IS DETTY DECEMBER A VIBE… OR A PROBLEM? | TDA - E863
Description
Today’s show kicks off with a conversation about Korean skincare before moving into a lively Friday intro and a shout out to everyone from the previous night’s event. The team also celebrate the official announcement of The Rotation presenters, breaking down the lineup and the reactions coming in from the community.
Headlines open with a shocking NHS report showing elderly patients left in corridor care at Queen’s Hospital in East London. The team unpack why the NHS situation feels like a developing country and whether the government is quietly pushing people toward private healthcare. They then move on to Dulwich College breaking its silence about allegations of Nigel Farage’s racist behaviour as a student, and a major new investment to create 50,000 SEN school places across England.
The Topic of the Day is a full cultural deep dive into Dettie December. The team explore its origins, the diaspora’s connection to Ghana and Nigeria, the impact of the Year of Return, and how the season has grown into a global cultural moment. Gina gives a personal account of why she loves Dettie December, the freedom it brings, the networking opportunities, and the undeniable joy of being surrounded by Black culture at scale.
The discussion gets real about the downsides too.
They tackle issues like:
• price hikes that impact local communities
• Ghana’s slow service culture and why visitors have to adjust
• cultural misunderstandings, especially from American tourists
• safety differences between Ghana and Nigeria
• whether tourists are exploiting local labour
• and the role of government corruption in preventing real infrastructure improvements
The team debate whether people should experience more than just the nightlife, how diaspora expectations clash with local norms, and why the conversation around development must start with the people, not Western standards.
A rich, insightful and often hilarious episode that blends culture, travel, diaspora identity and the realities of West African life during the biggest season of the year.
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