Wednesday 25 November 2009

Off-air recordings for week 28 November - 4 December 2009

Please email Rich Deakin <rdeakin@glos.ac.uk> or <fchmediaservices@glos.ac.uk> if you would like any of the following programmes / series recording.*

Sunday 29th

More 4 - Darcus Howe - Son of Mine - "This touching and candid film follows Darcus Howe as he attempts to understand and come closer to his troubled youngest son, as well as face up to his own failings as a father. The outspoken broadcaster and social commentator Darcus Howe is no stranger to controversy or tackling issues head on, but in Son Of Mine, his most personal documentary to date, he finally meets his match - in the form of his own troubled youngest son.
When Darcus Howe started this film, his twenty-one year old son Amiri was in serious trouble. He'd been caught handling stolen passports and shoplifting. He'd been accused of attempted rape. He wrote obsessive hip-hop lyrics about shooting and killing.
"Shit just attracts to us, man," Amiri confides to the camera, with disturbing pride."

Monday 30th

BBC 1 - Panorama: Can Tesco Save The World? - "It has been blamed for concreting over the countryside, and running up endless air miles importing food and trucking it the length and breadth of Britain, but is Tesco now leading the business fightback against man-made global warming?
Local communities and a new breed of business entrepreneurs increasingly see delivering a low-carbon economy as an opportunity to make money, while politicians are wary of forcing the pace of change because of its potential to lose votes."

Tuesday 1st

ITV 1 - Real Crime: Bombers On The Run - "“There was the most incredible tension inside the police. They knew there were people out there could kill several hundred people if we didn’t get them quickly.” Ken Livingston, Mayor of London. “There’s a split second when I enter that room that I think, ‘I’m going to die here.’” ‘Karl’, West Midlands Police specialist firearms officer, part of the team who apprehended Yassin Omar, who tried to bomb Warren Street Underground Station. Exactly two weeks after the July 7 bombings, as a memorial service was held in London for the victims and a still shocked nation was united in grief and sympathy for the injured, others were planning to emulate the mass murder with a repeat of those terrorist attacks. Presented by Mark Austin, Real Crime: Bombers On the Run tells the story of a group of terrorists’ failed attempt to bomb the capital with a series of explosions on public transport and the dramatic race to capture the culprits before they could strike again. Featuring interviews with witnesses who saw the bombers attempt to detonate their devices and key senior figures within the police operation to find them, Real Crime vividly reflects a week of febrile tension across London as the city remained on full alert while the would-be bombers were on the run. And speaking exclusively to Real Crime, for the first time officers from West Midlands Police specialist firearms unit tell the incredible story of how they risked their lives to snare one of the bombers. Featuring CCTV and archive footage, the documentary pieces together the bombers’ movements and the unprecedented scale of the police efforts to track them, before ultimately bringing them to justice."

Wednesday 2nd

BBC 2 - This World: Stalin's Return - "Joseph Stalin is back. Or is he?
Reporter John Sweeney travels more than 5000 miles through the old Soviet Union, from Stalin's birthplace in Georgia to a former labour camp in Russia, to find out if one of the twentieth century's most notorious mass-murderers is really being rehabilitated."

Friday 4th

BBC 2 - Gardeners' World: The League Of Extraordinary Gentlemen - "Narrated by keen gardener Sandi Toksvig, this documentary explores the stories behind the seven founders of the Royal Horticultural Society - a disparate group of gentlemen who met in 1804 above a bookshop in London's Piccadilly. Detailing their feuds and quarrels, the film then jumps forward to investigate where gardening is heading today, through the eyes of seven modern key horticulturists hoping to ensure the successful future of the RHS."

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* This applies to staff members at the University of Gloucestershire only. Any recordings made are to be used only for educational and non-commercial purposes under the terms of the ERA Licence.

Tuesday 17 November 2009

Off-air recordings for week 21-27 November 2009

Please email Rich Deakin <rdeakin@glos.ac.uk> or <fchmediaservices@glos.ac.uk> if you would like any of the following programmes / series recording.*

Sunday 22nd

ITV 1 - Flight of Faith: The Jesus Story - "Unique programme capturing the geography of the Holy Land from an aerial perspective, following in Jesus's footsteps and focusing on the familiar places connected with his ministry. The journey takes in his birthplace in Bethlehem, as well as Galilee, Nazareth, Cana and the lakeshore villages of Bethsaida and Capernaum - places intimately connected with much of the Messiah's early teaching. Including a journey over the Mount of the Beatitudes where he delivered his famous sermon, and the desert where he was tempted by the devil - revealing a landscape that remains unchanged since Biblical times. Plus the route of Jesus's last journey, culminating in his fateful visit to Jerusalem - scene of his arrest, crucifixion and resurrection. Narrated by Laurence Vulliamy."

Monday 23rd - Dispatches: Return to Africa's Witch Children - "
In 2008 a Bafta and Emmy Award-winning Dispatches told the story of how children in Africa's Niger Delta were being denounced by Christian pastors as witches and wizards and then killed, tortured or abandoned by their own families.
The film, which prompted international outrage against a practice conducted in the name of Jesus, forced the Nigerian authorities and the UN to act.
Child rights legislation came into force making it illegal to brand children as witches and some pastors were arrested. Financial support also poured in to assist a small British charity (Stepping Stones Nigeria) providing the only safe refuge for hundreds of youngsters attacked after claims that they were possessed by the Devil.
In Return to Africa's Witch Children, Dispatches reveals what happened to some of the children and church leaders who originally featured, and discovers that even now children as young as two are still being stigmatised as witches and treated as outcasts.
Gary Foxcroft of Lancaster-based charity Stepping Stones also returns to Nigeria and discovers that since his last visit the rescue centre that houses many of these children was the target of an attack. He also learns that the number of children living there has in fact risen.
Two-and-a-half-year-old Ellin is one such child. She was found at the side of the road, her body having been severely burnt with boiling water. Nwanakwo Udo Edet, around eight years old, wasn't so fortunate. He had acid poured over him after being labelled a wizard and later died."

BBC 1 - Panorama: Lethal Enterprise - "Who are your children hanging around with, and what would happen if a fight started? Because of a little-known law called joint enterprise, anyone caught up in a serious incident could face the same jail sentence as the person wielding the boot, knife or gun.
The police say it helps to curb gang violence, but Panorama investigates whether this catch-all policy is also leading to miscarriages of justice."

Tuesday 24th

BBC 2 - This World: An Iranian "Martyr" - "On June 20th, a young Iranian woman was shot in the street in Tehran. The video of her death, filmed on a mobile phone, was seen by millions around the world.
This World tells the story of Neda Agha Soltan, with exclusive accounts from those who really knew her. Many young Iranians have claimed her as a 'martyr' for Iran's protest movement; but the Iranian regime has tried to blame the West."

Wednesday 25th

More 4 - Terror Attack: Mumbai - "On 26 November 2008, ten young Pakistani men sailed into Mumbai, India's thriving financial heart, armed with AK47s, grenades and plastic explosives, as well as satellite phones and global positioning systems connecting them to their controllers.
They spread out across the city, killing more than 100 people in just an hour. But this was just the beginning.
Terror Attack: Mumbai brings together candid and personal accounts from the people who were caught up in the siege. Transcripts of phone calls between the gunmen and their commanders, intercepted by Indian intelligence, and CCTV footage from the hotels, give a chilling edge to their stories.
The film also explores the dramatic role that modern communications played: mobile phones, the internet and 24-hour television news gave vital information not just to those in hiding, but to the killers hunting for them."

More 4 - White Tribe - parts 1-3 - "When Darcus Howe came to England from Trinidad 40 years ago, he found a people who were certain of themselves and who knew what it was to be English. Now, as we enter a new millennium, as Scotland and Wales seek a semi-detached relationship to England, and with Europe looming ever nearer, Darcus discovers a people in the throes of an identity crisis. "The old England of self-confidence, of people knowing who they are, knowing where they have come from, that's dead¿the whole of England is in a flux." They are lost, confused and even ashamed to admit they are English, argues Darcus who, in this new, three-part series, travels the length and breadth of the country to discover why the English don't seem to want to be English anymore... "

Thursday 26th

BBC 2 - Natural World: Bringing Up Baby - "Natural World investigates the vital bond between animal mothers and their babies. The more we study animals the more we realise just how emotional they are, and all mothers are faced with tough choices as they struggle to bring up babies in a difficult and dangerous world, constantly balancing their own needs with those of their infants. Yet there are many ways to raise your brood, from the fish who looks after her young in her mouth to the extended childhoods of gorillas or orang-utans."

More 4 - Who You Callin' A Nigger? - "Darcus Howe sees trouble ahead for Britain's ethnic population. In this authored film, he travels the country expressing his views on a netherworld of unreported violence and prejudice, not between blacks and whites, but between Britain¿s increasingly divided ethnic minority groups."

Friday 27th

Channel 4 - Unreported World - The Battle for Israel's Soul - "The foreign affairs documentary series looks at how the growth in the number of Jewish 'fundamentalists' in Israel is allegedly threatening peace deal negotiations with Palestine."



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* This applies to staff members at the University of Gloucestershire only. Any recordings made are to be used only for educational and non-commercial purposes under the terms of the ERA Licence.

Wednesday 11 November 2009

Off-Air Recordings for week 14-20 November 2009

Please email Rich Deakin <rdeakin@glos.ac.uk> or <fchmediaservices@glos.ac.uk> if you would like any of the following programmes / series recording.*

Saturday 14th

Five - Alice's Adventures in Wonderland - "Musical adaptation of Lewis Carroll's classic tale of a girl who falls down a rabbit hole into a fantastic world. In Wonderland Alice meets a host of talking animals and outlandish creatures, including the legendary White Rabbit, the Mad Hatter and the Cheshire Cat. Featuring an all-star cast and sumptuous sets.Director: William SterlingStarring: Fiona Fullerton, Michael Jayston, Hywel Bennett, Michael Crawford, Davy Kaye, William Ellis."

More 4 - Extraordinary Animals in the Womb - "The embryonic journeys of four remarkable animals are brought to life as they develop, from conception to birth. The shark, whose cannibalistic embryos will eat their own siblings to survive; the emperor penguin, whose egg-bound chicks must battle the coldest weather on the planet; the kangaroo, whose underdeveloped foetus will undergo an exceptionally premature birth; and the parasitic wasp, whose larvae must hijack and exploit the body of another creature."

Sunday 15th

BBC 4 - Lightning: Nature Strikes Back - "Documentary looking into the cause, effect and current understanding of one of nature's greatest enigmas - lightning, which is almost as old as the planet itself and will probably outlast life on Earth.
The film celebrates this maverick of nature's power and beauty, whilst exploring how man is still battling to understand it. It looks at all aspects, from its generation within storm clouds to its impact, both good and bad, on humankind.
It features first-hand accounts from survivors of lightning strikes; shows how medical research is looking into its possible effect on the human body's own electrical circuit; looks at its role as a life giver, fixing nitrogen and possibly even providing the spark of life itself; reveals the application of state-of-the-art lightning detection techniques; and shows the impact that human activity itself may have on the formation of lightning.
From triggered lightning studies in Florida and the defences at Kennedy Space Center to filming sprites in Colorado, the film discovers whether science is any closer to unlocking some of lightning's mysteries."

ITV 3 - Mansfield Park - "At the age of ten, Fanny Price is taken from the poverty of her childhood home and sent to live with her wealthy relatives at Mansfield Park in Northampton. Although she's aware of her debt of gratitude towards her aunt and uncle from the start, Fanny struggles to adjust to aristocratic protocol and the daily reminders of her inferiority to her relatives."

Monday 16th

BBC1 - Panorama: Swimming with the Loan Sharks - "Loan sharks are thriving in recession-hit Britain, as the poor and vulnerable run out of credit and find themselves relying on criminals instead. Reporter Simon Boazman finds the victims who have suffered brutal violence, and looks at the lenders who can charge 17,000 per cent interest."

Channel 4 - Dispatches: Inside Britain's Israel Lobby - "Dispatches investigates one of the most powerful and influential political lobbies in Britain, which is working in support of the interests of the State of Israel.
Despite wielding great influence among the highest realms of British politics and media, little is known about the individuals and groups which collectively are known as the pro-Israel lobby.
Political commentator Peter Oborne sets out to establish who they are, how they are funded, how they work and what influence they have, from the key groups to the wealthy individuals who help bankroll the lobbying.
He investigates how accountable, transparent and open to scrutiny the lobby is, particularly in regard to its funding and financial support of MPs.
The pro-Israel lobby aims to shape the debate about Britain's relationship with Israel and future foreign policies relating to it.
Oborne examines how the lobby operates from within parliament and the tactics it employs behind the scenes when engaging with print and broadcast media."

Tuesday 17th

BBC 4 - Enid - "Illuminating and surprising drama telling the story of arguably the most popular children's storyteller of all, Enid Blyton.
It reveals how Blyton became the writer who would capture more youthful imaginations than anyone else, following her career from ambitious, driven and as yet unpublished young woman to household name and moral guardian, while glimpsing her own childhood - a dark time, far from the carefree, happy idyll portrayed in her books.
Through marriages and children, the roles of Enid the wife (to Hugh and then Kenneth) and mother are portrayed, ones she struggled to fulfil while balancing them with her extraordinary output.
The film also uncovers a strong and resourceful woman; a woman who never really grew up; a woman who rewrote the endings of many chapters of her real life, sometimes with cruel and hurtful results; and a woman whose legacy has often been criticised but whose success cannot be argued with, who gave children the stories they wanted."

Thursday 19th


BBC 2- Wonderland - Can We Get Married? - "Documentary about a couple with Down's syndrome who hope to marry. Emma and Ben are in their twenties and live in a supported-living community in Devon, where they have an active social life and part-time jobs. The programme examines how marrying would change Emma and Ben's lives, as the couple try to decide if married life would be an enormous stress or the romantic dream they always imagined."

Friday 20th

Channel 4 - Unreported World Malaysia: Refugees For Sale - "Unreported World reveals shocking evidence that Burmese refugees fleeing the country's brutal military regime are being detained and then allegedly sold by Malaysian immigration officials to Thai human traffickers. Reporter Aidan Hartley and Director George Waldrum travel to Kuala Lumpur to highlight how the refugees are forced to exchange one hellish existence for another. Living in complete fear of the state, the refugees claim they are being rounded up and subject to bloody whippings and indefinite imprisonment in overcrowded detention camps. As Unreported World reveals, for some this is just the beginning of a horrific journey into the trafficking network, where men, women and children disappear into a world of slavery and prostitution."


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* This applies to staff members at the University of Gloucestershire only. Any recordings made are to be used only for educational and non-commercial purposes under the terms of the ERA Licence.

Thursday 5 November 2009

Off-air recordings for week 7-13 November 2009

Please email Rich Deakin <rdeakin@glos.ac.uk> or <fchmediaservices@glos.ac.uk> if you would like any of the following programmes / series recording.*

Saturday 7th

Channel 4 - Day of the Kamikaze - "
The kamikazes were Japanese pilots who made the ultimate sacrifice: to carry a new and incomprehensible weapon of war; a final mission that would result in certain death; to dive and crash into enemy ships.
As the Second World War entered its final stages, Japan faced utter ruin and total defeat. As the Allies crept ever closer to the Japanese mainland, a Japanese High Command under increasing pressure sought desperate measures.
Surviving kamikaze pilots and the families of those who died reveal how military leaders, Japan's increasingly grave situation, and their country's proud history each played a part in persuading men to sign up to sacrifice their lives for their country.
The tactic permeated the nation's conscience as an entire generation prepared for kamikaze attack should their homeland fall into enemy hands.
By the summer of 1945, 1,900 kamikaze pilots had been sacrificed to sink 27 Allied warships. Fewer than two out every 100 pilots put a ship out of action, but more than 3,000 Allied naval men perished in kamikaze attacks.
Interviews with surviving American and British sailors reveal the horror of facing the daily suicide tactic for the first time. Original US archive colour film shows the deadly dives made by the pilots into Allied vessels and the horrific aftermath of the attacks on the ship and crew. Japanese footage and drama sequences also reveal how the pilots trained for their final mission and prepared for death."

More 4 - Making War Horse - "Michael Morpurgo's War Horse is set at the outbreak of World War I, when Joey, young Albert's beloved horse, is sold to the cavalry and shipped to France. Joey is soon caught up in enemy fire, and fate takes him on an extraordinary odyssey, serving on both sides before finding himself alone in no man's land. But Albert, who's still not old enough to enlist, can't forget Joey and embarks on a treacherous mission to find him and bring him home. Making War Horse features exclusive rehearsal and backstage footage of the stage production, interviews with the production team, the actors and the puppeteers, and extracts from the award-winning show."

Sunday 8th

BBC 2 - William Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice - "An adaptation of Shakespeare's play about a Jewish moneylender who seeks to forfeit a literal pound of flesh from his Christian nemesis. Starring Al Pacino and Jeremy Irons."

BBC 4- War Grave - "The graves of those killed in action are something very special. For the families, friends and comrades of those who fell they evoke a unique moment in time - memories of childhood, missed youth or first love. This documentary features personal stories of loss in conflicts from the First World War to the Falklands."

BBC 4 - The Children Who Fought Hitler - "Documentary telling the forgotten story of a heroic battle fought by the children of the British Memorial School to help liberate Europe from the Nazis.
The school served a unique horticultural community of ex-First World War soldiers and their families living in Ypres in Belgium who lovingly tended the war graves. Steeped in ideals of patriotic service and sacrifice, many pupils and ex-pupils refused to surrender to the invading Nazi forces.
Three surviving school pupils tell their extraordinary stories of resistance, illustrated with rare archive film. Elaine Madden dramatically escaped to England where she joined the Special Operations Executive and was dropped into Belgium to work as a spy and saboteur. Jerry Eaton joined the RAF taking on especially dangerous missions over Europe and would later become a wing commander. Stephen Grady joined the French resistance where, as a young teenager, he became adept in sabotage and secret attacks on German troops.
The film is a much deserved tribute to the courage, sacrifice and heroism of the Memorial School children."

Monday 9th

BBC 1 - Panorama : Assault On Justice - "A man given a beating in his own home. A young woman bitten and punched by a man. A bottle smashed onto the head of an innocent bystander in an argument. Three victims, all violently assaulted - yet their attackers escaped prosecution, receiving cautions instead.
Half of all criminal cases brought to justice in England and Wales are now dealt with out of court. It's fast justice...but is it fair?
The government says out-of-court punishments, like cautions and fines, are helping to unclog the overburdened courts system and deal swiftly with antisocial behaviour. Critics say it is simply justice on the cheap, letting some serious criminals off the hook and, crucially, denying victims their day in court.
Shelley Jofre investigates whether these decisions, made behind closed doors instead of in open court, are tough on crime or the causes of crime."

BBC4 - War Heroes: Section 60 Arlington Cemetry - "Documentary focusing on Section 60 of the historic Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia - the 'saddest acre in America' - where US service men and women from the Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts are buried.
An intimate look at the impact of lives lost too soon, the film bears witness to the rituals and traditions of the family and friends who come from around the country to visit the graves."

More 4 - True Stories: Dancing With The Devil - "
With unprecedented access to Rio de Janeiro's dangerous backstreets, Oscar-winning filmmaker Jon Blair provides an unflinching look at one of the bloodiest urban conflicts in the world, which leaves more than 1,000 people dead each year.
What has previously only been portrayed in fictional films like the famous City of God is now on screen and for real, as Blair follows the lives of three very different men.
'Spiderman', a 28-year-old drug lord, patrols the shadowy streets of Coréia, the sprawling favela he controls.
Inspector Leonardo Torres, a muscle-bound cop from Rio's drug squad, inches through the alleys of another shanty town, pursuing dealers and dodging bullets.
And Pastor Dione dos Santos, a reformed gangster turned evangelical preacher, trawls the slums looking for souls to be saved on his quest to broker peace among all parties and end the city's drug conflict."

Wednesday 11th

BBC 4 - Michael Portillo: Digging Up The Dead - "A personal journey for Michael Portillo into a story which may come as a shock to people whose knowledge of Spain comes from taking holidays on the beach.
Lying just beneath the surface of the ground, all over Spain, are the bodies of tens of thousands of people in unmarked and very often mass graves. For most of the last seventy years, since the end of the Spanish Civil War, these were known as the 'Graves of Forgetting'. The country was ruled by a dictatorship until the late 1970s and no-one dared speak out about the dead and the disappeared, of whom there could be as many as 200,000.
It is only now that Spain is getting to grips with its past - recognising the terrible crimes that were committed under General Franco's dictatorship and encouraging people to speak about their memories and the loved ones they lost. Many of the graves are being excavated and the bodies removed for reburial, while others will be turned into memorial parks. One excavation is taking place just moments from the beaches and bars of Malaga.
No Spanish family was untouched by the civil war and the repression that followed, and Michael Portillo's family is no exception. His father supported the democratic government and when Spain fell to Franco, Luis Portillo spent the rest of his life in exile.
As Michael discovers, while his uncles were fighting and dying for Franco, his father fought, unarmed in order to be certain that he could not kill a brother, for the republic. This is a journey into a place we thought we knew so well, but discover, through the stories told by a variety of characters, that we hardly knew at all."

BBC 2 - Natural World - Andrea: Queen of Mantas - "Manta rays are one of the most intelligent creatures in the ocean and, at up to seven metres long, one of the largest. Yet despite their size and curious nature, almost nothing is known about their lives.
Young marine biologist Andrea Marshall has given up everything for a life in Mozambique, diving amongst these beautiful animals. Superb underwater photography reveals new manta ray behaviour including breathtaking footage of their ritual courtship dances.
The film follows Andrea as she studies these endangered animals up close. With the discovery of a giant new species and remarkable insights into mantas' secretive lives, Andrea's findings are already rocking the world of marine biology."

BBC 2- Armistice - "Professor David Reynolds takes a fresh look at the extraordinary events and personalities that brought about the armistice of 1918, venturing beyond the familiar British account of Remembrance Day to unravel how the other side, the Germans, plunged to total defeat in just a few months at the end of the war.
In a journey that takes him through command centres and battlefields, he uncovers a story of wounded egos, mental illness and political brinkmanship as statesmen and generals haggled over the terms of peace, while, at the front, the soldiers fought on with sustained brutality.
For many Germans, the armistice was a betrayal of all they had fought for and it caused lasting resentments that would eventually fuel Adolf Hitler's rise to power. Reynolds argues that the bitter endgame of the 'war to end all wars' tragically sowed the seeds of even more appalling conflict to come."

Friday 14th

Channel 4 - Unreported World - Nepal: The Living Dead - "Unreported World highlights the tragic plight of Nepal's child widows, some of whom are as young as thirteen. Many face abuse and servitude for the rest of their lives, ostracised by their families and communities, and are often forced to sell their bodies to provide food and shelter for themselves and their children."


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* This applies to staff members at the University of Gloucestershire only. Any recordings made are to be used only for educational and non-commercial purposes under the terms of the ERA Licence.