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SATSATURDAY 31 OCTOBER 2009SATSAT00:00 Midnight News b00nh5vp (Listen)SATThe latest national and international news from BBC RadioSAT4. Followed by Weather.SATSAT00:30 Book of the Week b00nhs7s (Listen)SATDear Mr Bigelow, Episode 5SATSophie Thompson reads from the letters of FrancesSATWoodsford, a Bournemouth council worker, to wealthySATAmerican widower, Paul Bigelow, who she never met, writtenSATbetween 1949 and his death in 1961. They evoke life inSATpostwar Britain, and are introduced by Woodsford herself,SATwho is now in her 90s.SATFrances attends the 'wedding of the year' between herSATbrother and Audrey and begins to get used to life aloneSATwith Mother - only to realise, perhaps too late, that theSATmost important friend in her life is Mr Bigelow, who hasSATnow fallen seriously ill.SATAbridged by Doreen Estall.SATSAT00:48 Shipping Forecast b00nh5vr (Listen)SATThe latest shipping forecast.SATSAT01:00 Selection of BBC World Service Programmes b00nh68j (Listen)SATBBC Radio 4 joins the BBC World Service. BBC Radio 4SATresumes at 5.20am.SATSAT05:20 Shipping Forecast b00nh68l (Listen)SATThe latest shipping forecast.SATSAT05:30 News Briefing b00nh6fk (Listen)SATThe latest news from BBC Radio 4.SATSAT05:43 Prayer for the Day b00nh68n (Listen)SATDaily prayer and reflection with Rev Roger Hutchings.SATSAT05:45 iPM b00nh6cm (Listen)SATThe weekly interactive current affairs magazine featuringSATonline conversation and debate.SATSAT06:00 News and Papers b00nh6cp (Listen)SATThe latest news headlines. Including a look at the papers.SATSAT06:04 Weather b00nhn1l (Listen)SATThe latest weather forecast.SATSAT06:07 Open Country b00nhn1n (Listen)SATBrian May's 3-D VillageSATQueen guitarist Brian May uncovers the story of anSATOxfordshire village captured in time by VictorianSATphotographic pioneer T.R. Williams.SATMay has been fascinated by 3-D images since collectingSATcereal packet picture cards as a boy. He was particularlySATintrigued by a set of stereoscopic images of village lifeSATtaken by photographic pioneer T.R. Williams. FurtherSATinvestigation revealed all the images to be 3-D picturesSATof the tiny Oxfordshire village of Hinton Waldrist, takenSATin the 1850s.SATBrian joins presenter Helen Mark for a time-travel tour ofSATthe village. Together they discover how the people andSATwildlife of this Thames-side community have changed sinceSATWilliams recorded these evocative images of blacksmiths,SATspinners and farm workers.SATKerry Lock of the Berkshire, Buckinghamshire andSATOxfordshire Wildlife Trust describes the waxing and waningSATof wildlife over the past 160 years, while Nicola VerdonSATof the British Agricultural History Society examines theSATtelling detail in photos taken at the height of farming'sSATgolden age.SATTo discuss the past, present and future of 3-D photographySATHelen is also joined by Brian's collaborator, the photoSAThistorian Elena Vidal and by David Burder of the BritishSATStereoscopic Society. Has the boom in 3-D cinema and theSATlaunch of a 3-D digital camera come at just the right timeSATfor a revival of interest in T.R. Williams and a re-birthSATof the art of stereoscopic photography?SATSAT06:30 Farming Today b00nhn1q (Listen)SATFarming Today This WeekSATEvery year 6.7 million tonnes of food are thrown away.SATThat's about 10 billion pounds-worth. Charlotte SmithSATvisits a village where residents are embracing food wasteSATrecycling and asks the environment secretary Hilary BennSATif similar schemes could be rolled out across the country.SATSAT06:57 Weather b00nhn1s (Listen)SATThe latest weather forecast.SATSAT07:00 Today b00nhn1v (Listen)SATWith James Naughtie and John Humphrys. Including SportsSATDesk; Weather; Thought for the Day.SATSAT09:00 Saturday Live b00nhn1x (Listen)SATReal life stories in which listeners talk about the issuesSATthat matter to them.SATFi Glover is joined by clinical psychologist and writerSATDorothy Rowe.SATWith poetry from Elvis McGonagal.SATSAT10:00 Excess Baggage b00nhn1z (Listen)SATJohn McCarthy explores Berlin with the head of tourism andSATa writer who lives there, and finds a forward-looking andSATvibrant city coming to terms with a turbulent past.SATJohn also meets two former British soldiers who talk aboutSATtheir travelling life with the army.SATSAT10:30 Now Wash Your Hands b00nhn21 (Listen)SATThe story of the original Izal Medicated, in the words ofSATpeople who have a soft spot for hard toilet paper.SATFeaturing songs written by the presenter, Sally Goldsmith,SATand sung by a Professor of Infectious Diseases at theSATUniversity of Sheffield and locals of the city, where theSATpaper was originally made.SATA Loftus Audio production for BBC Radio 4.SATSAT11:00 Week in Westminster b00nhn23 (Listen)SATLeaks of what Sir Christopher Kelly is proposing for MPsSATand their allowances increased the sense of gloom amongstSATMPs this week.SATHilary the former Labour chief whip who is retiring at theSATnext election feels the recommendations will deter women,SATespecially those with children, from becoming MPs.SATAnother topic of conversation at Westminster this week wasSATwhether or not Tony Blair should become president of theSATEuropean council when the Lisbon Treaty is finallySATratified. Patricia Hewitt Michael Howard and Ed DaveySATdiscuss.SATAlso in the programmeSATHow could the government make a misjudgement over theSATfunding of the Territorial Army so soon after having theirSATclimb down over the issue of the Ghurkhas? Lindsey HoyleSATand Desmond Swayne give their verdict.SATAnd two parliamentary prospective candidates Claire KelleySAT( Liberal Democrat) and Sean Bailey (Conservative) talk ofSATtheir expectations of what parliamentary life mightSATinvolve.SATSAT11:30 From Our Own Correspondent b00nhn25 (Listen)SATKate Adie introduces BBC foreign correspondents with theSATstories behind the headlines.SATA talk with a night witch in Moscow; fear, suspicion andSATheavy artillery on the streets of Conakry, Guinea; whatSATthe ancient traditions of Halloween reveal about modernSATAmerica; an insight into the two rivals about to contestSATthe second round of the Afghan presidential election.SATSAT12:00 Money Box b00nhn27 (Listen)SATPaul Lewis with the latest news from the world of personalSATfinance.SATPester power - Halifax Bank of Scotland makes changes toSATits controversial overdraft charges.SATWhere there's a will there's a way - don't forget to writeSATone.SATHow just paying off the minimum on your cards messes withSATyour mind.SATNational Savings enters the best buy tables, and why thatSATis unusual.SATSAT12:30 The News Quiz b00nh0qz (Listen)SATSeries 69, Episode 6SATSandi Toksvig chairs the topical comedy quiz, recorded atSATthe University of Bedfordshire. The panel includes JeremySATHardy, Paul Sinha and Sue Perkins.SATSAT12:57 Weather b00nhn29 (Listen)SATThe latest weather forecast.SATSAT13:00 News b00nhn2c (Listen)SATThe latest national and international news from BBC RadioSAT4.SATSAT13:10 Any Questions? b00nh1cm (Listen)SATJonathan Dimbleby chairs the topical debate from CambridgeSATUniversity. The panellists are the shadow businessSATsecretary Kenneth Clarke, Liberal Democrat peer BaronessSATShirley Williams, UKIP MEP Marta Andreasen and the formerSATLord Chancellor, Lord Falconer.SATSAT14:00 Any Answers? b00nhn2f (Listen)SATJonathan Dimbleby takes listeners' calls and emails inSATresponse to this week's edition of Any Questions?SATSAT14:30 Saturday Play b0090f6x (Listen)SATThe Voyage of the DemeterSATRobert Forrest's chilling tale of the supernatural, set onSATa schooner sailing from Bulgaria to England in 1867.SATSomething very unpleasant is lurking aboard the ship, andSATthe voyage becomes a terrifying ordeal.SATRipelski ...... Finlay WelshSATRobash ...... Gary LewisSATKanesky ...... Steven McNicollSATBretov ...... Grant O'RourkeSATGentleman ...... Alexander Morton.SATSAT15:30 Baroque and Roll: Townshend on Purcell b00nf3kr (Listen)SATThe Who guitarist and songwriter Pete Townshend talksSATabout the band's career and reveals the influence on hisSATsongwriting of Baroque composer Henry Purcell.SATWhen Pete was a struggling 20-year-old musician he wasSATturned on to Purcell by his manager, Kit Lambert. It wasSATKit's recommendation of Purcell's Gordian Knot Untied thatSATstruck the loudest chord with Pete, awakening him to aSATlineage in English music that seemed strangely familiar.SATImmersing himself in the music, he soon set about writingSATThe Who's first album.SATPete reveals how he drew on Purcell's dramatic genius forSAThis most intriguing compositions. From his first mini-rockSATopera to his masterpiece, Tommy, and from his enduringSATLifehouse project through to his current musicalSATendeavour, there has always been a Purcellian presence.SATSAT16:00 Woman's Hour b00nhn6z (Listen)SATWeekend Woman's HourSATWith Sheila McClennon.SATThe best-selling American crime writer Patricia CornwellSATtalks about her latest book, the 17th to feature Dr KaySATScarpetta, the workaholic forensic scientist. She wasSATfirst introduced in 1990, and Patricia explains why KaySAThas been such an enjoyable character to write about forSATthe last 20 years.SATListener Sue Green emailed Woman's Hour recently to saySATthat she is something of a running joke among her friendsSATbecause she continues to use cotton handkerchiefs inSATfavour of the paper variety. But Sue is not alone: theSATprogramme hears from another die-hard handkerchief fan,SATAnnalisa Barbieri - who goes so far as to iron her belovedSATcollection - who talks about the history of this smallSATsquare of cloth.SATWithin the next few months, one million young people underSATthe age of 24 are going to be out of work. With noSATemployment and no direction, the lives of these youngstersSATcan quickly spiral into poverty, family disintegration andSAThomelessness. This is what happened to Elvige. StrugglingSATwith a dysfunctional family and the threat of a life onSATthe streets, she dropped out of college but is now aSATconfident young adult studying for a degree and doing workSATwith troubled youngsters.SATThe government wants to scrap the defence of provocationSATin murder cases where a spouse or partner has beenSATunfaithful. Woman's Hour asks what the bill's defeat inSATthe House of Lords means for women.SATKamilya Jurban is a Palestinian singer, instrumentalistSATand composer, and one of the most prominent contemporarySATartists in the Middle East. Karine Polwart is a ScottishSATfolk singer songwriter whose debut album won the Radio 2SATFolk Album of the Year Award in 2005. They were broughtSATtogether to perform for the British Council and they giveSATus a taste of their unique collaboration.SATWhat do clothes mean to women? Why do some of us find itSATso hard to give or throw things away that we no longerSATwear? Justine Picardie, author of My Mother's WeddingSATDress: The Life and Afterlife of Clothes', Jay Hunt, styleSATwriter and broadcaster, and Oriole Cullen, the curator ofSATfashion and textiles at the Victoria and Albert Museum,SATLondon share their emotional experience of clothes withSATJenni Murray.SATSAT16:56 1989: Day by Day b00nhnxp (Listen)SAT31st October 1989SATSir John Tusa looks back at the events making the news 20SATyears ago.SATFormer Chancellor Nigel Lawson tells the House of CommonsSATwhy he resigned; shadow energy secretary Tony BlairSATdemands electricity privatisation plans be scrapped; aSATcourt investigates a fraud case involving the use of sonicSATbinoculars to fix horse races.SATA Somethin' Else production for BBC Radio 4.SATSAT17:00 PM b00nhnxr (Listen)SATFull coverage and analysis of the day's news with RitulaSATShah, plus the sports headlines.SATSAT17:30 The Bottom Line b00ngzcf (Listen)SATEvan Davis is joined by a panel of top business guests toSATdiscuss those silly bits of paper and metal we call money.SATSurely someone can invent a better way to pay for things?SATHe also asks what companies are doing to look after theirSATlow-income consumers.SATEvan is joined by Antony Jenkins, chief executive ofSATcredit card company Barclaycard, Jim McCarthy, chiefSATexecutive of the UK chain Poundland, and Chris Dedicoat,SATEuropean president of Cisco, the world's largest producerSATof computer network equipment.SATSAT17:54 Shipping Forecast b00nhnxt (Listen)SATThe latest shipping forecast.SATSAT17:57 Weather b00nhnxw (Listen)SATThe latest weather forecast.SATSAT18:00 Six O'Clock News b00nhnxy (Listen)SATThe latest national and international news from BBC RadioSAT4.SATSAT18:15 Loose Ends b00nhny0 (Listen)SATClive Anderson and guests with an eclectic mix ofSATconversation, music and comedy.SATClive Anderson is joined by drummer Ginger Baker,SATpresenter and the new voice of Radio 2's breakfast show,SATChris Evans, and actor Alun Armstrong.SATRobin Ince finds out what everday things, from teacups toSATmemory sticks, can tell us about the universe withSATcosmologist Marcus Chown.SATWith comedy from Edinburgh Comedy Award nominee TomSATWrigglesworth and music from jazz singer-songwriter JamieSATCullum and country blues band Hey Negrita.SATSAT19:00 Profile b00nhny2 (Listen)SATJose Manuel BarrosoSATEdward Stourton takes a closer look at the life and careerSATof the President of the European Commission, Jose ManuelSATBarroso.SATSAT19:15 Saturday Review b00nhny4 (Listen)SATBidisha is joined by comedian Natalie Haynes, historianSATTristram Hunt and actor and writer Michael Simkins toSATreview the cultural highlights of the week - featuringSAThot-headed Mexican revolutionaries, Viennese students in aSATwhirl and Romanian chickens in a truck.SATFerdinand Bruckner's 1926 play Pains of Youth is set inSATVienna and features a group of bored, disillusionedSATmedical students. In the aftermath of the First World WarSATthey view their youth as a kind of sickness and see theSATfuture as holding two alternatives: bourgeois existence orSATsuicide. Martin Crimp's new version of the play at theSATNational Theatre in London is directed by Katie MitchellSATand features some of her typically striking twists ofSATstaging.SATBarbara Kingsolver's last novel, The Poisonwood Bible, wasSATpublished more than 10 years ago and became a bestseller.SATThe Lacuna is her new novel and the story of itsSATprotagonist - writer Harrison Shepherd - is told throughSATletters and entries in his diary. With a Mexican motherSATand an American father, his life oscillates between theSATtwo countries. As a young man in revolutionary Mexico, heSATbecomes close to artists Diego Rivera and Frida Kahlo andSATtheir houseguest Leon Trotsky, something which comes backSATto haunt him in the anti-communist climate of postwarSATAmerica.SATIt is almost 20 years since Nicolae Ceasescu's regime inSATRomania came to a violent end, but the Ceasescu era is aSATperiod which fascinates and inspires the writer andSATdirector Cristian Mungiu. His previous film 4 Months, 3SATWeeks and 2 Days, which won the Palme d'Or at Cannes inSAT2007, concerned a young woman trying to procur an illegalSATabortion. Tales From The Golden Age is more satirical inSATtone and while there's pathos here, there's also humour.SATFive urban myths from the twilight years of the communistSATera are played out, including a village sent into panic bySATan official visit and a photographer tasked with makingSATCeausescu look taller than Valerie Giscard d'Estaing.SATThe title poem of Grace Nichols's poetry collectionSATPicasso, I Want My Face Back is written in the voice ofSATDora Maar, the photographer who was Picasso's lover andSATmuse for ten years and inspired his 1937 painting WeepingSATWoman. Van Gogh, Munch and Tracey Emin also find their waySATinto the verse here, which is understandable givenSATNichols's recent stint as writer in residence at the Tate.SATIt's not all art and artists though; there are also poemsSATabout her native Guyana, India and the English landscape.SATCollision is definitely car-crash TV, but in a literalSATrather than derogatory sense. The ITV1 drama, written bySATAnthony Horowitz and scheduled to be broadcast over fiveSATsuccessive nights, focuses on a group of characters whoSATare involved in a major traffic accident. Douglas HenshallSATplays DI John Tolin, who is investigates the accident andSATtries to determine whether two of his colleagues, who wereSATin pursuit of one of the cars, may have been reponsible.SATBut Tolin finds many unsuspected secrets hidden in theSATwreckage and also has to come to terms with some skeletonsSATin his own closet.SATSAT20:00 Archive on 4 b00nhny6 (Listen)SATCapering With Ken CampbellSATIan McMillan explores the world of the actor and directorSATKen Campbell, who died in 2008.SATCampbell's acting credits included Fawlty Towers, TheSATHitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, Brookside, Law and OrderSATand In Sickness and In Health, as well as performingSATone-man shows. He also directed theatrical events,SATincluding the nine-hour Illuminatus trilogy, a 22-hourSATproduction of The Warp and Macbeth in pidgin English.SATHis daughter, Daisy, gives Ian McMillan a tour of Ken'sSAThome in Essex, where he didn't have a bedroom and had aSATparrot run in every room. He also talks to Campbell'sSATmanager Colin Watkeys, theatre director Richard Eyre, fanSATand collaborator Ian Potter and fellow actors JuliaSATMcKenzie and Jim Broadbent.SATSAT21:00 Classic Serial b00ncwzv (Listen)SATHowards End, Episode 2SATDramatisation of EM Forster's classic novel.SATHelen Schlegel is unhappy that her sister Margaret hasSATagreed to marry the recently-widowed Henry Wilcox.SATUnbeknown to the sisters, Ruth Wilcox bequeathed theSATWilcox country home, Howards End, to Margaret, but theSATnote has been destroyed by Henry's son, Charles.SATNarrator ...... John HurtSATMargaret Schlegel ...... Lisa DillonSATHelen Schlegel ...... Jill CardoSATTibby Schlegel ...... Tom FergusonSATAunt Juley ...... Alexandra MathieSATHenry Wilcox ...... Malcolm RaeburnSATRuth Wilcox ...... Ann RyeSATCharles Wilcox ...... Joseph KloskaSATLeonard Bast ...... Joseph ProsperoSATDolly Wilcox/Jacky Bast ...... Christine Marshall.SATSAT22:00 News and Weather b00nhpgc (Listen)SATThe latest national and international news from BBC RadioSAT4, followed by weather.SATSAT22:15 Moral Maze b00nfqzl (Listen)SATThe war crimes trial of former Bosnian Serb leader RadovanSATKaradzic has opened at the UN-backed InternationalSATCriminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia. He faces 11SATcounts of genocide, including complicity in the SrebrenicaSATmassacre in which 8,000 Muslim men and boys were killed.SATIt was one of the worst acts of atrocity in Europe sinceSATthe Second World War. But is what we are about to seeSATjustice or revenge - A show trial organised by theSATvictors, with TV coverage broadcast throughout the world,SATand eagerly viewed, especially in the Balkans. Can thereSATever be any morally certain and globally acceptableSATdefinition of what constitutes a war crime or willSATpragmatism and real politique alwaysSATWitnesses:SATJohn LaughlandSATAuthor of Travesty: The Trial of Slobodan Milosevic andSATthe Corruption of International Justice, andSATA History of Political Trials from Charles I to SaddamSATHussein.SATGeoffrey NiceSATThe British QC who led the prosecution of the SerbianSATleader Slobodan MilosovicSATProfessor David ChandlerSATProfessor of International Relations at the Centre for theSATStudy of Democracy, University of Westminster and editorSATof the Journal of Intervention and StatebuildingSATMark EllisSATExecutive Director, International Bar Association.SATSAT23:00 Brain of Britain b00ndxjr (Listen)SATRussell Davies welcomes four more guests to take part inSATthe perennial general knowledge contest.SATSAT23:30 Poetry Please b00ncyzd (Listen)SATRoger McGough introduces poems about snow and solitude.SATThere are splashes of colour too, with Goulash by MyraSATSchneider and Poppies by Carole Satymurti. The readers areSATMark Meadows, Tanya Moodie and Osi Okerafor.SATSATSUNSUNDAY 1 NOVEMBER 2009SUNSUN00:00 Midnight News b00nhpyp (Listen)SUNThe latest national and international news from BBC RadioSUN4. Followed by Weather.SUNSUN00:30 Afternoon Reading b008v8zk (Listen)SUNDilemmas of Modern Martyrs, SabotageSUNSeries of stories by Morven Crumlish.SUNPressed into service as a bridesmaid at a gay wedding,SUNJenny almost expected to be miserable. But weird scenesSUNare to follow.SUNRead by Siobhan Redmond.SUNA Sweet Talk production for BBC Radio 4.SUNSUN00:48 Shipping Forecast b00nhqd3 (Listen)SUNThe latest shipping forecast.SUNSUN01:00 Selection of BBC World Service Programmes b00nhqd5 (Listen)SUNBBC Radio 4 joins the BBC World Service.SUNSUN05:20 Shipping Forecast b00nhqd7 (Listen)SUNThe latest shipping forecast.SUNSUN05:30 News Briefing b00nhqd9 (Listen)SUNThe latest news from BBC Radio 4.SUNSUN05:43 Bells on Sunday b00nhqdc (Listen)SUNThe sound of bells from the church of St Lawrence Jewry inSUNLondon.SUNSUN05:45 Profile b00nhny2 (Listen)SUNJose Manuel BarrosoSUNEdward Stourton takes a closer look at the life and careerSUNof the President of the European Commission, Jose ManuelSUNBarroso.SUNSUN06:00 News Headlines b00nhqdf (Listen)SUNThe latest national and international news.SUNSUN06:05 Something Understood b00nhqdh (Listen)SUNBuilding BridgesSUNWriter Christie Dickason considers the physical andSUNmetaphorical significance of bridges - connecting peoples,SUNcultures and countries, but also underlining differences.SUNShe talks to violinist Ruth Waterman about the famousSUNbridge of Mostar in Bosnia, and draws upon the poetry ofSUNEmily Dickinson and music by Bobbie Gentry and Mozart.SUNA Falling Tree production for BBC Radio 4.SUNSUN06:35 On Your Farm b00nhqdk (Listen)SUNAlex James visits the Isle of Man to meet GeorgeSUNSteriopulos, the final nominee for the 2009 BBC Farmer ofSUNthe Year award.SUNGeorge has been instrumental in re-establishing theSUNisland's flock of Manx Loughtan sheep. The breed is famousSUNfor its four horns but nearly became extinct in the 1960sSUNas farmers switched to quicker-growing types. The LoughtanSUNhas just been granted the EU's Protected Designation ofSUNOrigin status, ranking it alongside Stilton Cheese andSUNChampagne. Such efforts mean the sheep are once againSUNcovering the island's hills in their thousands.SUNSUN06:57 Weather b00nhqdm (Listen)SUNThe latest weather forecast.SUNSUN07:00 News and Papers b00nhqdp (Listen)SUNThe latest news headlines. Including a look at the papers.SUNSUN07:10 Sunday b00nhsn4 (Listen)SUNRoger Bolton discusses the religious and ethical news ofSUNthe week. Moral arguments and perspectives on stories,SUNboth familiar and unfamiliar.SUNSUN07:55 Radio 4 Appeal b00nhsn6 (Listen)SUNMeningitis UKSUNSandi Toksvig appeals on behalf of Meningitis UK.SUNDonations to Meningitis UK should be sent to FREEPOST BBCSUNRadio 4 Appeal, please mark the back of your envelopeSUNMeningitis UK. Credit cards: Freephone 0800 404 8144. IfSUNyou are a UK tax payer, please provide Meningitis UK withSUNyour full name and address so they can claim the Gift AidSUNon your donation. The online and phone donation facilitiesSUNare not currently available to listeners without a UKSUNpostcode.SUNRegistered Charity No:1076774.SUNSUN07:58 Weather b00nhsn8 (Listen)SUNThe latest weather forecast.SUNSUN08:00 News and Papers b00nht55 (Listen)SUNThe latest news headlines. Including a look at the papers.SUNSUN08:10 Sunday Worship b00nht57 (Listen)SUNA Great Cloud of WitnessesSUNA service on All Saints Day from St Michael's Church inSUNAberystwyth.SUNThe preacher is Canon Stuart Bell, Rector of Aberystwyth.SUNMusical Director: Andy Herrick.SUNSUN08:50 A Point of View b00nh1cp (Listen)SUNClive James reflects on the postal workers' dispute andSUNgives his personal view of the modern history of labourSUNrelations.SUNSUN09:00 Broadcasting House b00nht59 (Listen)SUNNews and conversation about the big stories of the weekSUNwith Kevin Connolly.SUNSUN10:00 The Archers Omnibus b00nht5c (Listen)SUNThe week's events in Ambridge.SUNSUN11:15 Desert Island Discs b00nht5f (Listen)SUNJerry SpringerSUNKirsty Young's castaway is Jerry Springer.SUNHis life has been split between serving the public andSUNoutraging them. His first career was in politics where, asSUNa life-long Democrat, one of his early jobs was workingSUNwith Bobby Kennedy. Then he found global fame with hisSUNcontroversial TV programme, The Jerry Springer Show.SUNHe says that in politics and in his TV show, he is alwaysSUNon the side of the powerless and disenfranchised. It's aSUNphilosophy, he says, he learned from his parents. TheySUNwere among the last Jews to escape from Berlin in AugustSUN1939 and their memories and fears of that time shaped theSUNentire family.SUNSUN12:00 The Unbelievable Truth b00nf01t (Listen)SUNSeries 4, Episode 4SUNDavid Mitchell hosts the game show in which panellists areSUNencouraged to tell lies and compete to see how many itemsSUNof truth they are able to smuggle past their opponents.SUNWith Adam Hills, Rhod Gilbert, Reginald D Hunter andSUNShappi Khorsandi.SUNRecorded at the Edinburgh Festival.SUNSUN12:32 Food Programme b00nhtk2 (Listen)SUNYoghurtSUNCentral Asia was the birthplace of yoghurt, as GoldenSUNCrescent nomadic tribes domesticated sheep and goats andSUNbegan to curdle milk. Aylin Bozyap grew up in Istanbul,SUNand as a child used to take the ferry with her family toSUNthe port town of Kanlica to eat yoghurt.SUNRecreating the journey, she takes as her guide theSUNpolitical scientist, food historian and author ProfessorSUNArtun Unsal, who finds the yoghurt a poor immitation ofSUNits former self. In search of something better they visitSUNthe artisan yoghurt maker Mehmet Nazli, whose family hasSUNbeen making yoghurt for many years, and who still makes itSUNthe traditional way. His son and grandson also work in theSUNbusiness, but the work is hard and they don't make muchSUNmoney, with the profits staying mainly with the middlemenSUNand shops.SUNOn the other side of Istanbul they visit an artisanSUNyoghurt maker who has had to stop producing; the qualitySUNof the milk is no longer good enough, nor the city cleanSUNenough, to make real yoghurt any more.SUNFinally they go to the Silivri Yoghurt Festival, an annualSUNcelebration of traditional yogurt, and meet one of theSUNwinners. They also meet the deputy mayor of Silivri, whoSUNtakes them to visit a disused yoghurt house that ProfessorSUNUnsal is keen to see turned into a yoghurt museum.SUNIn the studio Sheila Dillon and Aylin taste a range ofSUNplain yoghurts, as well as a typical British style yoghurt.SUNSUN12:57 Weather b00nhtk4 (Listen)SUNThe latest weather forecast.SUNSUN13:00 The World This Weekend b00nhtk6 (Listen)SUNA look at events around the world with Shaun Ley.SUNSUN13:30 The Deighton File b00kjh8g (Listen)SUNNovelist Len Deighton talks to Patrick Humphries about hisSUNlife and writing career, which began with the publicationSUNof his spy novel The Ipcress File in 1962.SUNDeighton has written cookery books and Second World WarSUNhistories, as well as turning his hand to bookSUNillustration and film production. But he is best known forSUNhis influential spy novels, including Funeral in BerlinSUNand Billion Dollar Brain.SUNDeighton fan Henrietta Green talks about the writer'sSUNAction Cook Book, and Deighton biographer EdwardSUNMilward-Oliver and historian Sir Max Hastings discussSUNDeighton's acclaimed non-fiction work, such as Fighter andSUNBlitzkrieg.SUNSUN14:00 Gardeners' Question Time b00nh06t (Listen)SUNEric Robson chairs the popular horticultural forum.SUNMatthew Biggs, Bob Flowerdew and Pippa Greenwood areSUNguests of the Weald Horticultural Society in Sevenoaks,SUNKent.SUNBob explores the vineyards in the 'Garden of England',SUNdiscussing which varieties are best suited to winemakingSUNand how best to care for them.SUNIncluding Gardening weather forecast.SUNSUN14:45 Brother Mine b00cm7h2 (Listen)SUNGlobal DifferencesSUNJulian Lloyd Webber explores different social and culturalSUNattitudes towards siblings.SUNIslamic countries see sibling relationships develop viaSUNwet-nurses. China's one-child policy is havingSUNcontroversial consequences.SUNA Tinderbox Broadcast production for BBC Radio 4.SUNSUN15:00 Classic Serial b00nhv35 (Listen)SUNBel Ami, Episode 1SUNDramatisation by Frances Byrnes of Guy de Maupassant'sSUNstory of political corruption in the newspaper world ofSUN19th-century France and the inexorable rise of GeorgesSUNDuroy - 'Bel Ami' - a charming, ruthless man of littleSUNtalent but plenty of ambition.SUNBel Ami is making the perfect match with a society heiressSUNbut his past is about to catch up with him, in the shapeSUNof Mme de Marelle, his long-term mistress.SUNBel Ami ...... Jonathan SlingerSUNMarelle ...... Emma FieldingSUNMadeleine ...... Mali HarriesSUNForestier ...... Kieran SelfSUNMonsieur Walter ...... Steffan RhodriSUNRachel ...... Sara McGaugheySUNOther roles played by Richard Nichols.SUNDirected by Polly Thomas.SUNSUN16:00 Bookclub b00nhv5s (Listen)SUNLinda GrantSUNJames Naughtie and readers talk to Linda Grant about herSUNnovel When I Lived in Modern Times, winner of the OrangeSUNPrize for Fiction in 2000.SUNLinda is known for bringing a strong Jewish identity toSUNmost of her writing. 'Scratch a Jew and you've got aSUNstory', remarks the main character Evelyn Sert on theSUNstory's first page as she looks over her life. The novelSUNfollows Evelyn - hairdresser, spy, lover - on her voyageSUNfrom post-war London to Tel Aviv, where the British areSUNpreparing to leave Palestine and the new state of IsraelSUNis about to be born.SUNSUN16:30 High Flight b00nhw26 (Listen)SUNWhen Anglo-American poet John Magee was killed in aSUNmid-air collision over Lincolnshire in December 1941, agedSUNjust 19, he left behind a sonnet started, he claimed, 'atSUN30,000 feet and finished soon after (he) landed'. TheSUNpoem, High Flight, has become the most celebrated poemSUNabout the intoxication of flying.SUNSean Street traces the trajectory of the poem and its poetSUNfrom Rugby School through the Library of Congress and theSUNspace race to Ronald Reagan's tribute to the victims ofSUNthe Challenger space shuttle disaster and beyond, into aSUNunique place in the popular imagination.SUNThe programme includes contributions from Andrew Motion,SUNveterans of the Royal Canadian Air Force, composer BobSUNChilcott and Library of Congress archivist Cheryl Fox.SUNA Falling Tree production for BBC Radio 4.SUNSUN16:56 1989: Day by Day b00nhw28 (Listen)SUN1st November 1989SUNSir John Tusa looks back at the events making the news 20SUNyears ago.SUNPresident Bush agrees to meet Chairman Gorbachev on hisSUNboat in the Mediterranean for unofficial talks; PresidentSUNOrtega of Nicaragua breaks a 19-month ceasefire withSUNUS-backed Contra rebels; a coroner overseeing the inquestSUNinto the death of Beverly Lewis demands better communitySUNcare for the mentally ill.SUNA Somethin' Else production for BBC Radio 4.SUNSUN17:00 1989: How The Wall Fell b00nfn2j (Listen)SUNThe fall of the Berlin Wall made revolution look easy. ButSUNbehind the scenes, people power and the sudden end of ColdSUNWar certainties posed all kinds of challenges. As part ofSUNRadio 4's 1989 season, John Tusa discovers what happenedSUNwith key insiders from the British, German, Soviet andSUNother governments of the time.SUNSUN17:40 Profile b00nhny2 (Listen)SUNJose Manuel BarrosoSUNEdward Stourton takes a closer look at the life and careerSUNof the President of the European Commission, Jose ManuelSUNBarroso.SUNSUN17:54 Shipping Forecast b00nhw2b (Listen)SUNThe latest shipping forecast.SUNSUN17:57 Weather b00nj7vs (Listen)SUNThe latest weather forecast.SUNSUN18:00 Six O'Clock News b00nj7vv (Listen)SUNThe latest national and international news from BBC RadioSUN4.SUNSUN18:15 Pick of the Week b00nj7vx (Listen)SUNHardeep Singh Kohli makes his selection from the pastSUNseven days of BBC Radio.SUNAnalysis - Radio 4SUNThe Fantastic Book of Everyone's Secrets - Radio 4SUNDear Mr Bigelow - Radio 4SUNParting Shots - Radio 4SUNBeing Jewish - Blood or Belief - Radio 4SUNBaroque and Roll - Radio 4SUNNight Waves - Radio 3SUNM1 Magic - Radio 4SUNBleak Expectations - Radio 4SUNCapering With Ken Campbell - Radio 4SUNThe Verb - Radio 3SUNMaida Vale at 75 - Radio 1 & Radio 2SUNNow Wash Your Hands - Radio 4SUNThe Unbelievable Truth - Radio 4SUNIn Tune - Radio 3.SUNSUN19:00 The Archers b00nj7vz (Listen)SUNThe Grundys come back down to earth.SUNSUN19:15 Americana b00nj7w1 (Listen)SUNMatt Frei presents an insider guide to the people and theSUNstories shaping America today. Combining location reportsSUNwith lively discussion and exclusive interviews, the showSUNprovides new and surprising insights into contemporarySUNAmerica.SUNAmericans love golf and President Obama is no exception.SUNMatt Frei takes a swing of the club and a look at howSUNexactly the 44th President of the United States, BarakSUNObama, manages to make so much time to play. He isSUNsqueezing in more golf than his predecessor, even in theSUNmidst of juggling the challenges of economic recovery andSUNinternational diplomacy.SUNMatt Frei talks to former White House press secretary DanaSUNPerino about life on the other side of the podium. After aSUNfew years fielding questions on behalf of the George WSUNBush administration, Perino tells Americana how she feelsSUNthe Obama administration is handling the media storm soSUNfar.SUNIf she looks like Sarah Palin and talks like Sarah Palin,SUNdoes that mean that Michele Bachmann will be the new SarahSUNPalin? Bachmann has represented Minnesota in the UnitedSUNStates House of Representatives for three years. In thatSUNshort time she has managed to become a well-known voiceSUNwithin the Republican Party. Matt Frei talks to her aboutSUNhow she has amplified her opinions so effectively and whatSUNher hopes are for the Republican Party in the future.SUNWhat exactly does a Governor do? Matt Frei talks withSUNGovernor Brian Schweitzer, who moved from ranching toSUNrunning one of the largest states in the US, Montana.SUNGovernor Schweitzer took office in 2009 and shares hisSUNinsight on what it takes to be one of the 50 most powerfulSUNstate leaders in the nation.SUNMatt Frei invites the a cappella group Sonos, who areSUNcurrently touring around the United States, into theSUNAmericana studio. With FX pedals and well-known indieSUNtunes, Sonos makes the studio vibrate with a whole newSUNsound.SUNSUN19:45 Afternoon Reading b0090mt7 (Listen)SUNStories from the Bath Literature Festival, MathildeSUN3/5. Mathilde, by Hattie Naylor.SUN“I was born in the worst winter ever. It was said that theSUNground was so hard, the air so cold, the snow so thick, mySUNheart froze the moment I was brought into the world. AndSUNthen I was brought up by a cat.”SUNRead by Alison Reid.SUNSUN20:00 Feedback b00nh06r (Listen)SUNRoger Bolton airs listeners' views on BBC radio programmesSUNand policy.SUNSUN20:30 Last Word b00nh0qv (Listen)SUNMatthew Bannister presents the obituary series, analysingSUNand celebrating the life stories of people who haveSUNrecently died. The programme reflects on people ofSUNdistinction and interest from many walks of life, someSUNfamous and some less well known.SUNSUN21:00 Money Box b00nhn27 (Listen)SUNPaul Lewis with the latest news from the world of personalSUNfinance.SUNPester power - Halifax Bank of Scotland makes changes toSUNits controversial overdraft charges.SUNWhere there's a will there's a way - don't forget to writeSUNone.SUNHow just paying off the minimum on your cards messes withSUNyour mind.SUNNational Savings enters the best buy tables, and why thatSUNis unusual.SUNSUN21:26 Radio 4 Appeal b00nhsn6 (Listen)SUNMeningitis UKSUNSandi Toksvig appeals on behalf of Meningitis UK.SUNDonations to Meningitis UK should be sent to FREEPOST BBCSUNRadio 4 Appeal, please mark the back of your envelopeSUNMeningitis UK. Credit cards: Freephone 0800 404 8144. IfSUNyou are a UK tax payer, please provide Meningitis UK withSUNyour full name and address so they can claim the Gift AidSUNon your donation. The online and phone donation facilitiesSUNare not currently available to listeners without a UKSUNpostcode.SUNRegistered Charity No:1076774.SUNSUN21:30 Analysis b00nf0my (Listen)SUNKnowing Too MuchSUNAs a campaigning investigative journalist, Martin BrightSUNhas devoted much of his energy into uncovering thingsSUNpeople in power want to be kept secret. He calls himself aSUN'freedom of information fundamentalist'. But in thisSUNprogramme, he plays devil's advocate and asks if the truthSUNis really always desirable or always in the wider publicSUNinterest.SUNThrough interviews with psychologists, intelligenceSUNofficers, whistleblowers and academics, he explores theSUNimportance of institutional and personal secrecy, and asksSUNwhat happens when these two areas overlap, or even collide.SUNSUN21:58 Weather b00nj7w3 (Listen)SUNThe latest weather forecast.SUNSUN22:00 Westminster Hour b00nj7w5 (Listen)SUNReports from behind the scenes at Westminster. IncludingSUNThe Cases That Changed Our World.SUNSUN23:00 1989: Day by Day Omnibus b00nj7w7 (Listen)SUNWeek ending 31st October 1989SUNA look back at the events making the news 20 years ago,SUNwith Sir John Tusa.SUNNigel Lawson resigns after six years as Chancellor, WalterSUNSisulu addresses 70,000 people at the biggest ever ANCSUNrally, and riots in Moscow follow a demonstration outsideSUNthe KGB headquarters.SUNA Somethin' Else production for BBC Radio 4.SUNSUN23:30 Something Understood b00nhqdh (Listen)SUNBuilding BridgesSUNWriter Christie Dickason considers the physical andSUNmetaphorical significance of bridges - connecting peoples,SUNcultures and countries, but also underlining differences.SUNShe talks to violinist Ruth Waterman about the famousSUNbridge of Mostar in Bosnia, and draws upon the poetry ofSUNEmily Dickinson and music by Bobbie Gentry and Mozart.SUNA Falling Tree production for BBC Radio 4.SUNSUNMONMONDAY 2 NOVEMBER 2009MONMON00:00 Midnight News b00nj8j4 (Listen)MONThe latest national and international news from BBC RadioMON4. Followed by Weather.MONMON00:15 Thinking Allowed b00nfqzg (Listen)MONWhile nine out of ten people agree organ donation is aMONgood thing, a recent audit found 40 per cent of bereavedMONfamilies, when approached, didn't agree to donate. LaurieMONTaylor discusses new research which uncovers some of theMONreasons behind this apparent anomaly.MONMagi Sque, from the University of Southampton, was part ofMONa team who interviewed families who had declined organMONdonation. While many agreed in principle, carried organMONdonor cards and knew their relatives desire to donate,MONthey still didn't feel able to let their loved ones organsMONbe used. The most common reason families gave for this wasMONa simple desire to keep the body intact. They didn't wantMONthe dead to be 'hurt' any more.MONMagi explains why the research reveals some of ourMONdeep-seated cultural beliefs, and how those beliefs haveMONtheir roots in wider society's values and, at times ofMONgrief, can completely overcome our pre-existing views.MONWe also hear from Professor Caroline Knowles of GoldsmithsMONCollege, London who has researched the history, meaningMONand journey of the flip flop sandal.MONMON00:45 Bells on Sunday b00nhqdc (Listen)MONThe sound of bells from the church of St Lawrence Jewry inMONLondon.MONMON00:48 Shipping Forecast b00nj8qv (Listen)MONThe latest shipping forecast.MONMON01:00 Selection of BBC World Service Programmes b00nj90f (Listen)MONBBC Radio 4 joins the BBC World Service.MONMON05:20 Shipping Forecast b00nj8wp (Listen)MONThe latest shipping forecast.MONMON05:30 News Briefing b00nj99b (Listen)MONThe latest news from BBC Radio 4.MONMON05:43 Prayer for the Day b00njkl2 (Listen)MONDaily prayer and reflection with Rev Roger Hutchings.MONMON05:45 Farming Today b00nj9b3 (Listen)MONNews and issues in rural Britain with Charlotte Smith.MONMON05:57 Weather b00njkl4 (Listen)MONThe latest weather forecast for farmers.MONMON06:00 Today b00nj9fr (Listen)MONWith Sarah Montague and Justin Webb. Including SportsMONDesk; Weather; Thought for the Day.MONMON09:00 Start the Week b00njkl6 (Listen)MONAndrew Marr discusses memory, secrets, failed states andMONsnobbery with his guests.MONAcademic Viktor Mayer-Schönberger talks about his new bookMONDelete - the dangers of remembering in the digital age.MONDirector Daniel Kramer talks secrets, psychology and theMONaccessability of opera as his new production of BluebeardMONopens at the ENO. Clare Lockhart, Director of theMONInstitute for State Effectiveness, talks about how to fixMONfailed states by building markets, and Quentin Letts givesMONhis thesis on how snobbery will save us.MONMON09:45 Book of the Week b00nj9jc (Listen)MONThe Secret Lives of Somerset Maugham, Episode 1MONBarbara Flynn reads from Selina Hastings' biography ofMONSomerset Maugham, which sheds new light on his complexMONcharacter.MONIn 1892, at the age of 18, Somerset Maugham enrolled at StMONThomas' medical school, but his heart wasn't in it. WhatMONhe really wanted to do was write.MONAbridged by Libby Spurrier.MONA Pier production for BBC Radio 4.MONMON10:00 Woman's Hour b00nj9pl (Listen)MONWith Jane Garvey.MONMartine McCutcheon started her career as a six-week-oldMONbaby, when her photo was used for a national politicalMONposter campaign. She went on to play the part of the muchMONloved Tiffany in EastEnders, won a best actress OlivierMONAward for her role in Trevor Nunn's My Fair Lady, andMONstarred in Richard Curtis's film Love Actually. She alsoMONforged a successful music career with a number one singleMONand album. Now she has brought out her first novel, TheMONMistress. Martine joins Jane to discuss her newestMONventure. Why turn to writing? What was her inspiration?MONAnd what's next for the ex-soap star?MONApplications to take children into care have risen by 47MONper cent since last year say recent figures published byMONCafcass, the organisation that represents children'sMONinterests in the family courts. So what is behind thisMONenormous increase and what needs to be done to support aMONfamily justice system already under great strain,MONresponsible for supporting some of the youngest and mostMONvulnerable in our society? Jane is joined by ParliamentaryMONUnder-Secretary of State for Children, Young People andMONFamilies Baroness Dyleth Morgan, Anthony Douglas, chiefMONexecutive of Cafcass, and children's solicitor ChristinaMONBlacklaws.MONMore than 10,000 people in the UK currently need an organMONtransplant, and of these, 1,000 die every year before theyMONreceive an organ. Last year 28-year-old singer-songwriterMONSarah Springett donated one of her kidneys to herMONboyfriend Paul Shepherd after his kidney conditionMONworsened. As the NHS launches a new campaign to encourageMONmore people to sign the Organ Donor Register, Woman's HourMONtalks to Sarah and Paul about their experience, and toMONtheir consultant and NHS organ transplant czar Chris Rudge.MONAnd Grace Nichols's poetry has been described as 'rich inMONmusic, but also grit and earthy honesty'. The novelistMONJeannette Winterson admires her work for 'its wit, acidityMONand tenderness'. Grace explains what drew her to writeMONabout Picasso's muse, Dora Maar, in her latest collection,MONPicasso, I Want My Face Back, and why she wants toMONcelebrate the power of laughter.MONMON11:00 Repossessions in the Sun b00njwd7 (Listen)MONRay Furlong visits Spain's Mediterranean resorts to hearMONhow members of the country's one million-strong BritishMONexpatriate community are weathering the recession. HighMONunemployment in the construction and tourist sectors meansMONthat boom-time on the Costas is over, translating intoMONincreased home repossessions and divorce rates.MONMON11:30 Beauty of Britain b00njwd9 (Listen)MONColour Me WowMONComedy by Christopher Douglas and Nicola Sanderson. BeautyMONOlonga works as a carer for the Featherdown Agency andMONsees herself as an inspiration to other African girlsMONhoping to achieve their goals in the land of semi-skimmedMONmilk.MONBeauty has a particularly difficult client, but isMONdistracted by her latest business venture. Lynette assuresMONBeauty that 'Colour Me Wow' is no pyramid scheme, whileMONAnil shows a surprising new side to himself.MONBeauty ...... Jocelyn Jee EsienMONLynette ...... Doon MackichanMONSandra ...... Nicola SandersonMONSally ...... Felicity MontaguMONKaren ...... Nicola SandersonMONMrs Gupte ...... Indira JoshiMONAnil ...... Paul SharmaMONDr Kavanagh ...... Phyllida LawMONHilary ...... Rachel AtkinsMONClare ...... Doon MackichanMONMusic by The West End Gospel Choir.MONMON12:00 You and Yours b00njbfv (Listen)MONConsumer news and issues with Julian Worricker.MONMON12:57 Weather b00njcns (Listen)MONThe latest weather forecast.MONMON13:00 World at One b00njcpt (Listen)MONNational and international news with Martha Kearney.MONMON13:30 Brain of Britain b00njxlv (Listen)MONRussell Davies chairs the fourth heat of the perennialMONgeneral knowledge contest.MONMON14:00 The Archers b00nj7vz (Listen)MONThe Grundys come back down to earth.MONMON14:15 Afternoon Play b00cqdz9 (Listen)MONGoldengroveMONFrances Byrnes' story of the relationship between a youngMONworking-class girl and the woman who transforms her.MONMargaret, a spinster, teaches Narn, a city child, how toMONshake hands firmly, polish silver and identify birds. MostMONof all, she teaches her how to speak.MONMargaret ...... Jill BalconMONNarn ...... Jessica JolleysMONNarn Now ...... Siriol JenkinsMONJosie ...... Beccy AlexanderMONFred ...... Brendan CharlesonMONDirected by Kate McAll.MONMON15:00 Archive on 4 b00nhny6 (Listen)MONCapering With Ken CampbellMONIan McMillan explores the world of the actor and directorMONKen Campbell, who died in 2008.MONCampbell's acting credits included Fawlty Towers, TheMONHitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, Brookside, Law and OrderMONand In Sickness and In Health, as well as performingMONone-man shows. He also directed theatrical events,MONincluding the nine-hour Illuminatus trilogy, a 22-hourMONproduction of The Warp and Macbeth in pidgin English.MONHis daughter, Daisy, gives Ian McMillan a tour of Ken'sMONhome in Essex, where he didn't have a bedroom and had aMONparrot run in every room. He also talks to Campbell'sMONmanager Colin Watkeys, theatre director Richard Eyre, fanMONand collaborator Ian Potter and fellow actors JuliaMONMcKenzie and Jim Broadbent.MONMON15:45 A History of Private Life b00njctx (Listen)MONEducation in the Moral HomeMONHistorian Amanda Vickery presents a series which revealsMONthe hidden history of home over 400 years. She draws onMONfirst-hand accounts from letters and diaries, many ofMONwhich have never been heard before. Including songs whichMONhave been specially recorded for the series.MONHomes were exposed to huge forces of change in the 19thMONand 20th century, responding to industrialisation,MONpollution, and the imperial mission. Prof Vickery exploresMONhow they remained idealised havens in a heartless, dirtyMONworld.MONUntil the late-19th century, home was the only schoolroomMONmany British children were to experience, especially ifMONthey were girls. But was domestic education really soMONinferior to formal schooling? Drawing on diaries she hasMONdiscovered, Prof Vickery explores home education from theMONperspective of both mother and child.MONReaders: Deborah Findlay, John Sessions, Madeleine BrollyMONand Simon Tcherniak.MONSingers: Gwyneth Herbert and Thomas Guthrie, with DavidMONOwen Norris at the keyboard.MONA Loftus production for BBC Radio 4.MONMON16:00 Food Programme b00nhtk2 (Listen)MONYoghurtMONCentral Asia was the birthplace of yoghurt, as GoldenMONCrescent nomadic tribes domesticated sheep and goats andMONbegan to curdle milk. Aylin Bozyap grew up in Istanbul,MONand as a child used to take the ferry with her family toMONthe port town of Kanlica to eat yoghurt.MONRecreating the journey, she takes as her guide theMONpolitical scientist, food historian and author ProfessorMONArtun Unsal, who finds the yoghurt a poor immitation ofMONits former self. In search of something better they visitMONthe artisan yoghurt maker Mehmet Nazli, whose family hasMONbeen making yoghurt for many years, and who still makes itMONthe traditional way. His son and grandson also work in theMONbusiness, but the work is hard and they don't make muchMONmoney, with the profits staying mainly with the middlemenMONand shops.MONOn the other side of Istanbul they visit an artisanMONyoghurt maker who has had to stop producing; the qualityMONof the milk is no longer good enough, nor the city cleanMONenough, to make real yoghurt any more.MONFinally they go to the Silivri Yoghurt Festival, an annualMONcelebration of traditional yogurt, and meet one of theMONwinners. They also meet the deputy mayor of Silivri, whoMONtakes them to visit a disused yoghurt house that ProfessorMONUnsal is keen to see turned into a yoghurt museum.MONIn the studio Sheila Dillon and Aylin taste a range ofMONplain yoghurts, as well as a typical British style yoghurt.MONMON16:30 Click On b00njxwm (Listen)MONSeries 5, Episode 5MONAs Bonfire Night approaches, Simon Cox discovers the roleMONcomputers play in creating spectacular fireworks displays.MONHe also learns how technology used in mobile phones isMONhelping researchers in Cambridge to monitor pollution.MONMON16:56 1989: Day by Day b00njd4p (Listen)MON2nd November 1989MONSir John Tusa looks back at the events making the news 20MONyears ago.MONIn an unprecedented move, KGB officers take questions fromMONthe public on live TV; price rises on British Rail fillMONcommuters with woe; the Met's first black police officerMONtalks about the 'fun and games' in the early days.MONA Somethin' Else production for BBC Radio 4.MONMON17:00 PM b00njdbb (Listen)MONFull coverage and analysis of the day's news with CarolynMONQuinn. Plus Weather.MONMON18:00 Six O'Clock News b00njg1l (Listen)MONThe latest national and international news from BBC RadioMON4.MONMON18:30 The Unbelievable Truth b00nk0g7 (Listen)MONSeries 4, Episode 5MONDavid Mitchell hosts the game show in which panellists areMONencouraged to tell lies and compete to see how many itemsMONof truth they are able to smuggle past their opponents.MONWith Clive Anderson, Dom Joly, Fi Glover and Henning Wehn.MONMON19:00 The Archers b00njcq8 (Listen)MONReality bites for Lilian.MONMON19:15 Front Row b00njgdq (Listen)MONArts news and reviews with Mark Lawson. Including anMONinterview with the crime writer James Ellroy, whose booksMONinclude LA Confidential and The Black Dahlia.MONMON19:45 Woman's Hour Drama b00njgds (Listen)MONSingleparentpals.com, You Are Not AloneMONSue Teddern's story of the developing friendship betweenMONtwo single parents who correspond via a parenting adviceMONwebsite.MONWhen a nervous Tom logs on to a website for lone parentsMONfor the first time, he finds new friends and an impatientMONresponse from the formidable Rosie.MONRosie ...... Maxine PeakeMONTom ...... Kris MarshallMONSpp.com/Tash ...... Laura MolyneuxMONGill ...... Janice AcquahMONScott ...... Matt AddisMONRobin ...... Malcolm TierneyMONBazz ...... Jonathan TaflerMONDirected by David Hunter.MONMON20:00 Night Witches b00nk0g9 (Listen)MONLucy Ash tells the extraordinary but little-known tale ofMONRussia's three all-female regiments that flew more thanMON30,000 missions on the Eastern Front during Second WorldMONWar. At home they were celebrated as Stalin's Falcons, butMONterrified German troops called them the Night Witches.MONLucy travels to Moscow and Rostov-on-Don to meet a numberMONof these formidable women, who are now grandmothers inMONtheir 80s and 90s. She discovers that their bravery hasMONinspired aerobatic champions, comic book artists and evenMONa Dutch heavy metal band.MONMON20:30 Analysis b00nk0gc (Listen)MONThe Economist's New ClothesMONMany have said that the near collapse of the globalMONfinancial system exposed the failures of 30 years ofMONeconomic thinking. Stephanie Flanders, the BBC economicsMONeditor, examines the arguments raging within and outsideMONthe world of economics and asks what future studentsMONshould learn from the 'great recession'.MONMON21:00 Aping Evolution b00nk0wl (Listen)MONEpisode 1MONProfessor of Genetics Steve Jones challenges evolutionaryMONpsychology, the controversial new science of how ourMONbrains and minds developed.MONGirls like pink better because in Stone Age times theyMONneeded to be good at picking berries and women have betterMONsex with rich men - or so some evolutionary psychologistsMONwould have us believe. Critics say this isn't science, butMONconjecture.MONEvolutionary psychology seeks to explain human behaviourMONfrom the hunter-gatherers or our nearest relatives, theMONchimpanzee, and has some seductively simple theories. OneMONargument is that we have Stone Age brains in 21st-centuryMONskulls, from which we can account for everything from theMONviolence that men show to their stepchildren to why racismMONexists. Is evolutionary psychology a truly useful additionMONto the canon of ideas to come out of Darwinian evolutionMONor a just-so science that can be adjusted to suit theMONresearchers' prejudices?MONSteve Jones examines the history of the new science, theMONmethods used and asks if it can explain the human drive toMONlanguage, religion and culture.MONMON21:30 Start the Week b00njkl6 (Listen)MONAndrew Marr discusses memory, secrets, failed states andMONsnobbery with his guests.MONAcademic Viktor Mayer-Schönberger talks about his new bookMONDelete - the dangers of remembering in the digital age.MONDirector Daniel Kramer talks secrets, psychology and theMONaccessability of opera as his new production of BluebeardMONopens at the ENO. Clare Lockhart, Director of theMONInstitute for State Effectiveness, talks about how to fixMONfailed states by building markets, and Quentin Letts givesMONhis thesis on how snobbery will save us.MONMON21:58 Weather b00njhwg (Listen)MONThe latest weather forecast.MONMON22:00 The World Tonight b00njj5t (Listen)MONNational and international news and analysis with RitulaMONShah.MONMON22:45 Book at Bedtime b00njj5w (Listen)MONHeartland, Episode 6MONAlex Jones and David Holt read from the novel by AnthonyMONCartwright, set in 2002 in the fictional Black CountryMONcommunity of Cinderheath.MONJasmine catches up with some friends in London.MONAbridged by Jane Marshall.MONA Jane Marshall production for BBC Radio 4.MONMON23:00 With Great Pleasure b008wr7x (Listen)MONSir John MajorMONFormer prime minister Sir John Major chooses some of theMONpieces of writing which have sustained, inspired andMONentertained him. The readers are Nigel Anthony and LucyMONBriers.MONMON23:30 Today in Parliament b00njkhg (Listen)MONNews, views and features on today's stories in ParliamentMONwith Sean Curran.MONMONTUETUESDAY 3 NOVEMBER 2009TUETUE00:00 Midnight News b00nj8dm (Listen)TUEThe latest national and international news from BBC RadioTUE4. Followed by Weather.TUETUE00:30 Book of the Week b00nj9jc (Listen)TUEThe Secret Lives of Somerset Maugham, Episode 1TUEBarbara Flynn reads from Selina Hastings' biography ofTUESomerset Maugham, which sheds new light on his complexTUEcharacter.TUEIn 1892, at the age of 18, Somerset Maugham enrolled at StTUEThomas' medical school, but his heart wasn't in it. WhatTUEhe really wanted to do was write.TUEAbridged by Libby Spurrier.TUEA Pier production for BBC Radio 4.TUETUE00:48 Shipping Forecast b00nj8j6 (Listen)TUEThe latest shipping forecast.TUETUE01:00 Selection of BBC World Service Programmes b00nj8wr (Listen)TUEBBC Radio 4 joins the BBC World Service.TUETUE05:20 Shipping Forecast b00nj8qx (Listen)TUEThe latest shipping forecast.TUETUE05:30 News Briefing b00nj90h (Listen)TUEThe latest news from BBC Radio 4.TUETUE05:43 Prayer for the Day b00nj99d (Listen)TUEDaily prayer and reflection with Rev Roger Hutchings.TUETUE05:45 Farming Today b00nj99g (Listen)TUENews and issues in rural Britain with Anna Hill.TUETUE06:00 Today b00nj9f5 (Listen)TUEWith Evan Davis and Justin Webb. Including Sports Desk;TUEWeather; Thought for the Day; Yesterday in Parliament.TUETUE09:00 The Choice b00nk2c2 (Listen)TUEMichael Buerk interviews people who have madeTUElife-altering decisions and talks them through the wholeTUEprocess, from the original dilemma to living with theTUEconsequences.TUEMichael talks to former banking executive Paul Moore aboutTUEhis choice to blow the whistle on HBOS.TUETUE09:30 Parting Shots b00nk2c4 (Listen)TUEEpisode 3TUEMatthew Parris marks the passing of the valedictoryTUEdespatch, the traditional final telegram home in whichTUEBritish ambassadors could let their hair down and settle aTUEfew scores. The series features newly declassified ForeignTUEOffice files alongside interviews with the diplomats whoTUEwrote them.TUEThe privations of embassy life. In their valedictories,TUEdiplomats recount the hardships of foreign service - ratTUEinfested rooms, defunct plumbing and death threats.TUETUE09:45 Book of the Week b00nnn9t (Listen)TUEThe Secret Lives of Somerset Maugham, Episode 2TUEBarbara Flynn reads from Selina Hastings' biography ofTUESomerset Maugham, which sheds new light on his complexTUEcharacter.TUEStill struggling to make ends meet, Maugham has a changeTUEof fortune when the manager of the Royal Court TheatreTUEdecides to stage his play, Lady Frederick.TUEAbridged by Libby Spurrier.TUEA Pier production for BBC Radio 4.TUETUE10:00 Woman's Hour b00nj9p2 (Listen)TUEWith Jane Garvey. Including drama: Singleparentpals.com.TUETUE11:00 1989: A German Story b00nk2c6 (Listen)TUEUnder One FlagTUESeries in which German programme-makers reflect and reportTUEon aspects of the reunified country that rarely, if ever,TUEfind their way into the British media.TUEThomas Franke explores the German armed forces, theTUEBundeswehr.TUEWhen reunification took place in Germany after the fall ofTUEthe Berlin Wall in 1989, one of the most painfulTUEinstitutional mergers was of the former East and WestTUEGerman armies. Ex-GDR forces were often obliged to acceptTUElower grades in the united force. Yet today, having had toTUEengage together in combat during the NATO YugoslavTUEoperation of 1999, the Bundeswehr is, perhapsTUEsurprisingly, one of the success stories of the reunitedTUEnation. Yet, routinely, the annual swearing in ceremony inTUEfront of the Reichstag in Berlin is disrupted by noisyTUEprotests by those exercised by the notion of an armyTUEfighting under the German flag.TUEThomas goes on patrol with the army around the KosovanTUEcity of Prizren, where they are a part of theTUEpeace-keeping force, and visits the annual swearing-inTUEceremony where new members of the forces take the oathTUEbefore Chancellor Merkel. But echoes remain of the horrorTUEinflicted on Europe by another German army, and suchTUEsolemn moments are never far from controversy and protestTUE- especially when former peaceniks are now members of aTUEgovernment which sends its young men to bear arms in bothTUEEurope and Afghanistan.TUETUE11:30 Art Attack b00nk2xr (Listen)TUEEpisode 2TUESeries investigating the history of attacks on art works,TUEfrom the earliest times to the present day.TUEWhen does destruction become an act of creation? LawrenceTUEPollard explores what lies behind some of the more bizarreTUEassaults on contemporary art, including an exploding shed,TUEan artist who destroyed every one of his possessions andTUEart that has been both urinated on and whacked with aTUEhammer.TUETUE12:00 You and Yours b00njb1p (Listen)TUEConsumer news and issues with Julian Worricker.TUETUE12:57 Weather b00njcb6 (Listen)TUEThe latest weather forecast.TUETUE13:00 World at One b00njcnv (Listen)TUENational and international news with Martha Kearney.TUETUE13:30 The Bell Boys b00nk2xt (Listen)TUEIn the heart of London's East End, a team of craftsmenTUEpreserves a set of skills dating back to the 1500s,TUEturning out bells for churches and cathedrals acrossTUEBritain and around the world. Poet and closetTUEcampanologist Ian McMillan spends a day amongTUEWhitechapel's foundrymen, and follows the birth of a newTUEring of bells set to bring back life to a church towerTUEwhich has stood silent since the Second World War.TUETUE14:00 The Archers b00njcq8 (Listen)TUEReality bites for Lilian.TUETUE14:15 Afternoon Play b00chp3n (Listen)TUEDickens Confidential, Why Are We in Afghanistan?TUESeries of plays looking at how Charles Dickens, as theTUEhead of a daily paper, would have tackled bringing theTUEnews to the masses.TUEBy Mike Walker.TUEDickens and his team find themselves in the midst ofTUEspies, intrigue and dark goings-on at the Russian Embassy,TUEculminating in a heroic balloon chase across the LondonTUEskyline.TUECharles Dickens ...... Dan StevensTUEAgnes Paxton ...... Eleanor HowellTUEDaniel Parker ...... Andrew BuchanTUENadia Durova ...... Rachel AtkinsTUEAlex Burns ...... Dan StarkeyTUEJoseph Paxton ...... John DougallTUEBishop ...... John RoweTUEIvan Vitkovich ...... Chris PavloTUEDirected by Tracey Neale.TUETUE15:00 Making History b00nk4k4 (Listen)TUEVanessa Collingridge presents the series exploringTUEordinary people's links with the past.TUETUE15:30 Afternoon Reading b00nk4lm (Listen)TUETales From The Low Countries, My Father's Photo AlbumTUESeries of evocative new stories set in the Netherlands,TUEBelgium and Luxembourg.TUEBy Abdelkader Benali.TUEWhen a Dutch-Moroccan man learns that his mother is ill,TUEhe is compelled to make a long-overdue visit to hisTUEparents' house in Rotterdam. The visit proves to be theTUEstart of a journey through his dreams, childhood andTUEfamily history.TUERead by Khalid Abdalla.TUETranslated by David McKay.TUETUE15:45 A History of Private Life b00njct8 (Listen)TUEThe Garden IndoorsTUEHistorian Amanda Vickery presents a series which revealsTUEthe hidden history of home over 400 years. She draws onTUEfirst-hand accounts from letters and diaries, many ofTUEwhich have never been heard before. Including songs whichTUEhave been specially recorded for the series.TUEHomes were exposed to huge forces of change in the 19thTUEand 20th century, responding to industrialisation,TUEpollution and the imperial mission. Prof Vickery exploresTUEhow they remained idealised havens in a heartless, dirtyTUEworld.TUEBy the mid-19th century, the majority of the BritishTUEpopulation lived in filthy polluted towns. Yet theTUEVictorians contrived increasingly ingenious ways toTUEdomesticate nature, capturing ferns and sea anemones underTUEglass in their parlours.TUEReaders: Deborah Findlay, John Sessions, Madeleine BrollyTUEand Simon Tcherniak.TUESingers: Gwyneth Herbert and Thomas Guthrie, with DavidTUEOwen Norris at the keyboard.TUEA Loftus production for BBC Radio 4.TUETUE16:00 Law in Action b00nk4wp (Listen)TUEClive Coleman interviews Ken MacDonald, the formerTUEDirector of Public Prosecutions, about his five years inTUEthe position from 2003 to 2008.TUETUE16:30 A Good Read b00nk4wr (Listen)TUESue MacGregor talks to novelists Catherine O'Flynn andTUEKate Pullinger at the Birmingham Book Festival about theirTUEfavourite books, including titles by Gordon Burn, DonTUEDeLillo and Alaa Al Aswany.TUETUE16:56 1989: Day by Day b00njd4f (Listen)TUE3rd November 1989TUESir John Tusa looks back at the events making the news 20TUEyears ago.TUEProtests in East Germany force the resignation of theTUEMayor of Leipzig and five government hardliners; troubleTUEfor Gorbachev as Russian miners down tools; and a highTUEspeed link between London and the Channel Tunnel? 'Not inTUEmy back yard', say people in Swanley.TUEA Somethin' Else production for BBC Radio 4.TUETUE17:00 PM b00njdb2 (Listen)TUEFull coverage and analysis of the day's news with CarolynTUEQuinn. Plus Weather.TUETUE18:00 Six O'Clock News b00njfwk (Listen)TUEThe latest national and international news from BBC RadioTUE4.TUETUE18:30 Too Much Information b00nk4wt (Listen)TUEEpisode 4TUEComedy by Neil Warhurst about a tourist information centreTUEin a town with no tourist attractions whatsoever.TUEWaft Tourist Information resurrects an old Waft tradition,TUEThe Day of the Pie, in which the ugliest boy of theTUEvillage eats a pork pie on the village green.TUEWarren ...... Jeff RawleTUEDouglas ...... Malcolm TierneyTUEHeather ...... Liza SadovyTUELucy ...... Joannah TinceyTUEBryan ...... Paul BarnhillTUETourist Information Machine ...... Philip FoxTUETyler (Piggy) ...... Rhys Jennings.TUETUE19:00 The Archers b00njcpw (Listen)TUEEddie's good intentions go to pot.TUETUE19:15 Front Row b00njg1n (Listen)TUEArts news and reviews with Kirsty Lang. Including anTUEinterview with director Penny Woolcock, whose work rangesTUEfrom opera to a new hip-hop musical filmed in Birmingham.TUETUE19:45 Woman's Hour Drama b00njh98 (Listen)TUESingleparentpals.com, Getting Back on the HorseTUESue Teddern's story of the developing friendship betweenTUEtwo single parents who correspond via a parenting adviceTUEwebsite.TUERosie has an interview for promotion and Tom has his firstTUEdate for years. Who is the most nervous of the two?TUERosie ...... Maxine PeakeTUETom ...... Kris MarshallTUESpp.com/Tash ...... Laura MolyneuxTUEGill ...... Janice AcquahTUEJo-C ...... Annabelle DowlerTUEBazz ...... Jonathan TaflerTUEDirected by David Hunter.TUETUE20:00 File on 4 b00nk55r (Listen)TUEThe head of the Financial Services Authority, Lord Turner,TUEhas questioned the social usefulness of what banks do. ButTUEas he and other regulators wrestle with ways ofTUEcontrolling so-called 'casino operations', MichaelTUERobinson lifts the lid on the latest tricks of the tradeTUEwhich some banks are now using to increase profits.TUETUE20:40 In Touch b00nk55t (Listen)TUEPeter White with news and information for the blind andTUEpartially sighted.TUETUE21:00 All in the Mind b00nk5t4 (Listen)TUEClaudia Hammond presents the series exploring the latestTUEscientific research about the brain and the mind.TUETUE21:30 The Choice b00nk2c2 (Listen)TUEMichael Buerk interviews people who have madeTUElife-altering decisions and talks them through the wholeTUEprocess, from the original dilemma to living with theTUEconsequences.TUEMichael talks to former banking executive Paul Moore aboutTUEhis choice to blow the whistle on HBOS.TUETUE21:58 Weather b00njhnc (Listen)TUEThe latest weather forecast.TUETUE22:00 The World Tonight b00njj38 (Listen)TUENational and international news and analysis with RitulaTUEShah.TUETUE22:45 Book at Bedtime b00njj5y (Listen)TUEHeartland, Episode 7TUEAlex Jones and David Holt read from the novel by AnthonyTUECartwright, set in 2002 in the fictional Black CountryTUEcommunity of Cinderheath.TUEJasmine unexpectedly bumps in to an old friend fromTUEprimary school.TUEAbridged by Jane Marshall.TUEA Jane Marshall production for BBC Radio 4.TUETUE23:00 As Told to Craig Brown b00b71ds (Listen)TUEEpisode 4TUECraig Brown introduces a mixture of satire, socialTUEobservation and nonsense.TUENarrated by Juliet Stevenson and Steve Wright, with JohnTUEHumphrys, Ronni Ancona, Jon Culshaw, Lewis MacLeod, SallyTUEGrace, Ewan Bailey and Margaret Cabourn-Smith.TUETUE23:30 Today in Parliament b00njk8c (Listen)TUENews, views and features on today's stories in ParliamentTUEwith Susan Hulme.TUETUEWEDWEDNESDAY 4 NOVEMBER 2009WEDWED00:00 Midnight News b00nj8dq (Listen)WEDThe latest national and international news from BBC RadioWED4. Followed by Weather.WEDWED00:30 Book of the Week b00nnn9t (Listen)WEDThe Secret Lives of Somerset Maugham, Episode 2WEDBarbara Flynn reads from Selina Hastings' biography ofWEDSomerset Maugham, which sheds new light on his complexWEDcharacter.WEDStill struggling to make ends meet, Maugham has a changeWEDof fortune when the manager of the Royal Court TheatreWEDdecides to stage his play, Lady Frederick.WEDAbridged by Libby Spurrier.WEDA Pier production for BBC Radio 4.WEDWED00:48 Shipping Forecast b00nj8j8 (Listen)WEDThe latest shipping forecast.WEDWED01:00 Selection of BBC World Service Programmes b00nj8wy (Listen)WEDBBC Radio 4 joins the BBC World Service.WEDWED05:20 Shipping Forecast b00nj8qz (Listen)WEDThe latest shipping forecast.WEDWED05:30 News Briefing b00nj90k (Listen)WEDThe latest news from BBC Radio 4.WEDWED05:43 Prayer for the Day b00nj99j (Listen)WEDDaily prayer and reflection with Rev Roger Hutchings.WEDWED05:45 Farming Today b00nj99l (Listen)WEDNews and issues in rural Britain with Anna Hill.WEDWED06:00 Today b00nj9f7 (Listen)WEDWith Evan Davis and John Humphrys. Including Sports Desk;WEDWeather; Thought for the Day; Yesterday in Parliament.WEDWED09:00 Midweek b00nk9hx (Listen)WEDLively and diverse conversation with Libby Purves andWEDguests including Lawrence Dallaglio.WEDWED09:45 Book of the Week b00nnn9w (Listen)WEDThe Secret Lives of Somerset Maugham, Episode 3WEDBarbara Flynn reads from Selina Hastings' biography ofWEDSomerset Maugham, which sheds new light on his complexWEDcharacter.WEDIn 1915, with the codename Somerville, Maugham isWEDdespatched to Geneva to work for British intelligence.WEDAbridged by Libby Spurrier.WEDA Pier production for BBC Radio 4.WEDWED10:00 Woman's Hour b00nj9p4 (Listen)WEDWith Jane Garvey. Including drama: Singleparentpals.com.WEDWED11:00 M1: The Modernist Marvel b00nk9hz (Listen)WEDAs the M1, Britain's first major motorway, celebrates itsWED50th year, performance poet and musician John HegleyWEDpresents a poetic meditation on the 200-mile stretch ofWEDroad that is the transport backbone of Britain.WEDWith his mandolin in tow, John slows down, turns off andWEDseeks out the overlooked sights and sounds of the M1. HeWEDlearns why there is no Junction 3, discovers that thereWEDwas a scientific formula to the loo break that determinedWEDhow far apart service stations should be built, andWEDadmires the road for the glimpse on the modern world itWEDoffers us.WEDWED11:30 Hut 33 b00nk9j1 (Listen)WEDSeries 3, Spitfire PokerWEDSitcom by James Cary, set in Bletchley Park in 1941. ThreeWEDcode-breakers are forced to share a draughty wooden hut asWEDthey try to break German ciphers. Unfortunately, they hateWEDeach other.WEDThe codebreakers of Bletchley Park are in the doghouseWEDagain, so to make amends they help raise money for theWEDtown's Spitfire fund. Unfortunately Charles promptly losesWEDthe money in a card game, trying to impress an old schoolWEDchum, so the hut must try to win it back somehow. ArchieWEDcan't believe Charles is so desperate to curry favour withWEDa former prefect and Minka has trouble understanding theWEDrules of gentlemen's clubs.WEDCharles ...... Robert BathurstWEDArchie ...... Tom Goodman-HillWEDMinka...... Olivia ColmanWEDGordon ...... Fergus CraigWEDJoshua ...... Alex MacQueenWEDMrs Best ...... Lill RoughleyWEDByron ...... Alex LoweWEDButler ...... Phillip Fox.WEDWED12:00 You and Yours b00njb1r (Listen)WEDConsumer news and issues with Winifred Robinson.WEDWED12:57 Weather b00njcb8 (Listen)WEDThe latest weather forecast.WEDWED13:00 World at One b00njcnx (Listen)WEDNational and international news with Martha Kearney.WEDWED13:30 The Media Show b00nk9j3 (Listen)WEDSteve Hewlett presents a topical programme about theWEDfast-changing media world.WEDWED14:00 The Archers b00njcpw (Listen)WEDEddie's good intentions go to pot.WEDWED14:15 Afternoon Play b00nk9j5 (Listen)WEDIvan and the DogsWEDBy Hattie Naylor. The extraordinary true story of IvanWEDMishukov, who walked out of his Moscow apartment at theWEDage of four and spent two years living on the city streetsWEDwhere he was adopted by a pack of wild dogs.WEDIvan ...... Tom GlenisterWEDCellist: Sarah MoodyWEDDirected by Paul Dodgson.WEDA Pier production for BBC Radio 4.WEDWED15:00 Money Box Live b00nkb08 (Listen)WEDVincent Duggleby and guests answer listeners' questions onWEDthe subject of mortgages.WEDGuests:WEDPaula John, Your MortgageWEDRay Boulger, mortgage brokers John CharcoalWEDLouise Cuming, mortgage specialist, Cuming Associates Ltd.WEDWED15:30 Afternoon Reading b00nmt87 (Listen)WEDTales From The Low Countries, The Fortress at BrugesWEDSeries of evocative new stories set in the Netherlands,WEDBelgium and Luxembourg.WEDBy Gregory Norminton, set in the not-so-distant future inWED'what remains of Belgium'.WEDFollowing floods caused by global warming, most of the LowWEDCountries are now under the sea, but the medieval city ofWEDBruges has survived due to a feat of engineering calledWEDThe Fortress. The solidarity of two old friends - aWEDWalloon historian and a Fleming engineer - is tested byWEDthe arrival on the scene of Jean's new girlfriend,WEDMagdalena.WEDRead by Stephen Campbell Moore.WEDWED15:45 A History of Private Life b00njctb (Listen)WEDExporting the HomeWEDHistorian Amanda Vickery presents a series which revealsWEDthe hidden history of home over 400 years. She draws onWEDfirst-hand accounts from letters and diaries, many ofWEDwhich have never been heard before. Including songs whichWEDhave been specially recorded for the series.WEDHomes were exposed to huge forces of change in the 19thWEDand 20th century, responding to industrialisation,WEDpollution and the imperial mission. Prof Vickery exploresWEDhow they remained idealised havens in a heartless, dirtyWEDworld.WEDProf Vickery explores the kind of homes the BritishWEDstruggled to create in India, using the diaries andWEDletters of colonial settlers.WEDReaders: Deborah Findlay, John Sessions, Madeleine BrollyWEDand Simon Tcherniak.WEDSingers: Gwyneth Herbert and Thomas Guthrie, with DavidWEDOwen Norris at the keyboard.WEDA Loftus production for BBC Radio 4.WEDWED16:00 Thinking Allowed b00nkb0b (Listen)WEDIn a series of special programmes in association with theWEDOpen University, Laurie Taylor explores the subject ofWEDwhite collar crime, from its late addition to the statuteWEDbooks to the increasing difficulty in securing aWEDconviction. He speaks to the key academic experts in theWEDfield, explores the latest sociological research and hearsWEDfrom professionals on both sides of the law about theWEDculture, the practice and most often the non-prosecutionWEDof white collar crime.WEDIn this edition, Laurie considers the culture of theWEDcrime. What exactly is white collar crime, who commits itWEDand why?WEDWED16:30 All in the Mind b00nk5t4 (Listen)WEDClaudia Hammond presents the series exploring the latestWEDscientific research about the brain and the mind.WEDWED16:56 1989: Day by Day b00njd4h (Listen)WED4th November 1989WEDSir John Tusa looks back at the events making the news 20WEDyears ago.WEDMargaret Thatcher is the least popular prime ministerWEDsince polling began - she will stand down after the nextWEDelection; SDLP leader John Hume throws down the gauntletWEDto the IRA; and, he may have a 'Vision of Britain', butWEDPrince Charles is compared to Hitler, Mussolini and Stalin.WEDA Somethin' Else production for BBC Radio 4.WEDWED17:00 PM b00njdb4 (Listen)WEDFull coverage and analysis of the day's news with CarolynWEDQuinn. Plus Weather.WEDWED18:00 Six O'Clock News b00njfwm (Listen)WEDThe latest national and international news from BBC RadioWED4.WEDWED18:30 Rudy's Rare Records b00nkb2s (Listen)WEDSeries 2, Ride With MeWEDSitcom by Danny Robins, set in the finest, feistiest,WEDfamily-run record shop in Birmingham.WEDAdam takes his mortality a little too seriously, and findsWEDhimself confronted with a little too much lycra.WEDAdam ...... Lenny HenryWEDRudy ...... Larrington WalkerWEDRichie ...... Joe JacobsWEDTasha ...... Natasha GodfreyWEDClifton ...... Jeffery KissoonWEDDJ Karel ...... Andrew Brooke.WEDWED19:00 The Archers b00njcpy (Listen)WEDLilian calls in the experts.WEDWED19:15 Front Row b00njg1q (Listen)WEDArts news and reviews with Mark Lawson, including anWEDinterview with Ben Elton whose new novel, Meltdown, chartsWEDthe rise and fall of a City trader.WEDWED19:45 Woman's Hour Drama b00njh8w (Listen)WEDSingleparentpals.com, Coming CleanWEDSue Teddern's story of the developing friendship betweenWEDtwo single parents who correspond via a parenting adviceWEDwebsite.WEDThe honesty game backfires on Tom. Is this the end of aWEDshort but beautiful friendship with Rosie?WEDRosie ...... Maxine PeakeWEDTom ...... Kris MarshallWEDSpp.com/Tash ...... Laura MolyneuxWEDGill ...... Janice AcquahWEDJo-C ...... Annabelle DowlerWEDDirected by David Hunter.WEDWED20:00 Moral Maze b00nkcfk (Listen)WEDMichael Buerk chairs a debate on the moral questionsWEDbehind the week's news. Kenan Malik, Melanie Phillips,WEDJames Panton and Clifford Longley cross-examine witnesses.WEDWED20:45 The Cases That Changed Our World b00nknyx (Listen)WEDEpisode 1WEDClive Coleman tells the stories of cases that shaped ourWEDlives but which are little known outside the legal world.WEDThe dramatic 1670 trial of two Quakers which establishedWEDthe principle that judges cannot intimidate juries, noWEDmatter how furious the bench may be.WEDWED21:00 A Voyage on Livingstone's Lake b00grftd (Listen)WEDAdam Lusekelo tells the story of the MV Ilala, a boatWEDbuilt 60 years ago by Yarrow and Company in Glasgow as aWEDpassenger and cargo ship destined for Lake Nyasa,WEDmodern-day Lake Malawi. In a remarkable feat ofWEDengineering, it was shipped out in pieces via MozambiqueWEDand transported overland to be reconstructed on the shoresWEDof the inland lake, which has no navigable outlet to theWEDsea. Today, it is still sailing the lake, providing aWEDvital lifeline to remote communities in Malawi andWEDMozambique.WEDA Ruth Evans production for BBC Radio 4.WEDWED21:30 Midweek b00nk9hx (Listen)WEDLively and diverse conversation with Libby Purves andWEDguests including Lawrence Dallaglio.WEDWED21:58 Weather b00njhnf (Listen)WEDThe latest weather forecast.WEDWED22:00 The World Tonight b00njj3b (Listen)WEDNational and international news and analysis with RitulaWEDShah.WEDWED22:45 Book at Bedtime b00njj60 (Listen)WEDHeartland, Episode 8WEDAlex Jones and David Holt read from the novel by AnthonyWEDCartwright, set in 2002 in the fictional Black CountryWEDcommunity of Cinderheath.WEDRob is unsettled by the new crowd hanging out in his oldWEDdrinking haunt.WEDAbridged by Jane Marshall.WEDA Jane Marshall production for BBC Radio 4.WEDWED23:00 One b00nkp1w (Listen)WEDSeries 3, Episode 5WEDSketch show written by David Quantick, in which no itemWEDfeatures more than one voice.WEDWith Graeme Garden, Dan Maier, Johnny Daukes, DeborahWEDNorton, Katie Davies, Dan Antopolski, Andrew Crawford andWEDDavid Quantick.WEDWED23:15 Rik Mayall's Bedside Tales b00nkp1y (Listen)WEDRed CoatWEDSeries by Rik Mayall and John Nicholson about theWEDsometimes beautiful, sometimes bizarre oddities of humanWEDbehaviour. Rik tells the tale of Red Coat.WEDWED23:30 Today in Parliament b00njk8f (Listen)WEDNews, views and features on today's stories in ParliamentWEDwith David Wilby.WEDWEDTHUTHURSDAY 5 NOVEMBER 2009THUTHU00:00 Midnight News b00nj8ds (Listen)THUThe latest national and international news from BBC RadioTHU4. Followed by Weather.THUTHU00:30 Book of the Week b00nnn9w (Listen)THUThe Secret Lives of Somerset Maugham, Episode 3THUBarbara Flynn reads from Selina Hastings' biography ofTHUSomerset Maugham, which sheds new light on his complexTHUcharacter.THUIn 1915, with the codename Somerville, Maugham isTHUdespatched to Geneva to work for British intelligence.THUAbridged by Libby Spurrier.THUA Pier production for BBC Radio 4.THUTHU00:48 Shipping Forecast b00nj8jb (Listen)THUThe latest shipping forecast.THUTHU01:00 Selection of BBC World Service Programmes b00nj8x0 (Listen)THUBBC Radio 4 joins the BBC World Service.THUTHU05:20 Shipping Forecast b00nj8r1 (Listen)THUThe latest shipping forecast.THUTHU05:30 News Briefing b00nj90m (Listen)THUThe latest news from BBC Radio 4.THUTHU05:43 Prayer for the Day b00nj99n (Listen)THUDaily prayer and reflection with Rev Roger Hutchings.THUTHU05:45 Farming Today b00nj99q (Listen)THUNews and issues in rural Britain with Charlotte Smith.THUTHU06:00 Today b00nj9f9 (Listen)THUWith Sarah Montague and John Humphrys. Including SportsTHUDesk; Weather; Thought for the Day; Yesterday inTHUParliament.THUTHU09:00 In Our Time b00nkqrv (Listen)THUThe Siege of MünsterTHUMelvyn Bragg and guests Diarmaid MacCulloch, Lucy WoodingTHUand Charlotte Methuen discuss the Siege of Münster inTHU1534, when radical Anabaptists tried to create the 'NewTHUJerusalem' in a small German town, with horrificTHUconsequences.THUTHU09:45 Book of the Week b00nnn9y (Listen)THUThe Secret Lives of Somerset Maugham, Episode 4THUBarbara Flynn reads from Selina Hastings' biography ofTHUSomerset Maugham, which sheds new light on his complexTHUcharacter.THUWith his marriage to Syrie imploding, Maugham escapes toTHUthe south of France with Gerald and buys the VillaTHUMauresque.THUAbridged by Libby Spurrier.THUA Pier production for BBC Radio 4.THUTHU10:00 Woman's Hour b00nj9p6 (Listen)THUWith Jane Garvey. Including drama: Singleparentpals.com.THUTHU11:00 From Our Own Correspondent b00nkqrx (Listen)THUKate Adie introduces BBC foreign correspondents with theTHUstories behind the headlines.THUTHU11:30 Reece Shearsmith's Haunted House b00nkqrz (Listen)THUFilms, Fangs and Frightening FellasTHUComic actor Reece Shearsmith hosts energetic and wittyTHUillustrated discussions on horror, before an audienceTHUinside the reputedly haunted Sutton House in Hackney.THUReece examines classic scary moments from the movies andTHUlooks back at some of the great horror actors.THUHe is joined by horror enthusiasts Mark Gatiss, VicTHUReeves, Yvette Fielding and Mike Roberts.THUTHU12:00 You and Yours b00njb1t (Listen)THUConsumer news and issues with Winifred Robinson.THUTHU12:57 Weather b00njcbb (Listen)THUThe latest weather forecast.THUTHU13:00 World at One b00njcnz (Listen)THUNational and international news with Martha Kearney.THUTHU13:30 Off the Page b00nks89 (Listen)THULeaving the Comfort ZoneTHUIs leaving your comfort zone a form of masochism, or theTHUonly way to develop in life? Dominic Arkwright is joinedTHUby comedian Rhona Cameron, mountaineer Andy Cave andTHUjournalist Agnes Poirier to write about and discussTHUcomfort and pain.THUTHU14:00 The Archers b00njcpy (Listen)THULilian calls in the experts.THUTHU14:15 Afternoon Play b00nks8c (Listen)THUThe Penny Dreadfuls Present: Guy FawkesTHUWhat exactly is it that we’re asked to remember on the 5thTHUof November? As the nation prepares for Bonfire Night;THUhighly acclaimed comedy trio, The Penny Dreadfuls, take aTHUfresh and timely look at a familiar story with a comedic,THUstirring and sometimes graphic exploration of the build-upTHUto and aftermath of the Gunpowder Plot for The AfternoonTHUPlay.THURecorded in front of an audience at the Radio Theatre inTHULondon, there's plenty of laughs in places where you leastTHUexpect them – from the boisterously optimistic meetings ofTHUthe conspirators through to Fawke’s internment in theTHUTower of London.THUStarring Kevin Eldon as Guy, The Penny Dreadfuls will alsoTHUbe joined on stage by Miles Jupp and Andrew Pugsley.THUThe Penny Dreadfuls are David Reed, Humphrey Ker and ThomTHUTuck.THUThe Penny Dreadfuls have previously written and performedTHUtwo series of the Victorian themed Brothers Faversham forTHURadio 7 have just finished their fourth highly successfulTHUyear at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival.THUGuy Fawkes ...... Kevin EldonTHUThomas Percy ...... Miles JuppTHUJohn Wright ...... David ReedTHURobert Catesby ...... Thom TuckTHUThomas Winter ...... Andrew PugsleyTHUSir William Waad ...... Humphrey Ker.THUTHU15:00 Open Country b00nhn1n (Listen)THUBrian May's 3-D VillageTHUQueen guitarist Brian May uncovers the story of anTHUOxfordshire village captured in time by VictorianTHUphotographic pioneer T.R. Williams.THUMay has been fascinated by 3-D images since collectingTHUcereal packet picture cards as a boy. He was particularlyTHUintrigued by a set of stereoscopic images of village lifeTHUtaken by photographic pioneer T.R. Williams. FurtherTHUinvestigation revealed all the images to be 3-D picturesTHUof the tiny Oxfordshire village of Hinton Waldrist, takenTHUin the 1850s.THUBrian joins presenter Helen Mark for a time-travel tour ofTHUthe village. Together they discover how the people andTHUwildlife of this Thames-side community have changed sinceTHUWilliams recorded these evocative images of blacksmiths,THUspinners and farm workers.THUKerry Lock of the Berkshire, Buckinghamshire andTHUOxfordshire Wildlife Trust describes the waxing and waningTHUof wildlife over the past 160 years, while Nicola VerdonTHUof the British Agricultural History Society examines theTHUtelling detail in photos taken at the height of farming'sTHUgolden age.THUTo discuss the past, present and future of 3-D photographyTHUHelen is also joined by Brian's collaborator, the photoTHUhistorian Elena Vidal and by David Burder of the BritishTHUStereoscopic Society. Has the boom in 3-D cinema and theTHUlaunch of a 3-D digital camera come at just the right timeTHUfor a revival of interest in T.R. Williams and a re-birthTHUof the art of stereoscopic photography?THUTHU15:27 Radio 4 Appeal b00nhsn6 (Listen)THUMeningitis UKTHUSandi Toksvig appeals on behalf of Meningitis UK.THUDonations to Meningitis UK should be sent to FREEPOST BBCTHURadio 4 Appeal, please mark the back of your envelopeTHUMeningitis UK. Credit cards: Freephone 0800 404 8144. IfTHUyou are a UK tax payer, please provide Meningitis UK withTHUyour full name and address so they can claim the Gift AidTHUon your donation. The online and phone donation facilitiesTHUare not currently available to listeners without a UKTHUpostcode.THURegistered Charity No:1076774.THUTHU15:30 Afternoon Reading b00nmt7y (Listen)THUTales From The Low Countries, In Landlocked FrontiersTHUSeries of evocative new stories set in the Netherlands,THUBelgium and Luxembourg.THUBy Georges Hausemer.THUA nostalgic story about a childhood lived alongside theTHULuxembourgeois railway with a father who worked as aTHUpointsman.THUTranslated by Michael Hoffman, read by Michael Pennington.THUTHU15:45 A History of Private Life b00njctd (Listen)THUDunroaminTHUHistorian Amanda Vickery presents a series which revealsTHUthe hidden history of home over 400 years. She draws onTHUfirst-hand accounts from letters and diaries, many ofTHUwhich have never been heard before. Including songs whichTHUhave been specially recorded for the series.THUHomes were exposed to huge forces of change in the 19thTHUand 20th century, responding to industrialisation,THUpollution and the imperial mission. Prof Vickery exploresTHUhow they remained idealised havens in a heartless, dirtyTHUworld.THUThe roots of the suburb lie very deep; but for snobs andTHUbohemians, the adjective 'suburban' has always been theTHUultimate put-down. Prof Vickery listens to the experiencesTHUof those who moved there.THUReaders: Deborah Findlay, John Sessions, Madeleine BrollyTHUand Simon Tcherniak.THUSingers: Gwyneth Herbert and Thomas Guthrie, with DavidTHUOwen Norris at the keyboard.THUA Loftus production for BBC Radio 4.THUTHU16:00 Bookclub b00nhv5s (Listen)THULinda GrantTHUJames Naughtie and readers talk to Linda Grant about herTHUnovel When I Lived in Modern Times, winner of the OrangeTHUPrize for Fiction in 2000.THULinda is known for bringing a strong Jewish identity toTHUmost of her writing. 'Scratch a Jew and you've got aTHUstory', remarks the main character Evelyn Sert on theTHUstory's first page as she looks over her life. The novelTHUfollows Evelyn - hairdresser, spy, lover - on her voyageTHUfrom post-war London to Tel Aviv, where the British areTHUpreparing to leave Palestine and the new state of IsraelTHUis about to be born.THUTHU16:30 Material World b00nkv3p (Listen)THUDNA is celebrated as the molecule that carries our genesTHUfrom generation to generation. But a small group ofTHUpioneering chemists are using DNA to build theTHUnano-engines of the future. Quentin Cooper hears aboutTHUthese miniature biological machines.THUTHU16:56 1989: Day by Day b00njd4k (Listen)THU5th November 1989THUSir John Tusa looks back at the events making the news 20THUyears ago.THUFormer Chancellor Nigel Lawson makes things even moreTHUdifficult for Margaret Thatcher by spilling the beans onTHUTV; the Sony Walkman celebrates its 10th birthday but theTHUNoise Abatement Society doesn't; the greatest romanticTHUpianist of his generation, Vladimir Horowitz, dies.THUA Somethin' Else production for BBC Radio 4.THUTHU17:00 PM b00njdb6 (Listen)THUFull coverage and analysis of the day's news with EddieTHUMair. Plus Weather.THUTHU18:00 Six O'Clock News b00njfwp (Listen)THUThe latest national and international news from BBC RadioTHU4.THUTHU18:30 Bleak Expectations b00nkv3r (Listen)THUSeries 3, A Now Grim Life Yet More GrimifiedTHUComedy Victorian adventure by Mark Evans.THUPip Bin faces his most gruelling fate yet at the hands ofTHUhis evil undead ex-guardian and an enormous quantity ofTHUcheese. But can the spirits of Harvest Festival past,THUpresent and future show him a way to redemption?THUSir Philip ...... Richard JohnsonTHUYoung Pip Bin ...... Tom AllenTHUGently Benevolent ...... Anthony HeadTHUHarry Biscuit ...... James BachmanTHUMr Wackwallop ...... Geoffrey WhiteheadTHURipely ...... Sarah HadlandTHUPippa ...... Susy Kane.THUTHU19:00 The Archers b00njcq0 (Listen)THUBonfire night keeps its sparkle for Vicky.THUTHU19:15 Front Row b00njg1s (Listen)THUArts news and reviews with Mark Lawson, who discusses theTHUnewly-published and long awaited second volume of TSTHUEliot's letters.THUTHU19:45 Woman's Hour Drama b00njh8y (Listen)THUSingleparentpals.com, The Other ManTHUSue Teddern's story of the developing friendship betweenTHUtwo single parents who correspond via a parenting adviceTHUwebsite.THURosie has a new boyfriend but still seeks Tom's advice.THURosie ...... Maxine PeakeTHUTom ...... Kris MarshallTHUSpp.com/Tash ...... Laura MolyneuxTHUGill ...... Janice AcquahTHUScott/Mark ...... Matt AddisTHUDirected by David Hunter.THUTHU20:00 Law in Action b00nk4wp (Listen)THUClive Coleman interviews Ken MacDonald, the formerTHUDirector of Public Prosecutions, about his five years inTHUthe position from 2003 to 2008.THUTHU20:30 The Bottom Line b00nkv3t (Listen)THUEvan Davis presents the business magazine. EntrepreneursTHUand company bosses talk about the issues that matter toTHUtheir companies and their customers.THUTHU21:00 Leading Edge b00nkwz1 (Listen)THUThe oldest rocks on Earth are aliens! They are theTHUleft-over building rubble from the formation of the solarTHUsystem and can be dated to an incredible 4,567 millionTHUyears old. A surprising number fall to Earth each year asTHUmeteorites.THUNovember 5th is probably the worst night of the year forTHUspotting incandescent rocks streaking through the sky, butTHUtracking down a fresh meteorite, before it getsTHUcontaminated by terrestrial chemicals, is the ultimateTHUprize for the hunters. A rare few carry complex carbonTHUcompounds - perhaps remnants of the material out of whichTHUthe first life on Earth formed.THUGeoff Watts hears from meteorite hunters who scour theTHUdeserts of Arizona and Australia and the ice of Canada andTHUAntarctica to seek out extra-terrestrial rocks and meetsTHUthose who analyse them, using traces of rare elements toTHUtrack their history and reveal their origins.THUTHU21:30 In Our Time b00nkqrv (Listen)THUThe Siege of MünsterTHUMelvyn Bragg and guests Diarmaid MacCulloch, Lucy WoodingTHUand Charlotte Methuen discuss the Siege of Münster inTHU1534, when radical Anabaptists tried to create the 'NewTHUJerusalem' in a small German town, with horrificTHUconsequences.THUTHU21:58 Weather b00njhnh (Listen)THUThe latest weather forecast.THUTHU22:00 The World Tonight b00njj3d (Listen)THUNational and international news and analysis with RobinTHULustig.THUTHU22:45 Book at Bedtime b00njj62 (Listen)THUHeartland, Episode 9THUAlex Jones and David Holt read from the novel by AnthonyTHUCartwright, set in 2002 in the fictional Black CountryTHUcommunity of Cinderheath.THURob hears some worrying news at school.THUAbridged by Jane Marshall.THUA Jane Marshall production for BBC Radio 4.THUTHU23:00 Pick Ups b00nrrdc (Listen)THUSeries 2, All Bar NunTHUSitcom by Ian Kershaw, set around a Manchester taxiTHUcompany.THUAlan and Lind reveal hidden talents, while Dave seeks aTHUnun's advice on infidelity.THUMike ...... Paul LoughranTHULind ...... Lesley SharpTHUDave ...... Phil RowsonTHUAlan ...... Parvez QadirTHUShelly ...... Naomi RadcliffeTHUDrunk ...... Mark E SmithTHUTanya ...... Janie Connolly.THUTHU23:30 Today in Parliament b00njk8h (Listen)THUNews, views and features on today's stories in ParliamentTHUwith Sean Curran.THUTHUFRIFRIDAY 6 NOVEMBER 2009FRIFRI00:00 Midnight News b00nj8dv (Listen)FRIThe latest national and international news from BBC RadioFRI4. Followed by Weather.FRIFRI00:30 Book of the Week b00nnn9y (Listen)FRIThe Secret Lives of Somerset Maugham, Episode 4FRIBarbara Flynn reads from Selina Hastings' biography ofFRISomerset Maugham, which sheds new light on his complexFRIcharacter.FRIWith his marriage to Syrie imploding, Maugham escapes toFRIthe south of France with Gerald and buys the VillaFRIMauresque.FRIAbridged by Libby Spurrier.FRIA Pier production for BBC Radio 4.FRIFRI00:48 Shipping Forecast b00nj8jd (Listen)FRIThe latest shipping forecast.FRIFRI01:00 Selection of BBC World Service Programmes b00nj8x2 (Listen)FRIBBC Radio 4 joins the BBC World Service.FRIFRI05:20 Shipping Forecast b00nj8r3 (Listen)FRIThe latest shipping forecast.FRIFRI05:30 News Briefing b00nj90p (Listen)FRIThe latest news from BBC Radio 4.FRIFRI05:43 Prayer for the Day b00nj99s (Listen)FRIDaily prayer and reflection with Rev Roger Hutchings.FRIFRI05:45 Farming Today b00nj99v (Listen)FRINews and issues in rural Britain with Charlotte Smith.FRIFRI06:00 Today b00nj9fc (Listen)FRIWith James Naughtie and Evan Davis. Including Sports Desk;FRIWeather; Thought for the Day; Yesterday in Parliament.FRIFRI09:00 Desert Island Discs b00nht5f (Listen)FRIJerry SpringerFRIKirsty Young's castaway is Jerry Springer.FRIHis life has been split between serving the public andFRIoutraging them. His first career was in politics where, asFRIa life-long Democrat, one of his early jobs was workingFRIwith Bobby Kennedy. Then he found global fame with hisFRIcontroversial TV programme, The Jerry Springer Show.FRIHe says that in politics and in his TV show, he is alwaysFRIon the side of the powerless and disenfranchised. It's aFRIphilosophy, he says, he learned from his parents. TheyFRIwere among the last Jews to escape from Berlin in AugustFRI1939 and their memories and fears of that time shaped theFRIentire family.FRIFRI09:45 Book of the Week b00nnnb0 (Listen)FRIThe Secret Lives of Somerset Maugham, Episode 5FRIBarbara Flynn reads from Selina Hastings' biography ofFRISomerset Maugham, which sheds new light on his complexFRIcharacter.FRIWhen Maugham's companion Gerald Haxton dies, Alan SearleFRIbecomes a major part of Maugham's life.FRIAbridged by Libby Spurrier.FRIA Pier production for BBC Radio 4.FRIFRI10:00 Woman's Hour b00nj9p8 (Listen)FRIWith Jane Garvey. Including drama: Singleparentpals.com.FRIFRI11:00 Lives in a Landscape b00nkz1r (Listen)FRISeries 5, Play for TomorrowFRIDocumentary series telling original stories about realFRIlives in Britain today.FRIThree sixth formers have the summer to get their band backFRIon track after the bass player and best mate walks out onFRIthem.FRINick, Christian and Lawrence are all 17 and have livedFRImost of their lives in Grimsby. The closest of friends,FRIthey had hoped to spend the summer gigging with theirFRIband, Socio Republic. But bassist Reece has just decidedFRIhe no longer wants to be part of the group. The remainingFRItrio are left shell-shocked by their friend's decision andFRIthe future of the band is cast into serious doubt.FRIAlan Dein presents an intimate story of friendship underFRIpressure as the three 'in-betweeners' - not yet men, noFRIlonger boys - spend a long wet summer trying to fillFRIReece's shoes and get some gigs. Yet the weeks pass andFRIthe lads - heartbroken and mystified by Reece's departureFRI- are still without a new bass player. But, as LawrenceFRIsays, 'good things have to end for better things toFRIbegin'. The relentless rain brings on severe boredom andFRIthe lads seem paralysed.FRIThe three are aware that the clock is ticking. UniversityFRIbeckons in a year - when, once again, their friendshipsFRIwill be put to the test.FRIFRI11:30 The Richest Man In Britain b00nlx7p (Listen)FRIEpisode 1FRISitcom by Nick Hornby and Giles Smith about an ageing rockFRIstar and his search for fulfilment.FRITrillionnaire rocker Dave Mabbutt is persuaded to previewFRIhis 'drums-only' version of 1970s classic album, Temple ofFRIthe Human Mind.FRIDave Mabbutt ...... Mark WilliamsFRIDom ...... Russell ToveyFRIDave's Mum ...... Lynda BellinghamFRIJane the Guardian journalist ...... Kerry Fox.FRIFRI12:00 You and Yours b00njb1w (Listen)FRIConsumer news and issues with Peter White.FRIFRI12:57 Weather b00njcbd (Listen)FRIThe latest weather forecast.FRIFRI13:00 World at One b00njcp1 (Listen)FRINational and international news with Edward Stourton.FRIFRI13:30 Feedback b00nlx8j (Listen)FRIRoger Bolton airs listeners' views on BBC radio programmesFRIand policy.FRIFRI14:00 The Archers b00njcq0 (Listen)FRIBonfire night keeps its sparkle for Vicky.FRIFRI14:15 Afternoon Play b00nlxph (Listen)FRIThe Tony Kay ScandalFRIBy Michael McLean.FRIThe true story of the case of footballer Tony Kay, who, inFRI1965, was convicted of match fixing, sent to prison andFRIbanned for life by the FA. The play follows the course ofFRIevents leading up to Kay's trial, imprisonment andFRIrelease, and features recently-recorded observations fromFRIKay himself.FRITony Kay ...... Mikey NorthFRIPeter Swan ...... Carl PrekoppFRI'Bronco' Layne ...... Karl DaviesFRISolicitor ...... Andrew BranchFRIHarry Catterick ...... Tom BevanFRIJimmy Gauld ...... Ross SutherlandFRIJudge ...... Alan LeithFRIPrison Governor ...... Ian MastersFRIDirected by Martin JenkinsFRIA Pier production for BBC Radio 4.FRIFRI15:00 Gardeners' Question Time b00nlxzr (Listen)FRIEric Robson chairs the popular horticultural forum.FRIChris Beardshaw, Anne Swithinbank and John Cushnie areFRIguests of Linkinhorne Horticultural Society in Cornwall.FRIChris meets the man collecting over 200 varieties ofFRICornish apples, cherries and pears, and Anne celebratesFRIthe office plant, revealing the Office Plant of the Year.FRIIncluding Gardening weather forecast.FRIFRI15:45 A History of Private Life b00njctg (Listen)FRIAlternative HomesFRIHistorian Amanda Vickery presents a series which revealsFRIthe hidden history of home over 400 years. She draws onFRIfirst-hand accounts from letters and diaries, many ofFRIwhich have never been heard before. Including songs whichFRIhave been specially recorded for the series.FRIHomes were exposed to huge forces of change in the 19thFRIand 20th century, responding to industrialisation,FRIpollution, and the imperial mission. Prof Vickery exploresFRIhow they remained idealised havens in a heartless, dirtyFRIworld.FRI'Home means a place to go to when you are in trouble. AFRIplace sadly altered by war. A place to glorify when awayFRIand rely on always...' So reported one woman to the MassFRIObservation survey. Prof Vickery explores the enduringFRIpull of a home of one's own.FRIReaders: Deborah Findlay, John Sessions, Madeleine BrollyFRIand Simon Tcherniak.FRISingers: Gwyneth Herbert and Thomas Guthrie, with DavidFRIOwen Norris at the keyboard.FRIA Loftus production for BBC Radio 4.FRIFRI16:00 Last Word b00nlxzt (Listen)FRIMatthew Bannister presents the obituary series, analysingFRIand celebrating the life stories of people who haveFRIrecently died. The programme reflects on people ofFRIdistinction and interest from many walks of life, someFRIfamous and some less well known.FRIFRI16:30 The Film Programme b00nlyvf (Listen)FRIFrancine Stock talks to Matthew Sweet as he continues hisFRIcampaign to rewrite the history of British cinema andFRIbring to light some neglected classics. Plus, PortugueseFRIdirector Pedro Costa talks about his trilogy of films setFRIin a Lisbon slum, starring some of its residents.FRIFRI16:56 1989: Day by Day b00njd4m (Listen)FRI6th November 1989FRISir John Tusa looks back at the events making the news 20FRIyears ago.FRIA backlash against East German refugees begins in WestFRIGermany; supporters of women's ordination hold anFRIovernight vigil outside Lambeth Palace; and it's nunsFRIversus vicars on the rugby field!FRIA Somethin' Else production for BBC Radio 4.FRIFRI17:00 PM b00njdb8 (Listen)FRIFull coverage and analysis of the day's news with EddieFRIMair. Plus Weather.FRIFRI18:00 Six O'Clock News b00njfwr (Listen)FRIThe latest national and international news from BBC RadioFRI4.FRIFRI18:30 The News Quiz b00nlyvh (Listen)FRISeries 69, Episode 7FRISandi Toksvig chairs the topical comedy quiz. TheFRIpanellists are Jeremy Hardy, Danielle Ward, David MitchellFRIand Francis Wheen.FRIFRI19:00 The Archers b00njcq4 (Listen)FRIJennifer finds the truth is hard to take.FRIFRI19:15 Front Row b00njg1v (Listen)FRIArts news and reviews with Kirsty Lang, including anFRIinterview with the American novelist Paul Auster.FRIFRI19:45 Woman's Hour Drama b00njh90 (Listen)FRISingleparentpals.com, We Can't Go on Meeting Like ThisFRISue Teddern's story of the developing friendship betweenFRItwo single parents who correspond via a parenting adviceFRIwebsite.FRITom has a conference in Manchester - is this a chance toFRImeet Rosie in the flesh?FRIRosie ...... Maxine PeakeFRITom ...... Kris MarshallFRISpp.com/Tash ...... Laura MolyneuxFRIGill ...... Janice AcquahFRIJo-C ...... Annabelle DowlerFRIBazz ...... Jonathan TaflerFRILily ...... Isadora Dooley HunterFRIDirected by David Hunter.FRIFRI20:00 Any Questions? b00nlyvk (Listen)FRIJonathan Dimbleby chairs the topical debate fromFRIHartlepool. The panel includes author and documentaryFRImaker Carol Gould and Vince Cable, treasury spokesman andFRIdeputy leader of the Liberal Democrats.FRIFRI20:50 A Point of View b00nlyvm (Listen)FRIA weekly reflection on a topical issue from Clive James.FRIFRI21:00 A History of Private Life: Omnibus b00nlz4c (Listen)FRIEpisode 6FRIOmnibus edition of Prof Amanda Vickery's series revealingFRIthe hidden history of home over 400 years, drawing onFRIfirst-hand accounts from letters and diaries, many ofFRIwhich have never been heard before. Including songs whichFRIhave been specially recorded for the series.FRIHomes were exposed to huge forces of change in the 19thFRIand 20th century, responding to industrialisation,FRIpollution and the imperial mission. Prof Vickery exploresFRIhow they remained idealised havens in a heartless, dirtyFRIworld.FRIThe readers are Deborah Findlay, John Sessions, MadeleineFRIBrolly and Simon Tcherniak.FRIThe singers are Gwyneth Herbert and Thomas Guthrie, withFRIDavid Owen Norris at the keyboard.FRIA Loftus production for BBC Radio 4.FRIFRI21:58 Weather b00njhnk (Listen)FRIThe latest weather forecast.FRIFRI22:00 The World Tonight b00njj3g (Listen)FRINational and international news and analysis with RobinFRILustig.FRIFRI22:45 Book at Bedtime b00njj64 (Listen)FRIHeartland, Episode 10FRIAlex Jones and David Holt read from the novel by AnthonyFRICartwright, set in 2002 in the fictional Black CountryFRIcommunity of Cinderheath.FRIIt is finally polling day in the local elections.FRIAbridged by Jane Marshall.FRIA Jane Marshall production for BBC Radio 4.FRIFRI23:00 A Good Read b00nk4wr (Listen)FRISue MacGregor talks to novelists Catherine O'Flynn andFRIKate Pullinger at the Birmingham Book Festival about theirFRIfavourite books, including titles by Gordon Burn, DonFRIDeLillo and Alaa Al Aswany.FRIFRI23:30 Today in Parliament b00njk8k (Listen)FRINews, views and features on today's stories in ParliamentFRIwith Mark D'Arcy.FRIFRIFRI
30 October, 2009
Radio 4 Listings for 31/10/2009 - 06/11/2009
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