Maybe she’s born with it. Or maybe it’s just the patriarchy…? Listen in as co-hosts Cal Wilson and Santilla Chingaipe join the dots between money and power to find out why women are more likely to have less money and what we can all do about it.
Featured: Jamila Rizvi (author and editor-at-large, Future Women), Karen From Finance (“corporate” drag queen), Layne Beachley (pro surfing legend), Lorraine Baloyi (co-founder and director of African Family Services), Van Badham (writer and unionist).
A six-part series hosted by Cal Wilson (comedian) and Santilla Chingaipe (journalist and filmmaker). In each episode, Cal and Santilla work together to decode money and power, and what it means for our freedom.
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Cal Wilson
Cal Wilson (1970–2023) was a New Zealand stand-up comedian, author, radio and television presenter based in Australia. She came across the Tasman in 2003 and went on to become one of our most popular comedians, a perennial favourite on television shows such as Spicks and Specks, Good News Week, Thank God You’re Here, and more recently Have You Been Paying Attention? and Hughesy We Have a Problem. Her stand up shows were engaging as they are hilarious, often bringing the audience’s stories to life alongside her own.

Santilla Chingaipe
Santilla Chingaipe is a Zambian-born filmmaker, historian and author, whose work explores settler colonialism, slavery, and contemporary migration in Australia.
Chingaipe’s first book of non-fiction Black Convicts was shortlisted for The Stella Prize and long-listed for the prestigious Cundill History Prize, and the critically acclaimed and award-winning documentary inspired by the book, Our African Roots, is streaming on SBS On Demand. Our African Roots marked the first-time on Australian television that an African-Australian host interrogated the nation’s colonial history.
She spent nearly a decade working for SBS World News which saw her report from across Africa, and interview some of the continent’s most prominent leaders. She also reported extensively on Australia’s diverse African and Afro diasporic communities.
The recipient of several awards, she was recognised at the United Nations as one of the most influential people of African descent in the world in 2019 under 40. She delivered the annual E.W Cole lecture in 2023 on ‘Who Gets to Write History?’, and her work has been published internationally by The New York Times, The Guardian, The BBC, and elsewhere.
Chingaipe is a regular contributor to The Saturday Paper and a columnist for The Monthly. She is the founder of Behind The Screens, an annual program supported by VicScreen, aimed at increasing the representation of people historically excluded from the Australian film industry. Chingaipe hosts two monthly cultural events: the literary series First Chapter and its sister event, No Skips: A Listening Party.


