Advanced search
- TITLES
- NAMES
- COLLABORATIONS
Search filters
Enter full date
to
or just enter yyyy, or yyyy-mm below
to
to
to
Exclude
Only includes titles with the selected topics
to
In minutes
to
1-50 of 117
- How the BBC obtained the bombshell interview with Prince Andrew about his friendship with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
- Best friends Amanda Holden and Alan Carr roll up their sleeves to bring a crumbling Sicilian home back to life. As they embrace the local lifestyle, it's demolition and la dolce vita.
- How our favorite foods and products are made? Cherry Healey and Gregg Wallace go into the factories to figure out, while Ruth Goodman tell us about the historical development of the manufacturing process of these products.
- Maverick British reporter Mazher Mahmood, whose exposés generated headlines by his use of false identities to ensnare royals, sports stars, politicians, celebrities and members of the public.
- Three-part documentary series examines the 18 months preceding Hitler's invasion of Poland in 1939, beginning with Germany's annexation of Austria in March 1938 and culminating with the start of World War II.
- Competitive food show celebrating the families who make ordinary food extraordinary, presented by Zoe Ball and Nadiya Hussain.
- 12 strangers will spend 19 days in paradise. They will arrive with basic survival gear and in order to win the prize they will have to resist the temptation to spend any of it.
- Celebrities embark on a life-changing journey to explore their family history. Alongside their best mate or family member, the celebs will set off on the ultimate road trip as they discover family members they never even knew existed.
- Historians Dan Jones and Dr Suzannah Lipscomb and engineer Rob Bell explore how London faced daring invasions, catastrophic fires and deadly plague. Also, how it grew from a small Roman trading post, to the capital of the British Empire, and ultimately to the thriving mega-city we know today.
- The choices he made. The decisions he took. The points of no return. Told by those who watched it all unfold.
- Explosive observational documentary series filmed over six months in one of New York's toughest jails.
- Is ultra-processed food causing obesity in children, and could it even be addictive? Dr Chris van Tulleken investigates as he undergoes a gruelling self-experiment that even shocks the scientists.
- A three part archaeological documentary series about the life story of Tutankhamun, the boy king.
- TV Mini SeriesGlitter's conviction for child sex abuse and a series of sexual offences.
- Every day, almost 200,000 people pass through Frankfurt Airport. Flying has become so routine, that most travelers never consider what a remarkable feat of human ingenuity it is. But that's about to change. X-Ray: Mega Airport takes you behind the scenes, from the tarmac to the terminal to the aircraft, revealing how everything in this intricately designed mini-city functions. Using state-of-the-art camera technology and computer imagery, we detail the engineering inside the planes, the machinery, and even the brains of the people who work here.
- A series of earth tremors on 22 October in AD79 worried very few residents of Pompeii. The victims of eruption are scanned in present day.
- Host Gregg Wallace explores interesting machines used to make the foods we eat every day.
- A look at the Great Plague in London 1665 and a comparison to the spreading of the Covid-19 virus of today
- Celebrity car enthusiasts share their memories of classic British cars.
- Greed. Madness. Love. Tragedy Over centuries, Buckingham Palace has witnessed it all. Now, Alexander Armstrong reveals surprising stories hidden behind walls of Britain's most iconic royal residence.
- The Voltage show includes exclusive access to Al Qaeda members as it examines the life and motivations of the infamous global terrorist.
- JJ Chalmers. a former marine, uses his own devastating experiences of war to give a unique perspective on the heroism and struggles of one of the most famous events in history, the evacuation of Dunkirk.
- The story of the rise and fall of an iconic fashion brand and of an entrepreneur with ambitions to be king of the high street.
- 7.0 (17)TV SeriesPediatrician Guddi Singh offers advice to parents with questions about their newborns.
- Brian Cox gains exclusive access to Virgin Galactic, Blue Origin and Spaceport America, to explore what is really happening in privately financed space flight.
- TV Special
- A British family spend four weeks with a remote tribe in Namibia.
- Dr Xand van Tulleken and Raksha Dave tell the dramatic story of the Boxing Day Tsunami of 2004 and how events unfolded.
- A prosecution account of one of the UK's biggest entertainers' alleged criminality.
- August 1947 - Britain would give up the Indian Empire, partitioning it in into two independent countries, India and Pakistan. The documentary tells the story of the seven days that led up to their independence and the last days of the British Raj. The week in which Britain would give up the Indian Empire was marked by extreme contradictions of wild celebrations and vicious bloodshed. With seven days to go, the British were yet to announce where the border would be drawn. Millions anxiously awaited their fates, unsure in what country they would find themselves. One of the biggest migrations in human history is under way and countless people will lost their lives. The documentary moves through each day of the last week before independence, drawing on oral histories of survivors who were eyewitnesses to that tragedy. The story of a Muslim boy in Punjab heading to what would become Pakistan. The story of a Hindu woman whose husband attempted to kill her to prevent her being raped. The story of a Hindu man saved from a Muslim gang by his own Muslim servant who risked his own life in the process of saving his master. The story of a writer who saw his beloved city of Lahore burn around him and hundreds of thousands lose their lives on the railway network as religious violence increases and spreads with each passing day. This week was marked by extreme contradictions of wild celebrations and vicious bloodshed. The documentary retells, day by day, the unfolding events as seen through the eyes of ordinary people, caught up in an historic summer that would change the world forever.
- Feature-length documentary covering one summer weekend of gun violence across the United States, telling the stories of seven families who lives were torn apart through gun crime.
- Documentary following four young people who have extreme epilepsy, where seizures can be a daily occurrence and they have to be watched 24 hours a day.
- Gregg Wallace and Cherry Healey get exclusive access to some of the biggest factories in Britain and Europe to follow the relentless production lines making our favourite products.
- Gregg is at a huge factory in Stoke-on-Trent where they make 250,000 Cherry Bakewell tarts a day. Cherry learns how to avoid a soggy bottom when baking. Ruth sniffs out the origins of frangipane.
- Gregg is at a clothing factory in South Shields where they make 650 wax jackets a day. Cherry learns about the science of staying dry. Ruth investigates the fishy history of waxed jackets.
- Gregg is in France at an enormous croissant factory where they produce 336,000 flaky pastries a day. Cherry tests the best way to eat a croissant. Ruth is in Paris to investigate the Austrian origins of the croissant.
- Gregg visits a mattress factory in Leeds that 600 beds a day. Cherry learns whether there are benefits to taking an afternoon nap. Ruth investigates the origins of the modern mattress.
- Scarlett and her family move into the replica of their terraced house and meet their new neighbours, the Himba cattle herders. The two groups learn little about each others daily routines.
- Gregg visits a factory that produces 200,000 canapes every 24 hours. Cherry discovers the perfect way to cook a turkey and visits a candle maker. Ruth learns the origins of Christmas traditions.
- The documentary series returns with Gregg visiting a huge bakery in Cornwall that makes 180,000 Cornish pasties a day. Cherry explores the wonderful world of the onion and Ruth debunks some common Cornish pasty myths.
- Gregg visits an enormous foundry in northern France that produces a cast iron pot every five seconds. Cherry visits an iron ore mine in South Africa and Ruth learns how one-pot cooking evolved.
- Gregg visits an enormous factory, which produces two million tins of soup a day. Cherry compares the vitamin content of fresh and frozen vegetables. Ruth cooks an early soup and learns about the first soup kitchen.
- Gregg is in Ireland at a factory producing 450,000 bottles of cream liqueur a day. Cherry is at a plant where 85% of Ireland's bottles and jars are recycled. Ruth learns about the spiritual origins of liqueurs.
- Gregg is in Essex, visiting a factory that produces 400,000 fruit and nut filled treats a day. Cherry is helping with the macadamia harvest in South Africa. Ruth learns about the origins of Kendal Mint Cake.
- Dr Xand van Tulleken and Raksha Dave tell the dramatic story of the Boxing Day Tsunami, which killed more than 250,000 people. They begin 12 hours before the disaster on Christmas Day.