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Prison is one of the most hidden institutions in the UK, which means our opinions are often built from cinema scenes rather than social reality. We sit down with Andy West to talk about what happens when you bring big questions about freedom, identity, shame, and responsibility into a place designed for control.
We explore Andy’s journey from HMP Belmarsh and other London prisons to therapeutic settings like HMP Grendon, and why he keeps returning to the classroom even when the wider system is chaotic and disorganised. He explains why he holds a modest hope for prison education: not a neat ladder of rehabilitation, but a chance for someone to be “somewhere else” for a couple of hours. That shift matters because prison so often forces people to live under the weight of a single past moment, while a good lesson insists on possibility.
Andy also takes us behind the scenes of adapting his memoir The Life Inside into the BBC series Waiting for the Out. As executive producer, he describes the push and pull between protecting the “realness” of prison life and letting a story take on its own life through casting, scripts, and performance. That leads to a bigger question about accountability in the criminal justice system: how can prisons be held to account when the public rarely sees them, and when journalists and ordinary citizens struggle to get inside?
We talk about differences between men’s and women’s prisons, the role of autonomy, the limits of reform conversations, and why “trauma-informed” language can ring hollow when prison itself can be a trauma. If you care about prison reform, decarceration, rehabilitation, and honest storytelling about UK prisons, this one will stay with you. Subscribe, share with someone who thinks they “know” what prison is like, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway.
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By Rebel Justice - The View MagazineSend us Fan Mail
Prison is one of the most hidden institutions in the UK, which means our opinions are often built from cinema scenes rather than social reality. We sit down with Andy West to talk about what happens when you bring big questions about freedom, identity, shame, and responsibility into a place designed for control.
We explore Andy’s journey from HMP Belmarsh and other London prisons to therapeutic settings like HMP Grendon, and why he keeps returning to the classroom even when the wider system is chaotic and disorganised. He explains why he holds a modest hope for prison education: not a neat ladder of rehabilitation, but a chance for someone to be “somewhere else” for a couple of hours. That shift matters because prison so often forces people to live under the weight of a single past moment, while a good lesson insists on possibility.
Andy also takes us behind the scenes of adapting his memoir The Life Inside into the BBC series Waiting for the Out. As executive producer, he describes the push and pull between protecting the “realness” of prison life and letting a story take on its own life through casting, scripts, and performance. That leads to a bigger question about accountability in the criminal justice system: how can prisons be held to account when the public rarely sees them, and when journalists and ordinary citizens struggle to get inside?
We talk about differences between men’s and women’s prisons, the role of autonomy, the limits of reform conversations, and why “trauma-informed” language can ring hollow when prison itself can be a trauma. If you care about prison reform, decarceration, rehabilitation, and honest storytelling about UK prisons, this one will stay with you. Subscribe, share with someone who thinks they “know” what prison is like, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway.
Support the show
For more unmissable content from The View sign up here