Wednesday, 23 May 2012

Off-air recordings for week 26th May - 1st June 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 26th May 2012
 
Factual; Arts, Culture and the Media; History
 
A Picture of London
BBC2, 9:15-10:15pm
 
From its early years until the present day, London has provided powerful, emotional inspiration to artists.  This documentary evokes the city as seen by painters, photographers, film-makers and writers through the ages; the perspectives of Dickens, Hogarth, Turner, Virginia Wolfe, Monet and Alfred Hitchcock alongside those of contemporary Londoners who tread the streets of the city every day.
 
All these people have found beauty and inspiration in London's dirt and grime.  Architects and social engineers have strived to organise London, but painters, writers and many more have revelled in its labyrinthine unruliness.  This is the story of a city that tried to impose order on its streets, but actually discovered time after time that its true character lay in an unplanned, chaotic nature.


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Monday 28th May 2012
 
Documentaries
 
Dispatches: The Real Mr and Mrs Assad
Channel 4, 8:00-8:30pm
 
Channel 4 Dispatches reveals a portrait of a golden couple who have become global hate figures. The programme shows intimate footage of President Bashar al-Assad of Syria and his wife Asma that helps explain why the West bought the idea they were true modernisers.


When Bashar took the reins of power after his father's death in 2000, the West was drawn into a hope and belief that Syria would be a new force for change in the Middle East. The Assads were seen as a glamorous couple with modern Western morals and values; he was hailed a reformer, she was the 'Rose of the Desert'.

Key leaders and figures in the West welcomed the young couple, convinced that the softly spoken London-trained ophthalmologist and his beautiful British-born former investment banker wife would bring reform and modernisation to a country that had been run by an iron-fisted dictator for nearly 30 years.

But it seems the West was duped. Instead of a transparent and progressive leadership, what has emerged during a year-long bloody uprising is evidence of the regime's gross systematic human rights abuses, including widespread killings and torture, while the Assads look on.

Channel 4 Dispatches investigates the extent of the Assad family's culpability and the chains of command that link the President and select inner circle to the brutal crackdown.


News

Panorama - Euro 2012: Stadiums of Hate
BBC1, 8:30-9:00pm

With just days to go before the kick-off of the Euro 2012 championships, Panorama reveals shocking new evidence of racist violence and anti-semitism at the heart of Polish and Ukrainian football and asks whether tournament organiser UEFA should have chosen both nations to host the prestigious event.


Reporter Chris Rogers witnesses a group of Asian fans being attacked on the terraces of a Ukrainian premier league match and hears anti-Semitic chanting at games in Poland. And with exclusive access to a far right group in Ukraine which recruits and trains football hooligans to attack foreigners, Panorama asks: how safe will travelling football teams and their supporters be at this summer's European festival of football?


 
Factual; Documentaries
 
Afghanistan: The Great Game - A Personal View by Rory Stewart
BBC2, 9:00-10:00pm, 1/2
 
How control of Afghanistan was seen by Victorian Britain as key to the security of India.



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Tuesday 29th May 2012
 
Factual; History; Documentaries
 
Bristol on Film
BBC4, 8:00-8:30pm, 1/3
 
Bristol has fascinated film-makers from the moment the camera was invented. From shipping, sherry and tobacco to Brunel, bridges and the blitz, this programme explores the visual archives that document this ancient city.



Factual; Documentaries

Harold Baim's Britain on Film
BBC4, 8:30-9:00pm, 2/3
 
A record of Britain and its people as seen through the lens of film-maker Harold Baim. Extracts from Baim's archive of bright and shiny cinema shorts from the 1940s to 1980s reveal a world that has gone forever.



Factual; History; Documentaries

Harlots, Housewives and Heroines: A 17th Century History for Girls
BBC4, 9:00-10.00pm, 2/3, Act Two: At Home
 
Lucy Worsley explores the ordinary as well as the extraordinary lives of women in the home. This was an age when respectable women were defined by their marital status as maids, wives or widows. If they fell outside these categories they were in danger of being labelled whores or, at worst, witches.


While history has left many women voiceless over the centuries, Lucy discovers that in the Restoration a surprising number of women were beginning to question their roles in relationship to their husbands, their position in the home, their attitudes to sex and, most importantly, the expectation to produce children.

Meeting a host of experts and experiencing what life was like behind closed doors, Lucy explores whether their lives changed for better or worse during the second half of the 17th century.


Documentaries

Nature's Fury - Monsoon
ITV1, 11:05pm-12:05am

Film-maker and adventurer Chris Terrill follows the Asian monsoon across India, witnessing for himself its impact on a wide variety of people, from farmers to philosophers. His dramatic and dangerous journey ends in Mumbai, the subcontinent's biggest city - where he finally pushes his luck too far.



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Wednesday 30th May 2012
 
Factual; Documentaries
 
Afghanistan: The Great Game - A Personal View by Rory Stewart
BBC 2, 9:00-10:00pm, 2/2
 
In episode two Rory Stewart tells the story of the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in the twentieth century, and it's parallels with the American-led coalition's intervention today. He explains, that quite contrary to popular understanding, the Soviets were reluctant invaders who agonized over the risks of intervention, but despite all these misgivings, they were sucked into Afghanistan.

At first they thought it would take them a matter of months, but eight years later, when they departed, they had gained nothing but humiliation and horror. In this film Rory Stewart meets the soldiers and Generals on both sides, and he meets the CIA spies who covertly funded the Afghans to the tune of nine billions dollars. And he explains the bloody and tragic aftermath of this invasion - civil war, the rise of the Taliban, and the US-led invasion following the World Trade Centre attack.


Factual; Arts, Culture and the Media

Evidently... John Cooper Clarke
BBC4, 10:00-11:00pm

Evidently… John Cooper Clarke records and celebrates the life and works of Punk Poet John Cooper Clarke; which presents his life as a poet, a comedian, a recording artist and reveals how he remains a significant influence on contemporary culture, spanning four decades.  With a bevy of household names from a the worlds of stand-up comedy, lyricists, rock stars and cultural commentators paying homage to him, the film reveals Salford-born poet John Cooper Clarke as a dynamic force who remains as relevant today as he ever was, as subsequent generations cite him as a significant influence on their lives, careers and styles.

From Bill Bailey to Plan B, Steve Coogan to Kate Nash and Arctic Monkeys front man Alex Turner to cultural commentators such as Miranda Sawyer and Paul Morley, Evidently… John Cooper Clarke reveals the life behind one of Britain's sharpest and most witty poets - a national treasure.

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Thursday 31st May 2012
 
Documentaries
 
Britain's Lost Routes with Griff Rhys Jones
BBC1, 8:00-9:00pm, 1/4, Royal Progress
 
The Welsh actor sets out on a journey to discover the most influential pathways in the nation's history. He begins by retracing Queen Elizabeth I's route through the Cotswolds and into the West Country, recreating the baggage train the monarch took with her, sampling Elizabethan forms of transport and visiting some of the castles and stately homes she stopped at along the way.
 
 
Documentaries
 
Married to the Moonies
Channel 4, 9:00-10:00pm
 
With unprecedented access this revealing film takes viewers inside the little known world of the Unification Church, commonly known to outsiders as the Moonies. Married to the Moonies follows three British youngsters as they travel to Korea to be blessed by their messiah, Reverend Moon, at one of the movement's controversial mass weddings.

The three undertake a condensed courtship - meeting and making plans for the future with a person they hardly know. Twenty-two-year-old psychology student Elisa has decided to make her own wedding dress for the big day. Twenty one year old Reamonn has been matched with a girl from Argentina he hasn't even met. The cameras follow him to the airport as he meets his future bride for the first time.  And 20-year-old Naomi from south London is matched with her future husband just days before the ceremony.

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Friday 1st June 2012
 
News, Documentaries
 
Unreported World: My Week with the Gunmen
Channel 4, 7.30-7:55pm
 
Six months after its revolution, Libya is still riven by factionalism, militias and violence, as the armed groups who overthrew Colonel Gaddafi cling to territory and power.


Tripoli's streets are ruled by the gun. The police have tried to remove roadblocks manned by militiamen and have been driven off in a hail of gunfire.

Reporter Peter Oborne and director Richard Cookson talk to fighters from the powerful Zintan militia who have controlled the country's main airport since they seized it from Gaddafi forces. They've been involved in tense negotiations with the government about handing it over but the talks appear to have stalled...
 
Factual; History
 
The Great British Story: A People's History
BBC2, 9:00-10:00pm, 1/2 - Britannia and 2/8 - Tribes to Nations
 
The roots of Britain; from the end of the Romans to the coming of the Anglo Saxons.
 
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Tuesday, 15 May 2012

Off-air Recordings for week 19-25 May 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 19th May 2012

Factual; Arts, Culture and the Media

Off By Heart Shakespeare
BBC2, 9:00-10:00pm

William Shakespeare is hardly a name that you would expect to thrill Britain's teenagers, but over the last year thousands have taken part in a nationwide competition to learn some of his greatest speeches off by heart.

Now, nine finalists, aged between 13 and 15, and from all over the United Kingdom, are off to Stratford-upon-Avon to take part in a life changing series of workshops with the Royal Shakespeare Company.

Over a single week, they learn how to perform some of Shakespeare's greatest soliloquies from Romeo and Juliet, Henry V and Hamlet, before taking part in a dramatically different and closely fought grand final, hosted by Jeremy Paxman, to find the BBC Shakespeare Schools Champion.


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Sunday 20th May 2012

Factual; Life Stories; Documentaries

Man On Wire
BBC2, 10:00-11:30pm

Documentary based on Philippe Petit's autobiographical book To Reach the Clouds: My High Wire Walk Between the Twin Towers.

In August 1974, French wire-walker Philippe Petit spent nearly an hour walking, dancing, kneeling and lying on a wire which he and his friends had strung in secret between the rooftops of New York's Twin Towers. Six years of intense planning, dreaming and physical training fell into place that morning.

Already an accomplished wire-walker, Petit had caught sight of an article about the planned construction of the Twin Towers while in a dentist's waiting room in 1968, and at that moment an obsession was born. He spent every waking moment since that day plotting the details of his walk (which he called 'le coup') and gathered a team of people around him to assist in the planning.

Petit's preparation was expert, thorough and top secret: he took precise measurements and even aerial photographs to help him construct models of the rigging; learned about the physical effects of the wind on the swaying of the buildings; even created fake ID cards and spied on office workers to plan how best to gain access to the towers without arousing suspicion. On that August morning, his dream was realised.

Using contemporary interviews, archival footage and dramatic reconstructions, the film tells the story of this extraordinary feat, and also of Petit's previous walks between the towers of Notre Dame in Paris, and of the Sydney Harbour Bridge.



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Tuesday 22nd May 2012

Factual; Health and Wellbeing

Great Ormond Street
BBC2, 9:00-10:00pm, 3/6, Buying Time

This episode focuses on Great Ormond Street's heart transplant team. Every year, the number of donor hearts decreases: safer roads, better intensive care and a society reluctant to donate means fewer hearts and longer waits for children for whom transplant is the last resort. The Berlin Heart is a revolutionary machine that keeps these children alive. However, it's a precarious existence as the machine can only buy them time until the rare gift of a heart is made.


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Wednesday 23rd May 2012

Factual; History; Documentaries

The Fall of Singapore: The Great Betrayal
BBC2, 11:20pm-12:20am

Pearl Harbor and the Fall of Singapore: 70 years ago these huge military disasters shook both Britain and America, but they conceal a secret so shocking it has remained hidden ever since. This landmark film by Paul Elston tells the incredible story of how it was the British who gave the Japanese the knowhow to take out Pearl Harbor and capture Singapore. For 19 years before the fall of Singapore to the Japanese, British officers were spying for Japan. Worse still, the Japanese had infiltrated the very heart of the British establishment - through a mole who was a peer of the realm known to Churchill himself.



History; Documentaries

Hitler's Children
BBC 2, 9:00-10:00pm

Adolf Hitler did not have children, but what about the families of Goering, Himmler and Frank, to name a few? What is it like for the descendants of these top Nazi officials to deal with the terrifying legacy of their notorious families? Hitler's Children introduces us to sons, daughters, grandchildren, nieces and nephews of these infamous men. Niklas Frank, son of Hans Frank and godson of Hitler, despises his father so much that he has spent his entire adult life researching, writing and lecturing vehemently against him and the Nazi regime. Bettina Goering, the grandniece of Hitler's second in command, Hermann Goering, lives in voluntary exile in Santa Fe, and together with her brother decided to get sterilized so as to end the Goering name and bloodline. These, and many others, discuss how they have coped with the fact that their last name alone immediately raises images of murder and genocide; each baring, for the first time, the scars that their legacy has left them.


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Thursday 24th May 2012


Documentaries; History

Harlots, Housewives and Heroines: A 17th Century History For Girls
BBC4, 11:00pm-12:00am, 1/3 - Act One: At Court

In this new three-part series historian and Chief Curator of Historic Royal Palaces Dr Lucy Worsley immerses herself in the world of Restoration England, exploring the captivating lives of the women of the period. The years after the Civil War and the Restoration of Charles II marked the end of the medieval era and the beginning of the modern age.

These were exciting times for women, some of whom displayed remarkably modern attitudes and ambitions, achieving wealth, celebrity and power in ways that still look outstanding by 21st century standards. But these women also faced a world that was predominantly male, misogynistic and medieval in its outlook. In the first episode Lucy investigates the lives of women at the top: the King’s mistresses at the Royal Court. When Charles and his entourage returned from exile they came back with a host of continental ideas, and as a result some of the women at court rose to prominence as never before, gaining unprecedented political influence and independence.

Amongst a fascinating cast of female characters, the most astonishing were Charles II’s own mistresses: the Royalist, Barbara Villiers, the French spy Louise de Keroualle and the infamous Cockney actress, Nell Gwynn. Lucy examines the lives of these women, discovering how their fortunes were shaped by the Restoration and how their stories reflect the atmosphere of these extraordinary years. As she discovers, these women were key Restoration players, but as mistresses were truly in charge of their own destinies - or simply part of the world’s oldest profession?

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Friday 25th May 2012

News

Unreported World: Cameroon
Channel 4, 7:30-7:55pm, 6/8

Reporter Evan Williams and director James Brabazon travel to the Central African country of Cameroon to investigate the practice of eating ‘bushmeat' - wild meat hunted in the rainforest. They talk to the medical experts warning that butchering and eating primates including critically endangered gorillas and chimpanzees could trigger a new global pandemic - a new HIV or SARS - by unleashing as-yet unknown viruses. And they meet the British woman battling the trade and looking after the animals orphaned by the slaughter.

Eighty percent of all meat eaten in Cameroon is bushmeat. To understand how the trade works, the Unreported World team travels to the Dja Reserve in the south east of the country. The team passes a constant stream of logging trucks and discovers that the tracks and clearings created by logging companies have opened up the once-impenetrable jungle to bushmeat poachers.

Williams meets some of the wardens trying to combat the poachers. There are only 60 wardens to cover the 2000 square miles of the Dja Reserve. Until 2009 they were funded by the EU. Now they're on their own and it's dangerous work. One warden has already been killed by poachers this year and many have been injured.

Williams and Brabazon walk into the forest with the wardens and meet a group of indigenous Baka people, the so-called pygmies. They tell Williams that people come four or five times a week looking for all sorts of bushmeat and hire locals to go and hunt for them. One warden tells Williams that the local hunters get around 25 to 30 Euros for a chimpanzee.

But the Baka have something even more shocking to reveal. Eating gorilla meat has wiped out one of their neighbouring villages: 25 men, women and children died. There was only one person who survived, and that person didn't eat the meat...

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Wednesday, 9 May 2012

Off-air recordings for week 12-18 May 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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Sunday 13th May 2012

Factual; Documentaries

The Lost World of the Seventies
BBC2, 10:00-11:00pm
Michael Cockerell sheds new light on the tragi-comedy of the 1970s by focusing on some of its most controversial characters. With fresh filming and new interviews, along with a treasure trove of rare archive, the film presents the inside story of giant personalities who make today's public figures look sadly dull in comparison.


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Monday 14th May 2012

Factual; History; Documentaries

The 70s
BBC2, 9:00-10:00pm, 4/4, The Winner Takes It All: 77-79

Factual

56 Up
ITV1, 9:00-10:00pm, 1/3

56 Up, the latest instalment of ITV’s landmark documentary series returns to visit the people whose lives have been followed since they were seven and sees more of the original line-up taking part than ever before. The original 7 Up was broadcast in 1964 as a one-off World in Action Special featuring children who were selected from different backgrounds and social spheres to talk about their hopes and dreams for the future.

As members of the generation who would be running the country by the year 2000, what did they think they would become? Inspired by World in Action founder editor Tim Hewat’s passionate interest in both the Jesuit saying: “Give me the child until he is seven and I will show you the man,” and the rigid class system of 1960s Britain, 7 Up set out to discover whether or not the children’s lives were pre-determined by their background. The result was ground-breaking television and the follow-up films have won an array of awards. Director Michael Apted, who has since moved to Hollywood to direct films including Gorky Park, The Coal Miner’s Daughter, The World Is Not Enough, The Chronicles of Narnia and Gorillas in the Mist, has returned every seven years to chart the children’s progress through life.

Over the past six decades, the series has documented the group as they have become adults and entered middle-age, dealing with everything life has thrown at them in between. Now the series is back to discover what has happened to the group over the last seven years. And one of the original characters has decided to re-join the series after leaving almost 30 years ago. So where are they now?...

Documentaries

Dispatches: Watching The Detectives
Channel 4, 8:00-9:00pm

How safe are your secrets? Channel 4 Dispatches reveals how easy it is to buy our most personal and confidential information.

In a year-long undercover investigation, private detectives sell us access to health and criminal records, mobile phone bills and bank accounts. The programme discovers the extent of the black market in personal data and reveals how supposedly secure databases are open to exploitation.



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Tuesday 15th May 2012

Factual; Health and Wellbeing

Great Ormond Street
BBC2, 9:00-10:00pm, 2/6, A Chance At Life

An intimate portrait of two surgeons in Great Ormond Street's General Surgery unit. Navigating between ground-breaking success and devastating failure, they must balance the risk of surgery against the chance of success. Treating children with extraordinarily complex conditions, some of whom are old enough to be involved in the decision making, this film follows the surgeons, patients and their families as they embark on a journey of preparation towards their operation and into the unknown.



Factual; Life Stories; Reality

The Estate
BBC1, 11:40pm-12:10am, 8/8

Martin receives some shattering news from Emma, and Kelly Ann must make a big decision. Plus single mum Emma comes out fighting after her housing benefit is cut off.


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Wednesday 16th  May 2012

Factual; Arts, Culture and Media; History; Documentaries

Roundhead or Cavalier: Which One Are You?
BBC4, 1:00-2:00am

In the middle of the 17th century, Britain was devastated by a civil war that divided the nation into two tribes - the Roundheads and the Cavaliers. In this programme, celebrities and historians reveal that modern Britain is still defined by the battle between the two tribes. The Cavaliers represent a Britain of panache, pleasure and individuality. They are confronted by the Roundheads, who stand for modesty, discipline, equality and state intervention. The ideas which emerged 350 years ago shaped our democracy, civil liberties and constitution. They also create a cultural divide that influences how we live, what we wear and even what we eat and drink. Individuals usually identify with one tribe or the other, but sometimes they need some elements of the enemy's identity - David Cameron seeks a dash of the down-to-earth Roundhead, while Ed Miliband looks for some Cavalier charisma.


Factual

Felicity Kendal's Indian Shakespeare Quest
BBC2, 9:00-10:00pm

In Felicity Kendal's Indian Shakespeare Quest, Felicity Kendal discovers the story of India’s long love affair with Shakespeare – from the first days of Empire to Bollywood and beyond. The film follows Felicity as she travels across India, the land of her childhood and the place where she took her first steps on stage as a young actress in her parents’ theatre company, Shakespeareana.

She explores the story of India’s enduring love for Shakespeare – a story in which her own family have played an important part. As her investigation takes her from bustling cities to rural villages, from palaces to playgrounds, Felicity discovers the surprising scale of Shakespeare’s influence on Indian culture.

She learns how his works have made the transition from symbols of Empire to become an inspiration for a new generation of artists, making Shakespeare an iconic figure in a country miles from the land of his birth.

Factual; Arts, Culture and Media; History; Documentaries

Henry VIII: Patron or Plunderer?
BBC4, 8:00-9:00pm, 1/2

King Henry VIII had a fascinating and enlightening relationship with art. He came to the throne as the Renaissance swept across Europe, yet England's new king never lost sight of the medieval chivalry of his forefathers.

In the first of a two-part documentary, architectural historian Jonathan Foyle looks at the palaces, tapestries, music and paintings created in Henry's name and questions whether the art he commissioned compensates for the religious treasures he would come to destroy.


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Friday 18th May 2012

News

Unreported World - Ukraine: The Teenagers Who Live Underground
Channel 4, 7:30-7.55pm

UNICEF estimates that there may be as many as 100,000 street children in Ukraine. Marcel Theroux and Suemay Oram go underground in Kiev to meet some and find out what their life is like. Ukraine has invested billions in infrastructure projects for the 2012 European football championships. While the fans will enjoy the facilities, most of them won't know that living around them - and beneath their feet under the country's cities - are thousands of young people left on their own to survive dangerous, subterranean lives. 

Since the break-up of the Soviet Union, years of economic hardship have hurt Ukraine. The result has been a lost generation of teenagers who have run away from broken families, alcoholism and abuse. They suffer awful living conditions and embarrass the Ukrainian government, which in June will host the European Championships as part of its efforts to project a modern, European image with luxury shops and a thriving culture. Many of the teenagers inject drugs or sell sex, and face serious health risks including syphilis, hepatitis, and HIV/AIDS. In some cities, close to 20 per cent of youngsters living on the streets who were tested were HIV positive.

Theroux and Oram journey underground through pitch-black basements and passageways under the streets of Kiev. Their guides are a group young people who have made their home at the end of a warren of dark corridors. Outside, the temperature is below minus 20 degrees. Underneath the city's Soviet apartment buildings, hot water pipes are helping keep the street children alive. The team finds 13 who have set up home together, surrounded by mounds of rubbish, which indicate they've been living rough for some time. They've been sniffing glue to take away the feelings of cold and hunger, and the effects are starting to become obvious. Longer-term use causes brain damage.

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Wednesday, 2 May 2012

Off-air recordings for week 5-11 May 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 5th May 2012
 
Documentaries

Asian Weddings: Something Gold, Nothing Borrowed, Everything New
BBC Radio 4, 10:30-11:00am


Big fat gypsy weddings might have hit the headlines, but the traditional British Asian wedding has always been big. Often including several separate ceremonies and events spread over a week or more, the cost of the average Asian wedding in the UK is frequently well over £30,000. With the significance of marriage or 'shaadi' being huge in south Asian culture, weddings are a serious business. From the lavish designer outfits and the elaborate cakes to the grand stages where the bride and groom sit on their thrones, complete with a lighting and sound system to rival a TV talent show, this is an industry worth a reported £300 million a year in the UK alone.

Yasmeen Khan explores the glamorous world of British Asian weddings. She takes in an Asian wedding exhibition in the UK, meeting the clothes designers, wedding planners, toastmasters, food suppliers, chefs, videographers and 'yellow gold' jewellers making their fortunes as the second and third generation tie the knot, all of them keen to help the families show off their wealth. She learns about the different cultural aspects of a Muslim, Sikh and Hindu wedding. She visits a couple's big day and explore the meaning behind cultural traditions, such as the confiscating of the groom's shoes by the bride's sisters and cousins - finding out what he must do to get them back.

Yasmeen also delves into the politics of the guest list at an Asian wedding, many of which are huge affairs with hundreds and sometimes thousands of guests! And she discovers just how much family relations are tested as an increasing number of couples pay for something that has traditionally been paid for by the bride's family.


Factual; Crime and Justice; Documentaries

The Bishop and the Prisoner

BBC Radio 4, 10:30-11:00pm, 1/3


In this three part series the BBC is given a rare degree of access to prisons as it accompanies the Rt Rev James Jones, the Church of England's "Bishop for prisons," into the country's jails. Conversations with prisoners - voices rarely heard on radio - are the centrepieces of these programmes, but the Bishop also talks to prison staff, politicians and opinion-formers about what prison should be for, how prisoners can be helped to become useful citizens and whether community sentences can ever win the public's confidence as a viable alternative to prison.

In this first programme, James Jones visits Liverpool, High Down and Forest Bank prisons. He witnesses the "processing" of inmates as they go through prison reception (or "The Churn" ) and gets out of the way of officers on the walkways responding to alarms that are always sounding. He measures a cell (12 paces by 9). He talks to prisoners - first-timers, old hands, self-harmers - about why they are there. Governors and prison officers tell him how they seek to manage inmates' routines and behaviour, and about the importance of looking out for themselves - when two staff can be responsible for a wing holding sixty prisoners, it doesn't do to let your guard down.

The prison population is at record levels, having almost doubled in the last twenty years. The Justice secretary Kenneth Clarke says he doesn't understand how it has been allowed to get so big, and lambasts attempts of previous Governments to cut crime by giving longer sentences as "pathetic". He tells the Bishop that his aim is to reduce the re-offending rate. Yes, it will help his department's bottom line, but it's common sense too.

How to cut re-offending is the million dollar question. Prisoners, governors and commentators seem to agree that an offender only stops committing crimes when he decides he's had enough; as one said, "I've got too old for it - my heart isn't in it anymore." The deprivation of liberty, courses in thinking skills and literacy don't seem to work as effectively as the simple passage of time.

If prison doesn't reduce re-offending, does that mean it doesn't work?

Prison is also there to punish - though some say it doesn't do that well enough.

In one obvious sense prison is effective; while prisoners are locked away from society, they can't commit crime on the outside. But if prison is to mend the prisoner as well as incarcerate him, it must do more - and that is the focus of the next programme.



 
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Sunday 6th May 2012
 
Factual; Arts, Culture and the Media; Documentaries

The Person from Porlock
BBC Radio 4, 4:30-5:00pm

When the poet Coleridge failed to complete his 'dream poem' Kubla Khan, he laid the blame on a 'person from Porlock' who had called to see him on business, thereby fatally interrupting his writing.

'The Person from Porlock' has come to represent anything that interrupts the creative process, and he has inspired a number of poems in his own right, from writers as diverse as Stevie Smith and R S Thomas.

Paul Farley travels to Porlock in Somerset in search of Coleridge's mysterious visitor and, in the company of Tim Liardet, Hester Jones and Tom Mayberry, contemplates a number of poetic interruptions - both obstructive and curiously inspirational.
 
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Monday 7th May 2012
 
Factual; Arts, Culture and the Media; Documentaries; History

The King and the Playwright: a Jacobean History
BBC4, 9:00-10:00pm, 3/3, Legacy


 Factual

Britain Beware
ITV1, 10:15-11:15pm


Adrian Edmondson delves into the wonderful archives of the Central Office of Information, the government department responsible for making public information films, which is scheduled to close this month.

He takes us on a journey through the mini-movies and TV ads that for nearly 70 years have warned us of all kinds of dangers, from road safety to nuclear fallout. They have great nostalgia value for each generation, whether it is Charlie the Cat warning us of the dangers of falling into water, or Jimmy Savile advising us to ‘clunk click every trip’.

These influential films have helped shape attitudes and change the nation’s behaviour. Some are long-form masterpieces of black and white drama with a filmic feel, whilst others are shot like short glossy adverts. Some used humour to great effect, others left children quaking in their boots. The tone was crucial as Ade explains “For over half a century, the Central Office of Information made films alerting us to the dangers of the world. But the images they used had to avoid being overly shocking while at the same time driving home some potentially terrifying messages.”

Ade unearths some nostalgic gems and hidden treasures that provide a potted social history of Britain. From “Stranger Danger’ and ‘The Green Cross Code’ in the seventies, to eighties themes such as the dangers of drink-driving, playing with fireworks and sexually transmitted diseases. As he acknowledges “Of all the developed countries, Britain’s £20 million pound campaign was one of the earliest and perhaps partly due to this our HIV rates are still amongst the lowest in the world.”

Adrian will also come across the well-known figures that have given their time to keep us safe including Kevin Keegan, Donald Pleasance, Michael Aspel, Alvin Stardust and Ronnie Barker, alongside the characters iconic to our childhood such as Tufty the Squirrel and Joe & Petunia, the fat calamitous tourists.

Britain Beware serves up a quirky social history laced with nostalgia to mark the end of a great British institution that did its best to protect us from ourselves.



 
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Tuesday 8th May 2012
 
Factual; Health and Wellbeing

Great Ormond Street
BBC2, 9:00-10:00pm, 1/6, A Difficult Line

A look at Great Ormond Street Hospital's oncology department, following doctors as they face challenging ethical decisions about treating children with some of the rarest and most complex cancers in the country. Doctors must decide how to act in the best interest of their patients whilst handling relationships with the children's families.
 


Factual; Life Stories; Reality

The Estate
BBC1, 11:40pm-12:10am

Coleraine residents battle their way through a tough economic year in Ballysally. Things are going bump in the night at Kyle's flat; Louise is going to be a granny; and Jim's back on the booze, with disastrous consequences.
 
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Thursday 10th May 2012
 
Arts, Culture and the Media

The Library Returns
BBC Radio 4, 11:30am-12:05pm

Just as the news for libraries never seemed worse - with a shortage of users, imminent closures and cuts to funding - a new breed of libraries, in Britain and abroad and designed by architects for the 21st century, is rising from the ashes. This programme, presented by Jonathan Glancey, looks at the ways in which the design and function of the library is being re-invented in the USA, Europe and the UK. The programme visits Seattle, Delft , Stuttgart and the huge emerging new library in Birmingham, due for completion next year.

 
Documentaries; Science and Nature

World's Scariest... Weather
Channel 5, 8:00-9:00pm, 2/4

Some of the most violent and dangerous weather ever caught on camera, from heavy storms to flash floods and world-shaking events. Footage shows someone being lifted into the air by a tornado that is causing devastation in America, and a heatwave leads to terrifying wildfires in Russia. A mother with three kids in the back of her car is plunged into darkness as a dust storm hits Phoenix, Arizona, and a British teacher watches as the tsunami of March 2011 washes away his home in northern Japan.


Factual; Arts, Culture and Media; Travel

Shakespeare in Italy
BBC2, 2/2, Land of Fortune

Francesco da Mosto concludes his tour of the country beginning with a visit to Venice, where he meets actor Ciaran Hinds to discuss why the Bard chose the city as the setting for The Merchant of Venice. The historian is then joined by Mark Rylance in Rome as they explore how the playwright used the Italian capital for the plots of Julius Caesar and Antony and Cleopatra to avoid Elizabethan censors. Finally, on the island of Stromboli, off the northern coast of Sicily, Francesco uncovers the location for Shakespeare's late masterpiece - The Tempest.

 
Factual; Science and Nature; Documentaries

Do We Really Need The Moon?
BBC4, 10:00-11:00pm


The Moon is such a familiar presence in the sky that most of us take it for granted. But what if it wasn't where it is now? How would that affect life on Earth?

Space scientist and lunar fanatic Dr Maggie Aderin-Pocock explores our intimate relationship with the Moon. Besides orchestrating the tides, the moon dictates the length of a day, the rhythm of the seasons and the very stability of our planet.

Yet the Moon is always on the move. In the past it was closer to Earth and in the future it'll be farther away. That it is now perfectly placed to sustain life is pure luck, a cosmic coincidence. Using computer graphics to summon up great tides and set the Earth spinning on its side, Maggie Aderin-Pocock implores us to look at the Moon afresh: to see it not as an inert rock, but as a key player in the story of our planet, past, present and future.

 
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Friday 11th May 2012

Documentaries; Science and Technology

The Two Thousand Year Old Computer
BBC4, 3:30-4:30am


Imagine craftsmen built a bronze machine, conceived by Archimedes more than 2,000 years ago, for looking into the future. The astonishing thing is, it exists, in an Athens museum. Three fragments of a corroded bronze mechanism were found on the seabed in 1900 and it was such a complex device that it has taken this long to figure out what it is.

In this breathtaking documentary, we join a team of mathematicians, historians and other experts trying to solve the puzzle and meet the eccentric British engineer who has built his own version of Archimedes’s astrolabe and lunar calendar. It’s an extraordinary story, superbly told.

The efforts of an international team of scientists to solve the mysteries of the Antikythera Mechanism. The 2,000-year-old device was recovered from a Roman shipwreck off the southern coast of Greece in 1901, and is believed to be the world's oldest computer. The object appears to be designed to predict solar eclipses, and according to recent findings, calculate the timing of the ancient Olympics.

 
Documentaries

The Trouble with Moody Teens
BBC Radio 4, 11:00-11:30pm

Miranda Sawyer explores how some teenagers are suffering with clinical depression, a condition that is difficult to diagnose and often overlooked as typical adolescent behaviour. She investigates whether social networking and the current economic climate are adding to the problem, and reveals what treatment is available, including that of the support provided by such charities as Young Minds.

 
News

Unreported World - Congo, Magic, Gangs and Wrestlers
Channel 4Wrestlers are superstars in the Democratic Republic of Congo. In this vast and troubled country, wrestling is a passion, allowing fans to forget the poverty, violence and ongoing civil war for the duration of a bout.

Contests are televised and reported on the sports pages and attract thousands of fans.

In the capital, Kinshasa, Unreported World reporter Seyi Rhodes and director Wael Dabbous find some of the superstars of the sport practising 'black magic', and uncover allegations that many fighters are involved in gang violence and political intimidation.

Like other countries where wrestling is popular, there's a tradition in Congo of fighters wearing masks and customised costumes.

But alongside the theatrics common to wrestling elsewhere, Congo's version has incorporated the belief in black magic, or fetishe, which is genuinely feared by many.

The film begins with an amazing scene. Rhodes and Dabbous visit a wrestling match in Kinshasa to watch Congo's champion wrestler, Nanga Steve, taking on Super Angaluma, a fetishe wrestler famed for using black magic to defeat his opponents.

The street bout is held in a ring surrounded by hundreds of spectators, many of them young men. To the crowd's delight Super Angaluma uses fetishe to try and defeat Nanga Steve, sacrificing a chicken to help him unlock supernatural powers.

Despite this, in a classic denouement, good triumphs over evil and Nanga Steve is victorious.

In this city of eight million people - the third largest in Africa - Steve and the other star wrestlers aren't just celebrities: they're figures of power and influence.

Steve tells Rhodes that some wrestlers are major forces in gangs called 'Kuluna' that are terrorising the city. While some fighters like him are celebrities, others struggle to make a living, which he says explains the attraction of the gangs., 7:30-7:55pm


 
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Tuesday, 17 April 2012

Off-air recoridings for week 21-27 April 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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Sunday 22nd April 2012

Documentaries

Secrets of the Saxon Gold: A Time Team Special
Channel 4, 7:55-9:00pm

Two years after an Anglo-Saxon treasure hoard worth over three million pounds was discovered in Staffordshire, Time Team returns to see the results of the post-excavation process.


Documentaries

Indian Ocean with Simon Reeve
BBC2, 8:00-9:00pm, 1/6, South Africa to Zanzibar

In his greatest adventure yet Simon Reeve travels the Indian Ocean, uncovering stories from some of the world’s most remote, dangerous and beautiful locations.


He starts his journey on the rugged tip of South Africa, joining conservationists struggling to save the little-known and highly endangered African Penguin.

Further up the coast he meets the South African authorities using high speed boats to hunt down poachers targeting a sea creature called Abalone, a delicacy for which Chinese gourmets will pay big money. This illegal trade is dominated by drug-dealing gangsters, whom Simon encounters in a poverty-stricken township in Cape Town.

But it is the Indian Ocean’s greatest predator that dominates this leg of the journey. In his first ocean dive, Simon swims with huge and fearsome-looking ragged tooth sharks. Following a ride on a container ship travelling to the glorious coast of Mozambique, he accompanies local fisherman as they land a huge bull shark in their tiny boat, which is later butchered on the beach for its fins. It is part of a global tragedy that is seeing millions of sharks killed each year.

Finally, Simon makes an emotional journey to the tropical island of Zanzibar, steeped in the long history of the slave trade.


Factual; Travel; Documentaries

Ewan McGregor: Cold Chain Mission
BBC2, 9:00-10:00pm, 1/2

In this brand new two-parter for BBC2, Ewan McGregor is on a mission to the ends of the earth to immunise some of the hardest-to-reach children in the world. Against the odds, health workers deliver vaccines to the world's most remote children. But their fragile nature means the vaccines must be kept constantly cold as they are passed along the supply chain, from freezer to freezer - wherever that may be. The routes these vaccines travel are known as cold chains, and a vast network of them exists across the globe. In this series Ewan is following two of these cold chains supported by Unicef.

In the first episode, Ewan chooses a route that takes him through India. In a country with a booming population, often on the move, the cold chain is a race against time to stop polio before it can enter the country and spread. From India, Ewan continues his journey into the isolated wilderness of Nepal. He must endure a gruelling two-day trek to reach a tiny community secluded high in the Himalayas, but not before attempting to land at one of the world's most dangerous airstrips.

These two programmes give Ewan an opportunity to go to three very different countries, three situations, and look in detail at one strand of Unicef's work - the vaccine trail or the cold chain. It's the perfect kind of match, says Ewan, 'of furthering my work with Unicef and at the same time, going on an adventure, which I really like to do'.


Documentaries

Perspectives: David Walliams - The Genius of Dahl
ITV1, 10:15-11:15pm

“As a comedian I’ve spent a lot of time trying to work out how to say things that if said in a serious way would be completely unacceptable, and I haven’t always gotten away with it. In Dahl’s world, a grandma can be poisoned by her grandson. Parents can be eaten by a rhinoceros. And yet somehow it’s acceptable. It takes a true genius to pull that off.” – David Walliams on Roald Dahl.


It is perhaps not surprising that David Walliams is a huge fan of Roald Dahl, when some of his acting creations almost seem like Dahl characters – exaggerated and extreme, subversive and absurd, capable of cruelty, and challenging rules with dark humour.

In the latest installment of the Perspectives documentary strand, comedian and children’s author David Walliams delves into the electrifying, fantastic and dark world of Roald Dahl. He explores what makes Dahl one of the great storytellers, why his stories are loved by millions of readers and whether after many decades, they still stand the test of time.

Along the way, he visits Dahl’s house in Buckinghamshire, his childhood home of Cardiff, explores his Norwegian family roots and inspects the author’s writing hut – where his famous tales germinated. Famous fans including Joanna Lumley and Tim Minchin wax lyrical on the magical world of Dahl, alongside well-known children’s author Anthony Horowitz and Dahl experts and biographers Michael Rosen and Donald Sturrock.

Ultimately, in searching for the very essence of Dahl’s storytelling, David discovers the tragedies which shaped the author’s world view and writing, finds out how infamous characters such as Miss Trunchbull in Matilda were created, and even learns that the iconic Oompa Loompas in Charlie and The Chocolate Factory were very nearly known as something else.

“When I was a child I devoured every book I could get my hands on. I loved losing myself in colourful and dramatic stories – and my absolute favourite was this, Charlie And The Chocolate Factory. Everything about it electrified me, and when I reread Roald Dahl’s books as an adult it surprised me; there’s nothing prescriptive or predictable about them, with little sense of narrative rules. And they are nearly all perfect.

“Children’s books are often seen as the poor relation of literature. But children are just as demanding as adult readers, if not more so. I should know. I’m a children’s writer myself. Yet I will never be as good as Dahl. In this film I want to try and understand where Dahl’s magic touch came from.”


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Monday 23rd April 2012

Documentaries

Jungle Special: Inside Nature's Giants
Channel 4, 8:00-9:00pm, 3/3

The team take on their hardest challenge so far, to dissect an entire ecosystem - the jungle. Deep in the rainforest of Borneo they erect a high-tech dissection laboratory to investigate giant bugs and titan trees, and to reveal why the jungle is home to the most diverse collection of living things on our planet.


With a team of all-star biologists, anatomists and tree climbers, they delve into the mysteries of the rainforest: how it fits together and the extraordinary roles the strange creatures that live in it play; how waterfalls flow uphill, life springs from death and parasites hold the key to holding the jungle in balance.

Veterinary scientist Mark Evans climbs 60 metres into the canopy to catch the world's largest ants; comparative anatomist Joy Reidenberg heads deep into the forest to catch venomous centipedes and giant moths; and biologist Simon Watt investigates the most sinister organism of them all - an enormous parasitic fig tree.

Inside Nature's Giants lifts the lid on this confusing environment, delving deep into the workings of some of the rainforest's most spectacular inhabitants to bring viewers natural history like it's never been seen before.


Factual; History; Documentaries

The 1970s
BBC2, 9:00-10:00pm, 2/4, Doomwatch, 73-74

Historian Dominic Sandbrook takes viewers on an eye-opening and refreshing journey deep into the 1970s, a decade where the old Britain of the post-war years was transformed into the nation of today.


This episode looks at the impact of a fast changing world on British life and how Britain could no longer pretend to be a island nation that stood apart. Dominic explores the effects of the oil price hike of the 70s and of rampant inflation on Britain's living standards. He also looks at how many British people were choosing to live different kinds of lives embracing everything from environmentally aware lifestyles to the sexual revolution.


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Tuesday 24th April 2012

Factual; Documentaries

The Mighty Mississippi with Trevor McDonald
ITV1, 9:00-10:00pm, 3/3

In the third episode of the series Trevor visits the town which inspired the Huckleberry Finn novels, the island dedicated to making guns and the city known for being one of the best places to live in America.


The third part of Trevor’s journey sees him arrive in St Louis, Missouri on Independence Day and head to the St Louis Cardinals baseball stadium to meet the players and talk to them about being a part of the ultimate American sport.

Trevor visits an area of St Louis which is home to the largest community of Bosnians in American after they fled the civil war in the eastern European country. He meets one couple who have just got married and a businessman who takes him to ‘Little Bosnia’ and explains that the previously run-down area is now thriving with Bosnian businesses.

Trevor’s next stop is the town of Hannibal which was home to writer Sam Clements who wrote the Huckleberry Finn novels under the name of Mark Twain. Trevor takes to the water and gets behind the wheel of a paddle steamer in a nod to Mark Twain’s life as a river pilot in his younger years.

He says: “It is a gorgeous way to spend a day. Very calm and very contemplating. Very soothing. The river is still a route for cargo today and these barges are now the work horses.”

As Trevor continues on his journey up the Mississippi he visits Rock Island, Illinois, which is one of the largest weapons manufacturing facilities in the world. Workers on the 950 acre island use scrap metal to make guns and have provided weapons for every major conflict America has been involved in since the civil war.




Factual; Life Stories; Reality

The Estate
BBC1, 5/8, 11:40pm-12:10am

Fly-on-the-wall drama continues in Ballysally with romance in the air for Kelly Ann. Mum of five Louise takes delivery of free furniture from a charity. Noel struggles to keep his band members sober, and will single mum Emma pass her exams and get to University?



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Wednesday 25th April 2012

Documentaries

Beautiful Minds
BBC4, 9:00-10:00pm, 3/3, Richard Dawkins

In the mid 1960s Richard Dawkins was lecturing in zoology at the University of Oxford when he came upon an idea put forward by zoologist Bill Hamilton. The theory suggested that it is genes rather than individuals or species which are the drivers for natural selection. It could have revolutionised evolutionary theory but it was little understood outside academic circles. That is until political events lead Richard to have some time on his hands.





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Thursday 26th April 2012

News

Is Britain Running Dry?: Tonight
ITV1, 7:30-8:00pm

Two consecutive dry winters have taken their toll and Britain is now facing its worst drought for more than 30 years, with millions of people having already had hosepipe bans imposed and some experts predicting the climate will continue to get drier and warmer. Jonathan Maitland examines what is being done to protect dwindling water supplies and asks whether everyone needs to change the way they use resources.




Documentaries

Louis Theroux: Extreme Love
BBC2, 9:00-10:00pm, 2/2, Dementia

As one of the big retirement destinations for middle class Americans, Phoenix Arizona has also become a capital of dementia care. Louis visits the city in order to spend time in state-of-the-art care home Beatitudes and with home-based carers, whose love is tested by a condition that steadily erodes the personality and character of their partners.


At Beatitudes Louis meets Gary, a 69-year-old patient who thinks he is serving in the military and that it is his job to check the state of everyone's teeth. Louis submits to a dental check-up, is introduced to two of Gary's new resident girlfriends and spends time with Gary's wife of 20 years, Carla – a woman whom Gary robustly denies ever having married.

In a suburban Phoenix bungalow Louis agrees to become carer-for-a-day to Nancy, a formerNew York model with a personality to match. He finds a woman who can no longer remember her way through a complete sentence, but also a husband who finds much to love in the glimpses of personality that still sparkle through the dementia.




Factual; Arts, Culture and the Media; Documentaries

The King and the Playwright: A Jacobean History
BBC4, 9:00-10:00pm, 1/3, Incertainties

World-renowned American scholar Professor James Shapiro begins his three-part series about Shakespeare in the reign of King James with the anxious mood of 1603, when a new dynasty comes to power. Puritans, plague, an extravagant gift to a Spanish diplomatic delegation and a new British coin called the unite all figure in Shapiro's rich and fascinating history of a troubled time which saw an extraordinary creative outpouring.




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Friday 27th April 2012

News

Undercover: Elderly Care - Panorama
BBC1, 12:25-12:55am

Panorama reveals the appalling treatment of an elderly care home resident with dementia, captured on film after a concerned relative hid a secret camera. The abuse - in a care home passed as "excellent" by the national regulator, the Care Quality Commission - has led to five care workers being sacked, with one pleading guilty to assault. It was recorded by a secret camera placed in the elderly woman's bedroom by her daughter, who speaks for the first time about what happened. Fiona Phillips, whose parents suffered from dementia and whose mother died in a care home, investigates whether the regulator and care home provider did enough to prevent such abuse and asks whether the system of elderly care itself can be trusted.

News; Documentaries

Unreported World - Afghanistan: Lights, Camera, Death Threats
Channel 4, 7:30-7:55pm, 3/8

Unreported World finds out what it takes to survive in the world's toughest movie industry.


Cinema was outlawed in Afghanistan under the Taliban and a decade later, despite their overthrow, death threats remain a fact of life for Afghan film-makers.

Reporter Jenny Kleeman and director Andrew Lang join the country's biggest film stars on set, and discover a passionate family of film-makers and actors, drawing strength and humour from each other as they risk their lives to produce movies.

Thirty years ago, Kabul was full of record shops, cinemas and theatres. But the Taliban declared that making and watching films perverted people's minds, and banned films during their rule. Since they fell in 2001, a handful of brave film directors have started working again.

The team begin their journey on set with Saba Sahar - an actress, screenwriter and Afghanistan's first female film director. In a country where few women work at all, Saba is directing her sixth production - a TV series about the Afghan police force.

The only woman on set, Saba has complete authority, even over the real policemen who are acting as her extras. As well as directing, Saba is playing the heroine, who's a female cop succeeding in a man's world.

Saba's high-profile job is provoking some of the most dangerous people in the country. The drug lords and the Taliban have threatened her life. 'Each morning when I leave the house I think I'll never see my family again. I might be killed,' she tells Kleeman.

Kleeman and Lang meet Salim Shaheen, Afghanistan's most prolific film director. He's directed and starred in over 100 low-budget, high-octane movies over three decades.

With a large fan base, Salim has a huge influence on ordinary Afghans. He takes Kleeman on to the film set where he's in the middle of directing a fight scene.

Salim fears the departure of foreign troops from Afghanistan could mean the end of his career. 'There's going to be a civil war here,' he warns. 'If the Taliban come back, films will be banned. I'll have to leave the country.' ...


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Wednesday, 11 April 2012

Off-air recordings for week 14-20 April 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 April 2012

Documentaries; Arts, Culture and the Media

Titanic: A Commemoration in Music and Film
BBC2, 8:30-10:00pm

Live from Belfast’s Waterfront Hall John Humphrys hosts this commemorative event to mark the centenary of the sinking of RMS Titanic.


A unique blend of music and documentary the show features special performances from Bryan Ferry, Joss Stone, Nicola Benedetti, Alfie Boe, Charlie Siem, Maverick Sabre and the Ulster Orchestra.

The performances wrap around a documentary which tells the story of the ill-fated ship, those who built her, the people who sailed on her and the enduring legacy of the tragedy.

Imelda Staunton and Simon Callow read extant material drawn from survivors’ accounts and newspaper reports of the time, while award-winning musician Jamie Cullum explores the importance of music on board the ship.

The show will also feature the world premiere of Titanic Drums, an original composition featuring 100 traditional drummers from across Ireland, massed choirs, soloist Peter Corry and six times World Champion drummer Mark Wilson.

Merlin's Colin Morgan, Bronagh Gallagher and Ian McElhinney also star.

The project, which has been commissioned by BBC Two and BBC Northern Ireland from independent production company Whizz Kid Entertainment and Anderson Spratt Group Ltd, received funding from Northern Ireland Tourist Board and Northern Ireland Screen and is supported by Belfast City Council and Tourism Ireland.


Entertainment; Discussion and Talk

Parkinson: The Interviews
BBC4, 10:35-11:15pm, 1/6 Kenneth Williams

In this compilation of clips from five of his eight appearances on Parkinson, Kenneth Williams gives vent to his dislike of theatre critics as well as Michael Parkinson, and gives his rendition of My Crepes Suzette


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Sunday 15th April 2012

Factual; News

This World: Norway's Massacre
BBC2, 9:00-10:00pm

This World tells the inside story of the 2011 massacre in Norway, offering new insights into the life and mind of the perpetrator Anders Breivik, and exposing the hidden hatreds that inspired him. Through interviews with key players, including the Norwegian prime minister, survivors, the commander of the police response and the head of the Delta Force team that arrested Breivik, and including unique footage and unseen archive, the film pieces together, minute-by-minute, the course of the attacks and the response of the security services.


Factual

Words of The Titanic
ITV1, 10:00-11:00pm

“The pleasure and comfort which all of us enjoyed upon this floating palace, with its extraordinary provisions for such purposes, seemed an ominous feature to many of us, including myself, who felt it almost too good to last without some terrible retribution inflicted by the hand of an angry omnipotence.”


Colonel Archibald Gracie, first class passenger

One hundred years ago on 10th April 1912, the legendary Titanic set sail for New York. With diaries, letters, and memoirs, ‘Words of the Titanic’ tells the stories of the ship’s passengers and crew in their own words. The disaster at sea, which cost almost 1500 lives, has been well documented. But the individual experiences of the people on board offer a revealing insight into the emotions and terror they experienced when it became clear that the ‘unsinkable’ Titanic was doomed to plunge to the bottom of the ocean.

The film features a cast including Richard E. Grant, James Wilby, Claudie Blakely, Roger Allam and Anna Madeley, plus direct descendants of some of the ships passengers who read the diary extracts of their grandparents and great-grandparents. Dramatic reconstruction and images of the time evoke the spirit of Titanic’s fateful maiden voyage, which is brought poignantly to life in this powerful documentary. ‘Words of the Titanic’ is brand new & exclusive to ITV1 on Saturday 14th April at 10.35pm.

In 1912, Titanic was launched to sail the shipping route between the world’s most powerful cities, London and New York. Its vast size and unparalleled luxury stunned the 900 strong crew, who boarded the ship on 2nd April, when it left Belfast for Southampton.

Commander Charles Lightholler (read by James Wilby) recalled: “It is difficult to convey any idea of the size of a ship like the Titanic, when you could actually walk miles along decks and passages. It took me fourteen days before I could, with confidence, find my way from one part of that ship to another by the shortest route.”

On 10th April, Titanic’s 1,300 passengers boarded amidst an air of excitement. There were 700 in third-class, or steerage, 280 in second class, and 325 in first class. For three days Titanic then steamed westwards into the North Atlantic, covering more than 500 miles in a day. First class passenger, Colonel Archibald Gracie was returning home after spending the winter in the South of France...



Factual; History; Life Stories; Religion and Ethics

Witness to Auschwitz
BBC1, 11:10-11:40pm

With so few survivors of the Holocaust left to share their first-hand testimony, what is the right approach to those with accounts that can it be proved?


93-year-old Denis Avey is a British Hero of the Holocaust who helped save the life of an Auschwitz inmate. He wrote about this heroic act, verified by the man he saved, in a best-selling book. But its publication generated a heated debate. That's because Denis also claimed to have broken in to the Nazi concentration camp itself. Why would anyone do such a thing and was it even possible?

Witness to Auschwitz examines the controversy surrounding this latest Holocaust account and asks why is it so important to know the truth?



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Monday 16th April 2012

Factual; History; Documentaries

The 70s
BBC2, 9:00-10:00pm, 1/4, Get It On

Historian Dominic Sandbrook presents the 1970s as a vital and exciting era in which the old Britain of the post-war years was transformed into the nation we see around us today.


Sandbrook is as interested in how ordinary people were changing Britain as he is in politicians. In this episode, he reveals a country brimming with aspiration as millions get on the property ladder, take their first foreign holidays and start to challenge the old class boundaries to their lives. It was a decade in which ordinary British people first felt the thrill of freedom and money, but Sandbrook shows us it was also a decade in which raging conflicts about the economy and Europe loomed large.


Factual; Science and Nature; Documentaries

Inside Nature's Giants
Channel 4, 8:00-9:00pm, series 4, 2/3, The Kangaroo

The Australian Outback is home to millions of kangaroos but, sadly, every year thousands are fatally injured in traffic accidents. Veterinary scientist Mark Evans and comparative anatomist Joy Reidenberg take the opportunity to delve inside these bizarre animals. They uncover the kangaroo's lower jaw, which splits in two, and a massive Achilles tendon that enables it to hop like a frog. But it's the reproductive anatomy they find most surprising: the male genitalia is back to front, while females have three vaginas as well as the pouch in which they grow their young from jelly-bean-sized embryos.

Meanwhile, Simon Watt heads into the Blue Mountains, just outside Sydney, to follow in the footsteps of Charles Darwin. Back in 1836, when the young naturalist visited Australia, he wondered why the animals there were so different to those back home. Joined by Darwin's great, great grandson Christopher, Simon goes in search of some of these other creatures. Including a bird that decorates its nest with an assortment of blue ornaments - from clothes pegs to bottle tops - and a primitive mammal that lays eggs like a reptile.
Christopher explains how these animals and the island they live on played a crucial role in developing his ancestor's then-heretical ideas on evolution.



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Tuesday 17th April 2012

Factual

The Mighty Mississippi
ITV1, 9:00-10:00pm, 2/3

In the second part of the series, Trevor visits Morgan Freeman and talks to him about his childhood in the Deep South. He meets a close friend of Dr Martin Luther King who was standing next to him when he was assassinated, and he visits one of Elvis Presley’s first and much-loved girlfriends.


The second part of his journey begins in the quiet town of Clarksdale, Mississippi, where he meets actor, Morgan Freeman. Morgan tells Trevor that when he was growing up the segregation of black and white people was rigidly enforced, but it didn’t really trouble him until he reached his teenage years.

He says: “I still remember my childhood as being a lot of freedom. I’d get up in the morning, aged four, five, and go hunt my best friend and we would just run. That’s what I remember. I was going to a very good school, I had very good teachers. I was in a very safe environment. What white people did, I didn’t care about.

“I knew that we were separate, if I went into town then there were the separate facilities; the waiting room at the bus station, the water fountains. I didn’t have to go, and I didn’t go, so it didn’t bother me. By the time I graduated from high school, I did have this feeling about Mississippi’s state of apartheid and when I left, I was leaving for good.”

Morgan explains that he started going back to Mississippi when his parents moved back there in the mid 1950s and he eventually returned to live there himself. However, he reveals that he was shocked to discover that although children now go to mixed schools in his local town, they were still encouraged to socialise separately out of school...



Factual; Life Stories; Reality
 
The Estate
BBC1, 11:40pm-12:10am, 4/8

Emma deals with a tragedy for one of her alcoholic clients, there's a tearful hospital visit for Lauren, and schoolgirl Kelly Ann lands a holiday job.



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Wednesday 18th April 2012

Crime; Documentaries

Hijack Hell - Bus 174
BBC2, 11:20pm-1:10am

Documentary from Brazil recalling the dramatic hijacking of a bus during Rio de Janeiro's morning rush hour in June 2000, which was broadcast live on national television. Director Jose Padilha also explores the gunman's harrowing childhood and his struggles on the city's mean streets, questioning if he too was a victim of its class divide and poverty. In Portuguese and Spanish.




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Thursday 19th April 2012

Documentaries

Louis Theroux - Extreme Love: Autism
BBC2, 9:00-10:00pm, 1/2

In America nearly one child in a hundred is diagnosed with an autism spectrum disorder - a brain disorder characterised by an inability to socialise and communicate.

Louis travels to DLC Warren in New Jersey, one of the most innovative autism schools of its kind, to find out how specialised intervention can help both the children and the families who care for them.

He meets Joey, whose mother Carol is finding it increasingly hard to cope with some of the more challenging aspects of his disorder. In between the ever more explosive tantrums, Louis discovers a cheeky and charming 13-year-old, but there are tough decisions ahead about his future in the family home.

Nicky is 19. After making good progress at DLC Warren he is about to leave, but the prospect of change leads to increasing anxiety and erratic behaviour. Surrounded by a loving family who say they wouldn't have him any other way, he shows Louis his novel Dragonula and invites him to share his first day at his new school.

Twenty-year-old Brian is severely autistic and his behaviour - setting fire to the house and attacking his mother - has led to the difficult decision of placing him in residential care. Louis meets a mother whose love for her son has been tested to its limits and finds out how the school is preparing him for an adult life.





History; Documentaries

Meet The Romans with Mary Beard
BBC2, 11:20pm-12:20am, 1/3 - All Roads Lead To Rome

In the first episode in a new series exploring Rome from the bottom up, Professor Mary Beard asks not what the Romans did for us, but what the Empire did for Rome.


All roads lead to Rome, but this isn’t the tale of trading might and imperial power - it’s a portrait of the world’s first global metropolis as seen through the eyes of the ordinary Roman on the street. This is a city where everyone and everything came from somewhere else. The Empire affected everything Romans wore, ate, touched and worshipped.

Mary rides the Via Appia, climbs up to the top seats of the Colosseum, takes a boat to Rome’s famous port Ostia and takes us into the bowels of Monte Testaccio (‘broken pot mountain’). She also meets Eurysaces, ex-slave and eccentric baker, who made a fortune out of the grain trade, building his tomb in the shape of a giant bread-oven; Baricha, Zabda and Achiba, three prisoners of war who went on to become Roman citizens and Pupius Amicus, the purple-dye seller making imperial dye from murex shellfish imported from Tunisia.



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Friday 20th April 2012

News

Unreported World - Baghdad Bomb Squad
Channel 4, 7:30-7:55pm

Unreported World gains unprecedented and exclusive access to the Baghdad Bomb Squad. Nine years after the invasion and with the British and the Americans gone, Iraq still faces almost daily attacks from those trying to foment political chaos and sectarian hatred. Reporter Krishnan Guru-Murthy and director Alex Nott spend time with a small band of brave Iraqi officers trying to prevent further murderous attacks.


With modest resources and great courage in the face of terrible danger, four 12-man squads work around the clock defusing bombs or investigating crime scenes where a device has detonated. The Unreported World team joins one team as they begin a morning shift, when the bombers are at their busiest. Twenty-nine year old officer Rawad Yassin, who has already spent six years in the bomb squad, tells Guru-Murthy that his family have urged him to leave the unit but he feels a responsibility to his fellow officers.

Travelling in convoy they are called out to the suburb of Karrada. They believe they are heading to an unexploded device but on arrival find the aftermath of detonated device. The target was a senior military commander in charge of the Ministry of Communications Protection Force. Several of his staff have been killed, and more than a dozen injured.

As the team head off, reports come in of other bombings around Baghdad. Another unit finds an unexploded device right outside Iraq's Oil Ministry. Unreported World reveals extraordinary footage showing how a 'sticky bomb', which is fixed under the car of a Brigadier General, is made safe.

In the last two years more than 30 bomb disposal experts have been killed across Iraq. Guru-Murthy speaks to someone close to one of those killed trying to defuse a vehicle bomb. Ali Hameed shows Guru-Murthy video footage of the incident which left his partner Ali Latif with terrible injuries. Hameed says since the incident he's been living with severe psychological stress...



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Tuesday, 3 April 2012

Off-air recordings for week 7-13 April 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 7th April 2012

factual; Science and Nature; Documentaries

Natural World: The Iceberg That Sank The Titanic
BBC2, 6:50-7:40pm

Documentary which explores one crucial piece of the Titanic jigsaw that always escapes attention - the iceberg that caused the catastrophe. Conceived 15,000 years before the Titanic, its life story is every bit as fascinating. With the help of ice scientists, its origins of are revealed - its creation in the heart of the Greenland Ice Sheet, its dramatic birth from the mother glacier and an epic 4,000 mile journey through Arctic seas, towards a terrible date with destiny.



Factual; History; Documentaries

Timewatch: Myths of The Titanic
BBC2, 7:40-8:30pm

There have been many shipwrecks, but none has captured the public's imagination like the Titanic. From the moment Titanic hit an iceberg and sank on 14 April 1912, the public has been captivated by the story. Of over 2,200 passengers and crew, only 705 survived.


In 1912, the newspapers were full of stories of heroism and villainy, and the story of the Titanic has been told and retold ever since in an endless stream of books and films. Some of the stories are true, many are myths which were first told in 1912, but have been passed on from generation to generation ever since.

With the help of rare archive footage and location filming in America, Britain and Northern Ireland, Timewatch attempts to answer the mystery - why does the story of the Titanic have such a hold on people?



Factual; Crime and Justice; Discussion and Talk

Unreliable Evidence
BBC Radio 4, 1/4, Joint Enterprise

In the first of a new series, Clive Anderson and guests discuss the controversial law of joint enterprise under which people can be convicted of murder even if they didn't physically participate in an assault or strike the fatal blow.


Francis Fitzgibbon QC, who has defended people in joint enterprise cases, argues that this complex and unwieldy law is being applied indiscriminately to combat gang violence, and is leading to miscarriages of justice.

Solicitor Simon Natas calls for the law to be changed to make it necessary to prove that a defendant intended that someone should be killed or seriously injured.

But Mark Heywood QC who has prosecuted in the trials of people accused of murder following the death of a young man during a knife attack by a gang in Victoria Station, defends the way joint enterprise law is currently being applied.


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Sunday 8th April 2012

Art, Culture and the Media; Documentaries

Crucifixion
Channel 4, 10:00-11:20pm

For centuries, artists of all kinds - from Michelangelo to Martin Scorsese, Salvador Dali to Damien Hirst and Andrew Lloyd Webber to Monty Python - have attempted to convey the meaning of the crucifixion through their work.


For many it has been a deeply personal expression of belief. Now anatomist Dr Gunther von Hagens, who made his name showing the world the wonders of the human body through his Body Worlds exhibitions, has decided to create a crucifix.

The new piece, which he's been planning for over six years, is revealed in this documentary, which features interviews with leading art historians and theologians, amongst others, and examines the enduring iconic image of the crucifix.

The documentary follows von Hagens, who in 2011 revealed that he is suffering from Parkinson's disease, as he undertakes an intensely personal journey to create his crucifix.

Von Hagens is famous for using donated human bodies in his 'plastinated' works, and the new piece was made by injecting liquid plastic into bones and blood vessels, from a number of donors' bodies, which then hardens to create perfect casts.

The resulting figure, which does not contain any human tissue, was then mounted on a wooden cross cut from a tree felled near von Hagens' family home in Germany.

The documentary traces the representation and interpretation of the crucifix from illustrations on fourth-century tombs, through centuries of church-sanctioned depictions to contemporary portrayals.



Drama; Spiritual; Performances and Events

Passion In Port Talbot, It Has Begun
BBC4, 10:30-11:30pm

At Easter 2011, actor Michael Sheen (Twilight, Frost/Nixon) returned to his hometown of Port Talbot to direct and star in a modern, secular retelling of the Passion of Christ. This film captures the highlights of three days of drama played out in the streets, beach and shopping centre of the South Wales industrial town.


The play includes suicide bombers, mass public protest and ghostly visions, and features a guest appearance from Welsh rock band Manic Street Preachers. It climaxes with a terrifying scene of public execution in front of an audience of 12,000 people on a roundabout at the seafront. Described in the leading national newspaper as 'one of the oustanding theatrical events of the decade', the play featured over 1,000 members of the community.



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Monday 9th April 2012

Documentaries

Inside Nature's Giants: Hippo
Channel 4, 8:00-9:00pm, 1/3

So many hippos congregate to feed in Zambia's Luangwa Valley that they threaten the survival of other species in the park, so the authorities cull around 200 of them every year.


The cull offers veterinary scientist Mark Evans and comparative anatomist Joy Reidenberg the opportunity to dissect one of these magnificent animals.

Hippos are often mistakenly seen as Africa's laziest giant, lolling around all day in the mud. But as the team discover, at night they're surprisingly active.

The first obstacle in the dissection is the hippo's inch-thick skin. This acts as a protective shield against the foot-long canines of rival hippos. Mark and Joy are amazed to discover that the skin produces its own sun cream.

As they delve deeper into the guts and weigh the contents of the stomach, the vast quantities of half-digested vegetation confirm the hippo's reputation as a gluttonous feeding machine.

Meanwhile, Simon Watt searches for hippo dung to find out why these grazers incessantly flick their muck using their short tails.

Richard Dawkins reveals the surprising fact that the hippos' closest living relatives are whales. As the dissection draws to a close, Joy finally succeeds in extracting the hippo's voice-box and finds a remarkable similarity with their ocean-dwelling cousins.



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Tuesday 10th April 2012

Factual; Science and Nature; Science and Technology; Documentaries

Horizon: Defeating Cancer
BBC2, 9:00-10:00pm

Over the past year, Horizon has been behind the scenes at one of Britain's leading cancer hospitals, the Royal Marsden in London. The film follows Rosemary, Phil and Ray as they undergo remarkable new treatments - from a billion pound genetically targeted drug designed to fight a type of skin cancer, to advanced robotic surgery. We witness the breakthroughs in surgery and in scientific research that are offering new hope and helping to defeat a disease that more than one in three of us will develop at some stage of our lives.



Documentaries

The Mighty Mississsippi with Trevor McDonald
ITV1, 9:00-10:00pm, 1/3

The first part of the series sees Trevor take to the air to look down upon the mouth of the Mississippi in the Gulf of Mexico, before heading to New Orleans, where he attends a colourful jazz funeral, meets a debutante and witnesses the devastating effects of Hurricane Katrina still evident years after the tragedy.


His journey takes him to a plantation, one of a few still working, and he is shocked to see inside a slave cabin. Trevor also takes a ride on an airboat through a primeval swamp and comes face to face with one of his worse nightmares.

As he starts his exploration of the Mississippi, Trevor is mesmerised by the breath-taking view as his seaplane swoops over the vast wetland created by the river as it meets the sea.

His first stop is the vibrant city of New Orleans where he heads for the Garden District to see its impressive collection of mansions, some of which have been in the same family for generations. He meets the Favrow family who have lived in the area for 200 years. He talks to their daughter about the debutante ball season, a traditional period which sees daughters of wealthy New Orleans' families attend a year long calendar of parties and balls in lavish gowns.

In contrast to the Garden District, Trevor also visits the Third Ward of the city where most of the inhabitants are descendants of slaves. He attends a jazz funeral, a music and dance parade to see off one of the much-loved members of the community.

Next Trevor takes to the river itself and ventures aboard a tug boat to learn about the challenges and dangers of navigating the Mississippi.

And he heads to downtown New Orleans where jazz began and visits the Howling Wolf Club to listen to the music and join in the dancing. One band member reveals to Trevor how joining a jazz band has saved his life. He explains that so many of his contemporaries have suffered from depression because of the high crime rates in the area and some have even turned to drugs...





Factual; Life Stories; Reality

The Estate
BBC1, 11:4-pm-12:10am

Reality series set in recession-hit Ballysally, in Coleraine. Jimmy gets a job interview but Emma's job is in jeopardy, Martin continues his battle with the bottle and handyman Noel helps build a new drop-in centre for young people



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Wednesday 11th April 2012

Documentaries

Divine Women
BBC2, 9:00-10:00pm, 1/3, When God Was A Girl

Historian Bettany Hughes reveals the hidden history of women in religion, from dominatrix goddesses to feisty political operators and warrior empresses.


In this provocative upcoming series, Bettany tells the stories of the extraordinary women whose legends and lives cast new light on some of the hottest arguments about the role of women in religion today.

Drawing on cutting edge scholarship and archaeological evidence, she reveals what her favourite women in religion tell us about the lives of the real flesh and blood women of their day.

The series tells the story of the relationship between women and religion from 9000 BC onwards. The female of the species has always formed 50% of the population but has never occupied 50% of human history.

Yet the connection between women and the divine has been so strong in all societies that when we follow the stories of 'divine women' we uncover new evidence for the character of humanity and a fuller, truer history of the world.

Programme One looks at the evolution of the goddess in Turkey, Greece, Rome and India.


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Thursday 12th April 2012

News

Are Your Kids Contagious? Tonight
ITV1, 7:30-8:00pm

The number of cases of serious childhood illnesses such as measles and whooping cough is rising in the UK. Fiona Foster investigates why some parents are deciding not to immunise their children against these highly contagious diseases and looks at what is being done to protect the health of future generations.

News

Ivory Wars: Out of Africa
BBC1, 9:00-10:00pm

With wildlife crime now thought to be second only to drugs in terms of profit, Rageh Omaar goes on the trail of the ivory poachers, smugglers and organised crime syndicates to investigate the plight of Africa's elephants. As demand for ivory rises in the Far East, this Panorama special - made jointly with the BBC's Natural History Unit - goes undercover in central Africa and China to ask whether the African elephant can survive in some parts of the continent.


Last year saw the highest number of large seizures of illegal ivory for over two decades - despite a 23 year global ban on its international sale. One area of northern Kenya has lost a quarter of its elephants in the last three years - largely due to poaching. Panorama visits an elephant orphanage to see the impact of the killing on the young and, with access to Interpol's largest ever ivory operation, confronts the dealers in Africa and in China - now the world's biggest buyer of illegal ivory.



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Friday 13th April 2012

News;

Unreported World: Terror In Sudan
Channel 4, 7:30-7.55pm, new series 1/8

As George Clooney campaigns against the atrocities being committed in Sudan, Unreported World has filmed extensive documentary footage from the war zone.


Aidan Hartley and Daniel Bogado gained rare access to the Nuba Mountains to film the heroic doctors who are saving children in a largely hidden war being perpetrated on civilians by one of the world's most brutal dictatorships.

The Nuba Mountains region, in the South Kordofan oil fields upriver from Khartoum, is a troubled part of Sudan where a civil war has continued since the 1980s.

Nuba always fought alongside its southern black African Christian neighbours against the Arab Islamic regime in Khartoum, but the region was left behind in the peace accord that led to the independence of South Sudan in mid-2011.

In June 2011, President Omar al-Bashir's forces launched fresh attacks against opposition supporters in Nuba, many of them Christians and black Africans.

The Unreported World team highlights how government forces are carrying out almost constant aerial bombardment of civilian settlements, driving them from their fields so they cannot grow crops, while banning relief deliveries by international agencies.

As soon as they arrive in Nuba, Hartley and Bogado are caught in an air raid by Sukhoi ground attack jets firing rockets as terrified families dive into foxholes while explosions rumble in the surrounding villages. In another incident soon after, the team films traumatised children running into caves to hide from Antonov bombers.

The impact of Khartoum's refusal to allow medicines into Nuba is clear as doctors are forced to carry out operations on shrapnel-wounded children without anaesthetics and almost no medicines apart from traditional herbs.

Hartley and Bogado visit the Catholic Mother of Mercy hospital, the only functioning hospital for a million civilians trapped by the war. Made for 80 beds, it has 500 patients. The situation is so dire that even the medical staff are not eating as they tend the wounded and sick.





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