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27 November 2014
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Programme Information

Network TV Week 22

Friday 30 May 2008


Â鶹ԼÅÄ ONE Friday 30 May 2008
Doctors
Friday 30 May
1.45-2.15pm Â鶹ԼÅÄ ONE
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A woman is suspicious her husband is having an affair and, as a result, is suffering from panic attacks, as the drama set in a Midlands health centre continues. Nick endeavours to find the real cause of her distress. The husband reveals he is actually having relations of the furry kind ... he likes dressing as a rabbit and regularly attends "Furfest"!

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Meanwhile, following Ruth's revelations about Davey, and after he scalded her head, he arrives to take Ruth out for lunch, as usual. Michelle tells him that Ruth can't go because they are in the middle of a stock take. When Davey questions this, Michelle is adamant, while Ruth stands by in silence. When he goes, Ruth tells Michelle she will leave him.

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Later, Michelle tells Ruth she can stay with her, and drives her home to pack up some things. Davey walks in and asks what is going on. Ruth tells him she is leaving and that she won't be bullied any more.

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Meanwhile, Archie is looking forward to his romantic night with Melody, only to have it ruined by the arrival of her brother, JJ, who's back from his travels. JJ seems to take priority over Archie, and Archie senses JJ could be trouble.

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Nick is played Michael McKell, Ruth by Selina Chilton, Davey by Gavin Bell, Michelle by Donnaleigh Bailey, Archie by Matt Kennard, Melody by Elizabeth Bower and JJ by George Rainsford.

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SD2

EastEnders
Friday 30 May
8.00-8.30pm Â鶹ԼÅÄ ONE
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Sean catches Roxy trying to leave the Square, as the drama continues. Meanwhile, Chelsea is caught red-handed with drugs in her bag.

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Sean is played by Rob Kazinsky, Roxy by Rita Simons and Chelsea by Tiana Benjamin.

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JM3

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Â鶹ԼÅÄ TWO Friday 30 May 2008
Out Of The Blue
Friday 30 May
1.00-1.25pm Â鶹ԼÅÄ TWO

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With Tess seemingly in more danger, Noel desperately tries to convince her to return to England, as the drama set in an Australian beach resort continues.

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Stavva is completely out of it, obsessed with Justine, the girl he met at speed dating. But all is not what it seems. Justine is up to something – but what?

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Stavva isn't the only love-struck one. When Kyle goes for a job at Bacino, the café, Pia gets the impression that it's not the job, but Lucia that he is after.

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Meanwhile, Peta takes the photo of Addo, the mystery Asian woman and Philby to the police, but DS Wilson can only see the woman as a witness, not a suspect. A frustrated Peta decides to post the photo up around the local area – but Ray immediately tears it down.

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Meanwhile, Tess denies ever having seen the mystery woman before, but when Noel presses her, she admits that there is a slight recognition. However, worried that Philby was mixed up in something illegal, she doesn't want to get involved with the police.

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While Noel decides to take a swim, Tess is left to make her own way home. Feeling that she is being watched, she becomes positive that she is in danger and, when she receives another threatening email, she races down to the beach to fetch Noel – just in time to see a speed boat run directly over him...

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Tess is played by Olivia Bonnici, Noel by Sam Haft, Stavva by Ryan Johnson, Justine by Toni Pearen, Kyle by Louis Hunter, Pia by Zoe Carides, Lucia by Basia A'Hern, Peta by Daisy Betts, Addo by Daniel Henshall, DS Wilson by Shane Withington and Ray by David Ritchie.

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CM2

A Taste Of My Life Ep 5/15
Bank Holiday Monday 26 to Friday 30 May
6.30-7.00pm Â鶹ԼÅÄ TWO
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Sanjeev Bhaskar is the latest celebrity to take Nigel Slater on a journey through the foods that have shaped his life. He reminisces with Nigel about how school dinners were so bland that they were exotic, and about why mashed potato made him vomit. Sanjeev also reveals how, as a child, he was embarrassed about being Indian.

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He tells Nigel how he met his wife, Meera Syal, and what she is like in the kitchen.

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Sanjeev's fictional mum and dad from the Â鶹ԼÅÄ One series The Kumars At No. 42, Indira Joshi and Vincent Ebrahim, rustle up some prawns in chilli and some snails in garlic – or Bogeys in Butter as Nigel describes them!

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Sanjeev is also taken down Memory Lane by college chums Peter Robinson and musician Nitin Sawhney, who challenge him to create an entire menu from a Chinese takeaway.

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CM2

The Money Programme –
Where's My Mortgage Gone?

Friday 30 May
7.00-7.30pm Â鶹ԼÅÄ TWO
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Max Flint investigates the
shake up in the mortgage market

Max Flint returns for a new series of The Money Programme with an investigation into the biggest shake up in the mortgage market in living memory. In the space of six months, the number of mortgage products on the market has fallen dramatically. Approximately 10,000 mortgage products have been withdrawn.

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Max reveals the results of an exclusive Ipsos MORI survey which asks the public how they are coping with the credit crunch, if their plans for buying or moving have changed and if they expect to make cutbacks to keep a roof over their head.

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In the first of three programmes examining the different effects of the credit crunch and the downturn in the economy, Max asks householders and people wanting to get onto the property ladder how they expect to manage in this new, harsher economic climate. He asks whether they will still be able to get a mortgage and, even if they are offered one, if they will be able to afford higher interest rates.

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He meets a first-time buyer struggling to raise the money needed for a higher deposit, a householder keen to re-mortgage as a cheap fixed-term deal comes to an end and a Northern Rock mortgage holder hoping to renegotiate a loan at a better rate with a different lender.

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The Money Programme explains how the crisis in sub-prime lending in the United States reduced the amount of money banks were willing to lend each other and therefore why financial institutions are now wary of lending money to their customers. Max gauges the opinion of mortgage lenders and financial experts to unpick the causes and effects of this financial earthquake. He asks if this harsher economic climate in the housing market is a temporary blip or the shape of things to come.

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PH

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Â鶹ԼÅÄ FOUR Friday 30 May 2008
JOHNNY CASH NIGHT
Johnny Cash – The Last Great American

Friday 30 May
9.00-10.00pm Â鶹ԼÅÄ FOUR
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This major retrospective of Cash's life, times and music, first broadcast in 2004, features contributions from his daughter, Rosanne Cash, and son, John Carter Cash; his long-time manager, Lou Robin; and fellow musicians including Little Richard, Cowboy Jack Clement, Kris Kristofferson, Merle Haggard and Elvis Costello.

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Cash was the son of a sharecropper from Kingsland, Arkansas, who sang folk, spiritual and country songs to himself while picking cotton in the fields. In the Fifties he signed to Sam Phillips's Sun Records, scored his first hits and was part of the "Million Dollar Quartet" with Elvis Presley, Jerry Lee Lewis and Carl Perkins.

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In the Sixties he created his famous Man In Black persona and became a huge country music star with hits such as Folsom Prison Blues, Ring Of Fire, I Walk The Line and A Boy Named Sue. At that time he was also torn between drug dependency, hell-raising and a powerful spirituality. Cash had long since established himself as a man of the people with his prison concerts beginning with an incendiary performance in San Quentin.

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He ended the decade by finally marrying June Carter, daughter of the legendary Carter family, launching his own national TV series from Nashville, duetting with Bob Dylan, befriending the Native American movement and opposing the war in Vietnam while playing concerts for the soldiers in the field.

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Although plagued by ill health, Cash reignited his career with a new, young audience in the Nineties, when he began to record with Def Jam's producer, Rick Rubin.

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Cash won numerous Grammys and other awards for his last studio album, 2003's The Man Comes Around, and the extraordinary video for the Nine Inch Nails song, Hurt, which revealed Cash as a white-haired old man contemplating his mortality.

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Cash died in September 2003 shortly after the retrospective Unearthed, a five CD-set of the acoustic performances with which he resurrected his career in the last decade of his life, and after losing his wife in June 2003.

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SH3

JOHNNY CASH NIGHT
The Best Of The Johnny Cash Show 1969-1971 – Country Gold

Friday 30 May
10.00-11.00pm Â鶹ԼÅÄ FOUR
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The Johnny Cash Show ran on ABC television in the USA from 1969-1971 and was presented by Cash himself.

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Artists featured in this Best Of programme include Cash performing Ring Of Fire, Tammy Wynette with Stand By Your Man, Charley Pride with Able-Bodied Man, Waylon Jennings with Brown Eyed Handsome Man, Merle Haggard with No Hard Times, Cash and June Carter with Jackson and Loretta Lynn with I Know How.

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SH3

Â鶹ԼÅÄ FOUR Sessions – Rosanne Cash
Friday 30 May
11.00pm-12.00midnight Â鶹ԼÅÄ FOUR
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In this unique performance and interview, first broadcast in 2006, singer-songwriter and erstwhile new country star Rosanne Cash reflects on her 25-year musical career and her acclaimed album, Black Cadillac, which confronts the losses of her father, Johnny Cash, her mother, Vivian Liberto, and her stepmother, June Carter Cash.

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Filmed at LSO St Luke's in Shoreditch and around London, where Rosanne first began to emerge as a songwriter in the late Seventies, this concert features a five-piece band led by husband and producer John Leventhal, and songs from Black Cadillac, Eighties country hits such as Seven Year Ache and covers of Johnny Cash's Tennessee Flat Top Box and Big River.

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SH3

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Â鶹ԼÅÄ PARLIAMENT Friday 30 May 2008
1983 General Election
Friday 30 May
9.00am-8.10pm Â鶹ԼÅÄ PARLIAMENT
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Twenty-five years on, Â鶹ԼÅÄ Parliament gives viewers a chance to experience the 1983 General Election through this archive broadcast of the Â鶹ԼÅÄ's original, live election results coverage, from Thursday 9 June 1983.

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David Dimbleby hosts the Â鶹ԼÅÄ's 1983 General Election programme, with results analysis by Peter Snow and Tony King, commentary from the Â鶹ԼÅÄ's Political Editor, John Cole, and interviews by Robin Day.

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Throughout the course of the election, the pollsters at least had been certain that a Conservative victory was inevitable and that Margaret Thatcher would be returned to Downing Street for a second term as Prime Minister. The closer contest was expected to be the battle for second place, between the Labour Party, under the leadership of Michael Foot, and the Alliance, under its "Prime Minister designate", Roy Jenkins.

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Live coverage of declarations and reaction to the results comes from across the country, including reports from Nicholas Witchell in Margaret Thatcher's Finchley constituency, Brian Hanrahan in Michael Foot's constituency of Blaenau Gwent, Kate Adie in David Owen's Plymouth Devonport constituency, Michael Cole with David Steel in Ettrick Bridge, Valerie Singleton in Torbay, Selina Scott in Guildford and Esther Rantzen with the crowds gathered at Downing Street.

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In addition, Washington correspondent Martin Bell reports on the reaction to the UK election in the US, and the view from Moscow comes from Soviet press agency spokesman Gennady Gerasimov.

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PR



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