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1-34 of 34
- A group of supposed experts, explore dense regions of Latvia and Poland to search and discover artifacts and remains of those who did not get to go home during the Second World War.
- The legacy of World War I is examined in depth.
- An alternative history of the British Isles, told through art. 1,500 years later, eight dramatic turning points, artists and thinkers encounter key historic art works across the UK, that have shaped history and inspired their own work.
- Jimmy Carr hosts a unique TV experiment, where the audience decides whether to cancel controversial artists and offensive artworks - and the works they vote to cancel will be destroyed
- Africa on its own terms and in full voice - across Morocco, Nigeria and South Africa. Uncovering the energy and ambition of creatives reinventing African music, fashion and film. Ep1: Morocco. Morocco is Africa's most popular tourist destination, famous for mosques, medinas and, more recently, football. But now, Afua Hirsch goes beyond the clichés to explore how Morocco is changing. She gets the inside track from young creatives who are updating traditions, expressing new ideas and connecting Morocco to wider African culture with thrilling new art forms. She is snapped by internationally renowned photographer Hassan Hajjaj, goes riding with Tbourida horse rider Amal Amhari and explores Amazigh rug weaving with artist Sarah Allaoui. Afua also looks into the tensions between heritage, tradition and the desire for change with pioneering women artists Majida Khattari and Zainab Fasiki and Morocco's superstar singer-songwriter Rym Fikri.
- Annual British television show with a comedy panel in the style of a pub quiz with questions relating to the events of the year just gone by.
- Hackers in Wonderland is a 2000 documentary film, produced and directed by Russell Barnes, about hackers in the United Kingdom.
- Art Historian Professor Richard Clay explores visions of utopia examining what they reveal about some of our deepest hopes, dreams and fears about the future.
- Journalist Afua Hirsch explores how Kenya, Ethiopia and Senegal are becoming the powerhouses of African culture.
- Art Historian James Fox explores how colonial explorers devastated the indigenous communities of Southwest Pacific, while also introducing the world to aboriginal art and culture.
- Art historian Professor Richard Clay explores how Mythologies, written in 1957 by French philosopher Roland Barthes, laid bare the myth-making at the heart of popular culture.
- With intimate, behind-the-stage access, this documentary-series explores the creative process of extraordinary dancers and choreographers as they rehearse new work and performances.
- Actor Robert Llewellyn campaigns to persuade the residents of the village in the Cotswolds where he has made his home to generate more of their own energy through renewable sources.
- Having already discovered winners in both the South Asian and Contemporary categories, this week it's the turn of five aspiring dancers to perform in the Ballet category final at The Lowry, Salford.
- Afua Hirsch looks at how Ethiopian's proud history of independence had informed its art - and how its time under empire saw it develop its own sophisticated method of "Wax and Gold".
- Afua Hirsch explores the emergence of Senegal from French colonial rule - and how the country expressed itself through art under its poet president Léopold Senghor.
- Afua Hirsch concludes the series with a look at how art emerged in Kenya in a period of post-colonialism. Subjects include both the spiritual significance of art, and its means to create and reinforce stereotypes.
- A student prepares to lose her lesbian virginity by getting a master class in oral sex and Goedele coaches a young couple in the art of erotic massage as the frank sex education show returns.
- Goedele gives advice to three couples who want to improve their love life. Plus the results of a survey gauging British public opinion on unfaithfulness and a report on how technology is changing sexual habits.
- Goedele Liekens gives advice to partners who want to try out bondage and explains why she thinks women like being tied up. She also helps a gay couple to improve their foreplay.
- The team heads to Latvia to search for an abandoned German artillery bunker that may contain a trove of historic items.
- A search for a mass grave in western Poland yields an unexpected discovery that raises questions about a turning point in the war.
- Using Soviet military reports to locate the front-line trenches on the Courland Peninsula, the team stumbles upon a live high-explosive shell and calls in an army bomb-disposal squad for help.
- In western Latvia, the team sets out to uncover new clues to the 1944 showdown between Hitler's SS Nordland division and Stalin's Red Army.
- Prof Richard Clay explores how Utopian visions start as blueprints for a fairer world and asks if they can lead to real change. He argues that such visions have been a way of criticising the present.
- 201759m8.3 (6)TV EpisodeUtopia has been imagined in many different ways, but when people try to build it they very often fail. Can utopian visions reconcile the tension between the individual and the group? Rules and freedom?
- Is Utopia, ultimately, a state of mind? Can we find it within ourselves? Richard seems answers in a broad range of art forms from music to poetry, opera to computer games.
- Meet Mama, one of the last traditional weavers from the island of Rurutu in French Polynesia who still make taupoos, a type of traditional ceremonial hats handwoven from dried pandanus tree leaves.
- In Arnhem Land, Australia, the Gurruwiwi family of the Yolngu people is renown for their expertly made yidakis, a type of sacred instrument better known in pop culture by its informal name, the didgeridoo.