Main content

Why We Play: Old age

Tomorrow’s old people will have grown up expecting to play, and be familiar with digital technology. What will play look like in future, and will it go beyond bridge and bingo?

Many of today’s old people grew up in an era when life was hard, retirement short, and opportunities for play limited. But as we live longer, we need to seek out playful activities, for both physical and mental health.

We visit a bridge club for older people, where many members started to learn the game after they retired, to keep their brains sharp and give them social opportunities. We visit a care home in Scotland where the management frequently organise play sessions, such as pretend weddings, and where disco bingo is a regular event. And in Jerusalem, we meet two older men, one Arab, one Jewish, who come together over a shared love of backgammon. But will the old people of tomorrow want to move beyond these traditional games, and if so, what will the play of the future look like?

Available now

27 minutes

Last on

Sun 12 Feb 202311:32GMT

Broadcasts

  • Wed 2 Feb 202202:32GMT
  • Wed 2 Feb 202209:06GMT
  • Wed 2 Feb 202213:32GMT
  • Wed 2 Feb 202220:06GMT
  • Wed 2 Feb 202221:06GMT
  • Sun 6 Feb 202211:32GMT
  • Wed 8 Feb 202309:32GMT
  • Wed 8 Feb 202320:06GMT
  • Wed 8 Feb 202321:06GMT
  • Sun 12 Feb 202311:32GMT

The Documentary Podcast

The Documentary Podcast

Hear more documentaries from the BBC World Service

Podcast