
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


To close the first session of this year’s BoF VOICES on The Wider World, we wanted a voice that could cut through the noise and offer a clear, powerful call to action for human unity at a time when everything feels like it's breaking down. Few artists are better positioned to do that than Riz Ahmed.
An Oscar and Emmy-winning actor, producer and musician, Riz has built a career at the intersection of culture, politics and humanity — from Sound of Metal to The Night Of, and through music and activism that challenge how stories are told, and who gets to tell them.
Drawing on his upcoming adaptation of Hamlet, set in contemporary London, he argues that one of the most famous speeches in history — “to be or not to be” — has been misunderstood, de-radicalised and stripped of its original power. For Riz, Hamlet is not about despair or inaction. It’s about resistance, moral reckoning, and the fear that stops us from standing up when injustice feels overwhelming.
This is a talk about grief, complicity and courage. About why stories endure. And about what it means to take responsibility — even when the cost feels high.
Key Insights:
Additional Resources:
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
By The Business of Fashion4.4
555555 ratings
To close the first session of this year’s BoF VOICES on The Wider World, we wanted a voice that could cut through the noise and offer a clear, powerful call to action for human unity at a time when everything feels like it's breaking down. Few artists are better positioned to do that than Riz Ahmed.
An Oscar and Emmy-winning actor, producer and musician, Riz has built a career at the intersection of culture, politics and humanity — from Sound of Metal to The Night Of, and through music and activism that challenge how stories are told, and who gets to tell them.
Drawing on his upcoming adaptation of Hamlet, set in contemporary London, he argues that one of the most famous speeches in history — “to be or not to be” — has been misunderstood, de-radicalised and stripped of its original power. For Riz, Hamlet is not about despair or inaction. It’s about resistance, moral reckoning, and the fear that stops us from standing up when injustice feels overwhelming.
This is a talk about grief, complicity and courage. About why stories endure. And about what it means to take responsibility — even when the cost feels high.
Key Insights:
Additional Resources:
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

256 Listeners

2,856 Listeners

1,508 Listeners

276 Listeners

1,976 Listeners

701 Listeners

10 Listeners

1,074 Listeners

99 Listeners

0 Listeners

5 Listeners

45 Listeners

233 Listeners

262 Listeners

52 Listeners

619 Listeners