
The Marvyn Harrison Podcast Why I Hate Sainsbury’s Local
This episode is a forensic breakdown of Sainsbury’s Local as a system, not a shop.
What’s sold as convenience is friction. What’s sold as efficiency is unpaid labour. What’s sold as design is psychological manipulation that fails the moment you’re tired, parenting, or in a hurry.
From hostile layouts and absent staff to self-checkout purgatory and inflated prices, this is a critique of how modern “local” supermarkets quietly disrespect time, dignity, and common sense.
This isn’t nostalgia. It’s not brand hate.
It’s a lived audit of consumer experience from the perspective of a father, a customer, and a human being who just wanted milk and left annoyed.
Includes an explicit comparison with Aldi, and why Aldi consistently wins on clarity, flow, and respect.
Welcome to The Marvyn Harrison Podcast — a story-driven conversation exploring identity, fatherhood, masculinity, relationships, culture, politics, sport, and modern life.
In each episode, Marvyn Harrison sits down with leading thinkers, creatives, athletes, policymakers, and cultural voices to unpack the defining moments that shaped them. Through image prompts, structured storytelling, and revealing game segments, guests explore pivotal memories, career turning points, personal struggles, and the beliefs that guide their decisions today.
Expect honest discussions on mental health, family dynamics, leadership, equity, ambition, resilience, and the realities of navigating success in Britain and beyond.
This is a podcast about clarity, where lived experience meets sharp cultural insight.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
