These blogs are written by people with personal experience of mental illness. They review and reflect on some of the ways mental health has been portrayed in the media, including TV episodes and newspaper articles.

The way mental illness is portrayed and reported in the media is incredibly powerful in educating and influencing the public. Our Media Advisory Service works with journalists, script writers and other media professionals to help ensure fictional and factual portrayals of people with mental health problems in the media are accurate and sensitive.

By writing about their own experiences and their reactions to these portrayals, these bloggers raise awareness of the different attitudes they have encountered to their mental health and how the media can help shape these attitudes. Pledge to help end mental health stigma today >>


Review of 'Rachel Bruno: My Dad and Me'

August 12, 2013

Last week I watched ‘Rachel Bruno: My Dad and Me’. The programme really hit a note with me, as it showed both sides and more information about bipolar disorder, how those diagnosed live with it, or should I say learn to live with it and how difficult it is for those around them.

Why I took part in BBC Three's mental health season

July 29, 2013

Jonny BenjaminI began to hear a voice in my head when I was 10 years old. At the same time I started to believe I was being watched by cameras everywhere that I went.

I came to accept that this was my life. There was never any thought that I might have a mental health issue. I didn't have any concept of what mental health was anyway.

Review of Diaries of a Broken Mind

July 18, 2013

I took part in Diaries of a Broken Mind, a programme which aired last night on BBC3 about young people’s mental health.

All contributors were asked to film a first initial ‘interview’ with themselves centred round some key questions. A select few were then chosen to film other aspects of their life too, and tell their story in more depth.

I featured as one of the ‘chorus’ members of the programme, meaning I wasn’t a ‘main character’, but had little snippets shown of my initial interview.

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