Global News Podcast - The Happy Pod: Performing on the street got me Oasis tickets
Episode Date: July 26, 2025The street musician whose dream of seeing Oasis came true, thanks to a stranger. He says people should never give up. Also: an amazing survival story; hope for better cancer treatment; and a very slow... world championship.
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This is the HappyPod from the BBC World Service.
I'm Alex Ritson and in this edition... Can you believe it? A piece of cardboard I found in a roadside dumpster
took me to the front row and I watched Oasis Live right in front of me.
The man who played music in the street until he fulfilled his dream of seeing his favourite band live.
The German backpacker rescued after two weeks
lost in Western Australia's outback.
Just an amazing girl. Desperation and true grit I think just got her through in the end.
Plus a new test that could ensure tens of thousands of people with breast cancer get
better treatment and...
If I can do it, you can do it too. You don't have to do what you're told to do. Yeah, it
can be done even with difficult circumstances.
After a life-changing crash, one man finally achieves his goal of becoming a doctor.
We start with a busker or street musician from Japan who came to Northern England with
a dream of seeing his favourite band live.
That's Mirei Itao playing Don't Look Back in Anger in the middle of Manchester, the home
city of his favourite band Oasis. Tickets for their highly anticipated tour went on
sale last year. When he didn't get one, Mireille travelled from his home in Yokohama to Busk,
hoping to raise enough for a ticket. After weeks of performing to the public,
his dream came true when he met a kind stranger.
Mire spoke to the Happy Pods' Holly Gibbs days after he finally saw his beloved Oasis.
In Japan, Oasis is massive. Of course, not only in Japan, but Oasis is like kind of my childhood.
When I was young, listening a lot.
I really really wanted to go to the gig, but yeah of course I couldn't get an online ticket.
I was so sad.
But I couldn't give up.
So that's why I went to Manchester and then came up with a sign strategy because busking
would expose me to lots of publicity. I had no other choice.
Take me back to September when you were busking in Manchester to try and get a ticket. You had
a sign, didn't you, that said, please help me get an Oasis ticket?
you that said, please help me get an Oasis ticket?
Yeah, I did busking over six hours a day in the cold and for two weeks every day,
Monday to Sunday. And then I met someone. She appeared suddenly and then she walked there at a production company nearby. And her boss noticed me during lunch and said
let's sell that guy a ticket just like that I got a two ticket at face value
for Manchester and London yeah that alone felt like a miracle just right
after she appeared she told me excuse me sir, can I give me your email address?
And I was quite confused.
And then she explained me, so my boss saw you,
and we can sell you the ticket,
so I will send you details, so give me the email.
You know, I couldn't believe it,
because before that, I met a few scammersammers and they tried to sell me the fake ticket.
It was unbelievable, still today.
So how did it feel when you got the ticket?
My hand was shaking, I remember. And then I cried. After that, yeah, so happy. I remember just so happy feeling. Yeah.
And as I'm speaking to you, you've already been to the one in Manchester, but you have
not yet been to the one in London. How was it? How was the concert?
It felt like a dream. I checked my ticket that morning. Yeah, can you believe it? A piece of cardboard
I found in a roadside dumpster took me to the front row and I watched Oasis Live
right in front of me. During concert I was crying and out and it was the most emotional joyful moment of my life.
It felt almost like a religion experience.
They were shining so good.
People are nice and life is truly beautiful.
I learned how powerful it is to never give up.
I'm so glad I kept going.
Never give up is very, very important.
How lucky I am, no?
That's Mirai Itao speaking to Holly Gibbs.
When the German backpacker Carolina Wilga went missing
in Australia's vast outback earlier this
month. Many feared the worst. But after 12 days lost in the wilderness, the 26-year-old
was miraculously found alive and well. Helena Burke has been finding out more.
Concerns are growing for the safety of a 26-year-old German backpacker.
The desperate search for a German backpacker continues.
Carolina Vilga hasn't been seen or heard from for almost a fortnight.
When Carolina Vilga disappeared into the outback more than 300 kilometres from
Perth, the country held its breath for bad news. The expansive wilderness of
Western Australia has claimed many lives over the years with its intense sun,
harsh conditions and dangerous animals. The state is larger than the entire country of Mexico
and 85% of it is uninhabited. Carolina was on a solo road trip across the state
when her van was found abandoned in the remote bushland of the Caroon Hill
Nature Reserve. A large rescue operation was launched to try to find her but
several days of searching proved fruitless.
That was until a local farmer driving down a bush track stumbled on an unexpected site.
When you see a person standing on the road waving and you realise straight away and she's
very thin and fragile, I just, I stopped and got out of the car and grabbed her a hug. I just couldn't think of anything else to do.
She was crying, she was very upset, she was really in disbelief that someone had actually come along.
That's Tanya Henley speaking to the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
She said the road up to her farm was so remote that it was a miracle she'd bumped into the German. One way goes to my property, which is, well the house is 40 kilometres from there. If
you'd gone south back to Beacon, before she would have got to any house there's probably
60 kilometres. So yeah, everything lined up that day for her to be found. But a lovely person like, I gave her a drink and then she,
oh quite incredible really, she just had maybe a third of a cup or something. Then she said,
oh do you want some? And I thought, gosh, if someone's been out in the bush for that long
and you really haven't had a lot to drink, but yeah just an amazing girl.
After her rescue, the 26-year-old shared the details of how she survived for 12 days in the outback.
Carolina said she'd lost control of her van and it got stuck on some rocky terrain.
Dazed and confused after hitting her head in the crash,
the backpacker eventually walked away from the vehicle into the wilderness with no shoes on.
She ate the small amounts of food she had carried with her and drank rainwater, even
from puddles.
During the 11 freezing cold nights she spent outside, Carolina sought shelter, including
in a cave.
In a statement posted online, the backpacker described Tanya as her guardian angel.
There was something, obviously, because the timing was incredible but Angel well yes I'm not
sure about that. But um, I know just desperation and true grit I think just
got her through in the end. Carolina was ravaged by insect bites and
suffered a minor injury to her foot during the ordeal but is now doing well.
The backpacker says she now wants to continue her trip around Australia. Helena Burke
Next to a man who's overcome life-changing injuries to fulfil his dream of becoming a
doctor, Paul Edwards was preparing for the exams he hoped would take him to university
when he was knocked off his motorbike at the age of 17. He sustained severe injuries, including a broken neck, but after years in
recovery has finally graduated from university with a degree in medicine. He's been speaking
to the BBC's Emma Grimshaw and started by telling her about his accident.
I had just dropped someone off and about 30 seconds from my house I was going towards
a road I'd crossed many times before and
someone came to the junction and it was their first time ever driving an automatic car and
they hit the throttle instead of the brake and as a result they just came into the junction
and I hit the side of them. After that, my next memory is waking up in high dependency
which was about four days after the accident is my next memory.
I was in hospital for seven days in total, mostly because I was 17.
And now being a doctor, I realized that 17 year olds are young and they bounce.
Generally, they heal quite quickly.
If that were to happen to be today at 32, I think I'd have a very different story.
How long did it take you to be kind of independent after that crush?
A long time.
I had crutches and things like that.
And my goal was to walk downstairs without crutches.
We have bannisters, so I do have some support, but to be downstairs without crutches on Christmas
Day.
And I did get there in the end.
How many months was that?
Was that four months?
Yeah.
So after that, it took a few more months to fully heal because the brakes were so bad.
I think I was back on a motorbike in about February or March, something like that.
Being young and foolish, carrying my crutches on my rucksack because I still couldn't walk
properly.
Now the pain is still pretty bad, four or five out of 10 average, I would say, with
paracetamol and ibuprofen.
But I'm going to be in pain no matter what I do, which is why I choose to be active.
Because if I'm going to sit at home and be four or five out of 10, no matter what, if
I go out and do a triathlon, instead of a four or five, I'll be a five or six. And I
think that that price is worth paying. And once I come off medication, decided I wanted
to go back to university, everything kind of opened up for me.
And suddenly I thought, you know, this is possible.
And, you know, here I am, 2025, suddenly I'm now a doctor.
How did you feel when you finally arrived at uni?
Oh, unbelievable.
And I remember as a child walking past Bristol University
and thinking I want to study here one day because it's amazing.
And suddenly I'm walking through
the doors for registration and I'm putting my ID in front of someone. They say, congratulations,
welcome to Bristol. And it all opened up. I thought, I have done it. This is incredible.
And from that point on, I just kept going from strength to strength. With the pain,
it has been very hard, but yes, going back to applying was incredible. And then of course, I did my first
degree, which was neuroscience. And once I got to third year, I thought, you know what, medicine is
what I want. And I got my offer, I think in February 2020, just before lockdown happened.
And I remember running downstairs and being like, I made it. You know, mum, dad, I got my spot.
I'm going to be a doctor in a few years time.
And they were so happy.
And I was just over the moon.
And I had a smile on my face the entire summer.
And knowing what I was going into, phenomenal.
Even with the difficulties of the pandemic, I was so excited to be able to give back.
And looking back on it, it was a phenomenal moment in my life. So once or twice a year, I go back to my school or my and or my college and just
say you know, if I can do it, you can do it too. You don't have to do what you're told
to do. Nobody told me I could be a doctor, but I thought I can definitely do it. So yeah,
it can be done even with difficult circumstances. Doctor-to-be Paul Edwards.
Coming up in this podcast...
This is one small slither for Snail
and one giant glide for Snail Find.
And I think that did it.
and I think that did it.
The Snail Racing World Championships take place in Britain.
Now to a breakthrough that will help more breast cancer patients get the right treatment more quickly. Research shows that a new test can tell after just two weeks whether hormone
therapy will work for those with ER-positive and HER-2-positive tumours. These affect around
200,000 people around the world every year. Dr Maggie Chiang from the Institute of Cancer
Research in London co-authored the study and spoke to my colleague, Sean Mei.
It's very hard to actually predict who will do better because the current test that we
have could not differentiate more other than the ER positive, HER positive. So it's very
hard.
So what this test does, it helps to distinguish between tumors that
can be successfully tackled on a particular form of treatment and others that might need more
tougher treatment. Correct. That's how it is helping us to actually have the right treatments. We can
actually predict with more precise whether this treatment is working with a certain subgroup of this tumor.
So that means you can tailor the treatment according to the patient?
Absolutely. And with just two weeks of hormone therapy, this genetic test could help us to actually do a little bit better,
differentiate the genetic makeup of the tumor within ER positive, HER2 positive, help us
to understand more whether the certain treatments will work for them.
Does that mean that some cancer patients will not have to go through such brutal treatment
as they might otherwise have had to experience?
Yeah, this would spare the financial burden and emotional stresses the patient is actually having to
tackle. So I think this is really how the patient under the guidance with the physician
to discuss a more tailored treatment so that they can spare the unnecessary treatments
and spare the toxicity for these over treatments.
If you know within just two weeks whether or not a patient is likely to have a recurrence
of the tumour
after treatment. How do you have that conversation with the patient?
Hopefully this is a tool that helps the clinician know a little bit earlier that now your tumour
showing early resistance to the type of treatment that would only be given in that context.
So what we should think about a little more newer treatments, CDK4-6
inhibitor or chemotherapy. What proportion of breast cancer patients could benefit from this test?
80% of breast cancer are ER positive breast cancer. But with this test and this study,
we are focusing on the triple positive group, which is 10% of the breast cancer.
It's about 200,000 patients who actually are
diagnosed with this type of tumour yearly. Dr Maggie Chiang from the Institute of Cancer Research
in London. In northern Italy, a group of volunteers have been getting up at dawn to perform a special
rescue mission. They head for the mountain meadows to find baby deer hidden in the
long grass before the mowers arrive and their success rates have improved thanks
to thermal imaging drones. Josef Kutaya got up early to join them.
Morning has broken. The mountain air is crisp while the sun's rays caress the dolomites,
as I join a group of volunteers from the South Tyrol Hunting Association for a special rescue mission,
to save fawns from being mangled by the menacing steel cutters of the Combine harvester. In their early days baby fawns lie motionless in the thick mountain meadows
hidden from predators. But this is also the time when farmers in the Alps trim the half meter grass
which eventually ends up as hay. So before they embark on this job the volunteers comb the meadows to save the fawns, which are then released
once the grass is harvested.
One of the volunteers, Pirmin, launches his thermal drone, pointing the camera downwards
as it hovers over the steep meadow in front of us. Before you know it he sees two yellow dots on his display panel.
We get moving. Walking on a precipitous meadow is anything but easy but two
other volunteers follow the drone as quietly as possible. As we get closer in
a blink of an eye, two fawns hop
above the grass and zip up the meadow. Thomas Eichner tells me what happens the moment they
spot a fawn that's tucked in the grass. We put them into a small box. We take this box
out of the meadow in the forest and there we leave it as long as the farmer needs to cut the grass
and then we let it again go and with a whistle it communicates with the mother.
The mother is never far so that they immediately find each other.
Thomas points out that a doe typically gives birth to two fawns which she places
approximately 25 meters apart. This is a survival strategy, in case they are targeted
by wolves or foxes. I ask why this project is so important to him.
We really live in an industrialized world and in all places where people coexist with
nature, people continue to understand how nature works and give this on to their children
and this makes sure that humans respect nature. Last year alone volunteers in this region saved
around 1,500 fawns that otherwise would have had a different fate. Thanks to thermal drones
rescue efforts have become faster. So how was it before the advent of
aerial surveillance? It was very hard because the animals are so small and the
grass is so high that it's hard to see them so we could not get them all and we
need to invest a lot of time and as this is all voluntary it was really not easy
to organize so the drone was really the game-changer. When you see these soft
toy-like marvels the urge to cuddle them is overwhelming.
But Thomas immediately diffuses my excitement.
You need to be very careful to make sure that you don't get on it.
You absolutely need to use gloves not to touch it.
The human touch can throw off the fawn's scent, which could lead to its mother not recognizing it as her baby. Waking up at 4 a.m. in search of fawns
before your day job isn't easy. However, Thomas seems to have a different take on
this. It's so joyful, it's so nice that you always find motivated volunteers
that will help and will invest their time and then you have
a coffee and then you go to your regular job.
Thomas Eichner ending that report from Josef Kutaya.
It's a summer of sport with the Women's Euros and the World Athletics
Championships but one more may have slipped under the radar. The litter
picking World Cup.
Teams from all around the globe are in East London to compete in Spogami, the Japanese-invented
rubbish collecting game.
And competition is hotting up.
So what do you need to win?
And why do people do it?
Well one of the organisers is Chris Roof and he told me what it was all about.
When I first heard about it, I couldn't believe it either.
But these people take litter picking very, very seriously.
The sport was developed in 2008 as a way to reduce marine litter and get people more involved
in litter picking.
And it's just exploded.
There are people from 20 different countries competing in this World Cup and the winners will be
going to Tokyo to pick litter for an hour and hopefully the UK will bring home
the gold again. So what do you have to do to win? I mean pick litter. It's as simple
as that. You've just got to pick the highest volume of litter. Certain types
of litter are worth more points. Cig cigarette butts are worth a lot of points but obviously they don't weigh
very much. So there's a bit of strategy in balancing out between what kind of
litter you pick up and what's going to score you the most points.
Though this is fun, there is a serious side to it isn't there? The area that
you're going to in London, I've been there and there
is an awful lot of litter on the ground. One of the great things about Sporgomi
is that once you play... That's the official name for it isn't it? That's right, it's called the
Sporgomi World Cup. Sporgomi is a Japanese word which is part sports for
the spore and then gomi is from gomi Hiroyo or picking litter but one of the
amazing things about Sporgomi this competitive litter picking sport is that
once you've gotten prizes or you've gotten points for picking up litter
your brain sort of automatically focuses in on litter they've done surveys and
tests where once people have played this sport they then much more aware of this
around them and they've actually stopped littering themselves. And you say sport
I mean they the contestants really do dress for it don't they? Yeah we've got
official uniforms, we've got you know whistles and stopwatches and everything
is very by the book, we've got a whole load of referees who will be present on
the day just to make sure that the sports side of things is just as important as the litter-picking side of things.
Litter-picking World Cup organiser Chris Rowe.
And from one World Championship to another, but a much slower one.
Snails from around the world were invited to the English county of Norfolk to slither and glide in the annual
World Snail Racing Championships. This year's winner was Bilbo Slugins inching his way to
victory with a time of 2 minutes and 11 seconds. His handler was the aptly named British TikTok
creator Shell Rowe who rented the Speedy Molllusk for this competition. Shell took home a
trophy stuffed with lettuce leaves and spoke to our reporter Harry Bly.
New World Champion!
Yeah!
When Bill Bowie, my snail, won they said what's your name and I said Shell and it went silent
because they didn't know what I was going And I said, Shell. And it went silent because they didn't think I was taking the mick.
I mean, understandable. Let's also talk about Bilbo, your snail. I never thought I'd say that sentence out loud. Tell me about Bilbo.
Tell me about Bilbo. Well, I rented him.
I rented four snails, like you go, we queued in the pouring rain for about an hour to register
our snails.
You go, you pick a name.
And I asked the lady if she had any advice for me on picking my snails.
And she said people are either going for the ones that are resting so that they are ready
for the race or the ones who are making a break for it because they've got a bit of fight in them. So I chose the ones that were escaping. Clever. Well it paid off.
And for anyone that hasn't seen the video, when you think about a championship race you might think
of the Grand National or Formula One. Can you describe how far and what kind of track is it
for the snails for Bilbo slug-ins? What
did he conquer?
So it's on this table and the actual course is 13 and a half inches. You've got, they
get placed in the inner circle, which is in a red ring, and then 13 and a half inches
out is a black circle. To get the snails to race towards the black circle, they rub like
cucumber around the edge and they put water all over
the track so that it's easier for the snails to move. That's why when it's torrential rain they
love it because the snails love it. So it's a really tiny course but it's quite nice because
then everyone's so close to the action. And take me through the moment that you knew that Bilbo Sluggins was on course to win.
It was so soon out of the gate. They said, Bilbo's like making good pace. And I looked at him and he
was steaming ahead. And I just knew, I knew in my heart of hearts he was going to cross the finish
line. Did you have any words of wisdom to give to Bilbo before he started slithering?
I did give him a pep talk and I said that this is one small slither for snail and one giant glide
for snail kind and I think that did it. I think it did as well. Tell me about your future as a
snail trainer and what's your ambitions?
Oh gosh, I mean I'm going to be back next year defending my title. It's such a wonderful event,
I couldn't believe how many people had come out and it was just so much fun.
There was actually some trainers who came over from France, snails that had come from all over the world.
I was talking to the French trainers actually and they had to bring 10 snails that had come from all over the world. I was talking to the French trainers actually,
and they had to bring 10 snails through customs.
Oh my goodness.
Like that is so crazy to me, but it's so brilliant.
Bilbo, can he compete next year
or has he been released into the wild?
I wish I could have brought him home,
but I actually traveled like three and a half,
four hours to get there.
And I just didn't want to have him in the Tupperware to bring
him home. I thought, God, I had to give him back but maybe we'll be reunited. Who knows?
They might have put him aside.
Snail handler Shell Rose speaking to Harry Bly.
And that's all from the HappyPod for now. If you have a story you think we should cover
or want to share how anything in this week's episode made you feel, please do get in touch.
As ever, you can send us a voice note or an email globalpodcast at bbc.co.uk and you can now watch some of our interviews on YouTube. Just
search for the happy pod. This edition was mixed by Holly Smith and the
producers were Holly Gibbs, Harry Bly and Rachel Balclay. The editor is Karen
Martin. I'm Alex Ritzen. Until next time, goodbye.