Posts Tagged ‘health’

John Ryan Scoops Film Award

Friday, October 28th, 2011 by andy

Now it is official, The Beyond Prison film – Bringing the outside in – was highly commended at the Scottish Mental Health and Arts Film Festival 2011 and won the Best Short Documentary awards.

The statement released by Beyond Prison project manager read “Thanks to all that worked on the initial project for the super effort and all of those currently working on the legacy of Bringing the Outside In.

The film can be watched here:

www.beyondprison.org.uk

The actual awards is on display at the reception area at Lumiere Court from today to Friday 28th of October, come check it out and grab some Scottish toffee sweets.

Kindest Regards

Fabio Gomes
Manager
Beyond Prison Services”

Comic Voice Management comedian John Ryan, whose role has been instrumental throughout the project was ‘made up’ following the news of the prestigious award.

To learn more about John Ryan’s mental health shows and projects, please contact us here.

Dear all,

Now it is official, The Beyond Prison film – Bringing the outside in – was highly commended at the Scottish Mental Health and Arts Film Festival 2011 and won the Best Short Documentary awards.

Thanks to all that worked on the initial project for the super effort and all of those currently working on the legacy of Bringing the Outside In.

The film can be watched here:

www.beyondprison.org.uk

The actual awards is on display at the reception area at Lumiere Court from today to Friday 28

th of October, come check it out and grab some Scottish toffee sweets.

Kindest  Regards

Fabio Gomes

Manager

Beyond Prison Services -

Award Winning Comedian John Ryan Discusses Mental Health

Tuesday, August 9th, 2011 by andy

John Ryan’s DVD recording of the ‘Beyond Prison- Bringing  the outside in’ comedy  project has just won an award from the Scottish Mental Health Arts Film Festival in the Best Short Documentary Category 2011.  Whilst  ITV’s ‘show me the funny’ puts acts into controlled environments with disciplined audiences at night time, John Ryan wrote and performed his show in front of prisoners predominantly serving Life sentences in a women’s Prison. Add to that the fact that the subject matter was about Mental Health and Equality issues and here’s a man that will really SHOW YOU THE FUNNY.  The project was funded by the Home Office via a south London Charity called The Southside Partnership. John carried out research via workshops with various prison inmates to find out their experiences of Mental health and diversity issues within the prison service. The resulting show was filmed by Insidejob productions in conjunction with the inhouse media team at Downview Prison surrey. The project also won a Best of Health Awards 2010 in Mental Health and Well Being for the NHS. The DVD is now being circulated across the prison service for use in discussion groups.

TAKE ME BACK TO JOHN RYAN’S PAGE ON COMICVOICE.COM

John Ryan: Comedy, rugby and men’s health!

Wednesday, January 5th, 2011 by andy

IF laughter is the best medicine, a new comedy night in Wigan could be just the tonic!

Organisers are hoping a mix of comedy and rugby league will ensure the borough’s blokes start thinking and talking about that most taboo of subjects…..their own health.

Top comedian John Ryan will poke some good natured fun at men’s attitude – or lack of it – to exercise….why blokes hate going to the doctors and why they simply can’t say what they feel.

They’ll also be able to meet Wigan Warriors players Pat Richards and Sean O’Loughlin and have their picture taken next to the Super League trophy.

Award winning comic John has performed in prisons, army bases, football clubs and art centres.

Mr Ryan said: “If I can people to laugh, I can get people to listen. It will be a great night of comedy, not preachy, just a laugh with a bit of a health message.”

During the night leaflets on everything from checking for testicular cancer to gym membership will be handed out to encourage men to think more seriously about their own health.

Organiser Jane Hynes is manager of the NHS-commissioned Community Weight Management service in Wigan. She said: “The night has been organised in response to men’s well-documented aversion to taking their health seriously.

“Making light of something can make it easier to talk about and hopefully the night will encourage men to take an interest in their own health and well-being.
“If we can make them laugh maybe we can break down some misconceptions such as ‘avoiding visiting the doctor makes you more manly’.
“Men need to take their health more seriously.”

Talkin’ Bol***ks has been organised by Wigan Leisure and Culture Trust’s Active Living Team in partnership with Age UK, NHS Ashton, Leigh and Wigan and Wigan Warriors to highlight some startling statistics.

In the UK life expectancy for men is 77.4 years compared to 81.6 years for women.

Middle aged men are twice as likely as women to have diabetes and twice as likely not to know they have it!

While 21 per cent of men die between the ages of 15 and 64 compared to just 12 per cent of women.

Roger Jones, national co-ordinator for Fit as a Fiddle Age UK, said: “This is part of our Fit as a Fiddle older men’s project which aims at getting the over 50s man healthy and active by providing activities which are fun and healthy but also have a strong social  base which encourages men to work together and support each other.”

Talkin’ Bol***ks is being held at the DW Stadium on Thursday 27 January starting at 7pm.

For tickets call  01942 488 481. To find out more visit www.activeliving.org.uk

Visit John Ryan’s Official Comic Voice Management Page

NHS Mental Health and Wellbeing Award Winner John Ryan

Tuesday, November 23rd, 2010 by andy

John Ryan - Award WinnerThe Health and Social care Awards are an annual celebration of the innovative and inspirational achievements of teams and individuals working in the south east region. They are a great way to showcase the very best of what the NHS  does highlighting best practice on a national stage and inspiring others by showing how we are bringing the Healthier people, excellent care vision to life.

The Best of Health Awards 2010 in Mental Health and Well Being for the NHS – South East – was awarded to the BEYOND PRISON project organized by the Southside Partnership. The show and DVD was written and performed by John Ryan. The Project is now a finalist for the National NHS Best of Health Awards 2010. It is also a nominee for the Health Service Journal Awards in November.

Last week John Ryan’s other mental health based comedy project ‘Cracking Up’ received a commendation as a runner up at the Royal Society for Public Health Awards in London.

John Ryan’s skills in Mental health understanding and subsequent educational performances are proving a great success so to make your own enquiry: please contact us here.

John Ryan on Wayne Rooney’s Mental Health

Tuesday, October 19th, 2010 by andy

NEWS RELEASE: Wayne Rooney’s world has been thrown into chaos because of revelations about his private life, an ankle injury, becoming a dad and carrying the weight of a nations expectations through the world cup. His future is in turmoil and his life is microscopically analysed the world over.

How do we expect a young man to react to such tremendous pressure. Will he succumb to the pressure in the way that is increasingly becoming the norm for a man of his age? Suicide is now the main cause of death for his age group.

Mental Health is no laughing matter unless it is delicately handled and the public arer made more aware of the realities, possibilities and pitfalls that sufferers and non-sufferers face.

Discuss this topical story with an understanding of mental health brought forward by John Ryan.

George Michael’s Mental Anguish Discussed by John Ryan

Tuesday, September 7th, 2010 by andy

George Michael’s Mental Anguish Discussed by John Ryan

So, George Michael received an 8 week sentence. We can joke about him singing ‘Freedom’ or ‘Lets go Outside’ but let’s face it he has lost his liberty and if he is lucky might get to go outside for short periods when he isn’t on a lock down. How will prison affect his mental health? The reality is that even with the right support he will have a tough time coping with being away from family, friends and the comforts of home. Anxiety and depression are a prisoner’s bedmates and the long term effects are the sort of things that Comedian john Ryan talks about in his shows ‘Cracking Up’ and ‘Beyond Prison’.

Invite John Ryan to discuss this issue by contacting:

Andrew Dingley at Comic Voice Management

andrew@hahaheehee.com | 0845 459 56 56 ext.227

JOHN RYAN

“Upbeat, interesting and unique” ITV

“A five star performer” LBC Radio

Edinburgh Highlight award winner

The irresistibly amiable John Ryan uses his acerbic wit and seemingly encyclopaedic knowledge of the world around him to keep any audience on their toes. His East End Irish upbringing gives him the rare ability to connect with people from diverse backgrounds.

John Ryan – Men’s Health Event – Operation Checkmate

Thursday, July 29th, 2010 by andy

john ryan Plymouth men's health eventOPERATION CHECKMATE – SATURDAY 19 JUNE 2010
MEN’S HEALTH EVENT – PLYMOUTH NHS

“John Ryan comedian and Master of Ceremonies for the day drew large crowds where members of the public not only benefitted from a good laugh but gained valuable information as well. The day was a great success thanks to John and it is true that laughter is the best medicine!

Over 100 men had health MOT’s (30% of which were referred to other services). 70 received stop smoking advice, over 80 were given skin cancer awareness information and 75 new blood donors were registered.
500 pedometers and water bottles were distributed, in fact we ran out such was their popularity!

The events focus was on getting men more active. Over 100 took a rowing challenge, over 200 took football and bike challenges. Top scorers got some great prizes including the best sports quiz team.”

Community Public Health Practitioner, Public Health Development Unit

A word from John himself: “The day started out with me avoiding the full English breakfast at the hotel. I felt a bit guilty bulking up on the calories before talking to a crowd about their health. However I got as far as the muesli when the smell of the bacon wafted over. The waitress assured me that it was grilled so I figured it was healthy. Plymouth is a lively town and there was a good crowd many of whom remembered me from last year. The brief was straightforward, we needed to encourage the public to take up some of the many opportunities for health checks, and tips for a healthier lifestyle that were littered around the place. This they did in very ‘healthy’ numbers. The south west has the highest rates of skin cancer in the UK so there was plenty of opportunities to mention the free sun cream and other preventative measures available. The highlight of the day was being able to offer free condoms with my advice to “keep it zipped up and you wont need these’. All in all another great day and I even managed to avoid the chips with my grilled meat and salad (aka a kebab).  Roll on next year.”

John Ryan – Can Mental Health Make Good Comedy?

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010 by andy

The Guardian Reviews: James Anthony – 21.04.10

Mental Health Congress

It’s not the done thing to laugh at mental health issues. Just ask Steve Penk. Strange, as most comedians react to taboos like bulls to a matador’s cape. As John Ryan, standup comic and compere of Cracking Up!, says, “You hear comedians doing jokes about paedophilia, rape, child abuse, murder … no one’s making jokes about mental health.” (Example Video Clip Above)

Cracking Up! is about to change that, helping to reduce stigma by normalising mental health problems. It’s a variety night – a mix of comedy, sketches and poetry based on research and featuring contributions from people who have experienced mental health difficulties. Developed by NHS Surrey, the show has had a successful local run (including tough gigs such as Woking Football Club), selling out in its two-days in London, and could be coming to a club, theatre, school or business seminar near you.

One of the reasons people can laugh at jokes dealing with the taboos Ryan describes is they are relatively rare. It’s unlikely that someone in a comedy show audience has been directly affected by child abuse (although Jim Jeffries was famously confronted by a member of the audience who felt the comic’s bad-uncle gag was too close to home); one in four people are directly affected by mental illness. Monday’s sold-out theatre, if not quite the hard evidence needed to back up that figure, at least proved that many people are curious. Questioning revealed that a number of charity workers and mental health service users were among the audience.

It’s all very worthy, this desire to improve empathy. But is it funny? When I went along to find out, I realised I’d never seen anything like it before – and judging by the nervous atmosphere during the first half, neither had the rest of the audience. But any anxieties were assuaged by the compere: Ryan was personable and accessible, yet mischievous and willing to push boundaries. Once the audience realised what was going on, second-half laughs came easily and heartily. It felt inclusive and empowering.

Gareth Berliner has Crohn’s disease, and appears on stage with what must surely be a comedy first: a backpack containing a pump, which is connected directly to his heart. Undoing the valve, Berliner cheerfully related, would result in his swift and bloody death. He then told us about his botched suicide attempt. While fascinating in a morbid way, this is hardly a laughing matter. But on Monday night, delivered in Berliner’s twinkling style, it was a killer gag. In fact, it’s a good example of the obstacles the show faces: while mental health is still a hard sell, it needs to be pricked, laughed at, normalised – and ultimately accepted.

Cracking Up! proves that a comedy show about mental health can be hilarious. It’s a relief to see an agenda-led project, which mixes arts with education, deliver its message without preaching. But once it has raised its issues, the question is whether people are willing to face them head-on.

John Ryan explains…

Using Comedy - John Ryan