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In the MEANtime

In the MEANtime

By: Lauren Siegel Rami Shamseen Chen Yang Ryan Yung Wenjie Cai
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Welcome to In the MEANtime, a podcast where academic research becomes accessible, engaging, and relevant. Based in Greenwich, home of Greenwich Mean Time, we dive into the exciting projects shaping our world, offering a glimpse into the "meantime" of academic exploration. Each episode brings complex ideas down to earth, spotlighting real-world impacts and insights from leading researchers. Whether you're a researcher, student, professional, or just curious, In the MEANtime delivers meaningful conversations that bridge academia and everyday understanding.Lauren Siegel, Rami Shamseen, Chen Yang, Ryan Yung, Wenjie Cai Social Sciences
Episodes
  • S3Ep4:When Events Speak: Exploring the Messages Behind the Show
    Jun 11 2026

    In this episode, hosts Dr. Lauren Siegel and Dr. Ram Shamseen interview Dr. Pamela Zigomo about critical event theory, which examines underlying power relationships in event spaces and how event design can reproduce or disrupt inequalities. Zigomo discusses “entertainization,” describing how charities use popular entertainment to embed social messages, citing Global Citizen Festival’s model of requiring advocacy actions for access. She critiques past cause-related mega-events like Live Aid and Human Rights Now, noting research on limited long-term impact, Western-centric definitions of “top-selling” artists that excluded African performers, and “poverty porn” imagery that left audiences with distorted perceptions of the Global South. She previews her forthcoming book on third-sector event design beyond fundraising and shares post-colonial research on Southern African polo events and fan-community dynamics in fantasy football (FPL), highlighting recurring cycles of reproduced power structures.

    00:30 Meet the Hosts

    01:17 Critical Event Studies

    03:30 Global Citizen Example

    05:34 Entertainization Explained

    09:57 New Book on Third Sector

    11:42 Charity Events Beyond Fundraising

    14:39 Live Aid Critique and Poverty Porn

    19:17 Participation and Representation

    22:07 Polo Events and Postcolonial Mimicry

    28:33 Fantasy Football Fan Communities

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    35 mins
  • S3Ep3:The Human Touch: Rethinking Tech in Hospitality Workplaces
    Apr 30 2026

    In this episode, host Dr. Lauren Siegel, joined by Dr. Rami Shamseen, interviews Dr. Agnieszka Rydzik (University of Lincoln) about her research on how increasing use of technology in hospitality affects workers’ experiences, especially since the pandemic accelerated tools like QR-code ordering and self-service systems. Drawing on dozens of interviews with workers and industry stakeholders, she discusses how technology can intensify work, reduce staffing, create new pressures when systems fail, and shift customer frustration onto employees, often without enough training. Agnieszka also explores how these changes can reduce meaningful human interaction with customers, coworkers, and suppliers, contributing to disconnection and stress, while affecting workers differently by role and workplace.

    01:25 Pandemic Tech Acceleration

    03:57 Defining The Research Focus

    04:35 Peak Times Staffing Pressures

    08:09 Training And Tech Troubles

    09:48 Why Hospitality Matters

    12:03 Tech Reduces Human Connection

    14:05 Invisible Workplace Tech Shifts

    17:00 Gen Z Tech Reality

    17:34 Human Connection Over Apps

    18:01 Worker Centric Tech Rethink

    18:29 Hospitality Futures Tool

    20:39 Bartender Audio Narrative

    22:19 Dehumanization and Manners

    29:01 Guidelines for Better Practice

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    32 mins
  • S3Ep2:Exploring the Unseen: Queer Spaces, Death Rituals, and Storytelling with Dr. Ian R. Lamond
    Apr 9 2026

    In this episode, hosts Dr Lauren Siegel and Dr Wenjie Cai welcome visiting researcher Dr Ian R. Lamond (University of Greenwich, March 2026) to discuss their work on “death spaces,” storytelling, and rituals. Ian describes their book Death and Events and autoethnographic reflections from death-industry practitioners and death scholars, sparked by a case where tourists photographed an Indian funeral. Ian shares their move into celebrancy—focused on LGBTQIA+ ceremonies, gender-affirming renamings, themed weddings/funerals, and non-human companion rituals—and links this to narrative, performance, and research. Ian shares an impactful experience from attending the São Paulo Pride event. connecting this to the need for ongoing queer resistance and legacy. They also outlines creating Leeds rainbow plaques and trails marking queer history, and defines events as ruptures that reveal power and enable change.

    02:40 Studying Death Stories

    04:19 Tourists at Funeral

    06:06 Death Industry Insights

    07:06 Celebrancy New Career

    14:03 Rituals and Liminality

    16:53 Living Funerals Trend

    17:43 Sao Paulo Pride Story

    22:09 Queer Legacy Projects

    28:01 Critical Event Studies

    32:10 Comedy and Farewell



    Ian's edited book: Death and Events

    Upcoming: International Critical Autoethnographic Perspectives on Death

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    33 mins
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