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00:00
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00:00
National and international news from BBC Radio 4
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00:15
How Haitians in the Dominican Republic are being targeted for expulsion.
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00:45
Bells on Sunday, comes from Winchester Cathedral in Hampshire.
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00:48
The latest weather reports and forecasts for UK shipping
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00:00
National and international news from BBC Radio 4
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00:30
1/5 The sequel to Jung Chang’s global bestseller, Wild Swans.
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00:48
The latest weather reports and forecasts for UK shipping
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00:00
National and international news from BBC Radio 4
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00:30
2/5 The author, Jung Chang, enjoys unfamiliar experiences while living her new life in Europe.
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00:48
The latest weather reports and forecasts for UK shipping
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00:00
National and international news from BBC Radio 4
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00:30
3/5 In 1988 Jung Chang's mother is finally granted permission to visit her daughter in the UK.
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00:48
The latest weather reports and forecasts for UK shipping
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00:00
National and international news from BBC Radio 4
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00:30
4/5 Wild Swans was published in 1992, the next year the author returned to Chengdu.
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00:48
The latest weather reports and forecasts for UK shipping
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00:00
National and international news from BBC Radio 4
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00:30
5/5 Jung Chang and Jon Halliday published their biography of Chairman Mao in 2005.
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00:48
The latest weather reports and forecasts for UK shipping
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00:00
National and international news from BBC Radio 4
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00:15
Writer John Niven speaks to Bookclub about his first novel Kill Your Friends from 2008.
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00:48
The latest weather reports and forecasts for UK shipping
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01:00
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01:00
A selection of BBC World Service news and current affairs, arts and science programmes.
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01:00
A selection of BBC World Service news and current affairs, arts and science programmes.
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01:00
A selection of BBC World Service news and current affairs, arts and science programmes.
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01:00
A selection of BBC World Service news and current affairs, arts and science programmes.
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01:00
A selection of BBC World Service news and current affairs, arts and science programmes.
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01:00
A selection of BBC World Service news and current affairs, arts and science programmes.
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01:00
A selection of BBC World Service news and current affairs, arts and science programmes.
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02:00
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03:00
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04:00
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05:00
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05:00
National and international news from BBC Radio 4
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05:04
Matthew Bannister on a primatologist, a poet, a politician and a bass player.
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05:34
The latest weather reports and forecasts for UK shipping
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05:43
A spiritual comment and prayer to start the day with the Rev Lynne Gibson.
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05:45
Is rural crime falling off the radar in some police force areas?
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05:57
The latest weather reports and forecasts for farmers
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05:00
National and international news from BBC Radio 4
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05:04
6/6 Can coroners' courts cope with conspiracy?
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05:34
The latest weather reports and forecasts for UK shipping
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05:43
A spiritual comment and prayer to start the day with the Rev Lynne Gibson.
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05:45
Dairy farmers in Scotland say changing skilled worker visas could leave them shortstaffed.
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05:00
National and international news from BBC Radio 4
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05:04
Scientists have made early-stage human embryos using skin cell DNA fertilised with sperm
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05:34
The latest weather reports and forecasts for UK shipping
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05:43
A spiritual comment and prayer to start the day with the Rev Lynne Gibson.
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05:45
River Wye pollution, rural crime, new nature reserve.
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05:00
National and international news from BBC Radio 4
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05:04
UK benefits, Zack Polanski’s billionaire claim and Gen Z job interviews.
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05:34
The latest weather reports and forecasts for UK shipping
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05:43
A spiritual comment and prayer to start the day with the Rev Lynne Gibson.
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05:45
President Trump plans to bail out soyabean farmers.
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05:00
National and international news from BBC Radio 4
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05:04
What is the plan? And why is it happening now?
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05:34
The latest weather reports and forecasts for UK shipping
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05:43
A spiritual comment and prayer to start the day with the Rev Lynne Gibson.
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05:45
The increasing amounts of waste dumped in the countryside and how to tackle it.
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05:30
National and international news from BBC Radio 4
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05:34
The latest weather reports and forecasts for UK shipping
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05:43
A spiritual comment and prayer to start the day with Guvna B.
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05:45
Dan Neidle reveals the unexpected ways tax shapes our world.
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05:30
National and international news from BBC Radio 4
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05:34
The latest weather reports and forecasts for UK shipping
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05:43
Bells on Sunday comes from the church of St Mary the Virgin, Hartpury in Gloucestershire.
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05:45
Boomerang is a new charity set up to help visually impaired students pursue STEM subjects.
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06:00
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06:00
News and current affairs, including Sports Desk, Weather and Thought for the Day.
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06:00
News and current affairs, including Sports Desk, Weather and Thought for the Day.
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06:00
News and current affairs, including Sports Desk, Weather and Thought for the Day.
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06:00
News and current affairs, including Sports Desk, Weather and Thought for the Day.
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06:00
News and current affairs, including Sports Desk, Weather and Thought for the Day.
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06:00
The news headlines, including a look at the newspapers.
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06:07
Comedian Mark Steel joins Clare for an amble around Hambleton Peninsula in Rutland.
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06:30
Is the fight against rural crime being won?
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06:57
The latest weather reports and forecast
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06:00
The latest national and international news from BBC Radio 4
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06:05
The power and complexity of religious conversion in prison.
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06:35
Sarah Swadling discovers top jockey Harry Cobden’s passion for beef farming.
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06:57
The latest weather reports and forecast
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07:00
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07:00
Including Sports Desk, Weather and Thought for the Day.
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07:00
National and international news from BBC Radio 4
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07:10
A look at the ethical and religious issues of the week
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07:54
Actress Susannah Fielding presents the Radio 4 appeal on behalf of Children on the Edge.
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07:57
The latest weather reports and forecast
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08:00
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08:00
The news headlines, including a look at the newspapers.
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08:10
Farsi Christians - hope in the midst of trial.
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08:48
The story of the week that brought the future of Greece and the Eurozone to the brink
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08:58
Entomologist George McGavin shares his lifelong fascination with the red-backed shrike.
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09:00
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09:00
Greek economist Yanis Varoufakis and historians Paul Cartledge and Mary Vincent.
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09:45
How one woman wants to get more people to give blood after donations helped her husband.
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09:00
Materials scientist Eleanor Schofield on conserving a 500-year-old wooden warship.
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09:30
How can we learn to get along with people we disagree with?
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09:00
UK benefits, Zack Polanski’s billionaire claim and Gen Z job interviews.
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09:30
How did Jimmy O’Connor end up in a condemned cell at HMP Pentonville?
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09:00
Melvyn Bragg and his guests discuss the origins, science and mythology of the moon.
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09:45
Natalie Haynes joins Armando to repeatedly discuss repetition, repetitiously.
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09:00
Angela Harding, artist, shares the soundtrack of her life with Lauren Laverne.
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09:00
Susie Dent joins Adrian Chiles for extraordinary stories from remarkable people.
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09:00
Hostage families await the release of loved ones as Gazans try to return home.
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10:00
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10:00
Is the SEND system working for children with special educational needs?
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10:55
Katherine Rundell explores wonderful stories of 20 astonishing but endangered animals.
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10:00
The rise of AI 'girlfriends' with new websites offering online intimacy.
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10:55
Katherine Rundell explores wonderful stories of 20 astonishing but endangered animals.
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10:00
As she makes her second speech, how has the Conservative party leader's conference gone?
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10:55
Katherine Rundell explores wonderful stories of 20 astonishing but endangered animals.
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10:00
Singer-songwriter Tanita Tikaram on fame in the late 1980s, identity and belonging.
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10:55
Katherine Rundell explores wonderful stories of 20 astonishing but endangered animals.
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10:00
The latest in the Gisèle Pelicot case after a man appealed his conviction for rape.
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10:55
Katherine Rundell explores wonderful stories of 20 astonishing but endangered animals.
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10:00
2/13 Hannah Fry and Dara Ó Briain consider whether resonance can down bridges and lift moods.
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10:30
Bruce's story begins in the small factory town of Freehold, New Jersey.
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10:00
Ronnie Wood, musician and artist, shares the soundtrack of his life with Lauren Laverne.
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11:00
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11:00
2/3 A journey through the landscape that shapes the health of our children.
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11:45
1/5 The sequel to Jung Chang’s global bestseller, Wild Swans.
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11:00
Ellen E Jones and Mark Kermode look at the long relationship between cinema and painting.
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11:45
2/5 The author, Jung Chang, enjoys unfamiliar experiences while living her new life in Europe.
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-
11:00
Why has the number of under-18s in custody in England and Wales dropped to a record low?
-
11:40
Fascinating, surprising and eye-opening stories from the past, brought to life.
-
11:45
3/5 In 1988 Jung Chang's mother is finally granted permission to visit her daughter in the UK.
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11:00
Composer and conductor Thomas Adès reveals his formative creative influences.
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11:45
4/5 Wild Swans was published in 1992, the next year the author returned to Chengdu.
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-
11:00
Dan Saladino looks at projects helping to rethink chocolate, seafood and food forests.
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11:45
5/5 Jung Chang and Jon Halliday published their biography of Chairman Mao in 2005.
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11:00
Gaia Vince makes the positive case for immigration despite public concern over the issue.
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11:30
The soldier with the unenviable task of telling families their loved ones have been killed
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11:00
The Grundy's face an anxious wait, and Chris makes his feelings clear.
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12:00
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12:00
The latest national and international news from BBC Radio 4.
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12:04
We reveal how criminals are using water accounts as a gateway to fraud.
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12:57
The latest weather forecast
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12:00
The latest national and international news from BBC Radio 4.
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12:04
Call You & Yours: 'What's your experience of buying and selling a home?'
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12:57
The latest weather forecast
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12:00
The latest national and international news from BBC Radio 4.
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12:04
From Sunday, British Travellers to the EU will be subject to new biometric checks.
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12:57
The latest weather forecast
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12:00
The latest national and international news from BBC Radio 4.
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12:04
When leaders embrace chaos, can innovation thrive or does everything fall apart?
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12:32
Greg Foot investigates the so-called wonder products making bold claims.
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12:57
The latest weather forecast
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12:00
The latest national and international news from BBC Radio 4.
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12:04
Are they dividing the country?
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12:57
The latest weather forecast
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12:00
The latest national and international news from BBC Radio 4.
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12:04
Why the Government wants us to invest more cash savings into shares
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12:30
6/8 Andy Zaltzman is joined by Ian Smith and Ayesha Hazarika for the topical panel quiz show.
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12:57
The latest weather forecast
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12:15
The self proclaimed ‘grandmother of performance art’.
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12:30
2/6 Paul Sinha tests the general knowledge of his live audience in Ayr.
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12:57
The latest weather forecast
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13:00
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13:00
Sébastien Lecornu becomes France's shortest serving prime minister ever. We have reaction.
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13:45
How can you reconnect with yourself through food?
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13:00
We speak to the mother of a hostage in Gaza two years after Hamas's attack on Israel.
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13:45
A tale of faith and migration. A Zimbabwe mother rediscovers her spiritual home in the UK.
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13:00
The Conservative leader defends her party's record at the party conference.
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13:45
Artist Leon Clowes traces addiction recovery through the lens of a bespoke tarot deck.
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13:00
Gaza: a ceasefire expected to be signed within hours.
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13:45
A mountain, a deer and a ghillie - a re-imagination of Gaelic poem, Moladh Beinn Dobhrain.
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13:00
Thousands of Palestinians return to their homes while Israeli forces pull back.
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13:45
Satirical audio fiction about a lost northerner in London. Written by Antonia Gospel.
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13:00
National and international news from BBC Radio 4
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13:10
Alex Forsyth presents political debate from York St John University.
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13:00
Israel awaits the return of its hostages. Palestinians in Gaza hope to rebuild.
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14:00
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14:00
Jolene finds herself bearing the brunt.
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14:15
4/6 Ellie suggests a neighbourhood stake out when the garden pot plants are stolen again.
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14:45
8/10 Mrs Bridge does not approve of her son Douglas’s new girlfriend.
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14:00
The Grundys face an anxious wait.
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14:15
Hard-hitting comedy drama about the healing power of real friends, by Leila Navabi.
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14:00
Brad sees things from another perspective.
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14:15
2/4 Baltic Noir thriller combining espionage, betrayal - and forbidden love.
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14:00
Chris makes his feelings clear.
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14:15
By Andy Grace Edwards. Poignant drama about love, art and the healing power of a walk.
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14:00
Emotions run high for Will.
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14:15
A brother's far-right activism creates a major dilemma for his Police Detective sister.
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14:45
Dan Neidle reveals the unexpected ways tax shapes our world.
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14:05
Listeners respond to the issues raised in the preceding edition of Any Questions?
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14:45
Ed proves a sympathetic ear.
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14:00
Kathy Clugston delves into the extensive GQT archives, digging for timeless advice.
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14:45
Aleighcia Scott speaks to Chris Price about his family's contribution to reggae in the UK.
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15:00
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15:00
Andrew Davenport, creator of In the Night Garden, chooses Oliver Postgate.
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15:30
1/13 Hannah and Dara investigate why nature has evolved the humble crabs so many times.
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15:00
1/10 An arctic explorer is trapped in a snow drift. How will he escape?
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15:30
The power and complexity of religious conversion in prison.
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15:00
We take a look at investing live from the London Stock Exchange.
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15:30
Companionship has become the top use case for AI. Aleks & Kevin explore the consequences.
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15:00
Comedian Mark Steel joins Clare for an amble around Hambleton Peninsula in Rutland.
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15:27
Ambassador for Kinship Jay Kontzle makes the Radio 4 appeal on behalf of the charity.
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15:30
Andrea Catherwood discusses Radio 4's Inside the Migrant Hotel with Sue Mitchell.
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15:00
Kathy Clugston delves into the extensive GQT archives, digging for timeless advice.
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15:45
Detective comedy about vigils, victims and vintage coats.
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15:00
1/2 Star of the Sea unravels the mysterious death of landowner David Merridith.
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15:00
1/2 Behind the Iron Curtain, every note the Borodin Quartet plays could cost them everything.
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16:00
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16:00
6/6 Can coroners' courts cope with conspiracy?
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16:30
7/7 Jay Rayner and the panel are in Durham answering questions from an audience of home cooks.
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16:00
Exploring how blind approaches to art description bring galleries to life for everyone.
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16:30
Drs Chris and Xand van Tulleken want to know the link between nature and our wellbeing.
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16:00
David Yelland and Simon Lewis examine whether some people are beyond the help of PR.
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16:15
Steve Rosenberg BBC Russia editor, the rise of the self-produced celebrity documentary.
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16:00
What is the plan? And why is it happening now?
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16:30
Renewables overtake coal as the world’s biggest source of electricity.
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16:00
Matthew Bannister on an electoral officer, an author, an attempted assassin and an actor.
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16:30
UK benefits, Zack Polanski’s billionaire claim and Gen Z job interviews.
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16:00
Sally Wainwright on Riot Women, her drama about a group of mid-life women's punk rock band
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16:00
John Banville on his new novel Venetian Vespers and its connections to three other texts.
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16:30
5/6 The students v professors quiz.
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17:00
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17:00
After just 26 days, Sébastien Lecornu is gone. What's next for France?
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17:00
Shadow justice sec hits back, saying he would not 'shy away' from issues of integration.
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17:00
We’re joined by Shadow Chancellor Mel Stride.
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17:00
News and current affairs, reporting on breaking stories and summing up the day's headlines
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-
17:00
Thousands of Palestinians have begun returning to Gaza's north as a ceasefire begins.
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17:00
Over half a million Palestinians head back to what's left of their homes.
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17:30
How do you protect and police freedom of speech on campus and in society?
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17:54
The latest weather reports and forecasts for UK shipping
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17:57
The latest weather reports and forecast
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17:00
In 1932, a photo of ironworkers eating lunch at the top of a skyscraper was taken
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17:10
Ian McMillan with Maria Popova, Aditya Narayan, Kimberly Campanello, and DM Black.
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17:54
The latest weather reports and forecasts for UK shipping
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17:57
The latest weather reports and forecast
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18:00
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18:00
The country has been plunged into a political crisis
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18:30
2/6 Paul Sinha tests the general knowledge of his live audience in Ayr.
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18:00
Robert Jenrick has defended making comments some have described as racist
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18:30
1/6 Find out how hanging horseshoes upside down helps the people of Oakham vanquish the devil.
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18:00
Kemi Badenoch pledged to axe stamp duty on main homes in England and Northern Ireland
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18:30
6/6 The team court a star to be the charity’s patron, and Harriett’s salary gets leaked.
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18:00
News of a peace deal is met with celebrations in Israel and relief and anxiety in Gaza.
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18:30
Pie takes on the topic of race after a run-in with Sam. Is this wise?
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18:00
Palestinians stream north as Israeli troops pull back and the ceasefire begins in Gaza
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18:30
6/8 Andy Zaltzman is joined by Ian Smith and Ayesha Hazarika for the topical panel quiz show.
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18:00
Former Lostprophets singer and paedophile Ian Watkins dies after an attack in prison.
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18:15
Clive Anderson and guests with an eclectic mix of conversation, music and comedy.
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18:00
More aid is entering Gaza ahead of the release of the remaining Israeli hostages.
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18:15
Susan Hulme presents a selection of the best bits of audio across the BBC.
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19:00
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19:00
The Grundys face an anxious wait.
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19:15
Film director Kathryn Bigelow and Booker-nominee author Kiran Desai
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19:00
Brad sees things from another perspective.
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19:15
Marina Abramović on creating a dream in her new performance artwork Balkan Erotic Epic
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19:00
Chris makes his feelings clear.
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19:15
Tamsin Greig on Sally Wainwright's Riot Women and Booker Prize-shortlisted Susan Choi.
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19:00
Emotions run high for Will.
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19:15
Susan Sarandon's UK stage debut in Mary Page Marlowe and Thomas Pynchon's Shadow Ticket.
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19:00
Ed proves a sympathetic ear.
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19:15
Ellen and Mark explore how films and TV depict death and dying.
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19:00
The self proclaimed ‘grandmother of performance art’.
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19:15
Composer and conductor Thomas Adès reveals his formative creative influences.
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19:15
Join Clint Buffington on his hunt for messages in bottles and the people who sent them.
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19:45
Why mindfulness practice can improve your focus, immune system and reduce stress and pain.
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20:00
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20:00
The UK's nightlife sector is on its knees, so can - and should - it be saved?
-
20:30
Scientists have made early-stage human embryos using skin cell DNA fertilised with sperm
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20:00
Why has the number of under-18s in custody in England and Wales dropped to a record low?
-
20:40
Boomerang is a new charity set up to help visually impaired students pursue STEM subjects.
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20:00
The battle to define patriotism in the UK.
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20:45
The rise and fall of the original 'Superhead'.
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20:00
David Yelland and Simon Lewis examine whether some people are beyond the help of PR.
-
20:15
Steve Rosenberg BBC Russia editor, the rise of the self-produced celebrity documentary.
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-
20:00
Alex Forsyth presents political debate from York St John University.
-
20:55
Fascinating, surprising and eye-opening stories from the past, brought to life.
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-
20:00
At 80, does the peacekeeping organisation still have a role to play?
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20:00
Andrea Catherwood discusses Radio 4's Inside the Migrant Hotel with Sue Mitchell.
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20:30
Matthew Bannister on an electoral officer, an author, an attempted assassin and an actor.
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21:00
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21:00
Greek economist Yanis Varoufakis and historians Paul Cartledge and Mary Vincent.
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21:45
How one woman wants to get more people to give blood after donations helped her husband.
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21:00
The BBC Philharmonic Orchestra invite us into their rehearsal room.
-
21:30
How university research creates huge rewards – for founders, universities and the economy.
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21:00
Materials scientist Eleanor Schofield on conserving a 500-year-old wooden warship.
-
21:30
How can we learn to get along with people we disagree with?
|
-
21:00
Clive Anderson and guests with an eclectic mix of conversation, music and comedy.
-
21:45
Natalie Haynes joins Armando to repeatedly discuss repetition, repetitiously.
|
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21:00
Shahidha Bari and guests discuss the status of science in society and culture.
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-
21:00
A mission gone wrong. A daring rescue attempt. Told by the soldiers who were there.
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21:00
Why the Government wants us to invest more cash savings into shares
-
21:25
Actress Susannah Fielding presents the Radio 4 appeal on behalf of Children on the Edge.
-
21:30
The soldier with the unenviable task of telling families their loved ones have been killed
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22:00
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-
22:00
Sébastien Lecornu was appointed France's prime minister less than four weeks ago
-
22:45
1/10 An elemental story about climate, discovery and the time we have left.
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22:00
Two parents - one Israeli, one Palestinian - on the impact of that day on their families
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22:45
2/10 Travellers on a well-worn path arrive to investigate Helm.
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22:00
US President says he could travel to Egypt later this week for negotiations
-
22:45
3/10 Michael Lang’s plan becomes clearer as a threat is made against the stone circle.
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22:00
Israeli ministers meet to discuss Trump's Gaza plan for ceasefire and hostage release
-
22:45
4/10 Selima encounters familiar attitudes on Great Dun Fell as NaNay returns from the mountain.
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22:00
Hundreds of thousands of Palestinians go back to Gaza City as IDF withdraws
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22:45
5/10 Nathaniel is determined to destroy the circle as Helm brings a gift to NaNay’s tribe.
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22:00
National and international news from BBC Radio 4
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22:15
Dan Saladino looks at projects helping to rethink chocolate, seafood and food forests.
|
-
22:00
Ben Wright discusses key issues for Parliament as MPs return from the Conferences recess.
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23:00
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23:00
1/5 Clara Page and the Themis gang are back - and family ties are a stronger theme than ever.
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23:30
Mary Beard joins Calidius Eroticus and Fannia Voluptas for a Roman bar crawl.
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23:00
Predator, hunter, archer, daughter of Zeus, queen of wild creatures: the goddess Artemis.
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23:30
Two men, one woman. All three seem devoted to each other. Love story or exploitation?
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23:00
5/5 Ria is joined by real-life Baroness Ayesha Hazarika to try Electrical Muscle Stimulation.
-
23:15
5/5 Jon Holmes remixes the news into satirical shapes and sounds.
-
23:30
Mary joins novelist Robert Harris to uncover the story of a Pompeii hustler.
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23:00
Gaia Vince makes the positive case for immigration despite public concern over the issue.
-
23:30
Exploring how blind approaches to art description bring galleries to life for everyone.
|
-
23:00
The White House says it's tackling elitism and racism, but is academic freedom at risk?
-
23:30
Josh Cohen shares how Peanuts can help us navigate the frustrating squiggle of life.
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23:00
1/6 Find out how hanging horseshoes upside down helps the people of Oakham vanquish the devil.
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23:30
4/6 The students v professors quiz.
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23:00
Melvyn Bragg and his guests discuss the origins, science and mythology of the moon.
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23:45
Detective comedy about vigils, victims and vintage coats.
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