Wednesday, 22 February 2012

Off-air recordings for week 25th February - 2nd March 2012

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


*This applies to staff members and students 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.
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Saturday 25th February 2012

History; Documentary

Sex, Drugs and Rock 'n' Roll: The '60s Revealed
Yesterday, 11:00pm-12:00am, 2/3
Stars who rose to fame in the 1960s, including Sean Connery, Maureen Lipman, Sylvia Syms and Hayley Mills, reflect on decades of cultural change as they watch previously unscreened interviews they gave to TV presenter Bernard Braden in 1968. They recall the changing nature of British recreational habits as television increased in popularity and the work they did during the decade that launched their careers.


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Monday 27th February 2012

Factual; Arts, Culture and the Media; Magazines and Reviews

David Hockney: The Art of Seeing - A Culture Show Special
BBC2, 7:00-8:00pm

David Hockney, widely considered to be Britain's best-loved living artist, has taken over the Royal Academy in London with his exhibition A Bigger Picture made up of recent works depicting the landscape of his native Yorkshire.   In this programme, Andrew Marr, a friend of Hockney's and an amateur painter himself, is in conversation with the artist, both at his home in Bridlington and in the galleries of the RA.



News

Panorama: The Cost of Raising Britain
BBC1, 8:30-9:00pm

With nurseries and childminders costing families up to a third of their income, and working mums feeling squeezed out of the workplace, Panorama investigates the rising cost of childcare. Shelley Jofre meets a family who moved abroad for a better deal, and reveals why budget cuts are forcing some parents to consider taking over their own nurseries


Documentary

Proud and Prejudiced
Channel 4, 10:00-11:05pm

Proud and Prejudiced is the story of two of the most controversial men in Britain. Tommy Robinson, a tanning salon manager, is the leader of the English Defence League, the biggest far-right street protest movement for a generation.  Sayful Islam, a former tax inspector, heads a small group of Muslim extremists, who have become notorious for abusing British soldiers and burning poppies on Remembrance Day.  Both men enjoy a cult-like status with loyal followers, both are specialists in making highly inflammatory speeches and defying the authorities, and both are from the same town: Luton.  Caught in the middle is Sarah Allen, the leader of Luton Borough Council's 'Luton in Harmony' initiative, the official fight back against the town's reputation as a hotbed of extremism.  Filmed over the course of a year, this is an intimate portrait of the two men and how a dangerous local feud has become an alarming national drama.



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Tuesday 28th February 2012

Factual; Science and Nature; Science and Technology

Horizon; The Truth About Exercise
BBC2, 9:00-10:00pm

Like many, Michael Mosley want to get fitter and healthier but can't face hours on the treadmill or trips to the gym. Help may be at hand.  He uncovers the surprising new research which suggests many of us could benefit from just three minutes of high intensity exercise a week. He discovers the hidden power of simple activities like walking and fidgeting, and finds out why some of us don't respond to exercise at all.  Using himself as a guinea pig, Michael uncovers the surprising new research about exercise, that has the power to make us all live longer and healthier lives.



Factual; Performances and Events

The Richard Dimbleby Lecture
BBC1, 10:35-11:20pm

In the 2012 Richard Dimbleby Lecture, leading geneticist and Nobel laureate Sir Paul Nurse explores the wonder of science and how it enhances our culture and civilisation. He investigates how science can not only help solve the world's big problems, but also be harnessed to improve health and quality of life. One of Britain's most eminent scientists, Sir Paul is the president of the Royal Society and chief executive of the UK Centre for Medical Research and Innovation.


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Wednesday 29th February 2012

Documentaries

Hasidic Cruise: A Wonderland Film
BBC2, 9:00-10:00pm

Until last October, Stamford Hill's highly orthodox Gaby and Tikwah Lock -married for 40 years and who featured in a previous Wonderland film about Hasidic weddings - had never been on a holiday. Their leisure time was spent divided between religious study and domestic duties.


Then they booked themselves a 12 day Mediterranean kosher cruise. Although it tours the same destinations as many ships, this is a cruise like no other. Alongside universal entertainments like belly dancing and a communal jacuzzi, the Golden Iris boasts religious lectures, creative towel folding and couples relationship workshops. The experience of life on board seems to bring a sparkle to many of the marriages it hosts. 'It's like putting a log in the fireplace,' says one woman, 'For the flame not to go out, you have to feed it once in a while.'

For Gaby and Tikwah, however, the story of the holiday throws a surprising and revealing spotlight on married life. Home truths and frustrations emerge from their visits to the cruise ship couples workshop, which Gaby resolves with an unexpected gift for his wife and a little more understanding of Tikwah's exasperation at his domestic shortcomings.



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Thursday 1st March 2012

Documentary

Woof! A Horizon Guide to Dogs
BBC4, 8:00-9:00pm


Dallas Campbell looks back through the Horizon archives to find out what science can tell us about our best friend the dog, and whether new thinking should change the way we treat them. From investigating the domestic dog's wild wolf origins to discovering the remarkable impact that humans have had on canine evolution, Dallas explores why our bond with dogs is so strong and how we can best use that to manage them.


Documentary

Japan: Children of the Tsunami
BBC2, 9:00-10:00pm

Exploring Japan's tsunami last year through the eyes of children who witnessed the disaster. The programme features testimonies from youngsters at two schools - one where 74 pupils were killed by the giant wave, and the other close to the Fukushima power plant, where vital cooling systems were knocked out, triggering radiation leaks and forcing the evacuation of thousands of people.


Documentaries

Make Bradford British
Channel 4+1, 10:00-11:00pm

Make Bradford British is a two-part series that brings together people of different races and backgrounds to see if they can come up with a common notion of the thread that binds them together - what it means to be British.




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Tuesday, 14 February 2012

Off-air recordings for week 18-24th February 2012

Please email Rich Deakin rdeakin@glos.ac.uk if you would like any of the following programmes / series recording.*
*This applies to staff members and students 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.
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Saturday 18th February 2012

Factual; Arts; Culture and the Media; Documentaries

Lucian Freud: Painted Life
BBC2, 9:00-10:00pm

Painted Life explores the life and work of Lucian Freud, undoubtedly one of Britain's greatest artists. Freud gave his full backing to the documentary shortly before his death. Uniquely, he was filmed painting his last work, a portrait of his assistant David Dawson.

Lucian Freud: Painted Life also includes frank testimony from those who knew and loved this extraordinary personality. Members of his large family (he had at least fourteen children by a number of different women), close friends including David Hockney and Brigadier Andrew Parker Bowles, his dealers, his sitters and his former lovers recall for the first time a complex man who dedicated his life to his art and who always sought to transmute paint into a vibrant living representation of humanity.

The film shows how Freud never swam with the flow and only achieved celebrity in older age. He rejected the artistic fashions of his time, sticking to figurative art and exploring portraiture, especially with regards to nude portraiture, which he explored with a depth of scrutiny that produced some of the greatest works of our time.

This documentary is both a definitive biography and a revelatory exploration of the creative process.




Factual; Arts; Culture and the Media; Magazines and Reviews


The Culture Show
BBC2, 6:00-7:00pm, 22/31

Andrew Graham-Dixon presents the latest edition of The Culture Show from Glasgow, featuring the National Theatre of Scotland's new adaptation of The Wicker Man. As a major new Picasso exhibition opens at Tate Britain, Alastair Sooke looks back at his relationship with the English surrealist artist Roland Penrose. Also, forget the Oscars and the Baftas - Mark Kermode presents his very own movie awards of the year.



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Monday 20th February 2012

News

Panorama: Britain's Hidden Alcoholics
BBC1, 8:30-9:00pm

Alistair Campbell meets some of the increasing number of Britain's middle-class professionals for whom one glass of wine after work is never enough, and asks if we all need to reassess our relationship with drink.

Alistair, Tony Blair's former closest advisor, knows from bitter experience the true cost of excessive boozing: his alcoholism contributed to his nervous breakdown.
With nearly 9,000 people dying from alcohol-related diseases every year and leading medical experts describing it as a health crisis, Campbell ventures into the world of Britain's hidden alcoholics and asks how much is too much.



Documentaries

True Stories: My Social Network Stalker
Channel 4, 10:00-11:05pm

Ruth Jeffery and her boyfriend Shane Webber seemed a perfectly normal happy couple who talked about a future with marriage and children.  They had known each other for ten years, but after they rekindled their relationship from school days in early adulthood, the man Ruth loved began to secretly rip her life apart.  With exclusive access to Ruth and her family, who tell their full story on camera for the first time, this True Stories film unravels Ruth's prolonged ordeal, which came to a shocking conclusion. For three and a half years Ruth was subjected to emotional and mental abuse at the hands of an unknown stalker. It appeared she was constantly watched and Ruth was pushed to the brink of suicide after suffering the indignity of seeing naked images of her posted on adult websites and distributed to family and friends, including her parents.
After more than three years, the stalker was finally caught, but the revelation of the man's identity proved as traumatic as what she had already endured. Her tormenter was the person Ruth had confided in the most: her boyfriend.
My Social Network Stalker documents the story from Ruth's perspective, from the first abusive messages she received in 2008 - which she believed were from former school friends, isolating her from almost everyone she had ever known - to the sexually explicit photos and videos Webber circulated on the internet, some of which she is still trying to get taken off, to the extreme distress that caused her depression, symptoms of OCD and eating problems; and to how Webber was finally tracked down as the stalker.
The documentary also examines the possible motivations for Webber's shocking campaign of abuse on his loving girlfriend.   Webber has shown no remorse since his arrest, despite terrorising and humiliating the woman he claimed to love, and in October 2011 he was sentenced to four months in prison: the documentary makers are with Ruth as she and her family prepare for and react to the sentencing.
Ruth is in her final year of her degree and slowly rebuilding her life and her relationships. Webber served two months and has been released with a restraining order in place until 2016.



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Tuesday 21st February 2012

Factual; Documentaries

Storyville: The Love of Books - A Sarajevo Story
BBC4, 2:20-3:20am

Documentary which tells the story of a group of men and women who risked their lives to rescue a library - and preserve a nation's history - in the midst of the Bosnian war. Amid bullets and bombs and under fire from shells and snipers, this handful of passionate book-lovers safeguarded more than 10,000 unique, hand-written Islamic books and manuscripts - the most important texts held by Sarajevo's last surviving library.




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Thursday 23rd February 2012

Documentary; Science; Environment

This World:  Inside The Meltdown
BBC2, 9:00-10:00pm

An insight into the Fukushima nuclear plant accident told by those who fought to avoid a disaster which, according to the Japanese government, could have left a vast area of the country - even Tokyo - uninhabitable. Featuring interviews with employees, fire fighters, army officers, prime minister at the time Naoto Kan, and survivors of the tsunami, the film provides a detailed account of how close the nation came to a catastrophe that could have dwarfed the incident at Chernobyl in 1986.




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Friday 24th February

Catholics
BBC4, 3:15-4:15am, 1/3

A new, three-part documentary series about Catholicism in Britain will give an insight into some of its most intriguing, important and normally private institutions.  Catholics, by acclaimed film-maker Richard Alwyn for Wingspan Productions, goes behind the headlines that have come to define the Catholic Church to explore what it is actually like to be Catholic in Britain today.
Each of the three films – one about men, one about women, one about children – will be an intimate portrait of a different Catholic world, revealing Catholicism to be a rich but complex identity and observing how this identity shapes people’s lives. The first film, Priests, filmed over six months with extraordinary access, is an intimate behind-the-scenes portrait of Allen Hall in London, one of only three remaining Roman Catholic seminaries in Britain.
The second film, Children, focuses on a small primary school in rural Lancashire as some of the pupils head towards their first Holy Communion.
The third film, Women, uses its remarkable behind-the-scenes access to Westminster Cathedral, Britain’s biggest Roman Catholic Church, to meet the female staff, volunteers and congregation of the Cathedral to explore what it is like to be a Catholic woman in Britain today.
The series was commissioned by Richard Klein, Controller BBC Four, and Charlotte Moore, Commissioning Editor Documentaries. The series is executive produced by Wingspan’s Archie Baron and is a Wingspan Production in association with Jerusalem Productions for the BBC. The BBC executive producer is Clare Paterson.
Richard Alwyn’s previous films have been nominated for RTS and Bafta awards and include the Prix Italia-winning Beslan Siege. Richard Klein, Controller BBC Four, says: “Catholic Christianity is at the very centre of many of the western world's cultural and institutional sensibilities and yet Catholics today can feel at times like they are set apart from mainstream society. So this is a series which seeks to ask a simple question of people who are Catholics: What is it like, being a Catholic?”  Richard Alwyn says: "It’s inevitably been a very troubled time for the Catholic Church in recent years. So we are particularly proud of the access that we have gained to make films which reveal the complex reality of being Catholic away from the tabloid headlines." Archie Baron says: "I hope viewers will find this series moving, thought-provoking and closely textured."


Factual; Arts; Culture and the Media; Documentaries


Jeremy Deller: Middle Class Hero - A Culture Show Special
BBC2, 7:00-8:00pm

As Turner Prize-winning artist Jeremy Deller prepares for an exhibition at the Hayward Gallery in London, he discusses the creative processes behind some of his major works, which include a collaborative project with rock band Manic Street Preachers and a re-enactment of the Battle of Orgreave that took place during the 1984-5 UK miners' strike. The programme also follows him in Texas, where he films bats for his latest work.



Documentaries
Melvyn Bragg on Class and Culture
BBC2, 9:00-10:00pm, 1/3

Pete Townshend, Ken Loach and Faye Weldon join Melvyn Bragg as he explores how it was his generation of writers, artists and filmmakers who swept aside the culture of an earlier and more powerful class-bound era.  The grim but settled austerity years after World War Two were followed by an astonishing surge of energy that transformed perceptions of both culture and class.
Following in the footsteps of the angry young men of the 1950s, writers were expressing their frustration at the snobbery and exclusivity of the system in which they had grown up. They were saying it in books, on the stage and, by the early 60s they were saying it on television, the dominant medium of the time.  Melvyn explains: “Art goes where energy is and in the working class and lower middle class there was tremendous energy, and it came out and it took over.”


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Wednesday, 8 February 2012

Off-air recordings for week 11-17th February 2012

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


*This applies to staff members and students 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.
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Monday 13th February

News; Current Affairs

Panorama: Poor America
BBC1, 8:30-9:00pm

With one and a half million American children now homeless, reporter Hilary Andersson meets the school pupils who go hungry in the richest country on Earth. From those living in the storm drains under Las Vegas to the tent cities now springing up around the United States, Panorama finds out how the poor are surviving in America and asks whatever happened to Barack Obama's vision for the country.


Documentaries; Crime

True Stories: America's Serial Killer
More 4, 10:00-11:25pm

In one of the worst serial killings in American history, over just two years police have discovered 11 bodies dumped on an isolated stretch of coastal road in Long Island, New York, leading to a wealthy gated community.

Four of the dead were sex workers who had advertised online, as part of a rapidly growing internet sex trade worth millions. The killer is still at large.
With access to several people close to the case and to the victims, this True Stories film pieces together a crime that exposes a darker side of middle-class, white America. The film includes compelling interviews with families of the victims and of another online escort, Shannan Gilbert, who was found nearby, and first-hand accounts from witnesses, senior police and officials close to the case.
Examining how the sex trade has increasingly moved online, the film sheds light on a world where clients can now search for individuals from the privacy of their home, and, most importantly for some, anonymously.
The most highly prized commodity in this online industry is the ordinary American girl, like many of the victims of the Long Island serial killer, who were cashing in on this seemingly straightforward, lucrative operation in order to make ends meet or earn fast money.
Shannan's fate was one of the biggest mysteries of this crime. Her disappearance triggered the man-hunt and unearthing of this gruesome, high-profile case. But when her body was finally discovered in December 2011, police concluded that Shannan's death was not linked to the serial killer, something that is still strongly contended by her family.
This film tells the chilling story of five American girls who fell prey to a new, highly dangerous form of prostitution.
As the hunt for the killer continues, the police cannot rule out the possibility that he has claimed more lives, or that he will kill again. Meanwhile, more women are taken in by the lure of the online sex trade, running the risk of becoming someone's next victim.



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Tuesday 14th February

Factual; Documentaries

Storyville - If a Tree Falls: A Story of the Liberation Front
BBC4, 1:20-2:40am

Nominated for a 2011 Academy Award, this documentary tells the remarkable story of a young American environmentalist involved with the Earth Liberation Front - a group the FBI came to describe as America's 'number one domestic terrorism threat'.

For years, the ELF - operating in separate anonymous cells without any central leadership - had launched spectacular attacks against dozens of logging companies they accused of destroying the environment. In December 2005, Daniel McGowan was arrested by federal agents in a nationwide sweep of radical environmentalists involved with the ELF.
Part coming-of-age tale, part thriller, the film interweaves a verite chronicle of Daniel as he faces life in prison, with a dramatic recounting of the events that led to his involvement with the group.


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Wednesday 15th February

Documentaries

Cutting Edge: Obsessive Compulsive Hoarder
More 4, 9:00-10:00pm


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Friday 17th February

Documentaries

Baka: A Cry from the Rainforest
BBC2, 9:00-10:30pm

Phil Agland revisits the Baka Pygmy family he filmed 25 years ago in his Bafta-winning documentary Baka – People Of The Rainforest.

He explores how life has changed for the new generation: the children of the old film are now parents; Camera, who was born at the end of the first film and named after Phil’s film camera, now has a seven-year-old daughter, Ambi. Camera’s brother Ali also has a young daughter, who is disabled.
For the first time the Baka watch themselves in the original film on a huge screen in the forest. Seeing how their parents used to live prompts an epic journey deep into the forest to rediscover the old life of their fathers. The story that unfolds is a tragic one of a family caught helplessly between the world of the forest and the outside world that rejects them. But it is also a story of redemption inspired by the children, especially Ambi, who attends school for the first time.

Tuesday, 31 January 2012

Off-air recordings for week 4-10 February 2012

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


*This applies to staff members and students 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.
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Monday 6th February

News, Current Affairs

Panorama: Hunting the Internet Bullies
BBC1, 8:30-9:00pm

Online bullying is rapidly growing in frequency and intensity. A new breed of self-styled 'trolls' are stalking social networking websites, aiming their vicious attacks at victims who range from TV celebrities to grieving teenagers.

Declan Lawn meets X Factor star Cher Lloyd, who describes how cyber attacks are ruining her life, and highlights a new survey revealing that one in thirteen young people face persistent online bullying. Panorama tracks down some of the bullies and asks: what more could be done to stop them?



Factual; Health and Wellbeing; Documentaries

San Francisco's Year Zero: We Were Here
BBC4, 10:00-11:30pm

2011 marks 30 years since AIDS descended. In 1981, the flourishing gay community in San Franscisco was hit with an unimaginable disaster. Through the eyes of those whose lives changed in unimaginable ways, this film tells how their beloved city was changed from a hotbed of sexual freedom and social experimentation into the epicentre of a terrible sexually transmitted 'gay plague'. From their different vantage points as caregivers, activists, researchers, friends and lovers of the afflicted and as people with AIDS themselves, it shares stories which are intensely personal. Speaking to our capacity as individuals to rise to the occasion, this is the story of the incredible power of a community coming together with love, compassion and determination.

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Tuesday 7th February

Science and Nature; Nature and Environment

How to Grow a Planet
BBC2, 9:00-10:00pm, 1/3, Life from a Light

In this series Professor Iain Stewart tells a stunning new story about our planet. He reveals how the greatest changes to the Earth have been driven, above all, by plants.


In this first episode Iain journeys from the spectacular caves of Vietnam to the remote deserts of Africa. He sees how plants first harnessed light from the sun and created our life-giving atmosphere. He uncovers the epic battle between the dinosaurs and the tallest trees on the planet. And, using remarkable imagery, he shows plants breathing - and for the first time talking to each other.



Documentaries; Science

Katie: The Science of Seeing Again
Channel 4, 9:00-10:00pm

Following a vicious acid attack in 2008, Katie Piper has undergone 109 operations to rebuild her face. But it is the 110th op, using controversial cutting-edge science, which could truly transform her life, providing her only chance of seeing again through her badly damaged left eye. After spending three and a half years struggling to accept she would forever be blind in one eye, Katie heard about pioneering surgery that could potentially restore her sight using the extraordinary power of stem cells. She tracked down the doctor responsible for it and has put herself forward to be one of the first people in the world to undergo the treatment, which entails transplanting stem cells directly into her eye.


Criminology; Forensics

Death Unexplained
BBC1, 10:35-11:20pm, 1/3

With unprecedented access to forensic pathologists, mortuary technicians, police and the Coroner herself, Death Unexplained follows Her Majesty’s Coroner Alison Thompson and her team as they examine in painstaking detail mysterious, violent and unnatural deaths in West London, one of the busiest jurisdictions in the country.

Behind each case is also a very human story, movingly told by families themselves and revealing more about the circumstances of loved ones’ lives and deaths.

In the first episode, Alison’s team investigate a rare case of suspected poisoning; a possible prescription drugs overdose and the case of a man whose body lay undiscovered for months.  In court the Coroner must reach her verdict – who were the deceased and when, where and how did they die?


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Wednesday 8th February

Factual; Homes and Gardens; Science and Nature; Science and Environment

Bees, Butterflies and Blooms
BBC2; 8:00-9:00pm, 1/3, Villages, Farms and Countryside

Our bees and other pollinating insects are in crisis. It’s a complex problem that scientists the world over are trying to fathom, but the prognosis is grim - without healthy populations of insect pollinators across the world, our food security is under threat.

Our pollinating insects are vital to the production of the vast majority of the fruits and vegetables we need in our healthy 5-a-day diets. If we don’t start to look after our insect pollinators, eventually our favourite foods could vanish from our supermarket shelves, from apples and pears through to coffee and chocolate.

Sarah wants to show us all that we could make a difference and reverse this trend if we all do our bit. She wants to inspire and inform everyone, no matter where they live – village, town, city or countryside – to get planting nectar rich plants.

Backed by recent research, Sarah believes that one of the main reasons our pollinators are under threat is due to their poor health and nutrition. A lack of a rich and varied supply of pollen and nectar throughout the year to feed our insect workforce is leaving them vulnerable to the effects of pesticides and parasites and threatening some species with extinction.

Sarah believes in ‘people power’, and that together, we can all do our bit to help save our precious pollinators, and bring their needs to the fore.

If we all make small changes in our local areas and grow more wildflowers and insect-friendly plants, then we can lend a strong helping hand to our bees, butterflies and pollinating bugs.

Together, we could help to reverse the trend, maybe stop extinctions and secure a future for our threatened pollinating insects.



Documentary

Guerilla: The Taking of Patty Hearst
BBC2, 11:20pm-12:50am

Amongst all the crackpot politics of early 70s USA, the kidnapping of heiress Patty Hearst by anti-capitalist revolutionaries was the freakiest act in town. Robert Stone's fascinating Guerrilla combines a stunning wealth of contemporary footage with interviews from many - but sadly not all - of the major surviving players to brilliantly document the ideological fury of the captors, the harebrained reaction of the establishment, and the whirling media lunacy that fuelled both sides.

In 1973, a dismayed group of Berkley radicals and an escaped convict formed the Symbionese Liberation Army dedicated to destroying the "fascist insect" the USA had become. Attempting to bring about a prisoner swap, the SLA snatched Hearst, great-granddaughter of William Randolph Hearst and heiress to the publishing empire the SLA regarded as "chief propagandists of the military dictatorship".

The film's most comic and shocking moments come from the fact that every wild twist in the drama was pumped out on wall-to-wall television, especially when Patty herself turned up two months later as a bank-robbing, gun-toting member of the SLA - or when a month after that, six SLA members ended up dead in a two-hour shootout with the LA police.

Claiming brainwashing and using her family's considerable influence, Hearst obtained an early release from her ensuing prison sentence and an eventual Presidential pardon. The film suffers slightly, then, from a gaping Patty-shaped hole in the finale. Just as we are ready for some answers, Stone sidesteps the question of her truthfulness, claiming that the interesting part of the tale is the way America reacted. True as that may be, we, the bloodthirsty consumers of personality-led media, cannot help but be disappointed by her absence.


News; Current Affairs; Environment

Tonight: The Cost of Going Green
ITV1, 7:30-8:00pm

The UK Government is committed to having 15% of our total energy generated by renewable sources such as wind, water and solar power by the year 2020. This target has led to a number of innovative yet highly subsidised schemes – but at what cost to household bills? Jonathan Maitland investigates the cost of going green


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Thursday, 26 January 2012

Off-air recordings for week 28th January - 3rd February 2012

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


*This applies to staff members and students 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.
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Saturday 28th January

Factual; History; Documentaries

Atlantis: The Evidence - A Timewatch Special
BBC4, 8:00-9:00pm

In this Timewatch special, historian Bettany Hughes unravels one of the most intriguing mysteries of all time. She presents a series of geological, archaeological and historical clues to show that the legend of Atlantis was inspired by a real historical event, the greatest natural disaster of the ancient world.

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Sunday 29th January

Factual; Science and Nature; Nature and the Enviroment

Penguin Island
BBC1, 3:30-4:00pm, 1/6

Meet Bluey and Sheila, one of the 13,000 little penguin couples who live on Phillip Island, off the coast of Australia. As the devoted penguin couple returns to their cliff-top home to begin the annual breeding cycle, Penguin Island introduces the dedicated team of rangers and scientists who will monitor and protect them through the hottest summer on record.

Among them is Marg Healy. With over 26 years of experience with penguins and other animals, Marg runs Phillip Island's animal hospital, looking after injured wildlife including little penguins, possums, koalas and other birds.

Field researcher Leanne Renwick weighs and examines the penguins to ensure they are up to the task of breeding. Her colleague Elizabeth Lundahl-Hegedus is a parade ranger and has lived within the Summerlands penguin colony for 30 years. It is a short walk from her house to the Penguin Parade, where the nightly parade of little penguins returns from sea.

We meet the feathered residents of the Penguin Cafe, a cluster of 'love nests' behind the busy Phillip Island tourist centre, where perennial bachelor Rocky and the determined yet slightly dim-witted Spike vie for the attention of the passing females as they attempt to attract a mate - including recent divorcee Tash.

Meanwhile, Bluey and Sheila lay their first clutch of eggs. While Sheila is off at sea hunting for food, the eggs hatch and Bluey must guard them until Sheila is home to meet her two young sons for the first time.



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Monday 30th January

Factual; Arts, Culture and the Media; History

The Secret Catacombs of Paris
BBC Radio 4, 11:00-11:30am

Famously known as the City of Light, Paris is a diverse metropolis rich in architecture and steeped in history. But it has a dark alter ego that lies 30 metres under the ground, mirroring centuries of bloody wars, revolutions and riots on the surface. For Paris is porous - built on 177 miles of tunnels that were formed when limestone and gypsum were quarried to build the capital. Most people are only aware of just a tiny fraction of these tunnels - the world famous ossuary known as The Catacombs. The authorities have tried to keep a lid on the full extent of the labyrinthine remainder for hundreds of years. But there are little known entry points everywhere - in basements, in train stations, cellars and sewers. Throughout history, invaders have always found a way in, whether they were fighting Prussian soldiers, fleeing royalty of the French Revolution, the Nazis or The Resistance. Today they're home to the cataphiles - urban explorers who use the tunnels as an art space, a music venue or even a clandestine meeting point for secret societies.

The Guardian's architecture and design correspondent Jonathan Glancey investigates the underground maze of Paris, revealing a mysterious and intriguing history.

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Tuesday 31st January

Factual; Documentaries

Wonderland: My Child The Rioter
BBC2, 9:00-10:00pm

In August 2011, parents all over Britain were waking up to a morning they had never imagined. For some, it was the police knocking on the door, for others, it was the sight of a pile of stolen goods in their child's bedroom. Some simply realised that it was their kid who had been out on the streets, smashing windows, looting shops and attacking the police.


In sitting rooms and kitchens around the country, these families endured some of the most difficult conversations of their lives. Olly Lambert's film takes viewers inside those homes and inside those conversations. Many of these families would find their children facing lengthy prison sentences, and they themselves were singled out by a prime minister who blamed the worst riots in recent British history on 'a lack of proper parenting, a lack of proper upbringing, a lack of proper ethics, a lack of proper morals'.

Eileen and Alan Bretherton's son Liam had recently served in Afghanistan, and was at the beginning of a promising career in the army. He got caught up in the events of last summer while home on leave; consequently, his parents now have to face the fact that the son in whom they took so much pride is now an ex-offender whose military career is in ruins.

In Manchester, childhood sweethearts Kerry and Liam Parkes looked on as their 19-year-old son defended the riots and took pride in what he did on the streets of Manchester. And in Willesden, David Clark watched his son break down in tears in fear of what his future may now hold.

This simple film cuts to the heart of families at the frontline of rioting Britain.


Factual; Politics

What Are The Police For?
BBC Radio 4, 8:00-8:30pm, 1/3

With policing top of the political agenda, and major change on the way, Mark Easton asks what we want from our police.

Mark spends time with police officers doing jobs as diverse as roads policing, neighbourhood policing and monitoring sex offenders to paint a picture of how we are policed in 2012 and examine whether the daily reality matches the political rhetoric. And he speaks to politicians, academics and the public to assess whether what we are getting is what we want.

In this first programme, he digs into the origins of the current political debate over policing, and asks what the huge political changes lined up for policing in 2012 - including budget cuts, elected Police and Crime Commissioners and major changes to working practices - will mean for the service.


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Wednesday 1st February

Factual; Crime and Justice

Burglar in the House
BBC1, 10:45-11:30pm

Every two minutes a house in Britain is burgled, and for years Nottingham has suffered the highest burglary rates in the UK. But the city's police are fighting back, and are now capturing the burglars on camera. They are installing hidden minicams inside ordinary homes, which record the thieves in action. They call them 'capture houses', Nottingham's new weapon in the fight against crime. But is this new technology as reliable as the police think? And should the police be allowed to set traps for burglars?

Part of the Modern Crime season, this gripping documentary takes viewers to the frontline of a surburban crime-wave, witnessing first-hand the cat-and-mouse battle currently being played out across Nottingham. The film shows heart-stopping footage of burglars breaking into homes, and follows the intelligence and burglary teams as they hunt the burglars down. And cameras are there in the interview room as the burglar is shown the damning footage. Many burglars protest their innocence at first, but once they see the capture house footage, the game is up.

 
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Thursday 2nd February

Factual; History

Lost Kingdoms of Africa
BBC4, 11:10pm-12:10am, 1/4, The Kingdom of Asante

We know less about Africa's distant past than almost anywhere else on Earth. But the scarcity of written records doesn't mean that Africa lacks history - it is found instead in the culture, artefacts and traditions of the people. In this series, art historian Dr Gus Casely-Hayford explores some of the richest and most vibrant histories in the world, revealing fascinating stories of four complex and sophisticated civilisations: the Kingdom of Asante, the Zulu Kingdom, the Berber Kingdom of Morocco and the Kingdoms of Bunyoro & Buganda.


In this episode, Dr Casely-Hayford travels to Ghana in West Africa, where a powerful kingdom once dominated the region. Asante was built on gold and slaves, which ensured its important place in an economy that linked three continents. He reveals how this sophisticated kingdom emerged from the unlikely environment of dense tropical forest and how it was held together by a shared sense of tradition and history - one deliberately moulded by the kingdom's rulers.


Factual; History; Youth Culture

Teen Spirit
Yesterday, 9:00-10:00pm, 1/3

In this first episode, Suggs takes a look at post-war Britain in the 50s where the word teenager didn't even exist.  Instead children simply left school and entered straight into adult life by getting a job, getting married and having children themselves.  In an era where homes finally got the washing machine, electric fire and the telephone, young adults were also starting their own rebellious uprising.  Bored of following the establishment, they decided to cry out to society by donning drainpipe trousers, drape jackets and crepe shoes to form the well known culture of the Teddy Boys.  Suggs takes viewers back in time to explore the music, fashions and rebellious attitudes of the 50s teens. Don't forget your hair grease and comb.


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Friday 3rd February

News; Factual; Current Affairs

Egypt: Children of the Revolution
BBC2, 7:00-8:00pm

Documentary following three revolutionaries after the downfall of former Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak during the Arab Spring, exploring their different visions for the country's future. Western-educated Gigi Ibrahim discusses his desire for a more liberal Egypt, Ahmed Hassan hopes the changes will lead to greater employment opportunities, and Tahir Yasin, who was tortured while in prison, dreams of the nation becoming an Islamic state.

Wednesday, 18 January 2012

Off-air recordings for week 21-27 January 2012

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


*This applies to staff members and students 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.
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Saturday 21st January

Art, culture and the Media; Documentaries

Catfish
More4, 10:00-11:55pm

When New York photographer Nev Schulman receives a painting based on one of his photographs from Abby, an eight-year-old child prodigy in Michigan, they become Facebook friends, and Nev develops online relationships with Abby's family, in particular with her attractive elder half-sister Megan.


But is everything as it seems? Nev travels to Michigan to find out.

A reality thriller that is a shocking product of our times, Catfish is a riveting story of love, deception and grace within a labyrinth of online intrigue.

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Sunday 22nd January

Factual; History; Documentaries

The Last Explorers
BBC2, 6:00-7:00pm, 1/4 Livingstone

Neil Oliver follows in the footsteps of four Scottish explorers who planted ideas rather than flags - ideas that shaped the modern world we know today. In this first programme, Neil travels down the Zambesi river to reveal how David Livingstone took the faith of his nation to the ends of the Earth and exploited his celebrity to end the slave trade. His was a moral mission: to reshape British values and bring commerce, Christianity and civilisation to the African continent.


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Tuesday 24th January

Factual; Science and Nature; Nature and the Environment; Documentaries

Survivors: Nature's Indestructible Creatures
BBC2, 9:00-10:00pm, 1/3 The Great Dying

It is estimated that 99 per cent of species have become extinct and there have been times when life's hold on Earth has been so precarious it seems it hangs on by a thread.


This series focuses on the survivors - the old-timers - whose biographies stretch back millions of years and who show how it is possible to survive a mass extinction event which wipes out nearly all of its neighbours. The Natural History Museum's Professor Richard Fortey discovers what allows the very few to carry on going - perhaps not for ever, but certainly far beyond the life expectancy of normal species. What makes a survivor when all around drop like flies?

In this episode Professor Fortey focuses on a series of cataclysms over a million year period, 250 million years ago.



Factual; Politics; Documentaries

The World Against Apartheid: Have You Heard From Johannesburg?
BBC2, 10:00-11:00pm, 1/5, The Road To Resistance

Ten years in the making, this series explores how a violent and racist government was destroyed by the concerted efforts of men and women working on multiple fronts inside and outside South Africa for more than three decades. Featuring archive of the struggle never seen before on television and interviews with the major players, it is one of the most fascinating stories of the last century.

In this opening episode, Oliver Tambo leads citizens of the world in their condemnation of South Africa's cruel and racist new regime. The world reacts with horror when protesters are gunned down in the town of Sharpeville and the entire ANC leadership is forced underground or imprisoned. Nelson Mandela is jailed for life and ANC deputy president Oliver Tambo escapes into exile, embarking on what will become a 30-year journey to engage the world in the struggle to bring democracy to South Africa. With resistance inside South Africa effectively crushed by the brutal apartheid regime, the fate of the liberation struggle is in Tambo's hands.



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Wednesday 25th January

Factual; Science and Nature

Natural World: Jungle Gremlins of Java
BBC2, 8:00-9:00pm

The slow loris is the real-life gremlin, extremely cute but with a venom that can kill. Now it's also a YouTube superstar with millions of hits. Dr Anna Nekaris travels to the jungles of Java to solve the riddle of its toxic bite, but a shocking discovery awaits.




Factual; Arts, Culture and the Media

Ken Russell: A Bit of a Devil
BBC2, 11:00pm-12:00am

Following the recent death of Ken Russell, Alan Yentob looks back over the career of the flamboyant film director responsible for Women In Love, Tommy and The Devils. Friends and admirers - including Glenda Jackson, Terry Gilliam, Twiggy, Melvyn Bragg, Robert Powell and Roger Daltrey - recall a pioneering documentary-maker, talented photographer and fearless film director.


When at the BBC in the Sixties, Russell first established his name with brilliant documentaries on Elgar, Delius and Debussy. Not only did he bring alive their music with inspiring images, he also humanised them by using actors, something unthinkable in factual film-making at the time. His unfettered imagination soon led to feature films. Women In Love earned Glenda Jackson an Oscar and notoriety for a nude wrestling scene featuring Oliver Reed and Alan Bates. Although infamy dogged him with The Devils, he enjoyed considerable commercial success with The Boyfriend and his extravagant take on The Who's Tommy. Furiously creative to the end, Russell showed himself determined to pursue his original ideas, sometimes regardless of the personal cost.



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Thursday 26th January

Factual; Archaeology

Saxon Hoard: A Golden Discovery
BBC2, 8:00-9:00pm

Historian Dan Snow uncovers the secrets of one of Britain's most significant discoveries - the Staffordshire Hoard. Found by an amateur metal detecting enthusiast in 2009, the cache of 3,500 items offers an array of new clues into the Dark Ages, and the presenter pieces together the lives of the people who lived in these kingdoms.




Arts, Culture and the Media; Drama documentary

We'll Take Manhattan
BBC4, 9:00-10:30pm

We’ll Take Manhattan explores the explosive love affair between Sixties supermodel, Jean Shrimpton, and photographer, David Bailey.

Focusing on a wild and unpredictable 1962 Vogue photo shoot in New York, the drama brings to life the story of two young people falling in love, misbehaving and inadvertently defining the style of the Sixties along the way.

Set predominantly in 1962 but also exploring the story of how Bailey and Shrimpton first met, this one-off drama reveals how a young, visionary photographer refused to conform. He insisted on using the unconventional model Jean Shrimpton on an important photo shoot for British Vogue and, over the course of a freezing week in Manhattan, went against the wishes of fashion editor, Lady Clare Rendlesham, and made startling, original photographs.

We’ll Take Manhattan is the story of that wild week, of Bailey and Jean’s love affair, and of how two young people accidentally changed the world for ever.




Biography; Documentary

David Bailey: Four Beats To The Bar and No Cheating
BBC4, 10:30-11:35pm

From Vogue magazine fashion photographer to filmmaker, painter and sculptor, David Bailey is a cultural icon who has been at the cutting edge of contemporary art for 50 years. A working-class Londoner, he befriended the stars, married his muses and still captures the spirit and elegance of his times with his refreshingly simple approach and razor-sharp eye. Approaching his 73rd year, Bailey is showing no sign of slowing up. In his London studio and his country home in Devon, he continues to create one of the most varied and pertinent collections of any modern artist. Featuring interviews with art critic Martin Harrison, former wife Catherine Deneuve, current wife Catherine Dyer and close friend Jerry Hall, this is a portrait of a private man who bared the soul of the swinging sixties and seventies with his photographs and films. Grounded, honest, open and ferociously creative, Bailey makes art the way Count Basie played jazz - four beats to the bar and no cheating.

Wednesday, 11 January 2012

Off-air recordings for week 14-20 January 2012

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

*This applies to staff members and students 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.
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Saturday 14th January

Factual; Documentaries

Timeshift: The Rules of Drinking
BBC4, 11:00-pm-12:00am, series 11

Timeshift digs into the archive to discover the unwritten rules that have governed the way we drink in Britain. In the pubs and working men's clubs of the forties and fifties there were strict customs governing who stood where. To be invited to sup at the bar was a rite of passage for many young men, and it took years for women to be accepted into these bastions of masculinity. As the country prospered and foreign travel became widely available, so new drinking habits were introduced as we discovered wine and, even more exotically, cocktails.

People began to drink at home as well as at work, where journalists typified a tradition of the liquid lunch. Advertising played its part as lager was first sold as a woman's drink and then the drink of choice for young men with a bit of disposable income. The rules changed and changed again, but they were always there - unwritten and unspoken, yet underwriting our complicated relationship with drinking.


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Monday 16th January

Factual; Documentaries

Secrets of the Shoplifters
Channel 4, 10:00-11.05pm

Britain is the shoplifting capital of Europe - the crime has increased by over 12% in the last year. This film heads to the front line of the battle between shops and robbers, revealing the cunning and clever up-to-date tactics employed by both sides.


The summer riots highlighted that Brits are prepared to break the law and steal to get what they want. Whilet store detectives are refusing to give up the fight, shoplifters are equally determined to outwit them. It's a surreal world of cat and mouse - detectives scour Facebook while lifters use a range of complex tricks to try to disable those seemingly unmovable tags.

The recession is dramatically changing the goods that are being stolen - the theft of clothing is being replaced by a huge rise in meat stealing. With shoplifters becoming smarter and more presentable in appearance, security staff have to become experts in body language to stay one step ahead.

These committed detectives are putting their necks on the line, often without handcuffs or stab vests, while they try and detain people who, when caught, can sometimes turn violent.


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Tuesday 17th January

Drama. Classic and Period

The Mystery of Edwin Drood
BBC1, 1:25-2:25am, part 1 (part 2 tomorrow)

A two-part period drama adapted from the novel by Charles Dickens.

Opium addict and choirmaster John Jasper has vivid dreams of killing his beloved nephew Edwin Drood and stealing his fiancee Rosa. When two exotic strangers arrive in town, Jasper's dark desires take shape and his life will never be the same again.

With Edwin Drood feared dead, Jasper tries desperately to remember events of the night before. He pursues Rosa with an intensity that pushes him to the edge of sanity, while a trail of evidence points ominously to the cathedral crypt.

Factual; Science and Nature; Science and Technology

Horizon: Playing God
BBC2, 9:30-10:30pm

Adam Rutherford meets a new creature created by American scientists, the spider-goat. It is part goat, part spider, and its milk can be used to create artificial spider's web.

It is part of a new field of research, synthetic biology, with a radical aim: to break down nature into spare parts so that we can rebuild it however we please.

This technology is already being used to make bio-diesel to power cars. Other researchers are looking at how we might, one day, control human emotions by sending 'biological machines' into our brains.


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Wednesday 18th January

Factual; History

Illuminations: The Private Life of Medieval Kings
BBC4, 11:00pm-12:00am, Second of three part series (part 1 already recorded)

Dr Janina Ramirez unlocks the secrets of medieval illuminated manuscripts and shows how they gave power to the king and united the kingdom in an age of plague, warfare and rebellion. She discovers that Edward III used the manuscripts he read as a boy to prepare him for his great victory at the battle of Crecy and reveals how a vigorous new national identity bloomed during the 100 Years War with France (1340-1453).


In the British Library's Royal Manuscripts collection she finds out that magnificent manuscripts like the Bedford Hours, taken as war booty from the French royal family, were adapted for the education of English princes. Dr Ramirez also explores how knowledge spread through a new form of book - the encyclopaedia.

Factual; History

The Crusades
BBC2, 9:30-10:30pm, 1/3 Holy War

The story of the Crusades is remembered as a tale of religious fanaticism and unspeakable brutality, of medieval knights and jihadi warriors; of castles and kings; of heroism, betrayal and sacrifice.


But now, using fresh evidence, eye-witness testimonies and contemporary accounts - from both the Christian and Islamic worlds - Dr Thomas Asbridge re-examines this epic medieval tale. Retracing the steps of the crusaders from a small town in France to the magnificent cities of the Holy Land, he brings to life the human experience of the Crusades, and sheds new light on how it was that two of the world's great religions waged war in the name of God; why hundreds of thousands of Christians and Muslims answered the call to crusade and jihad.


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Thursday 19th January

News; Documentaries

Putin, Russia and the West
BBC2, 9:00-10:00pm, 1/4, Taking Control

Vladimir Putin, after eight years as President of Russia and four more as Prime Minister, is stubbornly holding onto power. He has announced his intention to return as President and declared his United Russia party the winner in parliamentary elections that have widely been seen as fraudulent, causing mass protests in Moscow and elsewhere with tens of thousands of people taking to the streets.


But just how did this consummate political operator with a background in the KGB become a valued ally of the West? And when did his policies start to provoke deep concern in Washington and London? Putin, Russia & the West tells the inside story, with contributions from Putin’s top colleagues and the Western statesmen who have clashed with him.

This is a four-part series from Norma Percy and the team at Brook Lapping behind the multi-award-winning documentaries The Death of Yugoslavia, The Second Russian Revolution and Iran & the West.

The first film, Taking Control, starts with George W Bush meeting Putin in June 2001 and declaring how he looked Putin in the eye and ‘got a sense of his soul’. Colin Powell and Condoleezza Rice recall their reactions to the discussions that happened behind closed doors, with Putin delivering a prophetic warning about Pakistan, Afghanistan and the Taliban. Three months later, 9/11 happened.

Following the terrorist attacks, Putin quickly aligned Russia with the West, to the surprise of many in the Kremlin. The US and Russia had opposed each other for decades, but the world had now changed. Sergei Ivanov, Russian’s Defence Minister, tells how offers from Taliban to join forces with Russia against America were rejected with strong language.

But at home Putin was becoming increasingly authoritarian. Mikhail Kasyanov, then Russia’s Prime Minister, recalls a meeting with Putin and the country’s top businessmen, where ‘all the oligarchs present almost hid under the table in fear.' The film also tells the story of how Russia’s richest man, Mikhail Khodorkovsky, challenged Putin and ended up in prison.


Documentaries

True Stories: Gypsy Blood
More4, 10:00-11:35pm

Filmed over two years by award-winning photographer Leo Maguire, Gypsy Blood examines the violent culture that some gypsy and traveller fathers hand on to their sons.


The film is an intimate portrait of two gypsy families, their fight for respect and the price they pay in cycles of revenge that can erupt into sudden and terrifying violence.

The Dohertys are Irish Traveller royalty. While Hughie Doherty, 27, becomes embroiled in a fight to defend his family's name, his seven-year-old son Francie is caught between two worlds, learning to read at primary school while learning to fight with his fists at home.

Fred Butcher is Romany but torn between the gypsy fighting tradition and his love as a father. His nine-year-old son, Freddy Cole, is terrified his father will be badly hurt in a fight. The film follows the story of how Fred nearly dies in a machete attack as a day of drinking and sparring goes terribly wrong.

Gypsy Blood is a haunting study of masculinity, violence and the uneasy relationship gypsy and traveller men have with their bare-knuckle traditions, and an insight into people living amongst a wider society but sometimes with values that are a world apart.


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Friday 20th January

Documentary; Historical

Pugin: God's Own Architect
BBC4, 1:35-2:35am

Augustus Northmore Welby Pugin is far from being a household name, yet he designed the iconic clock tower of Big Ben as well as much of the Palace of Westminster. The 19th century Gothic Revival that Pugin inspired, with its medieval influences and soaring church spires, established an image of Britain which still defines the nation. Presenter Richard Taylor charts Pugin's extraordinary life story and discovers how his work continues to influence Britain today


Factual; Arts, Culture and the Media

Fig Leaf: The Biggest Cover-up in History
BBC4, 3:35-4:35am

Writer and broadcaster Stephen Smith uncovers the secret history of the humble fig leaf, opening a window onto 2,000 years of Western art and ethics.

He tells how the work of Michelangelo, known to his contemporaries as 'the maker of pork things', fuelled the infamous 'fig leaf campaign', the greatest cover-up in art history; how Bernini turned censorship into a new form of erotica by replacing the fig leaf with the slipping gauze; and how the ingenious machinations of Rodin brought nudity back to the public eye.

In telling this story, Smith turns many of our deepest prejudices upside down, showing how the Victorians had a far more sophisticated and mature attitude to sexuality than we do today. He ends with an impassioned plea for the widespread return of the fig leaf to redeem modern art from cheap sensation and innuendo.