Global News Podcast - The Happy Pod: Creating 'Christina's Corner'
Episode Date: April 19, 2025After Dave's video rental store was forced to close, he created a space for his most loyal customer, Christina, so she could stick to her vital daily routine. Also: why millions of people are tuning i...n to watch the moose migration and what's the secret to 70 years of marriage?
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This is the HappyPod from the BBC World Service.
Hello, it's Alan Smith here and welcome to half an hour or so of uplifting stories from around the world.
In this edition, we hear about Christina's corner.
When they treat people like my daughter, I mean, they see them as a human.
There's a special place for them in heaven, you know.
A special place in a convenience store in a small town in Idaho.
There's the millions of people tuning in to watch the moose migration in northern Sweden.
I like everything about it.
The sounds, the pictures, the tranquility.
You just be there.
Plus...
I just thought, what a wonderful little snapshot.
Of course we've got recordings of famous people,
royalty or politicians from the era,
but very rarely people who are just on their holiday.
A 70-year-old voicemail which has been reunited
with the woman who recorded it. And...
When we are starting the programme, the first sessions they don't know each other. They
are not confident with the group and also they are not really sure they are going to
feel comfortable.
How rowing is helping refugees feel part of their new community.
helping refugees feel part of their new community.
We're going to start in the small US town of Pocatello in Idaho with a story about kindness.
Dave Craning ran the last video rental store in town until he just couldn't carry on due to falling profits. But for almost every day for decades he was visited by his most loyal
customer, Christina. For Christina picking out a film was an integral part
of her day and Dave was determined for her to carry this on despite his store
closing. The Happy Pods Harry Bly has been speaking to Dave and Christina's
mother Tony. My name is Tony Kavanaugh and my daughter is Christina. She is almost 36.
For more than 20 years, Toni and her daughter Christina have visited their local video rental store almost every day at 3.30 in the afternoon to pick up two of Christina's favourite movies.
It's part of just, you know, the fabric of her life. It's woven in. Christina has Down syndrome and is mostly non-verbal.
Toni says going to the video store is an important part of her daily routine.
I mean, I have a cabinet full of videos, but, and they are those videos, the same movies
that she goes and rents.
So it's going to rent the movies that she loves.
Nowadays, for many, video rental stores are a distant but fond memory. Since the mid-2000s,
as streaming services became mainstream, most stores have closed. And last year,
Christina's favorite video store began to struggle. Dave Kraning is the store owner. The cost was going up but the revenue was going down and it just kind of got to a point where I
just felt that just maintaining the video store wasn't feasible.
The people that worked there were warning me that eventually, they didn't know when, but things were just not looking good. Because I can't
explain it to her. And Dave knew that too. And that was his concern.
Dave kept the store going as long as he could.
Well he let it go on, you know, the loss of revenue because of her. So then, you know, it happened.
The hammer came down and it was like, oh no.
But when it came time to close the video store, Dave came up with a solution to create Christina's
Corner in the neighboring convenience store, which he also owns.
So I thought, well, I could build just this version of this corner of the store that looks
like the video store, put her favourite movies in there and then just kind of create a snapshot,
I guess, of what our video store was at the time we locked her up.
I explained it at one point. It was like having a prison sentence lifted.
And the way he's got it set up now,
I think she'll be able to do it as long as he's the owner.
Truthfully, when I did this,
I was just doing something nice for just a customer
that's been loyal just for decades.
I was just doing it to help a mother out and her daughter that wasn't born with the same
faculties as you and me.
I thought, you know, the shoes were on the other foot and I thought, you know, I can
help this one
person out and make their life a little bit easier.
I went to thank him and the words came.
I just burst into tears.
So about a week or two later I saw him and I said, promise not to cry.
And I thanked him then with words. You know, it's just when they treat people
like my daughter, I mean, they see them as a human and they're willing to go the extra mile, you know, so many times. Yeah, there are a lot of good people and kind people,
but they don't understand disabilities. They're afraid when they see people with disabilities.
So when somebody steps out like that, it's, there's a special place for them in heaven, you know.
You know, people are saying it's everything to me. So I didn't want to use that phrase,
but really it is, it's everything.
After Tony and I spoke, it approached 3.30 and was time for them to head over to Dave's
store.
Tony says she hopes their story will promote more love and kindness across the world.
Tony Kavanagh and Dave Craney were speaking to Harry Bly.
And this story got us thinking.
Has somebody you know gone out of their way to change someone's life for the better?
If so, we'd love to hear about it.
The address is globalpodcast.bbc.co.uk
Now on the HappyPod, let's slow down.
These sounds affirm last year's moose migration in northern Sweden.
It was broadcast by a team who've set up 30 cameras around
the woods to capture the natural phenomenon of the animal, also known as the elk, moving across
rivers and lakes to find greener pastures ready for summer. Well now the team's rolling the cameras
for another year. They'll stream live for 24 hours a day for about three weeks. Nine million people
tuned in last year and judging by the global reaction after its first day, many millions more will be
tuning in this year too. Ulla Malmgren is a fan of the show and one of its most
avid watchers. I like everything about it. The sounds, the pictures, the tranquility. You just be there. I don't have to go out. I can't go out. So
this is my connection with nature.
I have been watching this for six years now. I am city and home, so this is my lifeline.
Johan Erlag is the project manager and executive producer of the show.
He spoke to the BBC's Luke Jones.
I hope that the Swedish people would love it, but I couldn't imagine that the whole
world would be interested in this as well, so it's fantastic.
Just explain what the program is. It's just a load of cameras what over the Swedish countryside
picking up moose as and when they wander past. Yeah exactly the moose migrate from their winter
places to their summer pastures and we are actually having 30 cameras in a small area where they are actually going to cross and swim over a river.
So it's a very unique and beautiful thing when you actually see these big animals
walking down in the river and then suddenly the head appears with flapping ears and it's amazing.
And is it constant moose or is it occasionally a view of a bit of stream or a bit of field
where a moose has yet to arrive but we're keeping our eyes peeled just in case?
I mean the mooses migrate obviously this time of year, every year.
It's about the same dates every year but the spring is a bit earlier
this year so we had to start a week earlier but this is the very few weeks of the year where they
migrate in big queues actually so it's 20-30 yeah traffic jam in the woods. And you must be very good at it now because you've done it a few years, is that right?
Yeah, this is our seventh season actually.
And do you recognise the same moose coming back again?
Are there other recurring characters and stars?
Actually we tried to see if we can recognise the stars, but we can't actually.
They do look quite similar.
Yeah, they look quite similar.
The scientists are helping us and there are obviously mooses living in the area, but they
also migrate for a few kilometres.
Johan Erlag.
Now here's a question for you. Have you ever been reunited with something
that you thought you might have lost forever? Well, that's what happened to a British woman
called Valerie Stannard. You see, 70 years ago she recorded something called a voiceograph
whilst she was travelling in New York. Decades later, she's been reunited with the disc
that it was held on. Justin Dealey has been talking to Valerie to find out more. In 1955 Valerie from Welling Garden City was in New York
and decided to send a message home using a voice-a-graph machine. Now these
recording booths were popular in the 40s and 50s especially in America. Valerie
went into a small booth, had only one minute to speak and the recording of her
voice was pressed onto a vinyl disc. She then posted the voiceogram back to her family in Hertfordshire.
70 years later, record dealer Joel D'Ath was going through some records and made an
intriguing discovery.
I was in a dusty old warehouse and I was going through some records and I saw this voice
ogram and I just find them absolutely fascinating because as much as I'm a fan of rare records, this is a complete one-off.
So among it was not just the voiceogram but the envelope it came in and I thought, oh,
I have to, I have to not just listen to this, I have to do a bit of digging.
I heard a very well-spoken young lady who was telling her parents about her trip to
New York and I checked the date and it was 1955, so it's 70 years ago.
And I just thought, what a wonderful little snapshot.
Of course, we've got recordings of famous people,
royalty or politicians from the era,
but very rarely people who are just on their holiday.
I just went onto Facebook and I found
a Wellingard in City Facebook group, there's many,
and I just shared some details, shared some photos
and said, can anyone help? I know shared some details, shared some photos and said,
can anyone help? I know the street name, I know the surname and how fortunate for me
that some people got in touch.
A neighbour of Valerie's family was able to tell Joel that Valerie had moved to Vancouver.
In Canada she also had a daughter and finding out she was called Zoe, Joel was able to message
her on social media.
I thought it was going to be something spammy but I read it anyway and I thought it was
having rather a challenging day and it was just such a little ray of sunshine in the
middle of a bit of awfulness and so I reached out and it was really quite something.
By this time Joel had managed to get the recording digitized. It's 70 years old and not the clearest, but Valerie can be heard wishing her mum a happy
birthday and that America is a wonderful place.
Valerie was 20 years old when she made that recording.
Now, aged 90, she was able to listen again to her younger self.
It was a little bit frightening.
Do you actually remember going in to record that message at 20 years old or not?
Well, I remember the couple of days I was in New York very, very clearly
because such outstanding things happened to me.
And Joel, you're the man who's worked very hard
to make all of this happen.
It was certainly worth it, wasn't it?
I was just sort of sitting here,
feeling quite moved by the whole thing,
because when Valerie recorded that 70 years ago,
could Valerie have imagined that 70 years later
we'd be sitting here talking, meeting new people,
and because of some sort of voice postcard,
I'm so glad that I reached out.
And Zoe, as we've got Joel here, is there anything you'd like to say to Joel as well?
Oh, thank you so much. This has just been a lovely thing. My husband and I are with the Pipe Band.
And in 2026, we are going to be traveling to Glasgow to see the world.
And we're planning to pop down to London and meet
Joel in person. Well I thoroughly look forward to it. I don't think I've ever been to a
pipe band gig before but I think it's the best one to go to. That report was from Justin Dealey.
Coming up in this podcast. I was home during the day and I was out every night.
And my man worked during the day and he was home every night.
That was the secret.
We'll find out the recipe to 70 years of happy marriage. To southern Spain now and a project in the city of Seville which is using rowing to help
refugees feel part of their new community.
Spain has seen an increase in people seeking asylum over the past few years due to conflicts
and natural disasters and one group, the Seville Sports Marina, is inviting children and adults
who have arrived in Spain to join in
and be part of the boat crew. Craig Langren went to find out more.
I arrived to a flurry of activity down by the riverside. A group of adults and children are
dragging a large white rowing boat into the water. I'm here to meet Jose Vinges,
founder of a non-profit organization
called D'Arcena Deportiva Sevilla,
which runs programs to get people involved in sports.
Jose tells me the project's called Crew Together
and offers a six-week rowing course
to refugees and asylum seekers.
Lots of people have to move to our city
from different country like Venezuela, Morocco,
and we want them to feel part of our society.
And we learn to coordinate their movement
and work as a team.
I quickly settle in and become part of the crew.
You wanna sit next to Alou?
Yes. Okay.
Okay.
Alright, so I'm going to get in as well.
We each grab one of the metal oars with a bright orange blade at the end.
It was so tightly packed in that my knees knocked against the person sitting next to
me.
I'm just in the boat.
I'm not sure how helpful I'm being really.
I'm seeking solace in the fact that I'm balancing out the boat at the back.
We head further out into the middle of the Guadalquivir River.
Whilst it's wide, there isn't a strong current,
and the calm blue water shimmers in the early evening sun
as we make our way down the river,
passing parks, office buildings and cyclists on the footpath.
After about an hour or so of rowing up and down the river singing, the sun begins to
set and we make our way back to shore.
Everyone gets out and helps to pull the boat up the slipway and back into the nearby boat house.
It's a big effort. It's a big 200 kilos. Wow. It's a big old thing this boat.
It's a big old thing this boat. Jose tells me they put on a weekly session for 50 people, that's 10 each every day from
Monday to Friday. He says that they have a sports coach to teach the students how to
row and there's also someone called a social educator. Now their role is to create games
and activities to encourage the groups to talk, an important
part of all of this as Jose explained.
Many refugees don't have friends or family here, so this project helps them feel part
of the community.
When we are starting the programme, the first sessions they don't know each other.
They are not confident with the group and also they
are not really sure they are gonna feel comfortable growing on the river. But
it's great to see them after two, three sessions when they know each other
better and they connect and they join the games and they play that we are proposing and they are laughing and they are
getting better. Some stay in touch after the calls and also we try to connect them with employers.
José Vinyas, ending that report by Craig Langren in Seville. And for more stories like this,
listen to People Fixing the World, wherever you get your podcasts.
Now we've a story about a public artwork featuring life-size puppet animals
traveling across Africa from Kinshasa in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
The group, including the puppeteers, will follow a 20,000-kilometer route from the Congo basin,
traveling through Lagos and Dakar later this month before moving through
Morocco and then into Europe through Spain, France, Italy, the UK, Denmark and
Sweden all the way up to the Arctic Circle.
This is their promotional video. It's about raising awareness of what they
describe as their flight from climate disaster.
The artistic director, Amir Nizar-Zouabi, has been speaking to Julian Warika.
Yeah, it is an ambitious project, but we're facing a massive problem.
And maybe by doing massive feats, we can try and address this problem that is on everybody's doorstep.
It's everywhere all at once.
It's been, you know, climate crisis is a new, of course, right now with world politics being what they are,
it's being pushed aside.
So our project has become more acute.
And we want to raise the conversation.
We want to raise a different, we want to raise a
different way of talking about climate, we want to bring it to where
we feel safe, to the doorsteps of our cities so people can get inspired
again by nature, by the beauty of nature. Well the artwork is called The Herds,
they're a group of life-size puppet animals which will first emerge
onto the banks of the Congo River and then you've got this enormous journey to
undertake. How practically do you do that? With a lot of patience, with
flexibility and with knowing that a lot of things will go wrong, but basically
we're working with a lot of local artists and local groups along
the route so this is in many ways a global project that is rooted in local
collaborations in all of the cities that we walk through. It's not a touring
production, it's a production that is recreated in every city, organically
co-created with artists in the city and is reliant heavily on local knowledge and on
local participation. The number of the animals, the size of the herd changes from city to city,
but we rely heavily on local participants that come and work with us and they become the herds
in their city. So it's a civic act that invites
people to take part of a climate action. And at the end of it, when it finishes, what do
you hope you will have achieved? You know, we are theatre makers. First and foremost,
we're not politicians, thank God. And what I mainly hope to achieve, what we hope to achieve is to touch the heart.
I think that people are affected and take action when they're moved by something, when
they fall in love with something, when something becomes precious and they care about it.
Obviously, the science around climate has been around.
We all know it.
We all understand it, except the people in power that deny it.
But we also think there's another aspect of this discussion
that we need to engage with, which is an emotional aspect
that is very important and that's what we hope to achieve.
We're trying to create an immersive, visceral experience for people
to reignite something, to crack indifference.
Amir Nizar Zuabi, the artistic director of The Herds.
Now to finish with a story to gladden the heart. Two couples who married in the same venue on the
same day 70 years ago have just marked their platinum anniversaries together. Tommy and Thelma Budge had a joint wedding with Tommy's sister Violet and Leslie Flett
on 9th April 1955 in the Scottish Archipelago of Orkney.
David Delde joined the anniversary celebrations.
The beginning of April 70 years ago, a resignation from the Prime Minister Winston Churchill
and this song by Tennessee Ernie Ford, top of the charts.
Perhaps those words had been swirling in the heads of Tommy Budge and Lacey Flate. Thelma and Violet did give them their word and soon after the
four were in the Kirkwall Registrar's Office tying the knot. Thelma explains how the joint
wedding came about.
Violet was planning to get married later that year. Tommy had to go for his national service
and he was away, still at the first stages of it, and he couldn't get home twice,
so the only time that they would all work out was on that particular day.
And he got home on Friday night, I think, we were married on Saturday, on his way on Monday morning.
It's a day they all still remember vividly, after the ceremony they headed to Laisley's parents's parents house where Violet had a first encounter with a particular kind of drink.
It was a bottle of champagne that Bill Reed had got and he gave it to us and I said it
was the first time I ever tasted champagne in the last time. Oh I did not like it, it
wasn't my cup of tea at all.
In what really is a true love story, three of the four had all grown up and gone to school together in the parish of South Ronaldsea. So the natural place to go was back to brother and sister Tommy and Violet's parents' home,
up to thirty folk crammed in the
house for a homemade meal of chicken and tarties. Work commitments meant that both couples
didn't always see as much of each other as they might have liked. But Violet jokes that
might have been part of the secret to their success.
I worked at nights. I was home during the day and I was out every night and my man worked during the day
and he was home every night.
That was the secret.
To avoid each other.
Yes, to avoid each other.
Yes, that was the secret.
Now you may have noticed we've heard quite a lot from Violet and Thelma and a bit less
from Tommy and Laceley.
The designated spokesperson approach another part of the winning formula.
Both couples are looking forward to spending the day with their Berns, Grand Berns and Great Grand Berns.
It's a day I thought I'd never ever reach.
It's just beyond anybody's expectations.
Especially to all four of us still here and able to take part. It's just unbelievable.
Violet's advice for married life is simple.
Just tack each day as it comes. That's all I can say. Just tack each day as it comes.
That report was from David Delde.
And that's all from the Happy Pod for now. Remember, if you've any stories of kindness,
maybe someone you know has gone out of their way to change a person's life for the better,
do email us. The address is globalpodcasts at bbc.co.uk. And you can now watch some of
our interviews on YouTube. Just search for the HappyPod.
This edition was produced by Holly Gibbs and Harry Bly.
It was mixed by Craig Kingham.
And the editor is Karen Martin.
I'm Alan Smith, so until next time, it's goodbye.