Tuesday 18 January 2022
ITV/STV
21:00
Presenter: Ranvir Singh
Executive Producer: Fatima Salaria
Executive Producer: Yvonne Alexander
Ghislaine, Prince Andrew and the Paedophile is a Fremantle UK production for ITV & STV.
Ghislaine, Prince Andrew And The Paedophile Tuesday 18 January 2022 ITV/STV 21:00 Presenter: Ranvir Singh Executive Producer: Fatima Salaria Executive Producer: Yvonne Alexander As Ghislaine Maxwell awaits sentencing in a New York prison ITV's Ranvir Singh unravels the story of how an entitled daughter of a billionaire sank into shame and disgrace through her friendship with paedophile Jeffrey Epstein. Ranvir also explores how Prince Andrew, the Queen's second son, is now embroiled in the scandal as he faces his own possible civil court case brought by Virginia Giuffre. He denies any wrongdoing. Ghislaine Maxwell's trial shone a spotlight on the lifestyle of her, Jeffery Epstein and their circle, including private jets, New York mansions and luxury exotic islands. Ranvir Singh explores Maxwell and Epstein's extensive network of rich, powerful and famous friends, speaking with some of those in their 'Little Black Book' of contacts and examining evidence from the trial including flight logs from Epstein's private planes listing famous passengers. Ranvir Singh speaks to survivors who tell her Maxwell was equally to blame for using her influence as a woman to persuade them into Jeffery Epstein's web of abuse.
Ghislaine, Prince Andrew and the Paedophile is a Fremantle UK production for ITV & STV.
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Fred And Rose West: Reopened Series 1 / Episode 2 Thursday 16 September 2021 ITV/STV 21:00 Presenter: Sir Trevor McDonald Contributor: DCI (retd) Colin Sutton Contributor: Dr. Donna Youngs Contributor: Howard Sounes Director: Marcus Plowright Series Producer: Emily Harris Series Producer: Marcus Plowright Executive Producer: Dan Chambers In this new two-part documentary series presented by Sir Trevor McDonald and from the filmmakers behind the International Emmy-nominated and Grierson shortlisted In Cold Blood, a team of investigators explores claims The Wests were responsible for many more murders than the 12 women and girls they are known to have killed.
Fred West committed suicide before he was brought to trial, but his wife Rose was convicted of 10 murders in 1995. There has however always been a strong belief that there are many more victims. This new series, shown on consecutive nights, features former detective chief inspector Colin Sutton, investigative psychologist Donna Youngs, author Howard Sounes, and Broadcast Journalist Sir Trevor McDonald following up new leads to try to shed new light on the true number of the Wests' victims and their identities. In the second episode, members of the family of Mary Bastholm, who was almost certainly abducted and murdered by West in 1968, but who has never been found, speak to the programme as police excavate the basement floor of the cafe. Last in series. Fred And Rose West: Reopened Series 1 / Episode 1 Wednesday 15 September 2021 ITV/STV 21:00 Presenter: Sir Trevor McDonald Contributor: DCI (retd) Colin Sutton Contributor: Dr. Donna Youngs Contributor: Howard Sounes Director: Marcus Plowright Series Producer: Emily Harris Series Producer: Marcus Plowright Executive Producer: Dan Chambers In this new two-part documentary series, presented by Sir Trevor McDonald and from the filmmakers behind the International Emmy-nominated and Grierson shortlisted In Cold Blood, a team of investigators explores claims The Wests were responsible for many more murders than the 12 women and girls they are known to have killed.
Fred West committed suicide before he was brought to trial, but his wife Rose was convicted of 10 murders in 1995. There has however always been a strong belief that there are many more victims. This new series, shown on consecutive nights, features former Detective Chief Inspector Colin Sutton, Investigative Psychologist Donna Youngs, author Howard Sounes, and Broadcast Journalist Sir Trevor McDonald following up new leads to try to shed new light on the true number of The Wests' victims and their identities. In the first episode, the team unearths previously unseen documents including the full statement of Fred West's 'appropriate adult', Janet Leach, that contains details about the location of 'The Farm', where it has long been suggested up to 20 more victims may be found. The team studies newly revealed records of discussions between Fred West and his lawyer in which Fred talked about other crimes involving himself, Rose West and his brother, John West. Following new information from documents and witness testimonies, the team investigates numerous locations where The Wests claimed to have concealed victims. The use of Ground Penetrating Radar, sniffer dogs, and an inspection camera also reveal a suspicious cavity beneath a cafe in Gloucester. 9/11: Inside The President's War Room Tuesday 31 August 2021 20:30 BBC One Director/Producer: Adam Wishart Executive Producer: Neil Grant A Wish/Art Production for BBC One Twenty years ago, at 09.03, the second of four hijacked planes hit the South Tower of the World Trade Centre in Manhattan, New York. America was under attack. President George W. Bush was sitting in front of a classroom of seven year-olds in Florida. Members of the President's security detail thought that the next plane could be aimed at them. As the clock ticks the presidency is forced to make a series of critical decisions, while still struggling to make sense of what is unfolding. Should they order fighter jets to shoot on American civilians? Should the seminal Presidential speech declare war, or calm a nation? How would the leadership of the most powerful nation on Earth grapple with the national and international implications? This feature-length documentary tells the definitive timeline story of the Presidency through 12 hours of that momentous day - as it changed him, changed the United States Of America, and changed the world - told with direct testimony from those in power at the time: President George W. Bush, Vice President Richard Cheney, National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice, Secretary of State Colin Powell and numerous other senior White House personnel. It begins with blue-sky innocence, as a relatively new President orientates himself towards a domestic agenda and it ends as the machinery of Government flexes and responds to the threat and begins to contemplate the possibility of war. The events of that day led to two decades of conflict in Afghanistan and Iraq. As America and its allies now withdraw from Afghanistan and the Taliban resume control, this is the story of how it all began.
Surviving 9/11 Monday 30 August 2021 21:00 BBC Two Director: Arthur Cary Executive Producer: Darren Kemp Twenty years on from 9/11, BAFTA-winning director Arthur Cary takes a look at one of the defining historical events of the post-war era.
Broadcast live around the world like horrifying theatre, 9/11 is a moment in history that everyone over a certain age can remember, and knows exactly where they were when it happened. But what was it like to actually live through, and how easy is it to move on from a day that society wants to go on remembering? This film brings together 13 ordinary people who were caught in an event they weren't able to fully comprehend at the time, and that they are still working through with the benefit of hindsight. Surviving 9/11 is a deeply personal film, intertwining two separate narratives: the two-hour period when terrorists hijacked four planes and crashed three of them into The Twin Towers and The Pentagon, and the story of the 20 years since. Blending powerful testimony from American and British interviewees and personal and public archive, the story of the day unfolds almost in real time, while contemporary scenes explore how the lives of individuals continue to be affected by those moments. Contributors range from survivors, first responders and family members of victims. They include Vanessa from Scotland, who was taking part in an artists' residency on the 91st floor of the North Tower in New York; Bill, a firefighter from Staten Island who miraculously survived both towers collapsing around him; Malcolm, who lost his son Geoff and every anniversary camps alone on a mountain in Wales where he was when he first heard the news about the attacks; Heather, who was a newly qualified fighter pilot and took to the skies that day, prepared to ram the tail of United 93, the hijacked plane that was headed for Washington DC. The attacks happened in America, but they changed the world - and they continue to define the lives of many who survived them. Ambulance S07E01 Thursday 12 August 2021 BBC One 21:00 Narrator: Christopher Eccleston Series Director: Andrew Dedman Series Editor Peter Wallis-Taylor Series Producer: Becky Houlihan Series Producer: Billie Hussein Executive Producer: Simon Ford Tonight is the first episode of a new series of the BAFTA-Award-winning Ambulance, filmed earlier this year at an unprecedentedly difficult time for the NHS.
Cameras focus on a new cast of characters drawn from the staff of North West England Ambulance Service, as they care for the 1.4 million people of Merseyside. The whole of the country is in lockdown as crews across Merseyside book on for the day shift. In the Regional Operational Coordinating Centre, plans are well underway to tackle the immediate threat to life being posed by Storm Christoph, which is about to rage through the North West of England. The storm adds yet more pressure to a service already battling the peak of the CoronaVirus Pandemic. Crewmates Emily and Jo are first of the morning shift to be dispatched to a patient who is not breathing and is feared dead. This is the call Jo dreads, as she has only recently lost her mother. She fears it will have a profound emotional impact on her, even though she is saved from attending the scene. With little time to recover Jo and Emily are dispatched to reports of a road traffic collision caused by the storm. Paramedic Chris is also sent to manage the scene. Once on scene, the patient is found to have had a lucky escape, but must still be taken to a nearby medical facility - which leaves Chris reflecting once again on how his fellow scousers have faced the pandemic. Across Liverpool, ambulance crew Sarah and Mark are dispatched to their second patient of the day - a woman who is struggling to breathe. The patient is initially reluctant to attend a local medical facility but after some gentle persuasion agrees to go. Once safely on board the ambulance her gratitude for the crew and the NHS shines through, as Sarah and Mark modestly shrug off her compliments. Five hours into the shift, and the team have already treated over 290 suspected COVID19-positive patients. Emily and Jo's fifth call out of the day is to a COVID19-positive patient. Whilst on scene, it turns out Covid has rippled through the family and is continuing its spread to them all. There are now 258 patients waiting for an ambulance and the pressure on the service is building with no signs of the storm easing. Emily and Jo are on scene with their third covid patient of the day. As Emily tries to find a way to keep the patient out of hospital, a passerby hands the crew-mates a gift, leaving Emily to reflect on how hard times have been. Overnight, Storm Christoph has continued to intensify, with river levels throughout the North West of England rising the service is at risk of becoming overwhelmed. The news that there have also been a further 1820 CoronaVirus deaths in the past 24 hours sends shockwaves through the ambulance team. Ambulance crew Kerry and Quinten are dispatched to their first patient of the night. The patient who has had a fall at home, and as a result of the pressure on the service he has been kept waiting for an ambulance for five hours. As the weather continues to worsen, there are now another 299 patients waiting for an ambulance. Emily and Jo are dispatched to their first patient of the night, a woman who is distressed because she can hear ringing in her ears. Paramedic Chris is dispatched to another elderly patient. When he arrives he finds she has fallen out of bed. He soon manages to get the patient back on her feet and cheers her up as they share stories of Liverpool in days gone-by. As the floods continue to worsen, roads are forced to close which causes further delays in response times. Sarah and Mark are dispatched to a category one call for a patient in cardiac arrest but are forced to make a number of diversions along the way. Across town, Emily and Jo are also in a race against time to get to another patient in cardiac arrest. Despite dashing to treat the patient they aren’t able to save their life - another stark reminder for Emily and Jo of the fragility of life, and once again it throws all their work during the CoronaVirus Pandemic into sharp focus.
Undercover Big Boss: S01E02
Thursday 12 August 2021 ITV/STV 21:00 Narrator: Tracy-Ann Oberman Director: Paul Shenkin Series Producer: Paul Shenkin Series Editor: Richard Mears Executive Producer: Mike Cotton Executive Producer: Rachel Bloomfield
This week, it's the turn of Robert Forrester.
Robert is the Chief Cxecutive of Bristol Street Motors, one of the largest car dealership groups in the United Kingdom. It is a three billion-pound business that sells new and used cars from all the major brands. With 149 dealerships across the United Kingdom and over 6,000 employees, the company sells one car to a British resident every four minutes. When the CoronaVirus Pandemic hit, Robert was forced to close his dealerships and furlough the workforce. However, he also decided to take a massive gamble, whilst other businesses were downsizing, he saw an opportunity to become the biggest and best automotive dealer in the United Kingdom. So he went on a shopping spree, purchasing 30 new dealerships and investing millions of pounds of shareholders' money. Now he needs to make sure his gamble will pay off, so he is going undercover to make sure his company is in the right position to expand. As a self-confessed 'data geek' who graduated from Oxford, Robert has never actually worked on the shop floor or sold a car in his life. For his undercover journey, he adopts the persona of history lecturer called Tom Gough who is looking for a career change, post-pandemic. Here's a sneak preview of what's to come. The Riots 2011: One Week In August Monday 09 August 2021 BBC Two 21:00 Director: James Jones Executive Producer: Darren Kemp 2011 saw the largest wave of disorder in the United Kingdom since the 1980s.
This revelatory film hears from the people who experienced the riots up close and personal. A decade on, we look back at the Summer of 2011 through the eyes of those whose lives have never been the same since. In a series of candid interviews, we hear the story from all angles. Convicted rioters, frontline police, a judge, a government advisor and a grieving father look back at that week in August, and the years that followed, to piece together what really happened and why. Leigh-Anne: Race, Pop & Power Thursday 13 May 2021 BBC One 21:00 Presenter: Leigh-Anne Pinnock Contributor: Alexandra Burke Contributor: Neo Jessica Joshua Contributor: Rachel Agatha Keen Contributor: Keisha Buchanan Director: Tash Gaunt Producer: Kandise Abiola Executive Producer: Sam Bickley Executive Producer: Tom Currie This powerful one-off documentary follows pop star Leigh-Anne Pinnock as she confronts her experience as the only black member of Little Mix, and as a black woman in the music industry. Leigh-Anne talks about the racism she has experienced growing up. Both her parents are of Caribbean heritage, and Leigh-Anne identifies as black. She is also aware that having lighter skin and being a celebrity means she is in a more privileged position than others. Leigh-Anne embarks on her own, very personal journey, to understand how she can use her platform and privilege to combat the profound racism she sees in society around her. After she takes on this, her biggest and most important mission yet, news of George Floyd's death and Black Lives Matter protests begin to sweep the world. With the force of a global movement now behind her, Leigh-Anne confronts those closest to her and attempts to bring difficult conversations about black representation right to the top of the music industry. With no-holds-barred access to one third of the world’s biggest girl band, we join Leigh-Anne with her Little Mix bandmates behind the scenes, at home with her professional footballer fiancée Andre Gray and with fellow pop stars, politicians and podcasters as she opens up an all-important conversation about race. Leigh-Anne takes a look at the complexities and impact of unconscious bias, racial stereotyping and colourism both in and away from the public eye. Since winning X-Factor Leigh-Anne has often felt like she is treated differently, and now she is wondering whether years of feeling ignored at signings, not hearing her name cheered at events, and fans walking past her in favour of the other girls in the band may be down to her race. To understand her experience she contacts Beyonce's Creative Director Frank Gatson, whose words on their first video rehearsal nearly a decade ago, "you're the black girl, you have to work ten times harder", have stuck with her ever since. In an emotional scene with her parents, we see how they first reacted when Leigh-Anne told them how she had been feeling as the black member of the band. Leigh-Anne’s dad John, recalls: "At the time I thought to myself, Leigh-Anne, toughen up, get yourself together, you're in a good position, get on with it, don't moan about it" but her parents' attitudes have changed as they have seen the effect the experience has had on their daughter over the years. Leigh-Anne's mum, says: "You can use your voice and your experiences to help other people and to let other people know, things are going to change." Pulling together a group of black and mixed-race pop royalty for a round table discussion that's almost like therapy, Leigh-Anne compares experiences with Alexandra Burke, Neo Jessica Joshua (known professionally as Nao), Rachel Agatha Keen (who performs under the 'Raye' moniker), and Keisha Buchanan from the Sugababes. In turn, each artist reveals their own shocking experiences within the music industry because of the colour of their skin. When discussing colourism, Leigh-Anne is forced to confront the uncomfortable question - "If I was dark skinned, would I be in Little Mix?" If Leigh-Anne is going to ask difficult questions of the World around her, she needs to do the same at home. In 2012, Andre Gray, Leigh-Anne's footballer fiancée, wrote a series of offensive tweets, some of which were about black women. Leigh-Anne confronts Andre about these tweets and tries to understand what led him as a younger man to think such abhorrent things. Putting your head above the parapet isn't easy and Leigh-Anne starts to receive criticism from all angles. She seeks advice on how to handle this backlash from Member of Parliament Dawn Butler who herself has faced horrific racial abuse throughout her career. Dawn pushes her to carry on: "When the history books are written people have got to ask themselves, what's going to be said next to your name?" During Leigh-Anne's appearance on the Trilly Trio podcast, the subject of Leigh-Anne's immediate working world comes up. "I walk into work and there are no black people, and that has been that way my whole career, I just haven't noticed it, it's my normal!" The podcasters throw down the gauntlet for her: "Do you feel you have the confidence now to have a conversation with your record label, what's management really doing to emphasise Black Lives Matter?"
Leigh-Anne decides she must confront her label about what they are doing to make positive change. But meeting them on camera to join forces to work together going forwards is going to be harder than she imagined. Ian Wright: Home Truths Thursday 06 May 2021 BBC One 21:00 Presenter: Ian Wright Director: Dan Dewsbury Series Producer: Charlene Osuagwu Executive Producer: Emma Hindley Executive Producer: Anna Sadowy Ex-footballer and broadcaster Ian Wright investigates the effect on children of growing up in a psychologically abusive and violent home, in the United Kingdom.
In the last year, 1.6 million women experienced domestic abuse, and in 90 percent of domestic abuse cases there is a child present. As well as coming to terms with his own experience, Ian sets out to understand the impact this kind of childhood can have on kids growing up now and on the adults they will become. After returning to his childhood home for the first time in 50 years to revisit his past, Ian decides to travel across the United Kingdom to meet with other people who have experienced domestic abuse in their childhood, as well as to meet professionals to talk through his own trauma. Ian discovers how things have changed since he grew up in the 1970s, and finds out how children are supported in the United Kingdom today, by visiting his former primary school and observing local and charity-led initiatives. In the final leg of his journey, Ian visits a charity who work with people at risk of committing, or who have already committed, domestic abuse - and meets a man who is on a course to help him understand and change his behaviour. Ian discovers how abuse can become a dangerous cycle and, emotionally, he reveals that he is able to begin to forgive his mother and move on from the past. Upon reflection he concludes that "abuse creates a vicious cycle - it’s up to all of us to stop it". |
AuthorAndy Gibson for InformingBritain.com Archives
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