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- Follows contestants as they compete in challenges based on the Korean children's games featured on the Squid Game to win a $4.56 million cash prize.
- Cameras follow Bedfordshire Police over a 24 hour period as they respond to emergencies, investigate crimes, arrest suspects and battle against the clock.
- British television series following the hard and dedicated work of the NHS doctors and nurses battling to keep Britain alive and well.
- Eleven Britons are dropped into the remote Northern Canadian wilderness, where each must survive entirely alone. Equipped with only a handful of basic tools, they'll film their adventure themselves. Whoever lasts longest will win £100,000.
- Follow 20 British people who are sent to a remote region of Bulgaria to live the lives of their Stone Age ancestors by trying to survive for two months in the wilderness.
- An epic journey revealing the real Mars, as you've never seen it before. Using data from orbiters and rovers to build accurate views of the red planet and uncover its secrets. On a single circuit of Mars from dawn to dusk, encounter monster volcanoes, ancient lakes, alien ice-worlds and spacecraft crash sites. Explore humanity's Martian obsession, join the relentless search for life there, and hunt for a human home on the red planet's surface.
- This hard-hitting true-crime series follows police in Kansas City as they tackle a series of crimes that threaten the peace of their communities
- TV Mini Series
- Drama-documentary series telling the true stories of Britons who were saved from danger by a complete stranger.
- An eye-opening insight into the lives of British Muslims via privileged access to one of the largest mosques in Western Europe - Birmingham Central Mosque.
- A story told by ten men who fought together in the Falklands War, with unflinching honesty, discussion of life-changing moments of combat and how they have come to terms with them since. Broadcast in June 2022 on BBC Two.
- Observational documentary series featuring scientific experiments which look at the ways a new generation experience life across Britain and the world today.
- One family gets to see into every corner of each other's lives, with every social media post and text message laid bare and cameras tracking their every move. Cameras track the Kirk family's every move and, using cutting-edge smartphones, they'll be able to watch each other 24/7.
- Cameras follow the work of the London Trauma System a network of trauma care that's a safety net for 10 million people across the Capital and Home Counties. With everything from frontline emergency care to rehabilitation services.
- London's frontline trauma hospitals treat critically injured patients across the busiest month of the year
- Anne Robinson puts British spending habits under the microscope.
- TV Series
- Behind the scenes of the Taj Mahal Palace Hotel in Mumbai.
- Doctor Ronx Ikharia is on a mission to get young Brits to open up about their medical issues.
- The humble British bus accounts for two thirds of all journeys by public transport in the UK today. Now, this bold series meets the likeable army of men and women who face a daily battle to keep the show on the road. Set over an entire summer season the series captures the day-to-day running of the UK's largest family-owned bus company for an entertaining look at life On The Yorkshire Buses.
- A trio in Bristol have dedicated their lives to rescuing Britain's mistreated ferrets.
- A bemused shopkeeper observes as a man fixates on the image of a beautiful woman on a billboard.
- A crowd of 50 strangers follow participants for a week and make important decisions for them, such as "Should I break up?" or "What job should I take?"
- TV Series
- TV Series
- An experienced officer from the Bedfordshire Police Internet Child Abuse Investigation Team investigates an area of criminal behaviour beyond anything she has tackled before.
- Detectives race to the scene of a stabbing in broad daylight in a busy shopping centre. Meanwhile, on a suburban street an 18-year-old man is attacked and stabbed by 4 young men.
- Police track a lorry to a warehouse where they find cannabis and amphetamines with a street value of three million pounds. Intelligence reveals a suspected drug trafficker is about to flee to Spain.
- 2014– 47m8.8 (43)TV EpisodeBedfordshire Police investigate a reported burglary in which antiques worth a quarter of a million pounds have been stolen from a country estate. But something about the case doesn't add up.
- Detectives investigate when a coroner asks police to look into the sudden death of a 48-year-old woman in Cambridgeshire, and the hunt for clues takes the investigation right across Europe.
- In the first episode, twin doctors, Chris and Xand van Tulleken, are inspired by the freedom given to children in other countries. Like six-year-old Michi from Japan, who commutes alone across Tokyo to get to school, and seven-year-old Uuakhuike, from the Himba tribe in Namibia, who uses a machete to gather firewood for his family. Michi, who lives in a one-bedroomed apartment with his parents and three siblings, travels across Tokyo by bus, train and foot, battling commuters to get to school. His mum says: "In Japan we have a saying, 'Let your beloved child go on a journey.' To go out on your own is the first step towards independence." His dad says: "I worry about strangers approaching him. If he doesn't get off at the right stop." In Namibia, seven-year-old Uuakhuike, who is part of the Himba tribe and lives with his dad, mum, his dad's second wife and six brothers and sisters, is seen leaving the village to gather firewood. In the Himba tribe, children as young as three are taught how to use a machete. Uuakhuike, and his five-year-old brother walk miles from the safety of their village in search of firewood always keeping alert to dangers such as wild dogs and elephants. With British kids now spending less time outdoors than prison inmates and being heavily supervised most of the time, the doctors create a test of independence for their British Planet Child kids. To see if a group of 4-7 year olds can cross London without their parents, using London transport and take a trip on the London Eye. Kieran, aged five, and five-year-old cousin Rita live on a farm in the Yorkshire Dales. Whilst they enjoy lots of freedom on the farm and the surrounding land, they have little experience of life outside Yorkshire. Leo, seven, and his sisters Abi, five, and Harleigh, four, live with their mum, Claire, in Margate, Kent. The girls tell the programme that they have never been more than a metre away from their mum by themselves. Claire says: "It's a bit worrying handing them over. I've never let them get a bus by themselves." Seven-year-old twins Judah and Darcee live with their parents Tim and Rebecca, and twin brothers in Sussex. Ahead of their trip to London, Rebecca says: "There are times that I'm just not sure that they are savvy enough to push those boundaries themselves. So I need to put that boundary in place. I've got separation anxiety I think. It's a really big deal, it's London and they're really little. ' Chris and Xand meet the children in a park in London and give each group a map and the instruction that they must find their way out of the park, via the souvenir shop, and to the correct bus stop, where they must catch the right bus to the London Eye. The special buses are fitted with hidden cameras, and chaperones are around the park and onboard the buses to observe the children, with camera operators keeping a distance meaning that the children are otherwise on their own. Chris says: "I think we are going into this experiment with a few different questions, specifically, what are children actually able to do? Can they complete this task, emotionally, psychologically, intellectually? I think we're also asking what parents can do? Are parents able to just step back and allow this to run?" As the children set off across the park, Chris and Xand watch footage of them. The twins get lost and walk around in circles. Rita and Kieran are distracted by the play areas and Leo and his sisters make it to the souvenir shop. Eventually all three of the groups make it out of the park and to the right bus stop, then onto the bus. Unaware of the hidden cameras, the children are observed as they sit on the top deck of the bus and look out of the window. They talk about the buildings, which some of them believe to be palaces, and try to guess where the Queen might be. Chris and Xand tell Planet Child that, throughout their bus journey, the London Eye will come in and out of the children's vision. Will they hold their nerve and stay on for the right stop? Or will they be tempted to get off too soon and risk getting lost? As the children sit on the bus after almost an hour of being on their own, Xand says: 'This is one of the difficult bits for them. They've got to feel confident enough to stay on for a stop. What I don't want them to do is get off at Westminster Abbey and start strolling around. It's going to be difficult for them to manage." As the children get more tired, will they be able to complete the experiment and get their trip on the London Eye?
- The 19th series of the medical documentary programme begins by following the stories of two people who have come to the UK to make a new home for themselves. Plus, the story of a woman living with the legacy of cancer.
- 43-year-old Mohammad suffers from motor neurone disease and is rushed into hospital with severe sepsis. 47-year-old David has seriously injured his leg.
- Marion, who's 73 and was recently diagnosed with lung cancer, is admitted with a life-threatening infection. Roy, who's 83, suffers multiple injuries after falling off his roof.
- On one of the busiest days of the year at St George's, this edition focuses on motherhood, the incredible sacrifices made for our children, and what it means to have a family.
- A motorcyclist is rushed to St George's after hitting a lamp post. A two-year-old has banged his head on concrete, and his mum has a violent tale to tell.
- A woman who has autism is brought in after crushing her finger in a door. And 82-year-old Alec may have developed life-threatening sepsis after a chest infection.
- Maria is rushed to the emergency department after driving into a lamp post. Ronald is brought in after a fall at home. Little Ronnie is in Paediatrics after a bout of vomiting.
- Sylvia, who is 95-years-old, is rushed to St George's after falling down a flight of stairs. Cyclist Mark has been hit by a car at high speed and left agitated and confused.
- A nine-year-old boy is rushed into St George's after falling on his head. A paediatric consultant assesses a child after an accident on a swing.
- A man is airlifted to St George's with possible significant spinal injuries after a high-speed motorbike crash on the M4. A teen motorcyclist is also brought in following an incident.
- A look at three patients who have suffered potentially life-changing injuries, including a partially severed hand, a long-standing stab wound, and a serious quad-bike accident.
- Natai is rushed to A&E with a lacerated wrist after putting his hand through a glass pane. Pauline is struggling to breathe. And 17-year-old Fahad has crippling stomach pain.