I saw the trail for this programme on BBC1 this am. and was struck by
the comments centring on-  'it's the hearers sensitivity ' issue.
This may well end up blaming the hearer for being sensitive- rather
than what may be being picked up.
Specifically , why would it go on and off , or modulate up and down in
frequency  &/or tone in repetitive ways and then spend weeks or months
at a steady level [suddenly immune to personal foibles] ?
Further, how would couples or families pick up exactly the same
sequences?
I'm out of Bristol catchment area, though could probably have found
the full item on channel.
I saw the way it was heading and lost interest, maybe.
Even if I wanted to follow up the OP- the email would not confirm on
code insertion- so there it is.
Ho-Hum again.

On May 18, 2:19 pm, [email protected] wrote:
> It's Sophie Woodcock from BBC Radio Bristol here. We're doing a story
> on our Breakfast show tomorrow about the 'Bristol hum' and I'm keen to
> hear from people who are effected by it, particularly sufferers from
> our local area which is Bristol, North Somerset, Bath and North East
> Somerset, and South Gloucestershire. Can you contact me on my email
> address: [email protected]. Best wishes
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