Spinning Plates with Sophie Ellis-Bextor - Episode 103: Rachel Riley
Episode Date: August 14, 2023Rachel Riley is the co-host and face of maths on Countdown and a self-confessed 'proper maths geek'. I first met Rachel 10 years ago when we were both on Strictly together. When we chatted recent...ly we touched on those rollercoaster competition weeks, and the mild PTSD which Rachel experienced afterwards. However she also said she got some good things out of it, namely a lovely husband and two children.Last month Rachel picked up her MBE for services to Holocaust Education. She also told me about the vitriolic trolling that she suffered during her campaign against antisemitism, which coinicided with the birth of her first daughter.She and her husband, Pasha, are bringing up their two little daughters to speak both English and Russian, with a little Ukranian added into the mix.Spinning Plates is presented by Sophie Ellis-Bextor, produced by Claire Jones and post-production by Richard Jones Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Hello, I'm Sophia Lispector and welcome to Spinning Plates, the podcast where I speak
to busy working women who also happen to be mothers about how they make it work. I'm a
singer and I've released seven albums in between having my five sons aged 16 months to 16 years,
so I spin a few plates myself. Being a mother can be the most amazing thing, but can also be hard to find time for yourself and your own ambitions.
I want to be a bit nosy and see how other people balance everything. Welcome to Spinning Plates.
Hey, hey, how are you?
I'm speaking to you from a quiet house. This is a nice feeling.
Listen to how silent it is actually I can't hear
the rain it's been a bit drizzly recently how are you how's everything I am um I'm actually not up
to much I'm having a little weekend off it's been very chill and that was exactly what I needed I
was very ready for a little break. Back at it again soon though.
Got a couple of festivals coming up next weekend. Don't worry, I'll be back to the grind. But for
now it's just not doing very much, just playing with the kids and being in the pool and that
kind of thing. AKA a holiday. Anyway, no rest for spinning plates. No, no. um this week what a gorgeous guest my friend actually Rachel Riley
so Rachel and I met when we were part of the same dancing school also known as Strictly Come Dancing
which would you believe was a decade ago bloody hell I can't believe it was 10 years ago I did
that program that's bonkers and yes many fond memories actually I mean look it was a very
very unique environment best of times with the glory of the twinkly outfits and doing the dances
worst of times with the nerves um and actually some of the emotional intensity of it was a bit
much for me however for some people it was life-changing, like Rachel.
So when Rachel did the show, I was paired with Brendan Cole,
Rachel was paired with Pasha, and actually they fell in love
and they are now married and they have two little girls.
Absolutely gorgeous.
They're a brilliant couple.
I'm super fond of them.
Their little girls are gorgeous.
And Rachel and I bump into each other fairly frequently, actually, over the years.
I think she's brilliant.
I've got nothing but respect for her.
Plus, I've seen her at her day job when she's doing the numbers on Countdown.
And bloody hell, that woman's mind.
It's very impressive to see.
Her and Susie Dent just doing what they do on Countdown as flawlessly as they do it,
like exercising that muscle.'s super cool um and it was just such a pleasure to sit down with Rachel
and chat to her about how she's found motherhood but also her incredible strength actually she was
involved in um the actions against anti-semitism in the Labour Party and you know what you have to
be pretty brave to put yourself
out there because that comes with it with a whole lot of shtick which um i don't know if that's the
right word a whole lot of well actually just brazen disgusting criticism trolls people sending
horrific messages just stuff you wouldn't want to invite into your life but if you feel strongly
about something that's unjust and unfair and you
actually speak up on it and you have principles like that I just have nothing but respect for
that I think that's a wonderful way to live and what an inspiring way she'll be raising her kids
to call out things that don't feel right I think that's hugely impressive and obviously Rachel's
actions have been completely noted and she's now the recipient of an MBE, which she only got recently, I think.
So where are we now? August.
I think she got her MBE in, I think it was June.
Or it might have been beginning of July. Really recent.
So congratulations to her for that.
And yeah, it's just an absolute pleasure to sit down and talk and spend some time.
I think on the whole whole a lot of my guests
on spinning plates are people that I may be meeting for the first time or I don't know that well
but Rachel and I are it was just really nice to sit down with someone who's also a friend
that is a joy so yes over to Rachel and I will see you on the other side
hello Rachel I finally got you on my podcast having spoken to you very like i think maybe
two years ago three years ago i think that's yeah when i first had a baby and was like actually i'm
i'm not i'm not having much to do because it's a pandemic and my husband's around and you're like
i'm not really spinning very many plates right now yeah now i am now i'm here now i've just come
for the free child childcare for an hour
you're looking after
my little girl
so I can talk to you
I'm like great
get me on
well not me specifically
Carolina's been brilliant
with her
playing
we'll see them
in the garden sometimes
it's really sweet
but yeah it's actually
quite nice
because she's come over
and she's got the whole
house to herself
because all my boys
are out
so there's all these toys
so she'll have a ball
normally she'd be
you know screaming
if I'm leaving the room
and she's like mum who no she's going to be like can you talk for longer there's cupboards toys, so she'll have a ball. Normally she'd be, you know, screaming if I'm leaving the room, and she's like, Mum, who?
No, she's going to be like, can you talk for longer?
There's cupboards I haven't been into yet.
But yeah, before we press record,
we were both talking about how much we've got going on,
and obviously you now have two little girls,
and Pasha's been in and around, and you're doing your work.
So what is happening in your life at the moment with work?
What are you up to?
So right now I've got Countdown, an 8-up, 10-catsers Count is countdown so we live in london and we film in salford and i'm still
feeding the baby so every other weekish i i schlep up to manchester with the baby um and
everyone else stays at home and pasha has been filming um he's choreographing a film in romania
so he's been away for the most of the last month he was home for less than 48 hours over the weekend so we actually saw him and he's gone away again um so it's kind of changed because
over the pandemic we were just around a lot I was still you know fortunate enough to still be
filming Countdown but he's his work you know in you know theatre and shows it just disappeared
which actually you know in retrospect we really appreciate having all that family time together
but you know everything that you would expect
to be doing as new parents in that juggle,
we just kind of didn't have.
So now we've got two and now life's back up and running.
I mean, it's always changing,
but for now it's like it's been transitioned for us
because he's about to go on tour as well with La Bamba.
So he's going to be in London and then in Leicester
and then here, there and everywhere.
And I'm going to be up and down to Manchester.
And we've got, you know, one in preschool and one going to be going so it feels
now my head is you know looking in seven different directions and trying to work out how they piece
together and trying not to think about it because you know sweat a bit well I think that's actually
the way I handle things like that because I mean I suppose out of your two careers passion is quite
similar to the way it
works for Richard and I in terms of musicians and being away and that kind of working odd hours and
travelling around and everything changing quite regularly. I kind of just do like one week as it
comes really because if you look ahead it's actually a bit too much and the kids are actually
really adaptable and they kind of get on with whatever's in front of them really yeah so I
think if you look far ahead it makes your head spin but yeah I just need to sort out some kind
of regular childcare but we don't have a regular you know working life so that's the thing if you
knew it was Monday to Friday I'd be able to sort someone out but I just I need to delve into I
need to do some research I need to be a grown-up and find some proper childcare at some stage. Yes, and don't worry because I actually,
I don't really know very many people.
I hardly know my friends do have that regular life.
So I can give you some advice.
I need it, that's what I'm here for.
Well, I was thinking about you and Countdown
because I was lucky enough to come up and do Countdown
with you early in the year, which I loved.
And you record, so you do like the whole week's episodes in one day yeah and I was exhausted that night I slept
so well because I've been trying to do all these words and number games what's your relationship
with maths like these days like how do you feel about it as a thing to be doing well I was a bit
worried because when I got pregnant you think you know you hear about baby brain and hormones and then sleep deprivation and thankfully the countdown thing is like riding a bike so
thankfully that's still there I mean I think even before kids like I had fluctuation I could feel
with like hormone fluctuations some days I'm just not there and I think there's nothing you can
really do about that you just ride it and you know get back to it the next day um but yeah I mean I'm with you five
shows a day and then I go home and I've got the baby and sometimes she's teething and sometimes
you just get a couple of hours and you're back in the studio but you just get on with it um and I
think you know the adrenaline keeps you going um and I've got such a great team around me and I'm
a proper maths geek that's my favorite thing so you know sometimes I can't put sentences together
but thankfully I can still do the numbers game it's so you know sometimes I can't put sentences together but thankfully
I can still do
the numbers game
it's so flipping impressive
though
I loved watching you do it
it's lovely
and I mean you
and actually Susie Dent
as well
she's very impressive
with word knowledge
as well
amazing
she's amazing
and she's
you know
she's actually
I love Susie
we're just like
really really good mates
yeah I can see that
she's got two girls
as well
and hers are a bit older
I think Lucy's
about 22 now and Thea's about 15 um so seeing her as a
working mum like Thea was you know a little baby coming up with her when I first joined Countdown
so it's quite nice to see what's ahead for me and how you can juggle it and how you can manage it
and she can still write 15 books and come up to Manchester and all the rest of it is, yeah, it's my future
without all those books.
And actually, I suppose as well, when you talk about regular jobs,
like you've actually been doing it for a really long time,
Countdown, it's been a big part of your life.
Yeah, over 14 years now.
So I was 22 when I got my job, fresh out of uni,
and 37 now, two kids and still enjoying it and still, you know, I think my probably clothing outfits
have probably changed.
I have the options.
You know, it was interesting getting the maternity wardrobe
and obviously you go up and then you go down and then you go,
I got pregnant again, so you go up and then you go down.
And then some of the stuff you just think, was it this short,
you know, a few years ago?
Is it just that my body's a bit different?
I don't know.
But yeah, some of those, some of the things have beened out like as in yeah but that's also just what happens when you look at your wardrobe you're like is this still where I'm at anyway
and I've got things I've got things upstairs that I've had since I was in my 20s some even in my
teens yeah and it's like I have to sometimes admit like I'm not really going to go back to
that look anymore you don't want to throw it out though maybe one day. Exactly
and it's funny as well because when you're doing
countdown you've obviously got the contestants
and everybody's like getting excited if they
get like answer the maths
problem or they get a six or seven
or eight letter word but actually you and Susie
are doing them right like every time
I was like saying to Susie like have you ever considered
being like playing countdown you're really good at it
We don't get to we'd love to I think we've had you know the odd? You're really good at it. We don't get to. We'd love to.
I think we've had the odd round on eight out of ten castles countdown
where we get to actually play along.
Or a conundrum if the contestants say get the conundrum,
we can shove a hand up.
I mean, that's my job.
I get to play every round, every numbers round.
And I love it.
Well, yeah, you said you're a numbers geek.
You've always loved it.
But do you think that the profile of maths has changed
since you started counting
or even since you started studying it?
Do you feel like it's got a different association with people now?
I'm not sure.
I think science, I think, you know,
there's a lot of people that have done great things
for popular science, you know,
with Brian Cox effect,
buying loads of telescopes and things like that.
I think maths is still something that people don't quite understand what mathematicians do there's I mean I'm a big
fan of Hannah Fry she's a mathematician she's um again like working mom and she's just so cool
she's actually still working in maths and she goes and she talks about what mathematicians are doing
and how they're you know mapping out the best way to leave a fire escape or working out where
burglaries are likely to occur and all these cool things and I think I think science and STEM in
general has kind of moved on I think people realize now it's not you know necessarily nerdy
and geeky as it was kind of like the terms you'd think of when I was younger but now it's just
ubiquitous like it's true you know the world has changed so much since we were young.
And just, you know, that if you're going to go into science
and technology, engineering, math, STEM,
you're going to get a job.
And potentially the job that you're going to get
if you're a student doesn't even exist yet.
Yes.
But you're going to be employable.
And I think, you know, the more we can encourage kids,
and I like to encourage girls especially,
because there's still this gender difference um definitely perceptions and then the numbers going into studying and getting jobs in
these things um so the more we can say it's open to everyone um and it's not you know there's no
maths brain there's no creative brain it's you know you're just you that that's a myth and if
you like these things you don't have to be einstein you don't have to understand everything you don't have to know every word in the English
language to say that you can speak English and it's the same with you know science and maths
you can you can find the bit that you like and you can you know delve out a pathway and get an
interesting career if you want to I really love that actually and I think well firstly we had
Hannah Fry oh I love yes and like you said I was thinking when you were saying that
that both of you, yes you've been employed
but maybe both of you have found yourself doing things
you didn't necessarily think would be the end
end result when you were doing your studying
but also I think
what you said about
saying you don't have a creative brain
or a science brain
it's just you and the bits you know
the bits you're good at sort of thing and the bits you enjoy that's that's valid and that counts I remember
going to the science museum excuse me and they had um a big sign and it said something like maths
is not just what you learn in school there's maths everywhere when you pack your suitcase
you're that's maths if you're noticing patterns in nature that's maths yeah and I thought I wish
they'd said that at school because there's so much of a thing of like you're good at If you're noticing patterns in nature, that's maths. And I thought, I wish they'd said that at school
because there's so much of a thing of like,
you're good at this, you're not good at that.
And it's all the way you're taught,
the academics of it determine your relationship with that subject.
Yeah, and that's particularly what turns girls off.
I mean, girls and boys as well,
but statistically, you know, generalising,
girls are more susceptible to outside influences. So if you a girl you're not good at maths especially at a young age um or anyone
really they they they implant that and they they start to believe it and they perpetuate it um so
it's just important to just have i i support um a brilliant brilliant charity called national
numeracy and they're all about growth mindset so it's not i can't do maths it's i can't do maths
yet because the biggest indicator
as to whether you can improve your maths skills
is if you believe you can.
And there's a problem.
We do have a problem in the UK with numeracy.
I think 50% of adults are at the level
you'd expect of an 11-year-old.
Again, it's lower for women.
And we're passing on negative feelings
and fear of it to kids.
And I think we need to just change the way we speak about it, change the attitude and not be fear of it to kids and i think we need to just change the way we speak
about it change the attitude and not be scared of it and not um not feel intimidated and just
give it a go and even if you're going in and you're trying to help your kids and over the
pandemic you know more people were having to do more maths and higher level than they did before
because they're helping the kids for obvious reasons um and it's you know you can go
back and you can learn it together and if you're asking questions great like it's a learning
opportunity um i just think it's really important to just be positive about it in the same way you
wouldn't proudly say i can't read or can't you know don't say i can't do maths because it's just
i can't do it yet yeah and also there's lots of different levels and aspects of maths i actually like maths i always
enjoyed it at school um i quite like helping kit with his maths homework we'll sit quite he's 14
so he's sort of getting to the gcse level and it's funny things are sort of starting to come back a
little bit yeah um also the resources that are out there now for that age group are brilliant in terms
of going online and watching people give demos.
That feeling I had sometimes where I felt like,
this happened across the board, by the way,
feeling like I'd missed a really crucial part of the lesson.
Maybe I was away that day and my friends would be like,
no, no, you were definitely there.
But now you can go online and you can get access to that again
and someone will patiently take you through it again.
And I think, oh, that's brilliant.
Yeah, it's fun.
I'm at a different stage than
well this is three and a half but she is starting that we the other day we were driving I try and
just make it just get her to spot numbers and spot maths in the world around her so we were
driving in the car and she was you know whinging in the back about something ridiculous and I was
like Maeve let's see what numbers we can see so every time she saw a road sign she's like 20
or three and naught that makes 30 and at the moment she's at the stage where she's just trying
to recognize what numbers are um and she saw we had a little eight-year-old um so nine-year-old
girl around and we were playing some countdown games because she likes maths and Maeve for the
first time saw adding and taking away and she's like mummy I want to do addicts it's like great so we call it addicts um and she
wants to try adding um and it's so nice just to see her enthusiastic about it and if she gets it
wrong it's like no just try again and you know and when she gets it she's so pleased yeah um and
it's important not to say no that's wrong and have any negative attitude about it it's like all right
have another go yeah um and just get her to spot numbers and maths in the world around her and
you know got her a little watch and she's enthusiastic about it and I I just you know
for me I love it and when I see you know a something mathematical you know mathematical
way of thinking just even if it's like we're playing a matching game and to get the same
amount of cards each she'll like just balance it so that they're level that's like a mathematical way of thinking
it just makes me it just gives me like your face is really lighting up i mean like if they're
dancing their daddy can watch that and you know and if they're doing if they're leveling two
piles of cards oh that's my girl and you have a depression like now you join in you're like i'm
stop it no i'm not gonna he actually he's got he likes maths he's like I remember I remember well when we were first paired up um there was some like some and so many people even like a
simple sum if they're asking in front of me they get a bit nervous and they're like looking and
they're checking you know most basic things and he was like no I like maths what um it's nice
that is cool I mean I wouldn't normally when I normally when I speak to people I don't really
talk to you much like that half but seeing as I met you and Pasha at the same time yeah
it feels a bit different and I realized we actually met like 10 years ago now 10 years
I know yeah I've still got you know what I've got the bottle do you remember they gave us a
bottle of champagne that's got Strictly Come Dancing of the Year on it I mean I'm sure it
tastes like vinegar I looked in our cupboard and I found that and I was like you know what
in September whenever it is I'm gonna I'm gonna open that I'm that and I was like you know what in September
whenever it is
I'm going to open that
I'm going to see
what it's like
I think it's as good a time
as any isn't it
that's very sweet actually
I ended up giving mine
to Brendan
because he was so annoyed
that the professional dancers
hadn't been given one
oh no
I kept mine
it longed with me
he was really grumpy
like we didn't get those
so I was like
okay fair enough
thank you
you can have it
but yeah we
went to the same dancing school which is how we met um it does feel like we call it yeah that's
what I refer to it dancing school kind of the thing that was the only place that taught me
anything about like waltz or foxtrot yeah anywhere else so um I mean it's funny I think I have now
got to put where when I hear the theme tune, I don't feel quite as like freaked out.
But it was an extraordinary process.
I mean, do you, I suppose it is such a long time ago now,
but what are your memories of that time?
I mean, for me, it's still the most terrifying thing I've ever done in my whole life.
Well, I mean, I listened to your audio book.
Oh, yes.
It is kind of like...
I've only mentioned it a couple of times.
Well, you know, when I got to the part on Strictly I literally had to speed it up you know listen to you I don't know like
three times as fast as I could listen to it so I'd listen to it but it still gets me and like it
is like a you you don't know man you weren't there and it and it is ridiculous because I in the same
way that I can see you apologizing because it's not you know real problems it does do something to your psyche that isn't comfortable
and it even now like my body's kind of like something's just like flowing through me that
isn't comfortable and I hate the theme tune and I have to put brave face on with the girls because
I'm like yay daddy's song um but yeah I mean I did get like mild PTSD after it um but yeah i mean i did get like mild ptsd after it um really yeah and i i think my like my the
eventual way i decided to i like learned to do it was to ignore it as much as possible because i
tried immersive i tried ignoring it i tried everything and the best way was just just let
it wash over me because obviously i was with pasha so every year i'd find that i would go through
each week
I'd know exactly what week it was and I would have like the memories of my experience on it
plus the memories of each year and I would kind of like bring on everything that he was going
through each week as well so it was compounding and I just it just oh I don't like I mean I had
a great time while I was on it yeah but when I was off it I mean I think only someone that's been on that you know
mad roller coaster can quite get it I think that's very true and actually when I've met people who've
done it on different years to me there's definitely a sort of common look in your eye
I know yes we've been through it which is funny because on the surface of it was so much about it
was really glorious you know really really exquisite and I loved I loved
learning something new as an adult yeah a lot and spending whole days just dancing around the place
like turns out really suited me I loved all that um but I think there was something about the
sharpness of your focus during that time I think that was part of what I found I've never really
done that anything like that yeah I totally agree I think
um for me at the time you like when you're rehearsing that's the place you want to be in
and you haven't got anything else to worry about and you're and you get that instant gratification
of like Sunday you can't do anything you've never seen the charter before Saturday you perform and
like you've you're ticking the box of like I've done what I'm supposed to be doing and I think
this is it's like a really like a holiday romance version of you know when footballers retire and they've had their whole
lives planned and they've been in this team and they've been working towards something and they've
been doing all the exercise so they get the endorphins for that and then you know you just
stop and then you're you're outside of this group that you've been part of yeah you're back to like
doing random stuff but all your friends are still doing it you don't you're not doing the exercise that you were doing every day all day every day so the endorphins just
stop so like there's that hormonal yeah thing and it just it just feels weird yeah and i think
you know i'm quite uh rational try to be scientific type of person um and i think i just think the
hormones it just it just does something to you that you can't control.
And I actually had, Pasha got me a CBT session while I was on it because when I was in the dance-off, I just got stage fright
and I came back the next week and I was just not there.
And he said, you know, what's happened to you?
So he sent me for rapid CBT.
And it was one of the most brilliant things I've done in my life
because it taught me that I was a perfectionist,
which I didn't realise.
I thought being a perfectionist meant you wanted everything to be perfect,
but it doesn't.
It means that whenever you do something,
you pick at the small things that go wrong
rather than the CBT taught me to actually set a target
before I do anything
and then if you achieve that, look at that and be proud
rather than look at the things that will always go wrong
and pick yourself apart.
And, you know, talking to my girlfriends,
we all went to a grammar school,
so we're all kind of the same overachievers
and we all did the same things
and we'd never be proud of ourselves or look at something
and have it, you know, just like be like, great,
this is what I did and this is what people saw from it
and this is what, you know, this is the level I should have been
and I did it.
And actually my final week, I think I set myself a target of getting one eight even though I think
you know the numbers and the scores is a little bit a little bit pantomime all the rest of it but
I got two eights and then I got voted out so if I could go out you know proud and and feel like
actually I've achieved what I wanted to achieve rather than I got voted out and everybody hates
me I didn't have that feeling yeah um so
it's a funny thing but it is a bit of a mind um I don't know what the polite way of saying it is
well they're filling the blank yes I think um that's interesting about the perfectionism
and I relate to that a lot because I think you're right the sort of perception is that
being a perfectionist means that everything you do turns out perfectly and if it doesn't
it's not perfect you're disappointed whereas actually it's to do with a sort of
yeah nitpick and a standard in yourself that you've set yourself it might be internal pressure
it's impossible yeah maybe something good came out of that side of it if you learned that
loads of good things came up I mean I've got my I've got two children and her lovely husband. I think it's that as well. They're all right, you know.
But actually, thinking about that,
because I was looking at all the things you've been up to and I was thinking that actually, you know,
you were talking about finding the sort of stage fright
and nitpicking, but actually, if we fast forward to now,
because the timeline
of when you were involved in all the campaign against the you know the anti-semitism that was
going on in the labour party that what interested me in that was not just how brilliant and brave
you were but that was also the timeline when you were also having your first baby yeah but then i
was thinking i know you've spoken a lot about the horrible side effects,
the trolling and things like this,
but there must have been a lot of stuff about it
that's been really good,
not least the fact that it's been recognised
and, you know, have an MBE and all the good stuff.
But I wondered how empowering it is
to feel that sort of David and Goliath thing
and actually come out the other side of it
with something to show for it. Yeah, well, it was I mean it was it was a huge relief so
I mean it was it's it's funny it's one of it's another one of those things that I
recently realized whenever I talk about it I have another physical reaction um but I was you know
brought up secular Jewish but you know from forever i've known about the holocaust and
i knew what it meant to you know stay silent in the face of injustice and i think that was kind
of built into me and i just saw something bad happening and i don't know if it's just my
personality or whatever i just couldn't stay quiet and it did take a it took a it took a big
toll but the the and i remember when i first
started delving into and doing research i thought you know what maybe like they'll get out he'll be
out in a few months like but once people realize how bad it is he'll be out and then we can get
back to my real life and it wasn't like that at all they just stay like and pasha comes from a
communist country you know he when he was brought up he was communist he's like communist they get
their claws into things and they get they get the mechanisms of the party and they it's it's deeply
unpleasant and i was pregnant and my my first baby was due on the 1st of december the general
election was the 12th of december and she was eventually born on the 15th of december and
the the stress at that time,
because, you know, you're in a social media bubble
and social media is quite left-leaning.
And there's all these supporters telling you you're evil
and they're going to get in.
And genuinely, a lot of people I knew
were talking about where they were going to go,
like what country they could flee to,
because there's this real sense of fear
and what could happen.
And a real, and I do believe it was founded.
So when, you know, they were widely rejected,
you know, ATC lost, you know,
it was just utter relief.
But on that day, I also got a message
wishing my daughter stillborn.
So, you know know it took its
toll but also I met some brilliant people you know there's some we kind of I wasn't really in
the Jewish community we weren't brought up with Friday night dinners or anything we were kind of
like Yom Kippur Jews and we'd like like the menorah and stuff and now I've got invites to Friday night
dinners and um you know I'm being awarded an MBE for services to Holocaust education.
And I've gone to the Holocaust Survivor Centre
and met these amazing, amazing people
who've just survived horrors you can't imagine.
And they're still smiling and they're still making jokes
and they're still offering up.
If Pasha ever moves on, they'll take me out for a
dance um so that's been lovely and you know having my children and i growing up not really knowing
where we quite fit in knowing that we're jewish but we're not really religious and how does that
really work now i know like a broader spectrum of jewish people and i can give my daughters like
a jewish identity without them feeling that they don't fit in or whatever um and they can just you know I took them to um to shul for purim which is a holiday
that's kind of like everyone dresses up like you would at Halloween um and when we took them to
shul and um what's the kids reading where they're reading some stories and saying boo and cheering
and all the rest of it and as soon as we sat down in this quiet room with about 20 kids Maeve says mummy
I want some ham and I was like Maeve Maeve in a synagogue asking for ham I was like vegan ham
we've got some vegan ham I'll give you some vegan ham just um but just you know it's just just it's
just funny I just want them to be comfortable in themselves and in that environment and being able to pick and choose in the same way I can.
So yeah, there's loads of positives.
That's a really long answer to the question.
No, no, it's perfect because I was thinking about that
because I know you've spoken a lot about the other sides of it
and I'm so sorry you had to go through people saying
such horrible, evil things,
which obviously the sole intention of people who
send messages like the one you received is to upset you that is they are trying to go directly
to the heart of you to that's the thing about social media that I really hate is when you look
through and this happens for the good stuff and the bad actually every time you look at a tweet
for that one second they they've got you.
They're in your ear.
And I think it's a really,
it's very important to give it that perspective
because even eight people saying something awful
sounds like a crowd.
Because for that second, they've been there.
If I was in front of a crowd
and there's some people loving it
and a small proportion really bored,
I probably will be able to overlook them and just look at the people having fun but if i'm reading
messages i everything comes in at the same level yeah and i can take those voices and i can amplify
them you know the the middle ground don't really message so you're only really hearing the amplified
extreme ends absolutely um but i you know one of the best people I met through this is a guy called
Imran Ahmed and he set up Centre for Countering Digital Hate and he's like a labour proper labour
man like he was um a spad for Hilary Benn um and he just does amazing amazing work he's like he's
like a scientist so the way he analyzes stuff is like, how can we fight online hate,
but not in a way that's,
I think all that kind of stuff has kind of become so partisan,
like whether it's woke, whether it's this,
whether what side you are,
but just at the heart of it,
there's social media companies
that are making loads of money
out of making everybody angry
and they're making more money out of,
you know, really vile stuff that would be
illegal to say in real life for people but because these tech companies have come through really
really quickly with loads of money and the governments haven't caught up with legislation
um and of course they've got these like huge a lot in the u.s these these lobbies that are
putting pressure on and putting all this money
into to making sure they don't get legislated for there's i'm glad that there's people like
imran that's out there that's just like speaking the middle ground just saying you know what these
like proper extremists some of them you know proper nazis or proper terrorist sympathizers
or you know promoting this kind of stuff this shouldn't be allowed and we need to do something
to stop it and we need to hold these social media companies to account um so now i'm kind of like broad a
picture trying to support the the broad brush strokes of like let's let's change something
like this isn't normal i know it exists already so we kind of got used to it and i know there's
people that are kind of hoping to stoke it and say that oh you know every opinion's allowed and
you can say whatever you like and actually let's just look at it like how we would in the real life in the
real world exactly you know if someone went to your kids notice board at school and put up a
nazi a nazi you know meeting um and encouraged all these little children to go and look at it and
yeah it's not normal and just because it's on the internet you know doesn't mean it's not normal. And just because it's on the internet, you know, doesn't mean it's okay.
Yeah, I know.
And I think that idea of going after accountability
is really wise.
And actually, I can't really think of any reason
why anybody wouldn't subscribe to everything
that that organisation is doing.
Because surely, you know, if we're talking about,
you know, with your daughters, with my children,
the world they're growing up in, a lot of the things we worry about and that kind of wild west aspect to the internet and communication it's it's definitely worth paying attention to where
that's headed and all our worries about it could actually be allayed if there's just some more
accountability yeah i mean there's always there's a line there's a line with everything you know like what if you stop this free speech then you're gonna stop this
was like well you know who's gonna choose someone has to choose and someone has to make a judgment
where the line is because there you can't just post everything you can't just say i want to
do this violent act to you i want to kill all these certain people like there is a there is a
line and we know that the line exists because it sometimes goes into legality and then people get prosecuted and it turns into real life stuff.
And just because it's a difficult topic to work out where that line is
and who gets to judge it, you know, that's why there should be weights and measures
and to be a broad group of people working on these things.
Just because it's a difficult question doesn't mean we can just say everything goes
and whatever it's doing to society and you know teenagers and all the effects
it's having that's just whatever you know there are so there are social media companies with a
lot of money that are trying to promote those ideas to stop themselves being legislated exactly
but it's it's it's not the same all through the world you know there's different states in
different countries europe's a bit better than we are potentially um and there's you know the online safety bill um that imran's been doing
and you know some people are trying to pitch it as like woke lefty so i'm the type of person
people some people think i'm a i'm a mega woke lefty progressive and some people think i'm far
right um and i just think well if there's an equal amount of people thinking that then hopefully i
am at just in the middle like i perceive myself um and because I know people who work really hard on this and I know they're not
you know extreme left and trying to shut down everything and block everybody and yeah then
that's why I support it well but then I think about you in the middle of this so when you were
saying that when you think back to sort of 2018 2019 when everything when you're in the thick of
everything and you said it does something to you physically.
So what's changed in you that means that now you feel,
do you feel more empowered now?
That means you feel like you can be proactive in this,
like your involvement with clamping down on this.
How do you keep that feeling balanced if you have to be open to it
in order to get fueled up to want to change it?
Well, I mean, the CCDH, Centre to Accounting Digital Hate,
had real practical advice on what to do with trolling.
So you can just block it.
You don't have to accept this stuff.
I wouldn't accept it in the street.
Like you say, a couple of people can affect your mood.
They can get you right before you go to bed
when you're playing with your children.
And you don't have to accept it.
And I don't have to accept it. And I don't.
I don't.
And when my first daughter came along,
I just didn't have the time to be on social media
like I did before.
And also the election had just happened
and they'd been widely rejected.
And I know that there's some brilliant people in Labour now
really trying, determined to get rid of these bad actors.
So it kind of took the pressure off um a lot um and you know for my children I want the you know there's a lot of this talk about you
know why are people scared what were you really scared of and I as part of you know I've done a
lot of charity stuff and I get the Jewish community honestly you get you put you dip one toe in and you just get 75 000 charity invitations to do all kinds of stuff
and i try to do as much as i can if you go to a jewish school which i've been to do maths games
and and stuff you know little children have to play like sleeping lions as as drills for
terrorist attacks you know they have um bulletproof glass on the windows. At most Jewish buildings,
you won't recognise those Jewish buildings when you walk past
because they can't be recognisable.
They have security outside shawls, synagogues.
You know, it's really, really normal
to have really high-end security,
and there's a whole CST, the Community Security Trust,
who provide security at another charity,
because we need it, because across the world,
you know, there's still the Pittsburgh shootings,
there's, you know, killings in France,
there are attacks.
There's one of the reasons, you know,
I campaigned against Jeremy Corbyn.
He was campaigning to have terrorists
who bombed a Jewish charity in London released from prison.
Like, these are real threats.
And, you know know while my children
are Jewish and while you know friends who want their kids to be able to go and play and have a
normal life um you know I think it's important that you have to you know stand up against this
stuff yeah I'm embarrassed to say I didn't know that about Jewish schools and sleeping lines and
bulletproof glass and all that yeah they have they have, yeah. That's outrageous. It's not normal, but within the Jewish community,
it is there normal.
Yeah.
And when...
When you say it like that, you think, oh my goodness,
you know, why would you ever put down...
Yeah, I mean, you wouldn't go to church and have, you know...
Campaigning.
Have security.
You wouldn't go to even, you know, mosques.
You know, there have been mosque attacks,
but that wouldn't be normal to think,
to have that level of security.
And CST are brilliant.
They help because in the UK,
British Jews have been so much more fortunate than Jews around Europe.
And so they train other organisations, other religions,
in this kind of security techniques as well.
So they're great.
But it's a real threat.
There is a real threat.
And when you have people undermining that and, it's just it's not it's not no it's not right especially when you think of as you said
like the the history that you grew up you know speaking about your family and you think well
I have a voice I can use it and I suppose now that you've got your two little girls you think
about what world do you want them to live in so that's yeah and then you know other parents i know choosing between kids going to school and
you know there's flare-up in israel which has nothing to do with you know a kid in london
being abused at school and the teachers kind of condoning it and often often you know this
happened um and then thinking well should i send them to jewish school but then at jewish school
they're more of a target,
and there's a little bit of security,
and it's not right, really, is it?
It's not right.
We're in an age where we're desperately trying to eradicate discrimination and prejudice
and make everyone equal, and, you know, it's not right.
I agree. Absolutely, it's not right.
And I think, I mean, that's what I was saying
when I was
sort of reading through everything you've been up to I was sort of seeing like this like it looked
to me like you were just getting like bolder and more empowered by a lot of the things you've done
it must feel pretty incredible to speak out and then actually see that see it right to the end of
it well what what was really special, I mean, I was invited,
because I got my MBA in the New Year's Honours list,
and I'm actually going in July to Windsor Castle to get it.
That's pretty soon.
I'm really excited, but I got invited.
At the Holocaust Survivor Centre, they had a cream tea,
and there were a few survivors and people in the Jewish community being awarded in the honours, and we got to go there.
And, you know, these people, what they've survived,
and how they are, they're just incredible.
And like my teeny tiny like contribution just pales in comparison.
But at that event, the chief rabbi just stood up and said some words about what it meant to the Jewish community and him to people in general for my contribution.
And I was so moved and so
touched and actually when I do charity events and go and meet Jewish people that I just get
individual stories of you helped my son with with this thing with this fight that he was having and
it was so stressful for him and and it really made a difference or you know you empowered my daughter
to stand up to something that she experienced at school it's just or you know and you know other secular jews that didn't quite know where they fit
say that oh actually you know she really like looks up to you it's just it's really lovely
and it and it has had like a personal impact on so many you know individuals and that that
really means the world because it it puts into you know it means i did something and
i stood up for something absolutely and actually i, I think the more that we sort of,
sometimes I think society is funny
because the more we encourage things of, you know,
the next generation, the youngest generations,
the more sort of binary and safe people get in their older age.
And I think that sometimes is what's happening with,
I don't know, all levels of acceptance.
We want our children to feel they can be their complete whole self,
them to be, you know, being sort of true to themselves,
feeling authentic, that word that gets used a lot.
But then we, sometimes things get very clamped down
when they step outside of the norm.
And I know that on platforms like social media platforms,
people can be very wary of being called out.
And it's almost like people just don't really want to rock the boat
with a lot of things.
Oh, yeah, it's a lot safer just to keep your head down keep your mouth shut
exactly but that's not what you would encourage for your kids is that you'd never say it's hard
because you you don't want to put them in harm's way and you don't want them to risk you know some
kids were a jewish event like you know what happens if i go for a job interview and they don't like
whatever i've posted you know you said well you've You know, you've got to be true to yourself.
You've got to know that anything you do on social media is public.
So if you can stand by it and you know that anyone can look at it
over any period of time, then, you know,
you only have to answer to yourself, really.
And if they don't like it, that's kind of their problem.
But there are so many issues with that.
And it's really hard to navigate.
And I try to, you know, you have red lines with something she can't tolerate but I think I try to
you know appreciate someone else has a different opinion on something and it doesn't mean I have
to write them off as a person and I think social media makes that harder definitely
but stepping away from that you know I see the awful things that are written about me and I think, well, that's not true.
Obviously, I don't think it's true.
So I try, you know, to take as you find with other people.
Yeah, like I say, everyone has their red lines,
but you can be a bit more generous where you might lay them
and give people the benefit of the doubt of maybe, you know,
there's a grey area or maybe they didn't quite mean what people are twisting it to or you know just just just really see with your own eyes listen with your
own ears and make up your own mind absolutely like everyone um you don't have to hate everyone
ever yeah yeah i think you're absolutely right with all that and um so obviously this is you've
been thinking about your own childhood and what elements you know you want to incorporate with
your girls do they have any similarities do think, to how you were raised?
I don't know about how I was raised.
I mean, I think my parents gave us a lot of freedom in a good way
and I think I'm trying to do that with the kids.
Just let them try stuff.
I mean, they've got two very independent girls,
especially a three-year-old.
She's so independent and I love it.
It's brilliant.
It's my favourite age, objectively, like three, four.
Because they're so bold.
They're completely unapologetically themselves.
Sometimes a bit too much,
but I'm sort of rooting for them sometimes with that too.
Yeah, I mean, it's just nice watching them grow, isn't it?
And you've got five boys and they're all so different.
And then we've just got the two and the second one comes out and it took us like an hour after she was born because Maeve's looks
like Pasha so she's got dark hair dark eyes olive skin and we saw that you know the scan before she
was born it was like oh we've got another one the same and then Noah came out and after an hour
Pasha went oh look she's blonde and it was like really and she's you know because she's covered
in everything but she's blonde hair, blue eyes, fair skin.
And they're totally different personalities.
And you just, you know, it's just a pleasure as a parent, isn't it?
To see their personalities come out and to see how they are.
Yeah, that's kind of what I got into.
I was like, oh, they're really different.
I wonder who else is out there.
Yeah.
But then I do think you're quite, I actually saw that you'd sort of basically like,
with two kids, we can fit into like a normal size car normal size high tower room I mean I mean I would I love
I do love I love kids you could just keep having them I can see why you would um but I just then
you have like a teething week and you're just like no no no I know I well to be honest I'm
when we first started talking today
I was nearly like can you just if you interview yourself and I make all the right noises because
I had such a bad night's sleep which culminated in Mickey and I were down here my heart about
half four quarter five this morning um which I didn't want to be happening so that's what time
I got up so my brain oh so annoying and you just think of
all the things you've got to do that day and how much harder everything's going to be because you've
not really slept yeah but it's so light outside as well he when I was saying it's still night time
he just wasn't really like yeah right whatever um so I wanted to ask you how because obviously your
husband has a different he came from a different country how do you incorporate his russianness well that's the
thing you say you know upbringing is from you know we're repeating but he was in soviet russia so he
was in an apartment block where there was no running water in his flat there was an outside
toilet even though it gets down to minus 40 in the winter um and his mum you know they didn't have
nappies in those days they had to make their own kind of things out of cloth and carrier bags you know so it's a
completely different experience but i'm not i'm hoping you haven't recreated this no but it makes
you realize all this all the paraphernalia you don't you don't need it that's true you can
you just get on with it you know just got them got my boob for the milk you know something a
bottle lid they'll play with if you really need it you know you can get by without all the stuff even
though our house is full of stuff um but they say no wonder noah's so happy next door after
at home she's got a bottle you buy all these stories it's like cats you buy all the cat stuff
and they're like no i will sit on the hard floor next to the soft thing you bought me um but they're
they're bilingual um so they both understand um and noah's starting to speak
russian maven's you know equally happy in russian and english and we've got ukrainians living with
us so um noah the little one also kind of understands everything in ukrainian and mave
the other day said something in ukrainian like wow they just pick it up they're like sponges at
that age um and pash speaks them in russian i speak to
them in english um so you know they've got a bit of everything um and they're getting kind of they're
starting to sing a few russian nursery rhymes with him and and now the brilliant thing is um you know
some people like you will not watch television you will not we're not like that but we can watch
you know when mave was two she was obsessed with b and you can get Bing Bunny in Russian so she can watch her cartoons and be learning a language at the same time
um and then you know when they're a bit older you can put subtitles on and then they can
you know learn as they go um so they're getting a bit of everything again you know a bit of Jewish
bit of Russian bit of English bit of Ukrainian as well mixed in that's so fab I'm actually really
jealous of I've always been thought it must be lovely to grow up bilingual actually i think that's such a gift well it's interesting you see
things i mean we just you know i've been told about you about um bilingual children their brains
do get wired slightly differently really in what way i'm not entirely sure but they generally
statistically they do better across the board in different subjects and because you think well if
we start in bilingual will they be slow in english or they but actually statistically they do better across the board in different subjects and because you think well if we start in bilingual will they be slower in english or they but actually statistically
they generally do a bit better and and what's been interesting is is seeing things like her
learning to count so you're not you're not you're never quite sure if they're just repeating words
and repeating patterns but when she was learning to count she would switch in the middle she'd be
like one two three so you can see that
she knows the position and she knows what they mean.
And it is
interesting, you know,
and again, they say the most,
I don't know, the word is like
polyglotic or whatever, the best
adults who speak most languages,
they pick and choose bits of languages
because not every language has the right
words to explain each thing.
So they'll pick bits that's easy and mix and match.
And now, you know, Maeve's three and a half,
so she was, I don't think she knew
what language she was speaking before,
but now you can see her switch from one to the other
when she's speaking to different people.
So it's kind of fascinating to watch her do that.
I love the idea of the counting in one language
switching to
another that's amazing and the idea of choosing which which words articulate best where you what
you need to say sometimes it makes you laugh at some of the things she does but um yeah it's
fascinating to watch and you get a real sense of what she's understanding and the pattern spotting
she's she's doing um yeah it's yeah it's really interesting no i think that's great
i'm just thinking it's probably a bit too late for me to start that with my kids
the extra bonus bit of like going to have to use more of their brain it's a bit like i suppose
like the cab driver is learning the knowledge that literally using more parts of their brain
probably i wonder what language they dream in i don't know
i've asked that with passion he doesn't know i think he i don't know yeah who knows it's so
magical it really is and i mean are you as a person are you someone that does like lots of
like long-term planning or are you kind of okay i can't remember what i'm doing tomorrow oh yeah
yeah um no no no and especially passion is even worse than me and i think he's had
his influences rubbed off on me like i think especially because of his life he's i mean he
started off in siberia then he went to the middle of russia they went to moscow then he ended up in
new york and then out all these opportunities ended up in la out of you know happenstance and
then in london and then he's ended up here he was supposed to be here for just you know yeah one strictly season or whatever and he's found uh found a
wife and some children um so if we don't yeah we're terrible absolutely terrible with planning
stuff um i don't think it's terrible i think it's sometimes it's quite good introduction to
parenthood actually there's so much if it doesn't work out anyway so i think it can be quite good
if you're just sort of a little bit more you react to things yeah yeah i'm sure it's got its benefits and its negatives but
um you know we're thinking you know in a couple of years we'll move out of london but
we haven't decided where you'll know when the time's right and did you ever consider
not keeping going with tv and all the things you were doing? I love it. No, I love it. And now, you know, parenting, you go to work for a rest, don't you?
It's another one of those things.
You're just in that space and that's all you have to do at that time
when you're on camera.
It's such an indulgence, isn't it?
It is.
It feels lovely when you can just focus on one thing.
Yeah, yeah, absolutely.
And you just, it does feel like a rest.
And you go home and then the kids and you put the kids to bed
and it's like, okay.
So no, I love it.
And Countdown, the schedule's so good.
And because of the pandemic and because of the way that they've just been letting me breastfeed.
So if I need breaks to pump or feed the babies or whatever, I can do that.
So I was taking Maeve up to start with and now she's at preschool,
so I take Noah up with me.
I'm really lucky that I've been able to keep doing that
and she's going to turn two in November
and I'm hoping to stop and start ditching her
and get her off to preschool,
get her off the boob,
get my boobs back.
So you are a planner after all.
Well, that, you know.
When the second one was born, Maeve wasn't quite two and I wanted to feed her till I was two. I didn't want a planner after all. Well, that, you know, when the second one was born,
Maeve wasn't quite two
and I wanted to feed her
until I was two.
I didn't want to kick her off
when the baby came.
So I had two once
for two or three months
and I was like, you know,
I'm ready now.
It's been three and a half years
of breastfeeding
and I'm on the countdown.
More days than one.
Yeah, I think,
well, I don't know about you,
but when I stopped feeding my
babies I always felt like I got a bit of my brain back actually I'm hoping for that
just to get your body back and the one well she's one and a half and she just
she's just happy to get my nipples out wherever we are at the moment I think it's just a comfort
thing like yeah so I'm quite looking forward to just having them away. Well, I'm glad Countdown have been so hospitable.
It's kind of the way you imagine it working.
No, it's been good.
Yeah.
It's been good, especially the first one
because of the pandemic and I was around,
didn't have anywhere to go,
so she wouldn't take a bottle and we didn't force it.
So she just followed me around.
And thankfully the second one takes a bottle
so you can pump and run.
Yeah, a bit of flexibility.
There you go.
Oh, it's so nice to talk to you, Rachel.
Thank you for doing the pod. I had to wait a lot basically this way kept doing
the podcast for a few years just so you get really entrenched in all the plates running
lovely and i still need all your advice on child care we can pretend we're talking for a bit longer
if you want because now it's really happy next door well it's all quiet just so much you just
stay here my god yeah there's a couple of sofas. Let's just have a quick nap.
So peaceful.
We both won't tell anybody.
It suits me perfectly.
What a lovely woman.
Thank you, Rachel Riley.
So gorgeous to sit down and chat
and hear about everything, actually actually and how her life has shifted
and changed and I think sometimes that bravery and that sort of that sense of wanting to do what's
right I think it can be a bit strengthened when you're a parent actually because you feel a bit
of a legacy about the next generation maybe that also comes with getting older I don't know I've
started to think more about that actually the older I get and I think also just thinking about will I be the person to call out things if I feel like there's
something going wrong I do think it takes guts I like to think I'd always be able to do it but
the truth is I think sometimes I can be a bit a bit meek really um something I'm working on I think
I think it's really good to be able to call stuff out and be unapologetic about it I think it's a good thing so yes I can learn from that for sure and uh yeah just a complete
pleasure to chat so thank you to Rachel I would say as well poor Rachel when she got to my house
she just hurt herself she like hit her eye on the corner of her boot and she still came over even
though she was obviously in a little bit of pain.
Nothing some frozen peas couldn't solve.
But thank you to Rachel for persevering even though she's probably thinking I just kind of want to lie down for a little minute.
You know, sometimes these things happen.
I've got distracted.
I've just noticed my cat is lying in such a comfy way.
I want to be a cat.
Cats have quite a nice life, don't they?
Just mooching around, snuggling, sleeping, exploring, eating a little bit, exploring some more.
They're very low maintenance as well. Yeah, be a cat. That's my take on that. Anyway, thank you so much to Rachel. Thank you to everybody for listening. next week back with another brilliant guest i'm so
happy with this series i know it's um probably something i say every time but it's just been
really lovely putting it together and another wonderful array for you so yeah where to next
you'll have to come back next week and find out i never like telling you it's going to be just in
case something goes a bit wonky and i have to swap it. That would look unprofessional. That's the last thing I want. Anyway, in the
meantime, I hope you're having a nice chill time, whatever you're up to. I hope you've managed to
have a little bit of a break during the summer holidays. Or maybe if you don't have kids or your
kids are grown up, you're lucky enough to not be beholden to the actual school summer holidays.
Wow, I have got such a long way to go with that I'm sure I've mentioned it
before but my youngest is about to start reception so I'm still in it for the long haul but one can
dream anyway lots of love see you next week thanks bye Thank you. I'm going to go. Embrace it. Journey starts when you say so. If you've got five minutes or 50, Peloton Tread has workouts you can work in.
Or bring your classes with you for outdoor runs, walks, and hikes, led by expert instructors on the Peloton app.
Call yourself a runner.
Peloton all-access membership separate.
Learn more at onepeloton.ca slash running.