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By Mike Dicks
Hosted on Acast. See
... moreThe podcast currently has 22 episodes available.
Hello and welcome to Mike Reads Wikipedia. I’m Mike Dicks, your host. Traditionally, on this podcast, I read a random Wikipedia page—hence “Mike Reads Wikipedia”—but recently, I’ve been experimenting with feeding Wikipedia articles into ChatGPT, transforming them into scripts, and then adding my own touches before reading them out. As much as I like the idea of a podcast titled “Mike Gets ChatGPT to Read Wikipedia, Mangle it into a Script that I Edit and Read to You” it might be a bit of a mouthful so, I’m considering renaming it something snappier like “Mike Reads Something Out Loud” or just “Mike Reads Something.” We’ll see how that pans out.
Today’s episode dives into The Life in the UK Test—a test that anyone wishing to settle in the UK and become a citizen must pass. It’s designed to assess knowledge of British history, culture, and institutions through a series of multiple-choice questions.
So, I’m going to throw out a few questions to test your knowledge. Feel free to pause between each question but don’t look up the answers. If you can't answer at least 4 out of 5 correctly without Googling, I might just have to ask you to leave the UK:
Question One: When was the Statute of Rith Luhn enacted?
Question Two: What was the Heptarchy in early English history?
Question Three: Who appoints the Archbishop of Canterbury?
Question Four: How many people were counted in the UK's first census in 1801?
And Question Five: What did Richard Arkwright invent in 1769?
How would you fare with these? I’ll give you the answers at the end of this podcast, so stay tuned to find out if your UK residency is in jeopardy—don't worry, I can’t really deport you!
Last week, a friend of mine took the Life in the UK Test and she failed. Now, she must retake it every seven days, paying £50 each time, until she passes. If she fails to do so, she risks not being allowed to live and work here in the UK. This process made me think about the test and the questions it asks. As a middle-aged British man, I found many of the questions quite challenging without referring to Wikipedia.
I’ve been helping my friend revise, and the more I investigate, the more I question the purpose and practicality of this test. Why does it focus so heavily on obscure history and trivia? Is it genuinely useful for those trying to integrate into British life, or is it merely a bureaucratic hurdle to please politicians who enjoy creating barriers for those wanting to join British society?
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Britain is in the middle of a General Election, one that promises big change after a long period of austerity, war and privation the nation is ready for a change. It's June 2024 but Mike takes a look back at the Labour Manifesto from 1945 - the election that created the NHS, Free Secondary Education, Nationalised transport, power and industry, the Welfare State and the United Nations. It's not quite a Wikipedia page this episode, it's the original document and it's contents resonate today as much as they did back then.
Read the original document here:
http://www.labour-party.org.uk/manifestos/1945/1945-labour-manifesto.shtml
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As it's Eurovision day (well it was when I recorded this) I thought I'd read about it on Wikipedia and I don't see why you shouldn't have to listen along with me.
You van read the article yourself here EUROVISION
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This episode was recorded on election day (6/2021) and deals with a character who is standing for the Mayor of London, Count Binface - the article surprised me when I learnt that Binface was previously a version of Lord Buckethead and had to change due to a copyright dispute - it is, asmum always says, a bad day when you don't learn something
Read along HERE and HERETOO
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In a vain attempt to pretend this podcast has any listeners I suggest that iepisode's subject was suggested by a listener, called Z (you don't know him, he lives in another town) Anyway, welcome to the Wikipedia page about Jesus's foreskin(s) and how it ended up as the rings of Saturn
Feel free to read along HERE
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Amongst the many images I create and call 'art' are a series that I call "The Towers of Brighton and Hove and the most popular of those is loosely based on The Brighton Palace Pier, soo today I read the Wikipedia article about Brighton's most famous ico.
You can read along here
And look at my version of the pier here
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Recently I've looking back over some of my old projects, the ones I start and never complete and I came across an idea I had to do a book about 3 rubber ducks lost at sea. The idea was inspired by a real story that involved over 28000 bath toys being set free in the ocean that were tracked by scientists and I thought I would find the Wikipedia article about the inspirational event - it's entitled Friendly Floatees and you can read along here
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The podcast currently has 22 episodes available.