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SATURDAY 31 OCTOBER 2009SAT
SAT
00:00 Midnight News b00nh5vp (Listen)SAT
The latest national and international news from BBC RadioSAT
4. Followed by Weather.SAT
SAT
00:30 Book of the Week b00nhs7s (Listen)SAT
Dear Mr Bigelow, Episode 5SAT
Sophie Thompson reads from the letters of FrancesSAT
Woodsford, a Bournemouth council worker, to wealthySAT
American widower, Paul Bigelow, who she never met, writtenSAT
between 1949 and his death in 1961. They evoke life inSAT
postwar Britain, and are introduced by Woodsford herself,SAT
who is now in her 90s.SAT
Frances attends the 'wedding of the year' between herSAT
brother and Audrey and begins to get used to life aloneSAT
with Mother - only to realise, perhaps too late, that theSAT
most important friend in her life is Mr Bigelow, who hasSAT
now fallen seriously ill.SAT
Abridged by Doreen Estall.SAT
SAT
00:48 Shipping Forecast b00nh5vr (Listen)SAT
The latest shipping forecast.SAT
SAT
01:00 Selection of BBC World Service Programmes b00nh68j (Listen)SAT
BBC Radio 4 joins the BBC World Service. BBC Radio 4SAT
resumes at 5.20am.SAT
SAT
05:20 Shipping Forecast b00nh68l (Listen)SAT
The latest shipping forecast.SAT
SAT
05:30 News Briefing b00nh6fk (Listen)SAT
The latest news from BBC Radio 4.SAT
SAT
05:43 Prayer for the Day b00nh68n (Listen)SAT
Daily prayer and reflection with Rev Roger Hutchings.SAT
SAT
05:45 iPM b00nh6cm (Listen)SAT
The weekly interactive current affairs magazine featuringSAT
online conversation and debate.SAT
SAT
06:00 News and Papers b00nh6cp (Listen)SAT
The latest news headlines. Including a look at the papers.SAT
SAT
06:04 Weather b00nhn1l (Listen)SAT
The latest weather forecast.SAT
SAT
06:07 Open Country b00nhn1n (Listen)SAT
Brian May's 3-D VillageSAT
Queen guitarist Brian May uncovers the story of anSAT
Oxfordshire village captured in time by VictorianSAT
photographic pioneer T.R. Williams.SAT
May has been fascinated by 3-D images since collectingSAT
cereal packet picture cards as a boy. He was particularlySAT
intrigued by a set of stereoscopic images of village lifeSAT
taken by photographic pioneer T.R. Williams. FurtherSAT
investigation revealed all the images to be 3-D picturesSAT
of the tiny Oxfordshire village of Hinton Waldrist, takenSAT
in the 1850s.SAT
Brian joins presenter Helen Mark for a time-travel tour ofSAT
the village. Together they discover how the people andSAT
wildlife of this Thames-side community have changed sinceSAT
Williams recorded these evocative images of blacksmiths,SAT
spinners and farm workers.SAT
Kerry Lock of the Berkshire, Buckinghamshire andSAT
Oxfordshire Wildlife Trust describes the waxing and waningSAT
of wildlife over the past 160 years, while Nicola VerdonSAT
of the British Agricultural History Society examines theSAT
telling detail in photos taken at the height of farming'sSAT
golden age.SAT
To discuss the past, present and future of 3-D photographySAT
Helen is also joined by Brian's collaborator, the photoSAT
historian Elena Vidal and by David Burder of the BritishSAT
Stereoscopic Society. Has the boom in 3-D cinema and theSAT
launch of a 3-D digital camera come at just the right timeSAT
for a revival of interest in T.R. Williams and a re-birthSAT
of the art of stereoscopic photography?SAT
SAT
06:30 Farming Today b00nhn1q (Listen)SAT
Farming Today This WeekSAT
Every year 6.7 million tonnes of food are thrown away.SAT
That's about 10 billion pounds-worth. Charlotte SmithSAT
visits a village where residents are embracing food wasteSAT
recycling and asks the environment secretary Hilary BennSAT
if similar schemes could be rolled out across the country.SAT
SAT
06:57 Weather b00nhn1s (Listen)SAT
The latest weather forecast.SAT
SAT
07:00 Today b00nhn1v (Listen)SAT
With James Naughtie and John Humphrys. Including SportsSAT
Desk; Weather; Thought for the Day.SAT
SAT
09:00 Saturday Live b00nhn1x (Listen)SAT
Real life stories in which listeners talk about the issuesSAT
that matter to them.SAT
Fi Glover is joined by clinical psychologist and writerSAT
Dorothy Rowe.SAT
With poetry from Elvis McGonagal.SAT
SAT
10:00 Excess Baggage b00nhn1z (Listen)SAT
John McCarthy explores Berlin with the head of tourism andSAT
a writer who lives there, and finds a forward-looking andSAT
vibrant city coming to terms with a turbulent past.SAT
John also meets two former British soldiers who talk aboutSAT
their travelling life with the army.SAT
SAT
10:30 Now Wash Your Hands b00nhn21 (Listen)SAT
The story of the original Izal Medicated, in the words ofSAT
people who have a soft spot for hard toilet paper.SAT
Featuring songs written by the presenter, Sally Goldsmith,SAT
and sung by a Professor of Infectious Diseases at theSAT
University of Sheffield and locals of the city, where theSAT
paper was originally made.SAT
A Loftus Audio production for BBC Radio 4.SAT
SAT
11:00 Week in Westminster b00nhn23 (Listen)SAT
Leaks of what Sir Christopher Kelly is proposing for MPsSAT
and their allowances increased the sense of gloom amongstSAT
MPs this week.SAT
Hilary the former Labour chief whip who is retiring at theSAT
next election feels the recommendations will deter women,SAT
especially those with children, from becoming MPs.SAT
Another topic of conversation at Westminster this week wasSAT
whether or not Tony Blair should become president of theSAT
European council when the Lisbon Treaty is finallySAT
ratified. Patricia Hewitt Michael Howard and Ed DaveySAT
discuss.SAT
Also in the programmeSAT
How could the government make a misjudgement over theSAT
funding of the Territorial Army so soon after having theirSAT
climb down over the issue of the Ghurkhas? Lindsey HoyleSAT
and Desmond Swayne give their verdict.SAT
And two parliamentary prospective candidates Claire KelleySAT
( Liberal Democrat) and Sean Bailey (Conservative) talk ofSAT
their expectations of what parliamentary life mightSAT
involve.SAT
SAT
11:30 From Our Own Correspondent b00nhn25 (Listen)SAT
Kate Adie introduces BBC foreign correspondents with theSAT
stories behind the headlines.SAT
A talk with a night witch in Moscow; fear, suspicion andSAT
heavy artillery on the streets of Conakry, Guinea; whatSAT
the ancient traditions of Halloween reveal about modernSAT
America; an insight into the two rivals about to contestSAT
the second round of the Afghan presidential election.SAT
SAT
12:00 Money Box b00nhn27 (Listen)SAT
Paul Lewis with the latest news from the world of personalSAT
finance.SAT
Pester power - Halifax Bank of Scotland makes changes toSAT
its controversial overdraft charges.SAT
Where there's a will there's a way - don't forget to writeSAT
one.SAT
How just paying off the minimum on your cards messes withSAT
your mind.SAT
National Savings enters the best buy tables, and why thatSAT
is unusual.SAT
SAT
12:30 The News Quiz b00nh0qz (Listen)SAT
Series 69, Episode 6SAT
Sandi Toksvig chairs the topical comedy quiz, recorded atSAT
the University of Bedfordshire. The panel includes JeremySAT
Hardy, Paul Sinha and Sue Perkins.SAT
SAT
12:57 Weather b00nhn29 (Listen)SAT
The latest weather forecast.SAT
SAT
13:00 News b00nhn2c (Listen)SAT
The latest national and international news from BBC RadioSAT
4.SAT
SAT
13:10 Any Questions? b00nh1cm (Listen)SAT
Jonathan Dimbleby chairs the topical debate from CambridgeSAT
University. The panellists are the shadow businessSAT
secretary Kenneth Clarke, Liberal Democrat peer BaronessSAT
Shirley Williams, UKIP MEP Marta Andreasen and the formerSAT
Lord Chancellor, Lord Falconer.SAT
SAT
14:00 Any Answers? b00nhn2f (Listen)SAT
Jonathan Dimbleby takes listeners' calls and emails inSAT
response to this week's edition of Any Questions?SAT
SAT
14:30 Saturday Play b0090f6x (Listen)SAT
The Voyage of the DemeterSAT
Robert Forrest's chilling tale of the supernatural, set onSAT
a schooner sailing from Bulgaria to England in 1867.SAT
Something very unpleasant is lurking aboard the ship, andSAT
the voyage becomes a terrifying ordeal.SAT
Ripelski ...... Finlay WelshSAT
Robash ...... Gary LewisSAT
Kanesky ...... Steven McNicollSAT
Bretov ...... Grant O'RourkeSAT
Gentleman ...... Alexander Morton.SAT
SAT
15:30 Baroque and Roll: Townshend on Purcell b00nf3kr (Listen)SAT
The Who guitarist and songwriter Pete Townshend talksSAT
about the band's career and reveals the influence on hisSAT
songwriting of Baroque composer Henry Purcell.SAT
When Pete was a struggling 20-year-old musician he wasSAT
turned on to Purcell by his manager, Kit Lambert. It wasSAT
Kit's recommendation of Purcell's Gordian Knot Untied thatSAT
struck the loudest chord with Pete, awakening him to aSAT
lineage in English music that seemed strangely familiar.SAT
Immersing himself in the music, he soon set about writingSAT
The Who's first album.SAT
Pete reveals how he drew on Purcell's dramatic genius forSAT
his most intriguing compositions. From his first mini-rockSAT
opera to his masterpiece, Tommy, and from his enduringSAT
Lifehouse project through to his current musicalSAT
endeavour, there has always been a Purcellian presence.SAT
SAT
16:00 Woman's Hour b00nhn6z (Listen)SAT
Weekend Woman's HourSAT
With Sheila McClennon.SAT
The best-selling American crime writer Patricia CornwellSAT
talks about her latest book, the 17th to feature Dr KaySAT
Scarpetta, the workaholic forensic scientist. She wasSAT
first introduced in 1990, and Patricia explains why KaySAT
has been such an enjoyable character to write about forSAT
the last 20 years.SAT
Listener Sue Green emailed Woman's Hour recently to saySAT
that she is something of a running joke among her friendsSAT
because she continues to use cotton handkerchiefs inSAT
favour of the paper variety. But Sue is not alone: theSAT
programme hears from another die-hard handkerchief fan,SAT
Annalisa Barbieri - who goes so far as to iron her belovedSAT
collection - who talks about the history of this smallSAT
square of cloth.SAT
Within the next few months, one million young people underSAT
the age of 24 are going to be out of work. With noSAT
employment and no direction, the lives of these youngstersSAT
can quickly spiral into poverty, family disintegration andSAT
homelessness. This is what happened to Elvige. StrugglingSAT
with a dysfunctional family and the threat of a life onSAT
the streets, she dropped out of college but is now aSAT
confident young adult studying for a degree and doing workSAT
with troubled youngsters.SAT
The government wants to scrap the defence of provocationSAT
in murder cases where a spouse or partner has beenSAT
unfaithful. Woman's Hour asks what the bill's defeat inSAT
the House of Lords means for women.SAT
Kamilya Jurban is a Palestinian singer, instrumentalistSAT
and composer, and one of the most prominent contemporarySAT
artists in the Middle East. Karine Polwart is a ScottishSAT
folk singer songwriter whose debut album won the Radio 2SAT
Folk Album of the Year Award in 2005. They were broughtSAT
together to perform for the British Council and they giveSAT
us a taste of their unique collaboration.SAT
What do clothes mean to women? Why do some of us find itSAT
so hard to give or throw things away that we no longerSAT
wear? Justine Picardie, author of My Mother's WeddingSAT
Dress: The Life and Afterlife of Clothes', Jay Hunt, styleSAT
writer and broadcaster, and Oriole Cullen, the curator ofSAT
fashion and textiles at the Victoria and Albert Museum,SAT
London share their emotional experience of clothes withSAT
Jenni Murray.SAT
SAT
16:56 1989: Day by Day b00nhnxp (Listen)SAT
31st October 1989SAT
Sir John Tusa looks back at the events making the news 20SAT
years ago.SAT
Former Chancellor Nigel Lawson tells the House of CommonsSAT
why he resigned; shadow energy secretary Tony BlairSAT
demands electricity privatisation plans be scrapped; aSAT
court investigates a fraud case involving the use of sonicSAT
binoculars to fix horse races.SAT
A Somethin' Else production for BBC Radio 4.SAT
SAT
17:00 PM b00nhnxr (Listen)SAT
Full coverage and analysis of the day's news with RitulaSAT
Shah, plus the sports headlines.SAT
SAT
17:30 The Bottom Line b00ngzcf (Listen)SAT
Evan Davis is joined by a panel of top business guests toSAT
discuss those silly bits of paper and metal we call money.SAT
Surely someone can invent a better way to pay for things?SAT
He also asks what companies are doing to look after theirSAT
low-income consumers.SAT
Evan is joined by Antony Jenkins, chief executive ofSAT
credit card company Barclaycard, Jim McCarthy, chiefSAT
executive of the UK chain Poundland, and Chris Dedicoat,SAT
European president of Cisco, the world's largest producerSAT
of computer network equipment.SAT
SAT
17:54 Shipping Forecast b00nhnxt (Listen)SAT
The latest shipping forecast.SAT
SAT
17:57 Weather b00nhnxw (Listen)SAT
The latest weather forecast.SAT
SAT
18:00 Six O'Clock News b00nhnxy (Listen)SAT
The latest national and international news from BBC RadioSAT
4.SAT
SAT
18:15 Loose Ends b00nhny0 (Listen)SAT
Clive Anderson and guests with an eclectic mix ofSAT
conversation, music and comedy.SAT
Clive Anderson is joined by drummer Ginger Baker,SAT
presenter and the new voice of Radio 2's breakfast show,SAT
Chris Evans, and actor Alun Armstrong.SAT
Robin Ince finds out what everday things, from teacups toSAT
memory sticks, can tell us about the universe withSAT
cosmologist Marcus Chown.SAT
With comedy from Edinburgh Comedy Award nominee TomSAT
Wrigglesworth and music from jazz singer-songwriter JamieSAT
Cullum and country blues band Hey Negrita.SAT
SAT
19:00 Profile b00nhny2 (Listen)SAT
Jose Manuel BarrosoSAT
Edward Stourton takes a closer look at the life and careerSAT
of the President of the European Commission, Jose ManuelSAT
Barroso.SAT
SAT
19:15 Saturday Review b00nhny4 (Listen)SAT
Bidisha is joined by comedian Natalie Haynes, historianSAT
Tristram Hunt and actor and writer Michael Simkins toSAT
review the cultural highlights of the week - featuringSAT
hot-headed Mexican revolutionaries, Viennese students in aSAT
whirl and Romanian chickens in a truck.SAT
Ferdinand Bruckner's 1926 play Pains of Youth is set inSAT
Vienna and features a group of bored, disillusionedSAT
medical students. In the aftermath of the First World WarSAT
they view their youth as a kind of sickness and see theSAT
future as holding two alternatives: bourgeois existence orSAT
suicide. Martin Crimp's new version of the play at theSAT
National Theatre in London is directed by Katie MitchellSAT
and features some of her typically striking twists ofSAT
staging.SAT
Barbara Kingsolver's last novel, The Poisonwood Bible, wasSAT
published more than 10 years ago and became a bestseller.SAT
The Lacuna is her new novel and the story of itsSAT
protagonist - writer Harrison Shepherd - is told throughSAT
letters and entries in his diary. With a Mexican motherSAT
and an American father, his life oscillates between theSAT
two countries. As a young man in revolutionary Mexico, heSAT
becomes close to artists Diego Rivera and Frida Kahlo andSAT
their houseguest Leon Trotsky, something which comes backSAT
to haunt him in the anti-communist climate of postwarSAT
America.SAT
It is almost 20 years since Nicolae Ceasescu's regime inSAT
Romania came to a violent end, but the Ceasescu era is aSAT
period which fascinates and inspires the writer andSAT
director Cristian Mungiu. His previous film 4 Months, 3SAT
Weeks and 2 Days, which won the Palme d'Or at Cannes inSAT
2007, concerned a young woman trying to procur an illegalSAT
abortion. Tales From The Golden Age is more satirical inSAT
tone and while there's pathos here, there's also humour.SAT
Five urban myths from the twilight years of the communistSAT
era are played out, including a village sent into panic bySAT
an official visit and a photographer tasked with makingSAT
Ceausescu look taller than Valerie Giscard d'Estaing.SAT
The title poem of Grace Nichols's poetry collectionSAT
Picasso, I Want My Face Back is written in the voice ofSAT
Dora Maar, the photographer who was Picasso's lover andSAT
muse for ten years and inspired his 1937 painting WeepingSAT
Woman. Van Gogh, Munch and Tracey Emin also find their waySAT
into the verse here, which is understandable givenSAT
Nichols's recent stint as writer in residence at the Tate.SAT
It's not all art and artists though; there are also poemsSAT
about her native Guyana, India and the English landscape.SAT
Collision is definitely car-crash TV, but in a literalSAT
rather than derogatory sense. The ITV1 drama, written bySAT
Anthony Horowitz and scheduled to be broadcast over fiveSAT
successive nights, focuses on a group of characters whoSAT
are involved in a major traffic accident. Douglas HenshallSAT
plays DI John Tolin, who is investigates the accident andSAT
tries to determine whether two of his colleagues, who wereSAT
in pursuit of one of the cars, may have been reponsible.SAT
But Tolin finds many unsuspected secrets hidden in theSAT
wreckage and also has to come to terms with some skeletonsSAT
in his own closet.SAT
SAT
20:00 Archive on 4 b00nhny6 (Listen)SAT
Capering With Ken CampbellSAT
Ian McMillan explores the world of the actor and directorSAT
Ken Campbell, who died in 2008.SAT
Campbell's acting credits included Fawlty Towers, TheSAT
Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, Brookside, Law and OrderSAT
and In Sickness and In Health, as well as performingSAT
one-man shows. He also directed theatrical events,SAT
including the nine-hour Illuminatus trilogy, a 22-hourSAT
production of The Warp and Macbeth in pidgin English.SAT
His daughter, Daisy, gives Ian McMillan a tour of Ken'sSAT
home in Essex, where he didn't have a bedroom and had aSAT
parrot run in every room. He also talks to Campbell'sSAT
manager Colin Watkeys, theatre director Richard Eyre, fanSAT
and collaborator Ian Potter and fellow actors JuliaSAT
McKenzie and Jim Broadbent.SAT
SAT
21:00 Classic Serial b00ncwzv (Listen)SAT
Howards End, Episode 2SAT
Dramatisation of EM Forster's classic novel.SAT
Helen Schlegel is unhappy that her sister Margaret hasSAT
agreed to marry the recently-widowed Henry Wilcox.SAT
Unbeknown to the sisters, Ruth Wilcox bequeathed theSAT
Wilcox country home, Howards End, to Margaret, but theSAT
note has been destroyed by Henry's son, Charles.SAT
Narrator ...... John HurtSAT
Margaret Schlegel ...... Lisa DillonSAT
Helen Schlegel ...... Jill CardoSAT
Tibby Schlegel ...... Tom FergusonSAT
Aunt Juley ...... Alexandra MathieSAT
Henry Wilcox ...... Malcolm RaeburnSAT
Ruth Wilcox ...... Ann RyeSAT
Charles Wilcox ...... Joseph KloskaSAT
Leonard Bast ...... Joseph ProsperoSAT
Dolly Wilcox/Jacky Bast ...... Christine Marshall.SAT
SAT
22:00 News and Weather b00nhpgc (Listen)SAT
The latest national and international news from BBC RadioSAT
4, followed by weather.SAT
SAT
22:15 Moral Maze b00nfqzl (Listen)SAT
The war crimes trial of former Bosnian Serb leader RadovanSAT
Karadzic has opened at the UN-backed InternationalSAT
Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia. He faces 11SAT
counts of genocide, including complicity in the SrebrenicaSAT
massacre in which 8,000 Muslim men and boys were killed.SAT
It was one of the worst acts of atrocity in Europe sinceSAT
the Second World War. But is what we are about to seeSAT
justice or revenge - A show trial organised by theSAT
victors, with TV coverage broadcast throughout the world,SAT
and eagerly viewed, especially in the Balkans. Can thereSAT
ever be any morally certain and globally acceptableSAT
definition of what constitutes a war crime or willSAT
pragmatism and real politique alwaysSAT
Witnesses:SAT
John LaughlandSAT
Author of Travesty: The Trial of Slobodan Milosevic andSAT
the Corruption of International Justice, andSAT
A History of Political Trials from Charles I to SaddamSAT
Hussein.SAT
Geoffrey NiceSAT
The British QC who led the prosecution of the SerbianSAT
leader Slobodan MilosovicSAT
Professor David ChandlerSAT
Professor of International Relations at the Centre for theSAT
Study of Democracy, University of Westminster and editorSAT
of the Journal of Intervention and StatebuildingSAT
Mark EllisSAT
Executive Director, International Bar Association.SAT
SAT
23:00 Brain of Britain b00ndxjr (Listen)SAT
Russell Davies welcomes four more guests to take part inSAT
the perennial general knowledge contest.SAT
SAT
23:30 Poetry Please b00ncyzd (Listen)SAT
Roger McGough introduces poems about snow and solitude.SAT
There are splashes of colour too, with Goulash by MyraSAT
Schneider and Poppies by Carole Satymurti. The readers areSAT
Mark Meadows, Tanya Moodie and Osi Okerafor.SAT
SAT
SUN
SUNDAY 1 NOVEMBER 2009SUN
SUN
00:00 Midnight News b00nhpyp (Listen)SUN
The latest national and international news from BBC RadioSUN
4. Followed by Weather.SUN
SUN
00:30 Afternoon Reading b008v8zk (Listen)SUN
Dilemmas of Modern Martyrs, SabotageSUN
Series of stories by Morven Crumlish.SUN
Pressed into service as a bridesmaid at a gay wedding,SUN
Jenny almost expected to be miserable. But weird scenesSUN
are to follow.SUN
Read by Siobhan Redmond.SUN
A Sweet Talk production for BBC Radio 4.SUN
SUN
00:48 Shipping Forecast b00nhqd3 (Listen)SUN
The latest shipping forecast.SUN
SUN
01:00 Selection of BBC World Service Programmes b00nhqd5 (Listen)SUN
BBC Radio 4 joins the BBC World Service.SUN
SUN
05:20 Shipping Forecast b00nhqd7 (Listen)SUN
The latest shipping forecast.SUN
SUN
05:30 News Briefing b00nhqd9 (Listen)SUN
The latest news from BBC Radio 4.SUN
SUN
05:43 Bells on Sunday b00nhqdc (Listen)SUN
The sound of bells from the church of St Lawrence Jewry inSUN
London.SUN
SUN
05:45 Profile b00nhny2 (Listen)SUN
Jose Manuel BarrosoSUN
Edward Stourton takes a closer look at the life and careerSUN
of the President of the European Commission, Jose ManuelSUN
Barroso.SUN
SUN
06:00 News Headlines b00nhqdf (Listen)SUN
The latest national and international news.SUN
SUN
06:05 Something Understood b00nhqdh (Listen)SUN
Building BridgesSUN
Writer Christie Dickason considers the physical andSUN
metaphorical significance of bridges - connecting peoples,SUN
cultures and countries, but also underlining differences.SUN
She talks to violinist Ruth Waterman about the famousSUN
bridge of Mostar in Bosnia, and draws upon the poetry ofSUN
Emily Dickinson and music by Bobbie Gentry and Mozart.SUN
A Falling Tree production for BBC Radio 4.SUN
SUN
06:35 On Your Farm b00nhqdk (Listen)SUN
Alex James visits the Isle of Man to meet GeorgeSUN
Steriopulos, the final nominee for the 2009 BBC Farmer ofSUN
the Year award.SUN
George has been instrumental in re-establishing theSUN
island's flock of Manx Loughtan sheep. The breed is famousSUN
for its four horns but nearly became extinct in the 1960sSUN
as farmers switched to quicker-growing types. The LoughtanSUN
has just been granted the EU's Protected Designation ofSUN
Origin status, ranking it alongside Stilton Cheese andSUN
Champagne. Such efforts mean the sheep are once againSUN
covering the island's hills in their thousands.SUN
SUN
06:57 Weather b00nhqdm (Listen)SUN
The latest weather forecast.SUN
SUN
07:00 News and Papers b00nhqdp (Listen)SUN
The latest news headlines. Including a look at the papers.SUN
SUN
07:10 Sunday b00nhsn4 (Listen)SUN
Roger Bolton discusses the religious and ethical news ofSUN
the week. Moral arguments and perspectives on stories,SUN
both familiar and unfamiliar.SUN
SUN
07:55 Radio 4 Appeal b00nhsn6 (Listen)SUN
Meningitis UKSUN
Sandi Toksvig appeals on behalf of Meningitis UK.SUN
Donations to Meningitis UK should be sent to FREEPOST BBCSUN
Radio 4 Appeal, please mark the back of your envelopeSUN
Meningitis UK. Credit cards: Freephone 0800 404 8144. IfSUN
you are a UK tax payer, please provide Meningitis UK withSUN
your full name and address so they can claim the Gift AidSUN
on your donation. The online and phone donation facilitiesSUN
are not currently available to listeners without a UKSUN
postcode.SUN
Registered Charity No:1076774.SUN
SUN
07:58 Weather b00nhsn8 (Listen)SUN
The latest weather forecast.SUN
SUN
08:00 News and Papers b00nht55 (Listen)SUN
The latest news headlines. Including a look at the papers.SUN
SUN
08:10 Sunday Worship b00nht57 (Listen)SUN
A Great Cloud of WitnessesSUN
A service on All Saints Day from St Michael's Church inSUN
Aberystwyth.SUN
The preacher is Canon Stuart Bell, Rector of Aberystwyth.SUN
Musical Director: Andy Herrick.SUN
SUN
08:50 A Point of View b00nh1cp (Listen)SUN
Clive James reflects on the postal workers' dispute andSUN
gives his personal view of the modern history of labourSUN
relations.SUN
SUN
09:00 Broadcasting House b00nht59 (Listen)SUN
News and conversation about the big stories of the weekSUN
with Kevin Connolly.SUN
SUN
10:00 The Archers Omnibus b00nht5c (Listen)SUN
The week's events in Ambridge.SUN
SUN
11:15 Desert Island Discs b00nht5f (Listen)SUN
Jerry SpringerSUN
Kirsty Young's castaway is Jerry Springer.SUN
His life has been split between serving the public andSUN
outraging them. His first career was in politics where, asSUN
a life-long Democrat, one of his early jobs was workingSUN
with Bobby Kennedy. Then he found global fame with hisSUN
controversial TV programme, The Jerry Springer Show.SUN
He says that in politics and in his TV show, he is alwaysSUN
on the side of the powerless and disenfranchised. It's aSUN
philosophy, he says, he learned from his parents. TheySUN
were among the last Jews to escape from Berlin in AugustSUN
1939 and their memories and fears of that time shaped theSUN
entire family.SUN
SUN
12:00 The Unbelievable Truth b00nf01t (Listen)SUN
Series 4, Episode 4SUN
David Mitchell hosts the game show in which panellists areSUN
encouraged to tell lies and compete to see how many itemsSUN
of truth they are able to smuggle past their opponents.SUN
With Adam Hills, Rhod Gilbert, Reginald D Hunter andSUN
Shappi Khorsandi.SUN
Recorded at the Edinburgh Festival.SUN
SUN
12:32 Food Programme b00nhtk2 (Listen)SUN
YoghurtSUN
Central Asia was the birthplace of yoghurt, as GoldenSUN
Crescent nomadic tribes domesticated sheep and goats andSUN
began to curdle milk. Aylin Bozyap grew up in Istanbul,SUN
and as a child used to take the ferry with her family toSUN
the port town of Kanlica to eat yoghurt.SUN
Recreating the journey, she takes as her guide theSUN
political scientist, food historian and author ProfessorSUN
Artun Unsal, who finds the yoghurt a poor immitation ofSUN
its former self. In search of something better they visitSUN
the artisan yoghurt maker Mehmet Nazli, whose family hasSUN
been making yoghurt for many years, and who still makes itSUN
the traditional way. His son and grandson also work in theSUN
business, but the work is hard and they don't make muchSUN
money, with the profits staying mainly with the middlemenSUN
and shops.SUN
On the other side of Istanbul they visit an artisanSUN
yoghurt maker who has had to stop producing; the qualitySUN
of the milk is no longer good enough, nor the city cleanSUN
enough, to make real yoghurt any more.SUN
Finally they go to the Silivri Yoghurt Festival, an annualSUN
celebration of traditional yogurt, and meet one of theSUN
winners. They also meet the deputy mayor of Silivri, whoSUN
takes them to visit a disused yoghurt house that ProfessorSUN
Unsal is keen to see turned into a yoghurt museum.SUN
In the studio Sheila Dillon and Aylin taste a range ofSUN
plain yoghurts, as well as a typical British style yoghurt.SUN
SUN
12:57 Weather b00nhtk4 (Listen)SUN
The latest weather forecast.SUN
SUN
13:00 The World This Weekend b00nhtk6 (Listen)SUN
A look at events around the world with Shaun Ley.SUN
SUN
13:30 The Deighton File b00kjh8g (Listen)SUN
Novelist Len Deighton talks to Patrick Humphries about hisSUN
life and writing career, which began with the publicationSUN
of his spy novel The Ipcress File in 1962.SUN
Deighton has written cookery books and Second World WarSUN
histories, as well as turning his hand to bookSUN
illustration and film production. But he is best known forSUN
his influential spy novels, including Funeral in BerlinSUN
and Billion Dollar Brain.SUN
Deighton fan Henrietta Green talks about the writer'sSUN
Action Cook Book, and Deighton biographer EdwardSUN
Milward-Oliver and historian Sir Max Hastings discussSUN
Deighton's acclaimed non-fiction work, such as Fighter andSUN
Blitzkrieg.SUN
SUN
14:00 Gardeners' Question Time b00nh06t (Listen)SUN
Eric Robson chairs the popular horticultural forum.SUN
Matthew Biggs, Bob Flowerdew and Pippa Greenwood areSUN
guests of the Weald Horticultural Society in Sevenoaks,SUN
Kent.SUN
Bob explores the vineyards in the 'Garden of England',SUN
discussing which varieties are best suited to winemakingSUN
and how best to care for them.SUN
Including Gardening weather forecast.SUN
SUN
14:45 Brother Mine b00cm7h2 (Listen)SUN
Global DifferencesSUN
Julian Lloyd Webber explores different social and culturalSUN
attitudes towards siblings.SUN
Islamic countries see sibling relationships develop viaSUN
wet-nurses. China's one-child policy is havingSUN
controversial consequences.SUN
A Tinderbox Broadcast production for BBC Radio 4.SUN
SUN
15:00 Classic Serial b00nhv35 (Listen)SUN
Bel Ami, Episode 1SUN
Dramatisation by Frances Byrnes of Guy de Maupassant'sSUN
story of political corruption in the newspaper world ofSUN
19th-century France and the inexorable rise of GeorgesSUN
Duroy - 'Bel Ami' - a charming, ruthless man of littleSUN
talent but plenty of ambition.SUN
Bel Ami is making the perfect match with a society heiressSUN
but his past is about to catch up with him, in the shapeSUN
of Mme de Marelle, his long-term mistress.SUN
Bel Ami ...... Jonathan SlingerSUN
Marelle ...... Emma FieldingSUN
Madeleine ...... Mali HarriesSUN
Forestier ...... Kieran SelfSUN
Monsieur Walter ...... Steffan RhodriSUN
Rachel ...... Sara McGaugheySUN
Other roles played by Richard Nichols.SUN
Directed by Polly Thomas.SUN
SUN
16:00 Bookclub b00nhv5s (Listen)SUN
Linda GrantSUN
James Naughtie and readers talk to Linda Grant about herSUN
novel When I Lived in Modern Times, winner of the OrangeSUN
Prize for Fiction in 2000.SUN
Linda is known for bringing a strong Jewish identity toSUN
most of her writing. 'Scratch a Jew and you've got aSUN
story', remarks the main character Evelyn Sert on theSUN
story's first page as she looks over her life. The novelSUN
follows Evelyn - hairdresser, spy, lover - on her voyageSUN
from post-war London to Tel Aviv, where the British areSUN
preparing to leave Palestine and the new state of IsraelSUN
is about to be born.SUN
SUN
16:30 High Flight b00nhw26 (Listen)SUN
When Anglo-American poet John Magee was killed in aSUN
mid-air collision over Lincolnshire in December 1941, agedSUN
just 19, he left behind a sonnet started, he claimed, 'atSUN
30,000 feet and finished soon after (he) landed'. TheSUN
poem, High Flight, has become the most celebrated poemSUN
about the intoxication of flying.SUN
Sean Street traces the trajectory of the poem and its poetSUN
from Rugby School through the Library of Congress and theSUN
space race to Ronald Reagan's tribute to the victims ofSUN
the Challenger space shuttle disaster and beyond, into aSUN
unique place in the popular imagination.SUN
The programme includes contributions from Andrew Motion,SUN
veterans of the Royal Canadian Air Force, composer BobSUN
Chilcott and Library of Congress archivist Cheryl Fox.SUN
A Falling Tree production for BBC Radio 4.SUN
SUN
16:56 1989: Day by Day b00nhw28 (Listen)SUN
1st November 1989SUN
Sir John Tusa looks back at the events making the news 20SUN
years ago.SUN
President Bush agrees to meet Chairman Gorbachev on hisSUN
boat in the Mediterranean for unofficial talks; PresidentSUN
Ortega of Nicaragua breaks a 19-month ceasefire withSUN
US-backed Contra rebels; a coroner overseeing the inquestSUN
into the death of Beverly Lewis demands better communitySUN
care for the mentally ill.SUN
A Somethin' Else production for BBC Radio 4.SUN
SUN
17:00 1989: How The Wall Fell b00nfn2j (Listen)SUN
The fall of the Berlin Wall made revolution look easy. ButSUN
behind the scenes, people power and the sudden end of ColdSUN
War certainties posed all kinds of challenges. As part ofSUN
Radio 4's 1989 season, John Tusa discovers what happenedSUN
with key insiders from the British, German, Soviet andSUN
other governments of the time.SUN
SUN
17:40 Profile b00nhny2 (Listen)SUN
Jose Manuel BarrosoSUN
Edward Stourton takes a closer look at the life and careerSUN
of the President of the European Commission, Jose ManuelSUN
Barroso.SUN
SUN
17:54 Shipping Forecast b00nhw2b (Listen)SUN
The latest shipping forecast.SUN
SUN
17:57 Weather b00nj7vs (Listen)SUN
The latest weather forecast.SUN
SUN
18:00 Six O'Clock News b00nj7vv (Listen)SUN
The latest national and international news from BBC RadioSUN
4.SUN
SUN
18:15 Pick of the Week b00nj7vx (Listen)SUN
Hardeep Singh Kohli makes his selection from the pastSUN
seven days of BBC Radio.SUN
Analysis - Radio 4SUN
The Fantastic Book of Everyone's Secrets - Radio 4SUN
Dear Mr Bigelow - Radio 4SUN
Parting Shots - Radio 4SUN
Being Jewish - Blood or Belief - Radio 4SUN
Baroque and Roll - Radio 4SUN
Night Waves - Radio 3SUN
M1 Magic - Radio 4SUN
Bleak Expectations - Radio 4SUN
Capering With Ken Campbell - Radio 4SUN
The Verb - Radio 3SUN
Maida Vale at 75 - Radio 1 & Radio 2SUN
Now Wash Your Hands - Radio 4SUN
The Unbelievable Truth - Radio 4SUN
In Tune - Radio 3.SUN
SUN
19:00 The Archers b00nj7vz (Listen)SUN
The Grundys come back down to earth.SUN
SUN
19:15 Americana b00nj7w1 (Listen)SUN
Matt Frei presents an insider guide to the people and theSUN
stories shaping America today. Combining location reportsSUN
with lively discussion and exclusive interviews, the showSUN
provides new and surprising insights into contemporarySUN
America.SUN
Americans love golf and President Obama is no exception.SUN
Matt Frei takes a swing of the club and a look at howSUN
exactly the 44th President of the United States, BarakSUN
Obama, manages to make so much time to play. He isSUN
squeezing in more golf than his predecessor, even in theSUN
midst of juggling the challenges of economic recovery andSUN
international diplomacy.SUN
Matt Frei talks to former White House press secretary DanaSUN
Perino about life on the other side of the podium. After aSUN
few years fielding questions on behalf of the George WSUN
Bush administration, Perino tells Americana how she feelsSUN
the Obama administration is handling the media storm soSUN
far.SUN
If she looks like Sarah Palin and talks like Sarah Palin,SUN
does that mean that Michele Bachmann will be the new SarahSUN
Palin? Bachmann has represented Minnesota in the UnitedSUN
States House of Representatives for three years. In thatSUN
short time she has managed to become a well-known voiceSUN
within the Republican Party. Matt Frei talks to her aboutSUN
how she has amplified her opinions so effectively and whatSUN
her hopes are for the Republican Party in the future.SUN
What exactly does a Governor do? Matt Frei talks withSUN
Governor Brian Schweitzer, who moved from ranching toSUN
running one of the largest states in the US, Montana.SUN
Governor Schweitzer took office in 2009 and shares hisSUN
insight on what it takes to be one of the 50 most powerfulSUN
state leaders in the nation.SUN
Matt Frei invites the a cappella group Sonos, who areSUN
currently touring around the United States, into theSUN
Americana studio. With FX pedals and well-known indieSUN
tunes, Sonos makes the studio vibrate with a whole newSUN
sound.SUN
SUN
19:45 Afternoon Reading b0090mt7 (Listen)SUN
Stories from the Bath Literature Festival, MathildeSUN
3/5. Mathilde, by Hattie Naylor.SUN
“I was born in the worst winter ever. It was said that theSUN
ground was so hard, the air so cold, the snow so thick, mySUN
heart froze the moment I was brought into the world. AndSUN
then I was brought up by a cat.”SUN
Read by Alison Reid.SUN
SUN
20:00 Feedback b00nh06r (Listen)SUN
Roger Bolton airs listeners' views on BBC radio programmesSUN
and policy.SUN
SUN
20:30 Last Word b00nh0qv (Listen)SUN
Matthew Bannister presents the obituary series, analysingSUN
and celebrating the life stories of people who haveSUN
recently died. The programme reflects on people ofSUN
distinction and interest from many walks of life, someSUN
famous and some less well known.SUN
SUN
21:00 Money Box b00nhn27 (Listen)SUN
Paul Lewis with the latest news from the world of personalSUN
finance.SUN
Pester power - Halifax Bank of Scotland makes changes toSUN
its controversial overdraft charges.SUN
Where there's a will there's a way - don't forget to writeSUN
one.SUN
How just paying off the minimum on your cards messes withSUN
your mind.SUN
National Savings enters the best buy tables, and why thatSUN
is unusual.SUN
SUN
21:26 Radio 4 Appeal b00nhsn6 (Listen)SUN
Meningitis UKSUN
Sandi Toksvig appeals on behalf of Meningitis UK.SUN
Donations to Meningitis UK should be sent to FREEPOST BBCSUN
Radio 4 Appeal, please mark the back of your envelopeSUN
Meningitis UK. Credit cards: Freephone 0800 404 8144. IfSUN
you are a UK tax payer, please provide Meningitis UK withSUN
your full name and address so they can claim the Gift AidSUN
on your donation. The online and phone donation facilitiesSUN
are not currently available to listeners without a UKSUN
postcode.SUN
Registered Charity No:1076774.SUN
SUN
21:30 Analysis b00nf0my (Listen)SUN
Knowing Too MuchSUN
As a campaigning investigative journalist, Martin BrightSUN
has devoted much of his energy into uncovering thingsSUN
people in power want to be kept secret. He calls himself aSUN
'freedom of information fundamentalist'. But in thisSUN
programme, he plays devil's advocate and asks if the truthSUN
is really always desirable or always in the wider publicSUN
interest.SUN
Through interviews with psychologists, intelligenceSUN
officers, whistleblowers and academics, he explores theSUN
importance of institutional and personal secrecy, and asksSUN
what happens when these two areas overlap, or even collide.SUN
SUN
21:58 Weather b00nj7w3 (Listen)SUN
The latest weather forecast.SUN
SUN
22:00 Westminster Hour b00nj7w5 (Listen)SUN
Reports from behind the scenes at Westminster. IncludingSUN
The Cases That Changed Our World.SUN
SUN
23:00 1989: Day by Day Omnibus b00nj7w7 (Listen)SUN
Week ending 31st October 1989SUN
A look back at the events making the news 20 years ago,SUN
with Sir John Tusa.SUN
Nigel Lawson resigns after six years as Chancellor, WalterSUN
Sisulu addresses 70,000 people at the biggest ever ANCSUN
rally, and riots in Moscow follow a demonstration outsideSUN
the KGB headquarters.SUN
A Somethin' Else production for BBC Radio 4.SUN
SUN
23:30 Something Understood b00nhqdh (Listen)SUN
Building BridgesSUN
Writer Christie Dickason considers the physical andSUN
metaphorical significance of bridges - connecting peoples,SUN
cultures and countries, but also underlining differences.SUN
She talks to violinist Ruth Waterman about the famousSUN
bridge of Mostar in Bosnia, and draws upon the poetry ofSUN
Emily Dickinson and music by Bobbie Gentry and Mozart.SUN
A Falling Tree production for BBC Radio 4.SUN
SUN
MON
MONDAY 2 NOVEMBER 2009MON
MON
00:00 Midnight News b00nj8j4 (Listen)MON
The latest national and international news from BBC RadioMON
4. Followed by Weather.MON
MON
00:15 Thinking Allowed b00nfqzg (Listen)MON
While nine out of ten people agree organ donation is aMON
good thing, a recent audit found 40 per cent of bereavedMON
families, when approached, didn't agree to donate. LaurieMON
Taylor discusses new research which uncovers some of theMON
reasons behind this apparent anomaly.MON
Magi Sque, from the University of Southampton, was part ofMON
a team who interviewed families who had declined organMON
donation. While many agreed in principle, carried organMON
donor cards and knew their relatives desire to donate,MON
they still didn't feel able to let their loved ones organsMON
be used. The most common reason families gave for this wasMON
a simple desire to keep the body intact. They didn't wantMON
the dead to be 'hurt' any more.MON
Magi explains why the research reveals some of ourMON
deep-seated cultural beliefs, and how those beliefs haveMON
their roots in wider society's values and, at times ofMON
grief, can completely overcome our pre-existing views.MON
We also hear from Professor Caroline Knowles of GoldsmithsMON
College, London who has researched the history, meaningMON
and journey of the flip flop sandal.MON
MON
00:45 Bells on Sunday b00nhqdc (Listen)MON
The sound of bells from the church of St Lawrence Jewry inMON
London.MON
MON
00:48 Shipping Forecast b00nj8qv (Listen)MON
The latest shipping forecast.MON
MON
01:00 Selection of BBC World Service Programmes b00nj90f (Listen)MON
BBC Radio 4 joins the BBC World Service.MON
MON
05:20 Shipping Forecast b00nj8wp (Listen)MON
The latest shipping forecast.MON
MON
05:30 News Briefing b00nj99b (Listen)MON
The latest news from BBC Radio 4.MON
MON
05:43 Prayer for the Day b00njkl2 (Listen)MON
Daily prayer and reflection with Rev Roger Hutchings.MON
MON
05:45 Farming Today b00nj9b3 (Listen)MON
News and issues in rural Britain with Charlotte Smith.MON
MON
05:57 Weather b00njkl4 (Listen)MON
The latest weather forecast for farmers.MON
MON
06:00 Today b00nj9fr (Listen)MON
With Sarah Montague and Justin Webb. Including SportsMON
Desk; Weather; Thought for the Day.MON
MON
09:00 Start the Week b00njkl6 (Listen)MON
Andrew Marr discusses memory, secrets, failed states andMON
snobbery with his guests.MON
Academic Viktor Mayer-Schönberger talks about his new bookMON
Delete - the dangers of remembering in the digital age.MON
Director Daniel Kramer talks secrets, psychology and theMON
accessability of opera as his new production of BluebeardMON
opens at the ENO. Clare Lockhart, Director of theMON
Institute for State Effectiveness, talks about how to fixMON
failed states by building markets, and Quentin Letts givesMON
his thesis on how snobbery will save us.MON
MON
09:45 Book of the Week b00nj9jc (Listen)MON
The Secret Lives of Somerset Maugham, Episode 1MON
Barbara Flynn reads from Selina Hastings' biography ofMON
Somerset Maugham, which sheds new light on his complexMON
character.MON
In 1892, at the age of 18, Somerset Maugham enrolled at StMON
Thomas' medical school, but his heart wasn't in it. WhatMON
he really wanted to do was write.MON
Abridged by Libby Spurrier.MON
A Pier production for BBC Radio 4.MON
MON
10:00 Woman's Hour b00nj9pl (Listen)MON
With Jane Garvey.MON
Martine McCutcheon started her career as a six-week-oldMON
baby, when her photo was used for a national politicalMON
poster campaign. She went on to play the part of the muchMON
loved Tiffany in EastEnders, won a best actress OlivierMON
Award for her role in Trevor Nunn's My Fair Lady, andMON
starred in Richard Curtis's film Love Actually. She alsoMON
forged a successful music career with a number one singleMON
and album. Now she has brought out her first novel, TheMON
Mistress. Martine joins Jane to discuss her newestMON
venture. Why turn to writing? What was her inspiration?MON
And what's next for the ex-soap star?MON
Applications to take children into care have risen by 47MON
per cent since last year say recent figures published byMON
Cafcass, the organisation that represents children'sMON
interests in the family courts. So what is behind thisMON
enormous increase and what needs to be done to support aMON
family justice system already under great strain,MON
responsible for supporting some of the youngest and mostMON
vulnerable in our society? Jane is joined by ParliamentaryMON
Under-Secretary of State for Children, Young People andMON
Families Baroness Dyleth Morgan, Anthony Douglas, chiefMON
executive of Cafcass, and children's solicitor ChristinaMON
Blacklaws.MON
More than 10,000 people in the UK currently need an organMON
transplant, and of these, 1,000 die every year before theyMON
receive an organ. Last year 28-year-old singer-songwriterMON
Sarah Springett donated one of her kidneys to herMON
boyfriend Paul Shepherd after his kidney conditionMON
worsened. As the NHS launches a new campaign to encourageMON
more people to sign the Organ Donor Register, Woman's HourMON
talks to Sarah and Paul about their experience, and toMON
their consultant and NHS organ transplant czar Chris Rudge.MON
And Grace Nichols's poetry has been described as 'rich inMON
music, but also grit and earthy honesty'. The novelistMON
Jeannette Winterson admires her work for 'its wit, acidityMON
and tenderness'. Grace explains what drew her to writeMON
about Picasso's muse, Dora Maar, in her latest collection,MON
Picasso, I Want My Face Back, and why she wants toMON
celebrate the power of laughter.MON
MON
11:00 Repossessions in the Sun b00njwd7 (Listen)MON
Ray Furlong visits Spain's Mediterranean resorts to hearMON
how members of the country's one million-strong BritishMON
expatriate community are weathering the recession. HighMON
unemployment in the construction and tourist sectors meansMON
that boom-time on the Costas is over, translating intoMON
increased home repossessions and divorce rates.MON
MON
11:30 Beauty of Britain b00njwd9 (Listen)MON
Colour Me WowMON
Comedy by Christopher Douglas and Nicola Sanderson. BeautyMON
Olonga works as a carer for the Featherdown Agency andMON
sees herself as an inspiration to other African girlsMON
hoping to achieve their goals in the land of semi-skimmedMON
milk.MON
Beauty has a particularly difficult client, but isMON
distracted by her latest business venture. Lynette assuresMON
Beauty that 'Colour Me Wow' is no pyramid scheme, whileMON
Anil shows a surprising new side to himself.MON
Beauty ...... Jocelyn Jee EsienMON
Lynette ...... Doon MackichanMON
Sandra ...... Nicola SandersonMON
Sally ...... Felicity MontaguMON
Karen ...... Nicola SandersonMON
Mrs Gupte ...... Indira JoshiMON
Anil ...... Paul SharmaMON
Dr Kavanagh ...... Phyllida LawMON
Hilary ...... Rachel AtkinsMON
Clare ...... Doon MackichanMON
Music by The West End Gospel Choir.MON
MON
12:00 You and Yours b00njbfv (Listen)MON
Consumer news and issues with Julian Worricker.MON
MON
12:57 Weather b00njcns (Listen)MON
The latest weather forecast.MON
MON
13:00 World at One b00njcpt (Listen)MON
National and international news with Martha Kearney.MON
MON
13:30 Brain of Britain b00njxlv (Listen)MON
Russell Davies chairs the fourth heat of the perennialMON
general knowledge contest.MON
MON
14:00 The Archers b00nj7vz (Listen)MON
The Grundys come back down to earth.MON
MON
14:15 Afternoon Play b00cqdz9 (Listen)MON
GoldengroveMON
Frances Byrnes' story of the relationship between a youngMON
working-class girl and the woman who transforms her.MON
Margaret, a spinster, teaches Narn, a city child, how toMON
shake hands firmly, polish silver and identify birds. MostMON
of all, she teaches her how to speak.MON
Margaret ...... Jill BalconMON
Narn ...... Jessica JolleysMON
Narn Now ...... Siriol JenkinsMON
Josie ...... Beccy AlexanderMON
Fred ...... Brendan CharlesonMON
Directed by Kate McAll.MON
MON
15:00 Archive on 4 b00nhny6 (Listen)MON
Capering With Ken CampbellMON
Ian McMillan explores the world of the actor and directorMON
Ken Campbell, who died in 2008.MON
Campbell's acting credits included Fawlty Towers, TheMON
Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, Brookside, Law and OrderMON
and In Sickness and In Health, as well as performingMON
one-man shows. He also directed theatrical events,MON
including the nine-hour Illuminatus trilogy, a 22-hourMON
production of The Warp and Macbeth in pidgin English.MON
His daughter, Daisy, gives Ian McMillan a tour of Ken'sMON
home in Essex, where he didn't have a bedroom and had aMON
parrot run in every room. He also talks to Campbell'sMON
manager Colin Watkeys, theatre director Richard Eyre, fanMON
and collaborator Ian Potter and fellow actors JuliaMON
McKenzie and Jim Broadbent.MON
MON
15:45 A History of Private Life b00njctx (Listen)MON
Education in the Moral HomeMON
Historian Amanda Vickery presents a series which revealsMON
the hidden history of home over 400 years. She draws onMON
first-hand accounts from letters and diaries, many ofMON
which have never been heard before. Including songs whichMON
have been specially recorded for the series.MON
Homes were exposed to huge forces of change in the 19thMON
and 20th century, responding to industrialisation,MON
pollution, and the imperial mission. Prof Vickery exploresMON
how they remained idealised havens in a heartless, dirtyMON
world.MON
Until the late-19th century, home was the only schoolroomMON
many British children were to experience, especially ifMON
they were girls. But was domestic education really soMON
inferior to formal schooling? Drawing on diaries she hasMON
discovered, Prof Vickery explores home education from theMON
perspective of both mother and child.MON
Readers: Deborah Findlay, John Sessions, Madeleine BrollyMON
and Simon Tcherniak.MON
Singers: Gwyneth Herbert and Thomas Guthrie, with DavidMON
Owen Norris at the keyboard.MON
A Loftus production for BBC Radio 4.MON
MON
16:00 Food Programme b00nhtk2 (Listen)MON
YoghurtMON
Central Asia was the birthplace of yoghurt, as GoldenMON
Crescent nomadic tribes domesticated sheep and goats andMON
began to curdle milk. Aylin Bozyap grew up in Istanbul,MON
and as a child used to take the ferry with her family toMON
the port town of Kanlica to eat yoghurt.MON
Recreating the journey, she takes as her guide theMON
political scientist, food historian and author ProfessorMON
Artun Unsal, who finds the yoghurt a poor immitation ofMON
its former self. In search of something better they visitMON
the artisan yoghurt maker Mehmet Nazli, whose family hasMON
been making yoghurt for many years, and who still makes itMON
the traditional way. His son and grandson also work in theMON
business, but the work is hard and they don't make muchMON
money, with the profits staying mainly with the middlemenMON
and shops.MON
On the other side of Istanbul they visit an artisanMON
yoghurt maker who has had to stop producing; the qualityMON
of the milk is no longer good enough, nor the city cleanMON
enough, to make real yoghurt any more.MON
Finally they go to the Silivri Yoghurt Festival, an annualMON
celebration of traditional yogurt, and meet one of theMON
winners. They also meet the deputy mayor of Silivri, whoMON
takes them to visit a disused yoghurt house that ProfessorMON
Unsal is keen to see turned into a yoghurt museum.MON
In the studio Sheila Dillon and Aylin taste a range ofMON
plain yoghurts, as well as a typical British style yoghurt.MON
MON
16:30 Click On b00njxwm (Listen)MON
Series 5, Episode 5MON
As Bonfire Night approaches, Simon Cox discovers the roleMON
computers play in creating spectacular fireworks displays.MON
He also learns how technology used in mobile phones isMON
helping researchers in Cambridge to monitor pollution.MON
MON
16:56 1989: Day by Day b00njd4p (Listen)MON
2nd November 1989MON
Sir John Tusa looks back at the events making the news 20MON
years ago.MON
In an unprecedented move, KGB officers take questions fromMON
the public on live TV; price rises on British Rail fillMON
commuters with woe; the Met's first black police officerMON
talks about the 'fun and games' in the early days.MON
A Somethin' Else production for BBC Radio 4.MON
MON
17:00 PM b00njdbb (Listen)MON
Full coverage and analysis of the day's news with CarolynMON
Quinn. Plus Weather.MON
MON
18:00 Six O'Clock News b00njg1l (Listen)MON
The latest national and international news from BBC RadioMON
4.MON
MON
18:30 The Unbelievable Truth b00nk0g7 (Listen)MON
Series 4, Episode 5MON
David Mitchell hosts the game show in which panellists areMON
encouraged to tell lies and compete to see how many itemsMON
of truth they are able to smuggle past their opponents.MON
With Clive Anderson, Dom Joly, Fi Glover and Henning Wehn.MON
MON
19:00 The Archers b00njcq8 (Listen)MON
Reality bites for Lilian.MON
MON
19:15 Front Row b00njgdq (Listen)MON
Arts news and reviews with Mark Lawson. Including anMON
interview with the crime writer James Ellroy, whose booksMON
include LA Confidential and The Black Dahlia.MON
MON
19:45 Woman's Hour Drama b00njgds (Listen)MON
Singleparentpals.com, You Are Not AloneMON
Sue Teddern's story of the developing friendship betweenMON
two single parents who correspond via a parenting adviceMON
website.MON
When a nervous Tom logs on to a website for lone parentsMON
for the first time, he finds new friends and an impatientMON
response from the formidable Rosie.MON
Rosie ...... Maxine PeakeMON
Tom ...... Kris MarshallMON
Spp.com/Tash ...... Laura MolyneuxMON
Gill ...... Janice AcquahMON
Scott ...... Matt AddisMON
Robin ...... Malcolm TierneyMON
Bazz ...... Jonathan TaflerMON
Directed by David Hunter.MON
MON
20:00 Night Witches b00nk0g9 (Listen)MON
Lucy Ash tells the extraordinary but little-known tale ofMON
Russia's three all-female regiments that flew more thanMON
30,000 missions on the Eastern Front during Second WorldMON
War. At home they were celebrated as Stalin's Falcons, butMON
terrified German troops called them the Night Witches.MON
Lucy travels to Moscow and Rostov-on-Don to meet a numberMON
of these formidable women, who are now grandmothers inMON
their 80s and 90s. She discovers that their bravery hasMON
inspired aerobatic champions, comic book artists and evenMON
a Dutch heavy metal band.MON
MON
20:30 Analysis b00nk0gc (Listen)MON
The Economist's New ClothesMON
Many have said that the near collapse of the globalMON
financial system exposed the failures of 30 years ofMON
economic thinking. Stephanie Flanders, the BBC economicsMON
editor, examines the arguments raging within and outsideMON
the world of economics and asks what future studentsMON
should learn from the 'great recession'.MON
MON
21:00 Aping Evolution b00nk0wl (Listen)MON
Episode 1MON
Professor of Genetics Steve Jones challenges evolutionaryMON
psychology, the controversial new science of how ourMON
brains and minds developed.MON
Girls like pink better because in Stone Age times theyMON
needed to be good at picking berries and women have betterMON
sex with rich men - or so some evolutionary psychologistsMON
would have us believe. Critics say this isn't science, butMON
conjecture.MON
Evolutionary psychology seeks to explain human behaviourMON
from the hunter-gatherers or our nearest relatives, theMON
chimpanzee, and has some seductively simple theories. OneMON
argument is that we have Stone Age brains in 21st-centuryMON
skulls, from which we can account for everything from theMON
violence that men show to their stepchildren to why racismMON
exists. Is evolutionary psychology a truly useful additionMON
to the canon of ideas to come out of Darwinian evolutionMON
or a just-so science that can be adjusted to suit theMON
researchers' prejudices?MON
Steve Jones examines the history of the new science, theMON
methods used and asks if it can explain the human drive toMON
language, religion and culture.MON
MON
21:30 Start the Week b00njkl6 (Listen)MON
Andrew Marr discusses memory, secrets, failed states andMON
snobbery with his guests.MON
Academic Viktor Mayer-Schönberger talks about his new bookMON
Delete - the dangers of remembering in the digital age.MON
Director Daniel Kramer talks secrets, psychology and theMON
accessability of opera as his new production of BluebeardMON
opens at the ENO. Clare Lockhart, Director of theMON
Institute for State Effectiveness, talks about how to fixMON
failed states by building markets, and Quentin Letts givesMON
his thesis on how snobbery will save us.MON
MON
21:58 Weather b00njhwg (Listen)MON
The latest weather forecast.MON
MON
22:00 The World Tonight b00njj5t (Listen)MON
National and international news and analysis with RitulaMON
Shah.MON
MON
22:45 Book at Bedtime b00njj5w (Listen)MON
Heartland, Episode 6MON
Alex Jones and David Holt read from the novel by AnthonyMON
Cartwright, set in 2002 in the fictional Black CountryMON
community of Cinderheath.MON
Jasmine catches up with some friends in London.MON
Abridged by Jane Marshall.MON
A Jane Marshall production for BBC Radio 4.MON
MON
23:00 With Great Pleasure b008wr7x (Listen)MON
Sir John MajorMON
Former prime minister Sir John Major chooses some of theMON
pieces of writing which have sustained, inspired andMON
entertained him. The readers are Nigel Anthony and LucyMON
Briers.MON
MON
23:30 Today in Parliament b00njkhg (Listen)MON
News, views and features on today's stories in ParliamentMON
with Sean Curran.MON
MON
TUE
TUESDAY 3 NOVEMBER 2009TUE
TUE
00:00 Midnight News b00nj8dm (Listen)TUE
The latest national and international news from BBC RadioTUE
4. Followed by Weather.TUE
TUE
00:30 Book of the Week b00nj9jc (Listen)TUE
The Secret Lives of Somerset Maugham, Episode 1TUE
Barbara Flynn reads from Selina Hastings' biography ofTUE
Somerset Maugham, which sheds new light on his complexTUE
character.TUE
In 1892, at the age of 18, Somerset Maugham enrolled at StTUE
Thomas' medical school, but his heart wasn't in it. WhatTUE
he really wanted to do was write.TUE
Abridged by Libby Spurrier.TUE
A Pier production for BBC Radio 4.TUE
TUE
00:48 Shipping Forecast b00nj8j6 (Listen)TUE
The latest shipping forecast.TUE
TUE
01:00 Selection of BBC World Service Programmes b00nj8wr (Listen)TUE
BBC Radio 4 joins the BBC World Service.TUE
TUE
05:20 Shipping Forecast b00nj8qx (Listen)TUE
The latest shipping forecast.TUE
TUE
05:30 News Briefing b00nj90h (Listen)TUE
The latest news from BBC Radio 4.TUE
TUE
05:43 Prayer for the Day b00nj99d (Listen)TUE
Daily prayer and reflection with Rev Roger Hutchings.TUE
TUE
05:45 Farming Today b00nj99g (Listen)TUE
News and issues in rural Britain with Anna Hill.TUE
TUE
06:00 Today b00nj9f5 (Listen)TUE
With Evan Davis and Justin Webb. Including Sports Desk;TUE
Weather; Thought for the Day; Yesterday in Parliament.TUE
TUE
09:00 The Choice b00nk2c2 (Listen)TUE
Michael Buerk interviews people who have madeTUE
life-altering decisions and talks them through the wholeTUE
process, from the original dilemma to living with theTUE
consequences.TUE
Michael talks to former banking executive Paul Moore aboutTUE
his choice to blow the whistle on HBOS.TUE
TUE
09:30 Parting Shots b00nk2c4 (Listen)TUE
Episode 3TUE
Matthew Parris marks the passing of the valedictoryTUE
despatch, the traditional final telegram home in whichTUE
British ambassadors could let their hair down and settle aTUE
few scores. The series features newly declassified ForeignTUE
Office files alongside interviews with the diplomats whoTUE
wrote them.TUE
The privations of embassy life. In their valedictories,TUE
diplomats recount the hardships of foreign service - ratTUE
infested rooms, defunct plumbing and death threats.TUE
TUE
09:45 Book of the Week b00nnn9t (Listen)TUE
The Secret Lives of Somerset Maugham, Episode 2TUE
Barbara Flynn reads from Selina Hastings' biography ofTUE
Somerset Maugham, which sheds new light on his complexTUE
character.TUE
Still struggling to make ends meet, Maugham has a changeTUE
of fortune when the manager of the Royal Court TheatreTUE
decides to stage his play, Lady Frederick.TUE
Abridged by Libby Spurrier.TUE
A Pier production for BBC Radio 4.TUE
TUE
10:00 Woman's Hour b00nj9p2 (Listen)TUE
With Jane Garvey. Including drama: Singleparentpals.com.TUE
TUE
11:00 1989: A German Story b00nk2c6 (Listen)TUE
Under One FlagTUE
Series in which German programme-makers reflect and reportTUE
on aspects of the reunified country that rarely, if ever,TUE
find their way into the British media.TUE
Thomas Franke explores the German armed forces, theTUE
Bundeswehr.TUE
When reunification took place in Germany after the fall ofTUE
the Berlin Wall in 1989, one of the most painfulTUE
institutional mergers was of the former East and WestTUE
German armies. Ex-GDR forces were often obliged to acceptTUE
lower grades in the united force. Yet today, having had toTUE
engage together in combat during the NATO YugoslavTUE
operation of 1999, the Bundeswehr is, perhapsTUE
surprisingly, one of the success stories of the reunitedTUE
nation. Yet, routinely, the annual swearing in ceremony inTUE
front of the Reichstag in Berlin is disrupted by noisyTUE
protests by those exercised by the notion of an armyTUE
fighting under the German flag.TUE
Thomas goes on patrol with the army around the KosovanTUE
city of Prizren, where they are a part of theTUE
peace-keeping force, and visits the annual swearing-inTUE
ceremony where new members of the forces take the oathTUE
before Chancellor Merkel. But echoes remain of the horrorTUE
inflicted on Europe by another German army, and suchTUE
solemn moments are never far from controversy and protestTUE
- especially when former peaceniks are now members of aTUE
government which sends its young men to bear arms in bothTUE
Europe and Afghanistan.TUE
TUE
11:30 Art Attack b00nk2xr (Listen)TUE
Episode 2TUE
Series investigating the history of attacks on art works,TUE
from the earliest times to the present day.TUE
When does destruction become an act of creation? LawrenceTUE
Pollard explores what lies behind some of the more bizarreTUE
assaults on contemporary art, including an exploding shed,TUE
an artist who destroyed every one of his possessions andTUE
art that has been both urinated on and whacked with aTUE
hammer.TUE
TUE
12:00 You and Yours b00njb1p (Listen)TUE
Consumer news and issues with Julian Worricker.TUE
TUE
12:57 Weather b00njcb6 (Listen)TUE
The latest weather forecast.TUE
TUE
13:00 World at One b00njcnv (Listen)TUE
National and international news with Martha Kearney.TUE
TUE
13:30 The Bell Boys b00nk2xt (Listen)TUE
In the heart of London's East End, a team of craftsmenTUE
preserves a set of skills dating back to the 1500s,TUE
turning out bells for churches and cathedrals acrossTUE
Britain and around the world. Poet and closetTUE
campanologist Ian McMillan spends a day amongTUE
Whitechapel's foundrymen, and follows the birth of a newTUE
ring of bells set to bring back life to a church towerTUE
which has stood silent since the Second World War.TUE
TUE
14:00 The Archers b00njcq8 (Listen)TUE
Reality bites for Lilian.TUE
TUE
14:15 Afternoon Play b00chp3n (Listen)TUE
Dickens Confidential, Why Are We in Afghanistan?TUE
Series of plays looking at how Charles Dickens, as theTUE
head of a daily paper, would have tackled bringing theTUE
news to the masses.TUE
By Mike Walker.TUE
Dickens and his team find themselves in the midst ofTUE
spies, intrigue and dark goings-on at the Russian Embassy,TUE
culminating in a heroic balloon chase across the LondonTUE
skyline.TUE
Charles Dickens ...... Dan StevensTUE
Agnes Paxton ...... Eleanor HowellTUE
Daniel Parker ...... Andrew BuchanTUE
Nadia Durova ...... Rachel AtkinsTUE
Alex Burns ...... Dan StarkeyTUE
Joseph Paxton ...... John DougallTUE
Bishop ...... John RoweTUE
Ivan Vitkovich ...... Chris PavloTUE
Directed by Tracey Neale.TUE
TUE
15:00 Making History b00nk4k4 (Listen)TUE
Vanessa Collingridge presents the series exploringTUE
ordinary people's links with the past.TUE
TUE
15:30 Afternoon Reading b00nk4lm (Listen)TUE
Tales From The Low Countries, My Father's Photo AlbumTUE
Series of evocative new stories set in the Netherlands,TUE
Belgium and Luxembourg.TUE
By Abdelkader Benali.TUE
When a Dutch-Moroccan man learns that his mother is ill,TUE
he is compelled to make a long-overdue visit to hisTUE
parents' house in Rotterdam. The visit proves to be theTUE
start of a journey through his dreams, childhood andTUE
family history.TUE
Read by Khalid Abdalla.TUE
Translated by David McKay.TUE
TUE
15:45 A History of Private Life b00njct8 (Listen)TUE
The Garden IndoorsTUE
Historian Amanda Vickery presents a series which revealsTUE
the hidden history of home over 400 years. She draws onTUE
first-hand accounts from letters and diaries, many ofTUE
which have never been heard before. Including songs whichTUE
have been specially recorded for the series.TUE
Homes were exposed to huge forces of change in the 19thTUE
and 20th century, responding to industrialisation,TUE
pollution and the imperial mission. Prof Vickery exploresTUE
how they remained idealised havens in a heartless, dirtyTUE
world.TUE
By the mid-19th century, the majority of the BritishTUE
population lived in filthy polluted towns. Yet theTUE
Victorians contrived increasingly ingenious ways toTUE
domesticate nature, capturing ferns and sea anemones underTUE
glass in their parlours.TUE
Readers: Deborah Findlay, John Sessions, Madeleine BrollyTUE
and Simon Tcherniak.TUE
Singers: Gwyneth Herbert and Thomas Guthrie, with DavidTUE
Owen Norris at the keyboard.TUE
A Loftus production for BBC Radio 4.TUE
TUE
16:00 Law in Action b00nk4wp (Listen)TUE
Clive Coleman interviews Ken MacDonald, the formerTUE
Director of Public Prosecutions, about his five years inTUE
the position from 2003 to 2008.TUE
TUE
16:30 A Good Read b00nk4wr (Listen)TUE
Sue MacGregor talks to novelists Catherine O'Flynn andTUE
Kate Pullinger at the Birmingham Book Festival about theirTUE
favourite books, including titles by Gordon Burn, DonTUE
DeLillo and Alaa Al Aswany.TUE
TUE
16:56 1989: Day by Day b00njd4f (Listen)TUE
3rd November 1989TUE
Sir John Tusa looks back at the events making the news 20TUE
years ago.TUE
Protests in East Germany force the resignation of theTUE
Mayor of Leipzig and five government hardliners; troubleTUE
for Gorbachev as Russian miners down tools; and a highTUE
speed link between London and the Channel Tunnel? 'Not inTUE
my back yard', say people in Swanley.TUE
A Somethin' Else production for BBC Radio 4.TUE
TUE
17:00 PM b00njdb2 (Listen)TUE
Full coverage and analysis of the day's news with CarolynTUE
Quinn. Plus Weather.TUE
TUE
18:00 Six O'Clock News b00njfwk (Listen)TUE
The latest national and international news from BBC RadioTUE
4.TUE
TUE
18:30 Too Much Information b00nk4wt (Listen)TUE
Episode 4TUE
Comedy by Neil Warhurst about a tourist information centreTUE
in a town with no tourist attractions whatsoever.TUE
Waft Tourist Information resurrects an old Waft tradition,TUE
The Day of the Pie, in which the ugliest boy of theTUE
village eats a pork pie on the village green.TUE
Warren ...... Jeff RawleTUE
Douglas ...... Malcolm TierneyTUE
Heather ...... Liza SadovyTUE
Lucy ...... Joannah TinceyTUE
Bryan ...... Paul BarnhillTUE
Tourist Information Machine ...... Philip FoxTUE
Tyler (Piggy) ...... Rhys Jennings.TUE
TUE
19:00 The Archers b00njcpw (Listen)TUE
Eddie's good intentions go to pot.TUE
TUE
19:15 Front Row b00njg1n (Listen)TUE
Arts news and reviews with Kirsty Lang. Including anTUE
interview with director Penny Woolcock, whose work rangesTUE
from opera to a new hip-hop musical filmed in Birmingham.TUE
TUE
19:45 Woman's Hour Drama b00njh98 (Listen)TUE
Singleparentpals.com, Getting Back on the HorseTUE
Sue Teddern's story of the developing friendship betweenTUE
two single parents who correspond via a parenting adviceTUE
website.TUE
Rosie has an interview for promotion and Tom has his firstTUE
date for years. Who is the most nervous of the two?TUE
Rosie ...... Maxine PeakeTUE
Tom ...... Kris MarshallTUE
Spp.com/Tash ...... Laura MolyneuxTUE
Gill ...... Janice AcquahTUE
Jo-C ...... Annabelle DowlerTUE
Bazz ...... Jonathan TaflerTUE
Directed by David Hunter.TUE
TUE
20:00 File on 4 b00nk55r (Listen)TUE
The head of the Financial Services Authority, Lord Turner,TUE
has questioned the social usefulness of what banks do. ButTUE
as he and other regulators wrestle with ways ofTUE
controlling so-called 'casino operations', MichaelTUE
Robinson lifts the lid on the latest tricks of the tradeTUE
which some banks are now using to increase profits.TUE
TUE
20:40 In Touch b00nk55t (Listen)TUE
Peter White with news and information for the blind andTUE
partially sighted.TUE
TUE
21:00 All in the Mind b00nk5t4 (Listen)TUE
Claudia Hammond presents the series exploring the latestTUE
scientific research about the brain and the mind.TUE
TUE
21:30 The Choice b00nk2c2 (Listen)TUE
Michael Buerk interviews people who have madeTUE
life-altering decisions and talks them through the wholeTUE
process, from the original dilemma to living with theTUE
consequences.TUE
Michael talks to former banking executive Paul Moore aboutTUE
his choice to blow the whistle on HBOS.TUE
TUE
21:58 Weather b00njhnc (Listen)TUE
The latest weather forecast.TUE
TUE
22:00 The World Tonight b00njj38 (Listen)TUE
National and international news and analysis with RitulaTUE
Shah.TUE
TUE
22:45 Book at Bedtime b00njj5y (Listen)TUE
Heartland, Episode 7TUE
Alex Jones and David Holt read from the novel by AnthonyTUE
Cartwright, set in 2002 in the fictional Black CountryTUE
community of Cinderheath.TUE
Jasmine unexpectedly bumps in to an old friend fromTUE
primary school.TUE
Abridged by Jane Marshall.TUE
A Jane Marshall production for BBC Radio 4.TUE
TUE
23:00 As Told to Craig Brown b00b71ds (Listen)TUE
Episode 4TUE
Craig Brown introduces a mixture of satire, socialTUE
observation and nonsense.TUE
Narrated by Juliet Stevenson and Steve Wright, with JohnTUE
Humphrys, Ronni Ancona, Jon Culshaw, Lewis MacLeod, SallyTUE
Grace, Ewan Bailey and Margaret Cabourn-Smith.TUE
TUE
23:30 Today in Parliament b00njk8c (Listen)TUE
News, views and features on today's stories in ParliamentTUE
with Susan Hulme.TUE
TUE
WED
WEDNESDAY 4 NOVEMBER 2009WED
WED
00:00 Midnight News b00nj8dq (Listen)WED
The latest national and international news from BBC RadioWED
4. Followed by Weather.WED
WED
00:30 Book of the Week b00nnn9t (Listen)WED
The Secret Lives of Somerset Maugham, Episode 2WED
Barbara Flynn reads from Selina Hastings' biography ofWED
Somerset Maugham, which sheds new light on his complexWED
character.WED
Still struggling to make ends meet, Maugham has a changeWED
of fortune when the manager of the Royal Court TheatreWED
decides to stage his play, Lady Frederick.WED
Abridged by Libby Spurrier.WED
A Pier production for BBC Radio 4.WED
WED
00:48 Shipping Forecast b00nj8j8 (Listen)WED
The latest shipping forecast.WED
WED
01:00 Selection of BBC World Service Programmes b00nj8wy (Listen)WED
BBC Radio 4 joins the BBC World Service.WED
WED
05:20 Shipping Forecast b00nj8qz (Listen)WED
The latest shipping forecast.WED
WED
05:30 News Briefing b00nj90k (Listen)WED
The latest news from BBC Radio 4.WED
WED
05:43 Prayer for the Day b00nj99j (Listen)WED
Daily prayer and reflection with Rev Roger Hutchings.WED
WED
05:45 Farming Today b00nj99l (Listen)WED
News and issues in rural Britain with Anna Hill.WED
WED
06:00 Today b00nj9f7 (Listen)WED
With Evan Davis and John Humphrys. Including Sports Desk;WED
Weather; Thought for the Day; Yesterday in Parliament.WED
WED
09:00 Midweek b00nk9hx (Listen)WED
Lively and diverse conversation with Libby Purves andWED
guests including Lawrence Dallaglio.WED
WED
09:45 Book of the Week b00nnn9w (Listen)WED
The Secret Lives of Somerset Maugham, Episode 3WED
Barbara Flynn reads from Selina Hastings' biography ofWED
Somerset Maugham, which sheds new light on his complexWED
character.WED
In 1915, with the codename Somerville, Maugham isWED
despatched to Geneva to work for British intelligence.WED
Abridged by Libby Spurrier.WED
A Pier production for BBC Radio 4.WED
WED
10:00 Woman's Hour b00nj9p4 (Listen)WED
With Jane Garvey. Including drama: Singleparentpals.com.WED
WED
11:00 M1: The Modernist Marvel b00nk9hz (Listen)WED
As the M1, Britain's first major motorway, celebrates itsWED
50th year, performance poet and musician John HegleyWED
presents a poetic meditation on the 200-mile stretch ofWED
road that is the transport backbone of Britain.WED
With his mandolin in tow, John slows down, turns off andWED
seeks out the overlooked sights and sounds of the M1. HeWED
learns why there is no Junction 3, discovers that thereWED
was a scientific formula to the loo break that determinedWED
how far apart service stations should be built, andWED
admires the road for the glimpse on the modern world itWED
offers us.WED
WED
11:30 Hut 33 b00nk9j1 (Listen)WED
Series 3, Spitfire PokerWED
Sitcom by James Cary, set in Bletchley Park in 1941. ThreeWED
code-breakers are forced to share a draughty wooden hut asWED
they try to break German ciphers. Unfortunately, they hateWED
each other.WED
The codebreakers of Bletchley Park are in the doghouseWED
again, so to make amends they help raise money for theWED
town's Spitfire fund. Unfortunately Charles promptly losesWED
the money in a card game, trying to impress an old schoolWED
chum, so the hut must try to win it back somehow. ArchieWED
can't believe Charles is so desperate to curry favour withWED
a former prefect and Minka has trouble understanding theWED
rules of gentlemen's clubs.WED
Charles ...... Robert BathurstWED
Archie ...... Tom Goodman-HillWED
Minka...... Olivia ColmanWED
Gordon ...... Fergus CraigWED
Joshua ...... Alex MacQueenWED
Mrs Best ...... Lill RoughleyWED
Byron ...... Alex LoweWED
Butler ...... Phillip Fox.WED
WED
12:00 You and Yours b00njb1r (Listen)WED
Consumer news and issues with Winifred Robinson.WED
WED
12:57 Weather b00njcb8 (Listen)WED
The latest weather forecast.WED
WED
13:00 World at One b00njcnx (Listen)WED
National and international news with Martha Kearney.WED
WED
13:30 The Media Show b00nk9j3 (Listen)WED
Steve Hewlett presents a topical programme about theWED
fast-changing media world.WED
WED
14:00 The Archers b00njcpw (Listen)WED
Eddie's good intentions go to pot.WED
WED
14:15 Afternoon Play b00nk9j5 (Listen)WED
Ivan and the DogsWED
By Hattie Naylor. The extraordinary true story of IvanWED
Mishukov, who walked out of his Moscow apartment at theWED
age of four and spent two years living on the city streetsWED
where he was adopted by a pack of wild dogs.WED
Ivan ...... Tom GlenisterWED
Cellist: Sarah MoodyWED
Directed by Paul Dodgson.WED
A Pier production for BBC Radio 4.WED
WED
15:00 Money Box Live b00nkb08 (Listen)WED
Vincent Duggleby and guests answer listeners' questions onWED
the subject of mortgages.WED
Guests:WED
Paula John, Your MortgageWED
Ray Boulger, mortgage brokers John CharcoalWED
Louise Cuming, mortgage specialist, Cuming Associates Ltd.WED
WED
15:30 Afternoon Reading b00nmt87 (Listen)WED
Tales From The Low Countries, The Fortress at BrugesWED
Series of evocative new stories set in the Netherlands,WED
Belgium and Luxembourg.WED
By Gregory Norminton, set in the not-so-distant future inWED
'what remains of Belgium'.WED
Following floods caused by global warming, most of the LowWED
Countries are now under the sea, but the medieval city ofWED
Bruges has survived due to a feat of engineering calledWED
The Fortress. The solidarity of two old friends - aWED
Walloon historian and a Fleming engineer - is tested byWED
the arrival on the scene of Jean's new girlfriend,WED
Magdalena.WED
Read by Stephen Campbell Moore.WED
WED
15:45 A History of Private Life b00njctb (Listen)WED
Exporting the HomeWED
Historian Amanda Vickery presents a series which revealsWED
the hidden history of home over 400 years. She draws onWED
first-hand accounts from letters and diaries, many ofWED
which have never been heard before. Including songs whichWED
have been specially recorded for the series.WED
Homes were exposed to huge forces of change in the 19thWED
and 20th century, responding to industrialisation,WED
pollution and the imperial mission. Prof Vickery exploresWED
how they remained idealised havens in a heartless, dirtyWED
world.WED
Prof Vickery explores the kind of homes the BritishWED
struggled to create in India, using the diaries andWED
letters of colonial settlers.WED
Readers: Deborah Findlay, John Sessions, Madeleine BrollyWED
and Simon Tcherniak.WED
Singers: Gwyneth Herbert and Thomas Guthrie, with DavidWED
Owen Norris at the keyboard.WED
A Loftus production for BBC Radio 4.WED
WED
16:00 Thinking Allowed b00nkb0b (Listen)WED
In a series of special programmes in association with theWED
Open University, Laurie Taylor explores the subject ofWED
white collar crime, from its late addition to the statuteWED
books to the increasing difficulty in securing aWED
conviction. He speaks to the key academic experts in theWED
field, explores the latest sociological research and hearsWED
from professionals on both sides of the law about theWED
culture, the practice and most often the non-prosecutionWED
of white collar crime.WED
In this edition, Laurie considers the culture of theWED
crime. What exactly is white collar crime, who commits itWED
and why?WED
WED
16:30 All in the Mind b00nk5t4 (Listen)WED
Claudia Hammond presents the series exploring the latestWED
scientific research about the brain and the mind.WED
WED
16:56 1989: Day by Day b00njd4h (Listen)WED
4th November 1989WED
Sir John Tusa looks back at the events making the news 20WED
years ago.WED
Margaret Thatcher is the least popular prime ministerWED
since polling began - she will stand down after the nextWED
election; SDLP leader John Hume throws down the gauntletWED
to the IRA; and, he may have a 'Vision of Britain', butWED
Prince Charles is compared to Hitler, Mussolini and Stalin.WED
A Somethin' Else production for BBC Radio 4.WED
WED
17:00 PM b00njdb4 (Listen)WED
Full coverage and analysis of the day's news with CarolynWED
Quinn. Plus Weather.WED
WED
18:00 Six O'Clock News b00njfwm (Listen)WED
The latest national and international news from BBC RadioWED
4.WED
WED
18:30 Rudy's Rare Records b00nkb2s (Listen)WED
Series 2, Ride With MeWED
Sitcom by Danny Robins, set in the finest, feistiest,WED
family-run record shop in Birmingham.WED
Adam takes his mortality a little too seriously, and findsWED
himself confronted with a little too much lycra.WED
Adam ...... Lenny HenryWED
Rudy ...... Larrington WalkerWED
Richie ...... Joe JacobsWED
Tasha ...... Natasha GodfreyWED
Clifton ...... Jeffery KissoonWED
DJ Karel ...... Andrew Brooke.WED
WED
19:00 The Archers b00njcpy (Listen)WED
Lilian calls in the experts.WED
WED
19:15 Front Row b00njg1q (Listen)WED
Arts news and reviews with Mark Lawson, including anWED
interview with Ben Elton whose new novel, Meltdown, chartsWED
the rise and fall of a City trader.WED
WED
19:45 Woman's Hour Drama b00njh8w (Listen)WED
Singleparentpals.com, Coming CleanWED
Sue Teddern's story of the developing friendship betweenWED
two single parents who correspond via a parenting adviceWED
website.WED
The honesty game backfires on Tom. Is this the end of aWED
short but beautiful friendship with Rosie?WED
Rosie ...... Maxine PeakeWED
Tom ...... Kris MarshallWED
Spp.com/Tash ...... Laura MolyneuxWED
Gill ...... Janice AcquahWED
Jo-C ...... Annabelle DowlerWED
Directed by David Hunter.WED
WED
20:00 Moral Maze b00nkcfk (Listen)WED
Michael Buerk chairs a debate on the moral questionsWED
behind the week's news. Kenan Malik, Melanie Phillips,WED
James Panton and Clifford Longley cross-examine witnesses.WED
WED
20:45 The Cases That Changed Our World b00nknyx (Listen)WED
Episode 1WED
Clive Coleman tells the stories of cases that shaped ourWED
lives but which are little known outside the legal world.WED
The dramatic 1670 trial of two Quakers which establishedWED
the principle that judges cannot intimidate juries, noWED
matter how furious the bench may be.WED
WED
21:00 A Voyage on Livingstone's Lake b00grftd (Listen)WED
Adam Lusekelo tells the story of the MV Ilala, a boatWED
built 60 years ago by Yarrow and Company in Glasgow as aWED
passenger and cargo ship destined for Lake Nyasa,WED
modern-day Lake Malawi. In a remarkable feat ofWED
engineering, it was shipped out in pieces via MozambiqueWED
and transported overland to be reconstructed on the shoresWED
of the inland lake, which has no navigable outlet to theWED
sea. Today, it is still sailing the lake, providing aWED
vital lifeline to remote communities in Malawi andWED
Mozambique.WED
A Ruth Evans production for BBC Radio 4.WED
WED
21:30 Midweek b00nk9hx (Listen)WED
Lively and diverse conversation with Libby Purves andWED
guests including Lawrence Dallaglio.WED
WED
21:58 Weather b00njhnf (Listen)WED
The latest weather forecast.WED
WED
22:00 The World Tonight b00njj3b (Listen)WED
National and international news and analysis with RitulaWED
Shah.WED
WED
22:45 Book at Bedtime b00njj60 (Listen)WED
Heartland, Episode 8WED
Alex Jones and David Holt read from the novel by AnthonyWED
Cartwright, set in 2002 in the fictional Black CountryWED
community of Cinderheath.WED
Rob is unsettled by the new crowd hanging out in his oldWED
drinking haunt.WED
Abridged by Jane Marshall.WED
A Jane Marshall production for BBC Radio 4.WED
WED
23:00 One b00nkp1w (Listen)WED
Series 3, Episode 5WED
Sketch show written by David Quantick, in which no itemWED
features more than one voice.WED
With Graeme Garden, Dan Maier, Johnny Daukes, DeborahWED
Norton, Katie Davies, Dan Antopolski, Andrew Crawford andWED
David Quantick.WED
WED
23:15 Rik Mayall's Bedside Tales b00nkp1y (Listen)WED
Red CoatWED
Series by Rik Mayall and John Nicholson about theWED
sometimes beautiful, sometimes bizarre oddities of humanWED
behaviour. Rik tells the tale of Red Coat.WED
WED
23:30 Today in Parliament b00njk8f (Listen)WED
News, views and features on today's stories in ParliamentWED
with David Wilby.WED
WED
THU
THURSDAY 5 NOVEMBER 2009THU
THU
00:00 Midnight News b00nj8ds (Listen)THU
The latest national and international news from BBC RadioTHU
4. Followed by Weather.THU
THU
00:30 Book of the Week b00nnn9w (Listen)THU
The Secret Lives of Somerset Maugham, Episode 3THU
Barbara Flynn reads from Selina Hastings' biography ofTHU
Somerset Maugham, which sheds new light on his complexTHU
character.THU
In 1915, with the codename Somerville, Maugham isTHU
despatched to Geneva to work for British intelligence.THU
Abridged by Libby Spurrier.THU
A Pier production for BBC Radio 4.THU
THU
00:48 Shipping Forecast b00nj8jb (Listen)THU
The latest shipping forecast.THU
THU
01:00 Selection of BBC World Service Programmes b00nj8x0 (Listen)THU
BBC Radio 4 joins the BBC World Service.THU
THU
05:20 Shipping Forecast b00nj8r1 (Listen)THU
The latest shipping forecast.THU
THU
05:30 News Briefing b00nj90m (Listen)THU
The latest news from BBC Radio 4.THU
THU
05:43 Prayer for the Day b00nj99n (Listen)THU
Daily prayer and reflection with Rev Roger Hutchings.THU
THU
05:45 Farming Today b00nj99q (Listen)THU
News and issues in rural Britain with Charlotte Smith.THU
THU
06:00 Today b00nj9f9 (Listen)THU
With Sarah Montague and John Humphrys. Including SportsTHU
Desk; Weather; Thought for the Day; Yesterday inTHU
Parliament.THU
THU
09:00 In Our Time b00nkqrv (Listen)THU
The Siege of MünsterTHU
Melvyn Bragg and guests Diarmaid MacCulloch, Lucy WoodingTHU
and Charlotte Methuen discuss the Siege of Münster inTHU
1534, when radical Anabaptists tried to create the 'NewTHU
Jerusalem' in a small German town, with horrificTHU
consequences.THU
THU
09:45 Book of the Week b00nnn9y (Listen)THU
The Secret Lives of Somerset Maugham, Episode 4THU
Barbara Flynn reads from Selina Hastings' biography ofTHU
Somerset Maugham, which sheds new light on his complexTHU
character.THU
With his marriage to Syrie imploding, Maugham escapes toTHU
the south of France with Gerald and buys the VillaTHU
Mauresque.THU
Abridged by Libby Spurrier.THU
A Pier production for BBC Radio 4.THU
THU
10:00 Woman's Hour b00nj9p6 (Listen)THU
With Jane Garvey. Including drama: Singleparentpals.com.THU
THU
11:00 From Our Own Correspondent b00nkqrx (Listen)THU
Kate Adie introduces BBC foreign correspondents with theTHU
stories behind the headlines.THU
THU
11:30 Reece Shearsmith's Haunted House b00nkqrz (Listen)THU
Films, Fangs and Frightening FellasTHU
Comic actor Reece Shearsmith hosts energetic and wittyTHU
illustrated discussions on horror, before an audienceTHU
inside the reputedly haunted Sutton House in Hackney.THU
Reece examines classic scary moments from the movies andTHU
looks back at some of the great horror actors.THU
He is joined by horror enthusiasts Mark Gatiss, VicTHU
Reeves, Yvette Fielding and Mike Roberts.THU
THU
12:00 You and Yours b00njb1t (Listen)THU
Consumer news and issues with Winifred Robinson.THU
THU
12:57 Weather b00njcbb (Listen)THU
The latest weather forecast.THU
THU
13:00 World at One b00njcnz (Listen)THU
National and international news with Martha Kearney.THU
THU
13:30 Off the Page b00nks89 (Listen)THU
Leaving the Comfort ZoneTHU
Is leaving your comfort zone a form of masochism, or theTHU
only way to develop in life? Dominic Arkwright is joinedTHU
by comedian Rhona Cameron, mountaineer Andy Cave andTHU
journalist Agnes Poirier to write about and discussTHU
comfort and pain.THU
THU
14:00 The Archers b00njcpy (Listen)THU
Lilian calls in the experts.THU
THU
14:15 Afternoon Play b00nks8c (Listen)THU
The Penny Dreadfuls Present: Guy FawkesTHU
What exactly is it that we’re asked to remember on the 5thTHU
of November? As the nation prepares for Bonfire Night;THU
highly acclaimed comedy trio, The Penny Dreadfuls, take aTHU
fresh and timely look at a familiar story with a comedic,THU
stirring and sometimes graphic exploration of the build-upTHU
to and aftermath of the Gunpowder Plot for The AfternoonTHU
Play.THU
Recorded in front of an audience at the Radio Theatre inTHU
London, there's plenty of laughs in places where you leastTHU
expect them – from the boisterously optimistic meetings ofTHU
the conspirators through to Fawke’s internment in theTHU
Tower of London.THU
Starring Kevin Eldon as Guy, The Penny Dreadfuls will alsoTHU
be joined on stage by Miles Jupp and Andrew Pugsley.THU
The Penny Dreadfuls are David Reed, Humphrey Ker and ThomTHU
Tuck.THU
The Penny Dreadfuls have previously written and performedTHU
two series of the Victorian themed Brothers Faversham forTHU
Radio 7 have just finished their fourth highly successfulTHU
year at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival.THU
Guy Fawkes ...... Kevin EldonTHU
Thomas Percy ...... Miles JuppTHU
John Wright ...... David ReedTHU
Robert Catesby ...... Thom TuckTHU
Thomas Winter ...... Andrew PugsleyTHU
Sir William Waad ...... Humphrey Ker.THU
THU
15:00 Open Country b00nhn1n (Listen)THU
Brian May's 3-D VillageTHU
Queen guitarist Brian May uncovers the story of anTHU
Oxfordshire village captured in time by VictorianTHU
photographic pioneer T.R. Williams.THU
May has been fascinated by 3-D images since collectingTHU
cereal packet picture cards as a boy. He was particularlyTHU
intrigued by a set of stereoscopic images of village lifeTHU
taken by photographic pioneer T.R. Williams. FurtherTHU
investigation revealed all the images to be 3-D picturesTHU
of the tiny Oxfordshire village of Hinton Waldrist, takenTHU
in the 1850s.THU
Brian joins presenter Helen Mark for a time-travel tour ofTHU
the village. Together they discover how the people andTHU
wildlife of this Thames-side community have changed sinceTHU
Williams recorded these evocative images of blacksmiths,THU
spinners and farm workers.THU
Kerry Lock of the Berkshire, Buckinghamshire andTHU
Oxfordshire Wildlife Trust describes the waxing and waningTHU
of wildlife over the past 160 years, while Nicola VerdonTHU
of the British Agricultural History Society examines theTHU
telling detail in photos taken at the height of farming'sTHU
golden age.THU
To discuss the past, present and future of 3-D photographyTHU
Helen is also joined by Brian's collaborator, the photoTHU
historian Elena Vidal and by David Burder of the BritishTHU
Stereoscopic Society. Has the boom in 3-D cinema and theTHU
launch of a 3-D digital camera come at just the right timeTHU
for a revival of interest in T.R. Williams and a re-birthTHU
of the art of stereoscopic photography?THU
THU
15:27 Radio 4 Appeal b00nhsn6 (Listen)THU
Meningitis UKTHU
Sandi Toksvig appeals on behalf of Meningitis UK.THU
Donations to Meningitis UK should be sent to FREEPOST BBCTHU
Radio 4 Appeal, please mark the back of your envelopeTHU
Meningitis UK. Credit cards: Freephone 0800 404 8144. IfTHU
you are a UK tax payer, please provide Meningitis UK withTHU
your full name and address so they can claim the Gift AidTHU
on your donation. The online and phone donation facilitiesTHU
are not currently available to listeners without a UKTHU
postcode.THU
Registered Charity No:1076774.THU
THU
15:30 Afternoon Reading b00nmt7y (Listen)THU
Tales From The Low Countries, In Landlocked FrontiersTHU
Series of evocative new stories set in the Netherlands,THU
Belgium and Luxembourg.THU
By Georges Hausemer.THU
A nostalgic story about a childhood lived alongside theTHU
Luxembourgeois railway with a father who worked as aTHU
pointsman.THU
Translated by Michael Hoffman, read by Michael Pennington.THU
THU
15:45 A History of Private Life b00njctd (Listen)THU
DunroaminTHU
Historian Amanda Vickery presents a series which revealsTHU
the hidden history of home over 400 years. She draws onTHU
first-hand accounts from letters and diaries, many ofTHU
which have never been heard before. Including songs whichTHU
have been specially recorded for the series.THU
Homes were exposed to huge forces of change in the 19thTHU
and 20th century, responding to industrialisation,THU
pollution and the imperial mission. Prof Vickery exploresTHU
how they remained idealised havens in a heartless, dirtyTHU
world.THU
The roots of the suburb lie very deep; but for snobs andTHU
bohemians, the adjective 'suburban' has always been theTHU
ultimate put-down. Prof Vickery listens to the experiencesTHU
of those who moved there.THU
Readers: Deborah Findlay, John Sessions, Madeleine BrollyTHU
and Simon Tcherniak.THU
Singers: Gwyneth Herbert and Thomas Guthrie, with DavidTHU
Owen Norris at the keyboard.THU
A Loftus production for BBC Radio 4.THU
THU
16:00 Bookclub b00nhv5s (Listen)THU
Linda GrantTHU
James Naughtie and readers talk to Linda Grant about herTHU
novel When I Lived in Modern Times, winner of the OrangeTHU
Prize for Fiction in 2000.THU
Linda is known for bringing a strong Jewish identity toTHU
most of her writing. 'Scratch a Jew and you've got aTHU
story', remarks the main character Evelyn Sert on theTHU
story's first page as she looks over her life. The novelTHU
follows Evelyn - hairdresser, spy, lover - on her voyageTHU
from post-war London to Tel Aviv, where the British areTHU
preparing to leave Palestine and the new state of IsraelTHU
is about to be born.THU
THU
16:30 Material World b00nkv3p (Listen)THU
DNA is celebrated as the molecule that carries our genesTHU
from generation to generation. But a small group ofTHU
pioneering chemists are using DNA to build theTHU
nano-engines of the future. Quentin Cooper hears aboutTHU
these miniature biological machines.THU
THU
16:56 1989: Day by Day b00njd4k (Listen)THU
5th November 1989THU
Sir John Tusa looks back at the events making the news 20THU
years ago.THU
Former Chancellor Nigel Lawson makes things even moreTHU
difficult for Margaret Thatcher by spilling the beans onTHU
TV; the Sony Walkman celebrates its 10th birthday but theTHU
Noise Abatement Society doesn't; the greatest romanticTHU
pianist of his generation, Vladimir Horowitz, dies.THU
A Somethin' Else production for BBC Radio 4.THU
THU
17:00 PM b00njdb6 (Listen)THU
Full coverage and analysis of the day's news with EddieTHU
Mair. Plus Weather.THU
THU
18:00 Six O'Clock News b00njfwp (Listen)THU
The latest national and international news from BBC RadioTHU
4.THU
THU
18:30 Bleak Expectations b00nkv3r (Listen)THU
Series 3, A Now Grim Life Yet More GrimifiedTHU
Comedy Victorian adventure by Mark Evans.THU
Pip Bin faces his most gruelling fate yet at the hands ofTHU
his evil undead ex-guardian and an enormous quantity ofTHU
cheese. But can the spirits of Harvest Festival past,THU
present and future show him a way to redemption?THU
Sir Philip ...... Richard JohnsonTHU
Young Pip Bin ...... Tom AllenTHU
Gently Benevolent ...... Anthony HeadTHU
Harry Biscuit ...... James BachmanTHU
Mr Wackwallop ...... Geoffrey WhiteheadTHU
Ripely ...... Sarah HadlandTHU
Pippa ...... Susy Kane.THU
THU
19:00 The Archers b00njcq0 (Listen)THU
Bonfire night keeps its sparkle for Vicky.THU
THU
19:15 Front Row b00njg1s (Listen)THU
Arts news and reviews with Mark Lawson, who discusses theTHU
newly-published and long awaited second volume of TSTHU
Eliot's letters.THU
THU
19:45 Woman's Hour Drama b00njh8y (Listen)THU
Singleparentpals.com, The Other ManTHU
Sue Teddern's story of the developing friendship betweenTHU
two single parents who correspond via a parenting adviceTHU
website.THU
Rosie has a new boyfriend but still seeks Tom's advice.THU
Rosie ...... Maxine PeakeTHU
Tom ...... Kris MarshallTHU
Spp.com/Tash ...... Laura MolyneuxTHU
Gill ...... Janice AcquahTHU
Scott/Mark ...... Matt AddisTHU
Directed by David Hunter.THU
THU
20:00 Law in Action b00nk4wp (Listen)THU
Clive Coleman interviews Ken MacDonald, the formerTHU
Director of Public Prosecutions, about his five years inTHU
the position from 2003 to 2008.THU
THU
20:30 The Bottom Line b00nkv3t (Listen)THU
Evan Davis presents the business magazine. EntrepreneursTHU
and company bosses talk about the issues that matter toTHU
their companies and their customers.THU
THU
21:00 Leading Edge b00nkwz1 (Listen)THU
The oldest rocks on Earth are aliens! They are theTHU
left-over building rubble from the formation of the solarTHU
system and can be dated to an incredible 4,567 millionTHU
years old. A surprising number fall to Earth each year asTHU
meteorites.THU
November 5th is probably the worst night of the year forTHU
spotting incandescent rocks streaking through the sky, butTHU
tracking down a fresh meteorite, before it getsTHU
contaminated by terrestrial chemicals, is the ultimateTHU
prize for the hunters. A rare few carry complex carbonTHU
compounds - perhaps remnants of the material out of whichTHU
the first life on Earth formed.THU
Geoff Watts hears from meteorite hunters who scour theTHU
deserts of Arizona and Australia and the ice of Canada andTHU
Antarctica to seek out extra-terrestrial rocks and meetsTHU
those who analyse them, using traces of rare elements toTHU
track their history and reveal their origins.THU
THU
21:30 In Our Time b00nkqrv (Listen)THU
The Siege of MünsterTHU
Melvyn Bragg and guests Diarmaid MacCulloch, Lucy WoodingTHU
and Charlotte Methuen discuss the Siege of Münster inTHU
1534, when radical Anabaptists tried to create the 'NewTHU
Jerusalem' in a small German town, with horrificTHU
consequences.THU
THU
21:58 Weather b00njhnh (Listen)THU
The latest weather forecast.THU
THU
22:00 The World Tonight b00njj3d (Listen)THU
National and international news and analysis with RobinTHU
Lustig.THU
THU
22:45 Book at Bedtime b00njj62 (Listen)THU
Heartland, Episode 9THU
Alex Jones and David Holt read from the novel by AnthonyTHU
Cartwright, set in 2002 in the fictional Black CountryTHU
community of Cinderheath.THU
Rob hears some worrying news at school.THU
Abridged by Jane Marshall.THU
A Jane Marshall production for BBC Radio 4.THU
THU
23:00 Pick Ups b00nrrdc (Listen)THU
Series 2, All Bar NunTHU
Sitcom by Ian Kershaw, set around a Manchester taxiTHU
company.THU
Alan and Lind reveal hidden talents, while Dave seeks aTHU
nun's advice on infidelity.THU
Mike ...... Paul LoughranTHU
Lind ...... Lesley SharpTHU
Dave ...... Phil RowsonTHU
Alan ...... Parvez QadirTHU
Shelly ...... Naomi RadcliffeTHU
Drunk ...... Mark E SmithTHU
Tanya ...... Janie Connolly.THU
THU
23:30 Today in Parliament b00njk8h (Listen)THU
News, views and features on today's stories in ParliamentTHU
with Sean Curran.THU
THU
FRI
FRIDAY 6 NOVEMBER 2009FRI
FRI
00:00 Midnight News b00nj8dv (Listen)FRI
The latest national and international news from BBC RadioFRI
4. Followed by Weather.FRI
FRI
00:30 Book of the Week b00nnn9y (Listen)FRI
The Secret Lives of Somerset Maugham, Episode 4FRI
Barbara Flynn reads from Selina Hastings' biography ofFRI
Somerset Maugham, which sheds new light on his complexFRI
character.FRI
With his marriage to Syrie imploding, Maugham escapes toFRI
the south of France with Gerald and buys the VillaFRI
Mauresque.FRI
Abridged by Libby Spurrier.FRI
A Pier production for BBC Radio 4.FRI
FRI
00:48 Shipping Forecast b00nj8jd (Listen)FRI
The latest shipping forecast.FRI
FRI
01:00 Selection of BBC World Service Programmes b00nj8x2 (Listen)FRI
BBC Radio 4 joins the BBC World Service.FRI
FRI
05:20 Shipping Forecast b00nj8r3 (Listen)FRI
The latest shipping forecast.FRI
FRI
05:30 News Briefing b00nj90p (Listen)FRI
The latest news from BBC Radio 4.FRI
FRI
05:43 Prayer for the Day b00nj99s (Listen)FRI
Daily prayer and reflection with Rev Roger Hutchings.FRI
FRI
05:45 Farming Today b00nj99v (Listen)FRI
News and issues in rural Britain with Charlotte Smith.FRI
FRI
06:00 Today b00nj9fc (Listen)FRI
With James Naughtie and Evan Davis. Including Sports Desk;FRI
Weather; Thought for the Day; Yesterday in Parliament.FRI
FRI
09:00 Desert Island Discs b00nht5f (Listen)FRI
Jerry SpringerFRI
Kirsty Young's castaway is Jerry Springer.FRI
His life has been split between serving the public andFRI
outraging them. His first career was in politics where, asFRI
a life-long Democrat, one of his early jobs was workingFRI
with Bobby Kennedy. Then he found global fame with hisFRI
controversial TV programme, The Jerry Springer Show.FRI
He says that in politics and in his TV show, he is alwaysFRI
on the side of the powerless and disenfranchised. It's aFRI
philosophy, he says, he learned from his parents. TheyFRI
were among the last Jews to escape from Berlin in AugustFRI
1939 and their memories and fears of that time shaped theFRI
entire family.FRI
FRI
09:45 Book of the Week b00nnnb0 (Listen)FRI
The Secret Lives of Somerset Maugham, Episode 5FRI
Barbara Flynn reads from Selina Hastings' biography ofFRI
Somerset Maugham, which sheds new light on his complexFRI
character.FRI
When Maugham's companion Gerald Haxton dies, Alan SearleFRI
becomes a major part of Maugham's life.FRI
Abridged by Libby Spurrier.FRI
A Pier production for BBC Radio 4.FRI
FRI
10:00 Woman's Hour b00nj9p8 (Listen)FRI
With Jane Garvey. Including drama: Singleparentpals.com.FRI
FRI
11:00 Lives in a Landscape b00nkz1r (Listen)FRI
Series 5, Play for TomorrowFRI
Documentary series telling original stories about realFRI
lives in Britain today.FRI
Three sixth formers have the summer to get their band backFRI
on track after the bass player and best mate walks out onFRI
them.FRI
Nick, Christian and Lawrence are all 17 and have livedFRI
most of their lives in Grimsby. The closest of friends,FRI
they had hoped to spend the summer gigging with theirFRI
band, Socio Republic. But bassist Reece has just decidedFRI
he no longer wants to be part of the group. The remainingFRI
trio are left shell-shocked by their friend's decision andFRI
the future of the band is cast into serious doubt.FRI
Alan Dein presents an intimate story of friendship underFRI
pressure as the three 'in-betweeners' - not yet men, noFRI
longer boys - spend a long wet summer trying to fillFRI
Reece's shoes and get some gigs. Yet the weeks pass andFRI
the lads - heartbroken and mystified by Reece's departureFRI
- are still without a new bass player. But, as LawrenceFRI
says, 'good things have to end for better things toFRI
begin'. The relentless rain brings on severe boredom andFRI
the lads seem paralysed.FRI
The three are aware that the clock is ticking. UniversityFRI
beckons in a year - when, once again, their friendshipsFRI
will be put to the test.FRI
FRI
11:30 The Richest Man In Britain b00nlx7p (Listen)FRI
Episode 1FRI
Sitcom by Nick Hornby and Giles Smith about an ageing rockFRI
star and his search for fulfilment.FRI
Trillionnaire rocker Dave Mabbutt is persuaded to previewFRI
his 'drums-only' version of 1970s classic album, Temple ofFRI
the Human Mind.FRI
Dave Mabbutt ...... Mark WilliamsFRI
Dom ...... Russell ToveyFRI
Dave's Mum ...... Lynda BellinghamFRI
Jane the Guardian journalist ...... Kerry Fox.FRI
FRI
12:00 You and Yours b00njb1w (Listen)FRI
Consumer news and issues with Peter White.FRI
FRI
12:57 Weather b00njcbd (Listen)FRI
The latest weather forecast.FRI
FRI
13:00 World at One b00njcp1 (Listen)FRI
National and international news with Edward Stourton.FRI
FRI
13:30 Feedback b00nlx8j (Listen)FRI
Roger Bolton airs listeners' views on BBC radio programmesFRI
and policy.FRI
FRI
14:00 The Archers b00njcq0 (Listen)FRI
Bonfire night keeps its sparkle for Vicky.FRI
FRI
14:15 Afternoon Play b00nlxph (Listen)FRI
The Tony Kay ScandalFRI
By Michael McLean.FRI
The true story of the case of footballer Tony Kay, who, inFRI
1965, was convicted of match fixing, sent to prison andFRI
banned for life by the FA. The play follows the course ofFRI
events leading up to Kay's trial, imprisonment andFRI
release, and features recently-recorded observations fromFRI
Kay himself.FRI
Tony Kay ...... Mikey NorthFRI
Peter Swan ...... Carl PrekoppFRI
'Bronco' Layne ...... Karl DaviesFRI
Solicitor ...... Andrew BranchFRI
Harry Catterick ...... Tom BevanFRI
Jimmy Gauld ...... Ross SutherlandFRI
Judge ...... Alan LeithFRI
Prison Governor ...... Ian MastersFRI
Directed by Martin JenkinsFRI
A Pier production for BBC Radio 4.FRI
FRI
15:00 Gardeners' Question Time b00nlxzr (Listen)FRI
Eric Robson chairs the popular horticultural forum.FRI
Chris Beardshaw, Anne Swithinbank and John Cushnie areFRI
guests of Linkinhorne Horticultural Society in Cornwall.FRI
Chris meets the man collecting over 200 varieties ofFRI
Cornish apples, cherries and pears, and Anne celebratesFRI
the office plant, revealing the Office Plant of the Year.FRI
Including Gardening weather forecast.FRI
FRI
15:45 A History of Private Life b00njctg (Listen)FRI
Alternative HomesFRI
Historian Amanda Vickery presents a series which revealsFRI
the hidden history of home over 400 years. She draws onFRI
first-hand accounts from letters and diaries, many ofFRI
which have never been heard before. Including songs whichFRI
have been specially recorded for the series.FRI
Homes were exposed to huge forces of change in the 19thFRI
and 20th century, responding to industrialisation,FRI
pollution, and the imperial mission. Prof Vickery exploresFRI
how they remained idealised havens in a heartless, dirtyFRI
world.FRI
'Home means a place to go to when you are in trouble. AFRI
place sadly altered by war. A place to glorify when awayFRI
and rely on always...' So reported one woman to the MassFRI
Observation survey. Prof Vickery explores the enduringFRI
pull of a home of one's own.FRI
Readers: Deborah Findlay, John Sessions, Madeleine BrollyFRI
and Simon Tcherniak.FRI
Singers: Gwyneth Herbert and Thomas Guthrie, with DavidFRI
Owen Norris at the keyboard.FRI
A Loftus production for BBC Radio 4.FRI
FRI
16:00 Last Word b00nlxzt (Listen)FRI
Matthew Bannister presents the obituary series, analysingFRI
and celebrating the life stories of people who haveFRI
recently died. The programme reflects on people ofFRI
distinction and interest from many walks of life, someFRI
famous and some less well known.FRI
FRI
16:30 The Film Programme b00nlyvf (Listen)FRI
Francine Stock talks to Matthew Sweet as he continues hisFRI
campaign to rewrite the history of British cinema andFRI
bring to light some neglected classics. Plus, PortugueseFRI
director Pedro Costa talks about his trilogy of films setFRI
in a Lisbon slum, starring some of its residents.FRI
FRI
16:56 1989: Day by Day b00njd4m (Listen)FRI
6th November 1989FRI
Sir John Tusa looks back at the events making the news 20FRI
years ago.FRI
A backlash against East German refugees begins in WestFRI
Germany; supporters of women's ordination hold anFRI
overnight vigil outside Lambeth Palace; and it's nunsFRI
versus vicars on the rugby field!FRI
A Somethin' Else production for BBC Radio 4.FRI
FRI
17:00 PM b00njdb8 (Listen)FRI
Full coverage and analysis of the day's news with EddieFRI
Mair. Plus Weather.FRI
FRI
18:00 Six O'Clock News b00njfwr (Listen)FRI
The latest national and international news from BBC RadioFRI
4.FRI
FRI
18:30 The News Quiz b00nlyvh (Listen)FRI
Series 69, Episode 7FRI
Sandi Toksvig chairs the topical comedy quiz. TheFRI
panellists are Jeremy Hardy, Danielle Ward, David MitchellFRI
and Francis Wheen.FRI
FRI
19:00 The Archers b00njcq4 (Listen)FRI
Jennifer finds the truth is hard to take.FRI
FRI
19:15 Front Row b00njg1v (Listen)FRI
Arts news and reviews with Kirsty Lang, including anFRI
interview with the American novelist Paul Auster.FRI
FRI
19:45 Woman's Hour Drama b00njh90 (Listen)FRI
Singleparentpals.com, We Can't Go on Meeting Like ThisFRI
Sue Teddern's story of the developing friendship betweenFRI
two single parents who correspond via a parenting adviceFRI
website.FRI
Tom has a conference in Manchester - is this a chance toFRI
meet Rosie in the flesh?FRI
Rosie ...... Maxine PeakeFRI
Tom ...... Kris MarshallFRI
Spp.com/Tash ...... Laura MolyneuxFRI
Gill ...... Janice AcquahFRI
Jo-C ...... Annabelle DowlerFRI
Bazz ...... Jonathan TaflerFRI
Lily ...... Isadora Dooley HunterFRI
Directed by David Hunter.FRI
FRI
20:00 Any Questions? b00nlyvk (Listen)FRI
Jonathan Dimbleby chairs the topical debate fromFRI
Hartlepool. The panel includes author and documentaryFRI
maker Carol Gould and Vince Cable, treasury spokesman andFRI
deputy leader of the Liberal Democrats.FRI
FRI
20:50 A Point of View b00nlyvm (Listen)FRI
A weekly reflection on a topical issue from Clive James.FRI
FRI
21:00 A History of Private Life: Omnibus b00nlz4c (Listen)FRI
Episode 6FRI
Omnibus edition of Prof Amanda Vickery's series revealingFRI
the hidden history of home over 400 years, drawing onFRI
first-hand accounts from letters and diaries, many ofFRI
which have never been heard before. Including songs whichFRI
have been specially recorded for the series.FRI
Homes were exposed to huge forces of change in the 19thFRI
and 20th century, responding to industrialisation,FRI
pollution and the imperial mission. Prof Vickery exploresFRI
how they remained idealised havens in a heartless, dirtyFRI
world.FRI
The readers are Deborah Findlay, John Sessions, MadeleineFRI
Brolly and Simon Tcherniak.FRI
The singers are Gwyneth Herbert and Thomas Guthrie, withFRI
David Owen Norris at the keyboard.FRI
A Loftus production for BBC Radio 4.FRI
FRI
21:58 Weather b00njhnk (Listen)FRI
The latest weather forecast.FRI
FRI
22:00 The World Tonight b00njj3g (Listen)FRI
National and international news and analysis with RobinFRI
Lustig.FRI
FRI
22:45 Book at Bedtime b00njj64 (Listen)FRI
Heartland, Episode 10FRI
Alex Jones and David Holt read from the novel by AnthonyFRI
Cartwright, set in 2002 in the fictional Black CountryFRI
community of Cinderheath.FRI
It is finally polling day in the local elections.FRI
Abridged by Jane Marshall.FRI
A Jane Marshall production for BBC Radio 4.FRI
FRI
23:00 A Good Read b00nk4wr (Listen)FRI
Sue MacGregor talks to novelists Catherine O'Flynn andFRI
Kate Pullinger at the Birmingham Book Festival about theirFRI
favourite books, including titles by Gordon Burn, DonFRI
DeLillo and Alaa Al Aswany.FRI
FRI
23:30 Today in Parliament b00njk8k (Listen)FRI
News, views and features on today's stories in ParliamentFRI
with Mark D'Arcy.FRI
FRI
FRI
30 October, 2009
Radio 4 Listings for 31/10/2009 - 06/11/2009
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