Our top desert island disc listens to get you o... - Drink Free

Drink Free

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Our top desert island disc listens to get you on track

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Learning and gaining strength from other people's stories can really help in changing your relationship with alcohol. With programmes going back 60 years BBC Radio's Desert Island Discs has interviews and music with hundreds of notable figures. We pick out those who talk about their drinking, or how drink has impacted on their life.

In case you were wondering, George Best - never did one!

You can find all of these on bbc.co.uk/programmes/b006qnmr

Tony Adams

The drama and successes of his life have been as remarkable off the pitch as on it. He found sporting glory despite being an alcoholic and even served time in prison for drink-driving. But his journey of recovery has been a remarkable one. He went back to studying, developed a love of literature and the arts, and put his own money into a charity to support other sports men and women recovering from addiction.

Clarissa Dixon Wright

The opening lines of this programme made me want to listen straight away! She speaks at great length of her near-fatal alcoholism and was telling the story of when she thought she had looked death straight in the eye.

Freddie Flintoff

Freddie has talked openly about his depression and use of alcohol: "...somewhat the worse for wear, he weaved into the cabinet room, plonked himself down in the PM's chair and knocked back yet another bottle of beer."

AA Gill

His witty, first-person articles have earned him a whole host of awards and a loyal following. But his life as a successful writer was preceded by more than a decade that was spent living in squalid squats, taking drugs and existing in an alcoholic haze. It was the unplanned intervention of a GP that made him face up to his alcoholism and seek treatment. It's now 21 years since he last had a drink and he has been given, he says, the chance to start again and live a second life.

Kathy Burke (we love her!)

Her early life had been tumultuous - her mother died before she was two and her father was often drunk, leaving her and her older brother to run the family home.

Oliver Reed

Need we say more?

George Michael

I picked this one since how he describes his pattern of self-destruction may be familiar to many of us. I listened to this whist driving around Bristol in 2007 and it stays with me most because of what he says about Amy Winehouse - and how perceptive that was in hindsight!

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