The Restaurant: You're Fried! 2007
George Lamb goes behind the scenes of the restaurant reality show
George Lamb goes behind the scenes of the restaurant reality show
Award-winning comedian Nick Helm presents a helter-skelter ride of songs, sketches, jokes, poetry, fireworks, stunts, dance, and whatever else he can muster.
Ibiza is moving upmarket. With access to clubs, villas and yachts as well as police and emergency services, Zara McDermott follows the money to discover what makes the island tick.
People Like Us is a British reality documentary series broadcast on BBC Three. The programme tries to reflect the true lives of some of the residents of the Harpurhey district of the city of Manchester, which according to the programme has continually ranked as one of the most deprived in the UK. It has been critically panned both in Manchester as well as the wider UK for showing a very stereotypical view of the residents. Each episode lasts 60 minutes. The narrator of the programme is Natalie Casey.
Junior Doctors: Your Life in Their Hands is a BBC Three television series looking at how a group of foundation doctors cope with life on the wards. Three series have been broadcast to date, all narrated by Jason Done. The first, broadcast in 2011, focused on seven foundation doctors at Newcastle General Hospital and Royal Victoria Infirmary in Newcastle upon Tyne, three of which were newly-qualified FY1s and four being FY2s. The second series was broadcast in 2012 and followed six FY1s and two FY2s at Chelsea and Westminster Hospital in London. A third series, filmed at the Royal Liverpool University Hospital, was broadcast in 2013 and followed five FY1 doctors and two FY2 doctors. On 9 March 2011 the show achieved BBC Three's highest ever ratings for a factual entertainment programme, when 1.44 million people watched the third episode of the first series.
Stacey Dooley reveals the shocking new youth trends that are spreading across America, immersing herself into some of the most unusual American communities and exploring what it really means to be a young American.
From a Glasgow call centre, 16-year-old Elliot Castro began scamming innocent people. But the luxury lifestyle it funded spiralled into darkness, danger - and eventually prison.
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Stacey Dooley looks at three countries in the aftermath of the economic crisis.
A look at current events like UFO's and 7/7.
Talent show with a difference, in which five girls unleash the digital guru within themselves.
Journalists Alys Harte and Bronagh Munro launch their own serial, forensic investigation into the real-life disappearance of 16-year-old Damien Nettles, who went missing on the Isle of Wight in 1996.
Join Drag Race UK Season 2 winner Lawrence Chaney on their adventure to California, where they travel all around Tinseltown.
The perception of how rape happens is changing, with 90 per cent of victims saying they know their attacker. Stacey Dooley meets four women who have reported being raped by someone they know - and follows their emotional journey as they fight to be believed in a system under immense strain.
Six legendary Walford women - and one dead body. The actors behind the murderous storyline join former Square resident Joe Swash to dig into the doof doof death.
A look into the lives of a group of 20-something real estate brokers from across the UK, Chris, Jess, Ellie and James, as they try to earn the big bucks and crush the competition among the sparking towers and burning sands of Dubai. With access to one of the busiest property agencies in the city, haus & haus, the young agents will see their fortunes rise and fall as they navigate their way through this cutthroat and highly competitive world.
Seven Welsh nurses, fresh out of uni and in at the deep end. From blue light arrivals to amputations and strokes, each one has to be ready for whatever comes through the doors.
F*** Off, I'm a Hairy Woman was a BBC Three documentary about the body image and contrasting stereotypes surrounding women's Androgenic hair, as part of a series including F*** Off, I'm Fat and F*** Off, I'm Ginger. It first aired on 29 March 2007. It was presented by comedienne Shazia Mirza, and followed her as she grew all her body hair for six months. Her introduction posed the question, "what would it be like if we lived in a world where beautiful women were allowed to be hairy? To find out, I've decided to take the plunge and grow out my body hair. Can I learn to love it, and can I convince the rest of the world to love it too?" After six months, she advertised for other hairy women to put on a catwalk show, wearing lingerie made of body hair designed and made by artist Tracey Moberly. It was repeated on the Really television channel in November 2011.