Show Us Your Bits cover art

Show Us Your Bits

Show Us Your Bits

By: Alice Cripps and Josie Lloyd
Listen for free

Summary

Curious magpies Alice Rivers Cripps and Josie Lloyd uncover the personal stories behind everyday and extraordinary pieces of jewellery. Alice is the founder and Creative Director of Posh Totty Designs and Josie is an author and lover of stories, so between them they share their tales of their sparkly bits and their special guests tell all about what's in their jewellery boxes. This is a weekly natter with interesting guests about all things bling with a touch of comedy and heart. This season we have everything from meaningful momentoes, cheap and cheerful charms to high-end designer bling. Here are the stories behind the jewels.


Please listen and like and share with your friends. www.poshtottydesigns.com/blog Instagram: @showusyourbitspodcast @poshtottydesigns

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Alice Cripps and Josie Lloyd
Art Personal Development Personal Success Social Sciences
Episodes
  • The Beat Goes On - With Jed Novick
    May 15 2026

    This week on Show Us Your Bits, hosts Alice Rivers Cripps and Josie Lloyd are deep in the Brighton Festival - and in the spirit of May Madness, they have brought on one of Brighton's most distinctive characters to help make sense of it all. Their guest is Jed Novick, veteran journalist, former lecturer at Brighton University and the founder of a brand new Brighton arts and culture magazine called The Beat. Jed started his career as a sports feature writer on The Times after journalism college in 1986, before landing what he calls the best job of his life at The Independent in its earliest days - where he became quietly famous for writing invented TV listings, including entirely made-up soap opera storylines that attracted boxes of letters from readers suggesting plot ideas for characters who didn't exist. He later worked at The Guardian and set up several magazines before moving into lecturing, where he taught journalism at Brighton University until the course's shift away from print made him feel, as he puts it, like a stegosaurus. Taking voluntary redundancy, he has marked the start of his new chapter by launching The Beat - a 48-page print magazine curating the best of Brighton's arts, music, food, and culture scene, starting with a festival special featuring a double-page spread on the band Angine de Poitrine and coverage of The Great Escape music festival. The Beat is available via subscription through its Instagram page @thebrightonbeat_

    As for his bits, Jed is one of the most jewellery-laden guests the show has ever had, wearing more rings than fingers - each one a story. A twisted spoon ring given by a friend for his sixtieth birthday; a ring from the National Jewish Museum in Amsterdam; a huge Moroccan silver ring spanning knuckle to knuckle; a black onyx ring bought in Kathmandu during four years of travelling that began when the Berlin Wall fell in 1989; a tiger's eye ring made from two stones he quietly pocketed from his mother-in-law's broken necklace; a matching ring made by the jeweller landlady of his local pub The Eddy in West Hill for Gilly's 60th birthday and a ring he cast himself in a cuttlefish casting course at the Phoenix Art Centre in Brighton - a gift for his wife Gilly Smith (food writer and host of the Cooking The Books podcast and also a previous guest on the podcast). He also wears a leather necklace holding a single surviving batik cow-bone bead given to him by a Dean Moriarty-type figure he met in Tokyo, a keepsake from his Jack Kerouac-inspired years on the road. As for suits, Jed traces his love of tailoring straight back to punk - both, he says, are about refusing to be generic.


    The episode also touches on his marriage to Gilly: the two eloped on April Fool's Day, told no one, then announced it at a party that evening. He grew up in Hackney, moved to Brighton in 1995 after the arrival of their first child, and once bought a house in the Sussex countryside purely because his wife sent him a photo of its pond.


    Alice and Josie close the episode buzzing about The Beat and the Brighton Festival, with Josie heading off to a wedding at Dreamland in Margate followed by the Cannes Film Festival to promote The Bright Side Running Club.


    Topics Covered


    The Brighton Festival and Brighton May Madness

    Artists' Open Houses in Brighton

    Jed Novick's career: The Times, The Independent, The Guardian

    The Beat magazine -- Brighton's new arts and culture print magazine

    The Great Escape music festival and Angine de Poitrine

    Inventing TV listings and soap opera storylines at The Independent

    Lecturing at Brighton University

    Jed's ring collection and the stories behind each one

    The National Jewish Museum in Amsterdam

    Travelling from Berlin to Kathmandu after the fall of the Berlin Wall

    Jack Kerouac and the On the Road years

    Batik bone necklace from Kenya via Tokyo

    Punk fashion vs bespoke suits

    Eloping on April Fool's Day

    Josie heading to Cannes for The Bright Side Running Club

    Season 10 of Show Us Your Bits



    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Show More Show Less
    33 mins
  • We're back
    May 8 2026

    Welcome to Season 10 of Show Us Your Bits -- and what a milestone it is. In this opening episode, hosts Alice Rivers Cripps and Josie Lloyd reunite after the summer break to catch up on everything that happened while they were apart, before teasing an exciting new season of guests.


    Alice shares the extraordinary story of a three-day charity walk across the Sierra Nevada in southern Spain, organised to raise funds for Leo's Angels -- a charity set up by her friend Emma after the tragic death of her 11-year-old son Leo from an epileptic fit. Twenty-three female founders walked more than 60 kilometres together through the mountains, raising over £23,000. The walk was not without drama: the group survived a terrifying encounter with a massive swarm of angry bees that had been smoked out of their hive, forcing the women -- including one member with a severe bee allergy -- to silently wade through a river bed surrounded by thousands of bees for two kilometres. Alice came home buzzing with energy and renewed motivation for life and business.


    Josie, meanwhile, had been travelling in Vietnam. The trip took in Ho Chi Minh City, the island of Phu Quoc, Ninh Binh's stunning inland waterways, the ghost-town tourist developments around Ha Long Bay, and the vibrant old quarter of Hanoi. Josie also did a Vietnamese cookery course, visited a Michelin-starred pho restaurant and came home via a stopover in the futuristic city of Shenzhen. Back in the UK, she celebrated her husband Emlyn's birthday with a full Beatles tourist experience in Liverpool.


    On the business front, Alice has been appearing on QVC to sell her Posh Totty Designs jewellery collection and is growing increasingly comfortable in front of the cameras. Josie is heading to Cannes to promote her film The Bright Side Running Club.


    The episode closes with both hosts looking ahead to a packed Season 10 guest line up, including several of the female founders from Alice's charity walk.


    Topics Covered


    - Leo's Angels charity and the story behind it

    - The Sierra Nevada 60km charity walk for epilepsy research

    - The bee swarm survival story

    - Travel in Vietnam: Ho Chi Minh City, Phu Quoc, Ninh Binh, Ha Long Bay, Hanoi

    - Vietnamese food and the Michelin-starred pho restaurant

    - Shenzhen airport and modern China

    - Liverpool and the Beatles tourist trail

    - Selling jewellery on QVC

    - The Bright Side Running Club film at Cannes

    - Preview of Season 10 guests



    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Show More Show Less
    16 mins
  • The Gin Lady - with Tina from Warners Gin
    Mar 20 2026

    Co-founder and CEO of Warners Gin Distillery, Tina Warner-Keogh started off with a mission in 2012 to save the world from mediocre gin. From a farming family, she used her gut as her guide and nature as her inspiration to diversify her husband Tom’s family farm, installing a still and growing botanicals. Tina tells the story of starting a business from scratch to pioneering the world’s first rhubarb gin. From a patriarchal family, she’s had to grow in courage and belief, steering her business through Covid and the cost of living crisis to the success it is today. Sustainability is absolutely at the heart of what she does and her mission is to the world’s leading nature-driven drinks business. She brings some china pea pods, as she’s nicknamed ‘Tina Pod’ and is very close to her Mum. She also brings some colourful ‘wings’ beaded earrings from Tanzania, which commemorate her epic climb up Kilimanjaro as well as a framed picture from her brother with a very special meaning. She says that her six minute diary helps her process her emotions and makes her focus on gratitude every day and that her dogs keep her grounded and happy. Find Warners gin in good clubs, bars and restaurants, as well as supermarkets near you.



    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 6 mins
adbl_web_anon_alc_button_suppression_c
No reviews yet