world cup goal in the tournament. You can probably see from behind me the ecstasy, the exhilaration and the euphoria in this. Please, Amanda, a big deal for the convenience. It's one that will go into the history books, I must tell you.
Starting point is 00:27:32 Perfect timing there from Paul Njia, reporting from a watch party in Capeford. And that's all from the Happy Pod for now. We'd love to hear from you. Let us know where you're listening from. As ever, the address is global podcast at BBC.co.uk. This edition was mixed and produced by Rachel Bulkley. The editor is Karen Martin. I'm Holly Gibbs. Until next time, goodbye.
Starting point is 00:28:04 How did a boycott Jimmy become a billionaire from posting videos? On good, bad billionaire, we're going to find out how the world's most popular YouTuber, Mr Beast, made his fortune. He's buried himself in a coffin for days. Counted to 100,000 on camera. And even recreated squid games, all in an attempt to go viral on the internet. But it all started when he gave a homeless man $10,000. So is he a philanthropist reshaping capitalism? Or is he just the king of the attention economy?
Starting point is 00:28:36 Find out on Good Bad Billionaire. Listen on BBC.com or wherever you get your podcasts.

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