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1-48 of 48
- The stylish survival guide to looking great on a budget, as Gok Wan continues his mission to banish the nation's wardrobe disasters.
- A long forgotten roll of film compels a couple to re-live their tragic past.
- Businesswoman Karren Brady investigates unequal pay and the gender pay gap, speaking to women whose careers have been affected by attitudes towards women in the workplace.
- The Guv offers himself to the electorate, in exchange for free dogs.
- Secrets of the female orgasm and how woman can ejaculate like men, best way to make love if you're overweight, what happens inside a vagina during male ejaculation and what men can learn from women who have sex with other women.
- Why some couples no longer consider anal sex taboo, one of the best sexual positions for pregnant women and well endowed men: the spoons, and the secrets of tantric sex: men can have multiple orgasms too.
- When three is not a crowd; why having sex with multiple partners is becoming increasingly popular, Lichen Sclerosis a potentially devastating skin condition that can make penetrative sex impossible, and the art of spanking as erotic foreplay.
- Designer vaginas: the women getting genital makeovers, first hand tips to perfect mutual masturbation, how does a woman become a man and a penis become a vagina.
- The Chawner family move into a quiet suburban street in Ramsbottom and cause problems. A psychiatrist in Clapham battles a huge renovation next door. Thumping basslines, pounding walls and slamming doors deprive a family of sleep.
- May concludes that the major breakthroughs in transportation over the last 100 years shrunk the world not by allowing us to see more of it, but--thanks to television, computers, and fiber optic cable--by increasingly bringing it to us.
- May reruns the 20th century's space races. He begins with the V2 rockets that the Nazis launched on London and moves on to the rocket rivalry between Russia and America. All the while, he asks, was it all really worth it?
- May examines how we can correct and compensate for medical problems, such as missing limbs or defective hearts. In the process, he shows that we can now defy the hand we were dealt at birth and, by unraveling our DNA, discover who we really are.
- How did we construct skyscrapers that appear to defy gravity? Why is an electrician from Newcastle the unsung hero behind our 24-hour lifestyle? And what motivates May to drop a Mini Cooper on a plate-glass window?
- What spawned teenagers? Was it the nylon-inspired fashion revolution, crystal radio, vinyl records, the first Japanese motorcycle, or the electric guitar? May sets out to discover how, during the 20th century, the teenager emerged as a distinct entity.
- May investigates some of the most ingenious ideas to emerge from 20th century warfare. He flies in the RAF's latest supersonic jet as well as a biplane, getting to grips with just how difficult it was for early aviators to hit their targets. James also joins a group of ex-paratroopers to test camouflage painting techniques. It work so well he can't spot a man just a few hundred feet in front of him, and so turns to a hi-tech infrared camera to spot his enemy.
- Nish takes on Boris' new pup, Rachel Parris looks at the government's "Get Ready for Brexit" campaign, Andy Murray investigates the new generation of climate change activists and Geoff Norcott mocks liberal catastrophising.
- Nish sums up Donald Trump's recent activities. Rachel Parris offers advice to Meghan Markle. Geoff Norcott presents some easy ways to tackle climate change. Ahir Shah looks at the final season of 'The UK'.
- Through the unexpected power of Zoom (and some pre-recorded segments) the topical satire returns to look at the Coronavirus pandemic, how to spot an expert and the dangers of isolation. Plus, radicalisation of mums via Facebook.
- Anna investigates some of the music television channels shown sexual imagery. Plus Anna and Dr. Radha Modgil visit Brislington School in Bristol to educate teenagers on the female body.
- Anna tackles the display of Lads Mags in newsagents. plus Anna and Dr Radha Modgil go to Fairfax school to discuss body temperature in relation to sexual arousal.
- A frank look at male puberty, artificial insemination, online chatrooms, love & sex in a relationship where both partners are blind, and more results from the British sex survey.
- A frank discussion about genetics, menopause, finding the right bra, a couple with sickle cell disease who conceived a child and more results from the survey.
- A frank look at pregnancy and different experiences of gay men in the Jewish community. And more results from the Great British Sex Survey reveal how many people have had anal sex, and in which part of the country is dressing up to explore a sexual fantasy most popular.
- Profiling French Prime Minister Pierre Laval who helped the Nazi's after England sunk and killed 1,300 french sailors and was later found guilty of treason and hung.
- Chaim Mordechaj Rumkowski, a Polish Jew who helped the Nazis, is profiled.
- Seconds from Disaster reveals how a US mission in Somalia quickly turns from a raid to a search and rescue mention leaving 18 American soldiers are dead and another 73 are injured.
- Profiles Dinko Sakic, the so-called "Beast of the Balkans", and the history behind the Jasenovac concentration camp (Jasenovac, Croatia), which, under Sakic's command, became known for brutality that shocked even visiting Nazi officials.
- AKA Good or Evil. Profiling Mohammad Amin Al-Husayni, Grand Mufti of Jerusalem, who enticed Bosnian Muslims to serve in the Waffen-SS.
- AKA Hitler's Executioner. The crimes of Viktor Arajs, leader of the Arajs Kommando unit, is profiled.
- Details of collaborators in Ukraine and Lithuania are examined.
- Failed politician Vidkun Quisling cuts a secret deal with the Nazis that he hopes will catapult him to power, only to find himself leader of Norway in name only after Germany invades the country in 1940.
- AKA The Devil's Due. Greeks who helped the Nazis.
- How the IRA collaborated with the Nazis is examined, which profiles individuals and organizations that knowingly or unwittingly aided the Third Reich.
- The 1935 Nuremburg Laws, the final solution, and soldiers who are Jewish that were allowed to fight for Germany are discussed.
- AKA Hitler or Death. The Belgian collaborator Léon Degrelle is profiled.
- Failed politician Anton Mussert's lust for power leads him to make a pact with the Nazis, going even so far as swearing his allegiance personally to Adolf Hitler. But Hilter turns the tables on Mussert, costing the Dutch people dearly.
- This episode explores the Finnish collaborators, and dispels with the myth that they were the "good collaborators" who were not involved in many war crimes. The Finns negotiated an alliance with one of the most evil regimes the world has ever seen, Nazi Germany, in order to fight the common enemy, communist Russia, but the alliance went far beyond the mere cobelligerency to full scale collaboration. The episode details war crimes committed by the Waffen SS Finish soldiers, and explores the depth of the Finish denial. The Soviet POVs received harsh treatment and died by the thousands in Finnish camps, for which Finnish collaborators were tried after the war. However, war time leader Mannerheim, once seen as Finnish Hitler, is revered in present day Finland and was even voted to be "greatest Finn" in 2004, while Risto Ryti, war time president of Finland imprisoned for Nazi collaboration by the western allies for 10 years after the war, won second place.
- A team of investigators go deep into the triangle to explore ocean floor wrecks and stage experiments to tackle the mystery once and for all. In the last hundred years, countless lives have been lost but nobody is really sure why. Is it some form of extreme weather? A rare ocean phenomenon? Or could something else be at work? Testing theories on a scale never done before, Curiosity looks at the science behind one of the world's most mysterious places.
- Hurricane Sandy is one of the most treacherous storms to hit the US. CURIOSITY goes on the ground with those who experienced the event first hand and uncovers how distinct phenomena combined to create the perfect storm and how to prepare for the next one.
- For 20 years, Lexus has been synonymous with quiet, efficient, luxury. Now they have launched their first petrol sucking supercar - the Lexus LFA. 325kph and 0-100kph in 3.8 seconds, it's anything but understated. This is the construction story behind the ultimate Japanese supercar. Hand built at the LFA Works in Toyota City, Japan, this car is 65% carbon fibre and powered by the highest revving production engine on the road. At $375,000 it's also the most expensive Japanese road car ever.
- Rachel Parris offers her guide to spotting whether you are a member of the "elite" and Irish comedian Catherine Bohart presents a guide to being the kind of immigrant British people don't mind so much as the mash report returns.
- Piers Morgan's breakfast television interview with Donald Trump is the subject of much discussion. Geoff Norcott returns to investigate safe spaces in universities.
- In Budget week, Nish comments on investigations into Arron Banks, Rachel Parris looks at climate change and the environment and Desiree Burch talks about the upcoming US mid-term elections and apologises for Americans.
- Where are the Liberal Democrats? Will Brexit be as cool as WWII? Ahir Shah discusses the inter-generational housing crisis. There's a look at the results of the U.S. mid-term elections, in which a dead man was elected.
- Rachel Parris responds to accusations of bias, Geoff Norcott explores the Brexit options, Andy Murray presents a guide to post-Brexit cuisine. Plus, Donald Trump's response to Californian wildfires.
- Rachel Parris presents a guide to real world behaviour for the internet reliant, Nish talks about far-right political success in Europe, Fin Taylor explores compromise and Desiree Burch talks U.S. politics.
- Nish and Catherine Bohart discuss Brexit and the Northern Irish border, Rachel looks at MP's PR disasters and public funding and Geoff Norcott looks at businesses aligning themselves with politically correct issues.