R4 One
Tuesday 2nd October 2018
06:00-09:15 Breakfast
09:15-10:00 brand new series.12/20.Rip Off Britain.(Series 9).Gloria Hunniford, Julia Somerville and Angela Rippon expose devastating problems that have left homeowners seriously out of pocket. Former neighbours relive the moment they watched as mysterious cracks suddenly appeared in their new-build homes, leading to their properties having to be demolished.
There is also a look at how a rogue builder who had left a string of houses damaged or uninhabitable was finally brought to justice, and why a product supposed to weatherproof a home has left one woman dreading what might happen every time it rains.
10:00-11:00 brand new series.39/.Homes Under the Hammer.(Series 21).(Episode 39).More tales from the auction rooms as Martin, Dion and Martel follow developments across the country. Dion catches up with an impressive new build running alongside a tourist steam train track in Cottishall in Norfolk, while Martin meets a developer who has made it three in a row of terraced houses in Bootle in Liverpool. Martel talks to a husband-and-wife team who, along with a sister, are taking on a house in Maidstone in Kent where the outside loo is further away than the next-door pub.
11:00-11:45 brand new series.7/10.Neighbourhood Blues.(Series 8).(Episode 7).Northumbria Police launch Operation Flynn to target wanted and active criminals across their area. Run from police HQ, the neighbourhood teams with their links to the community are integral to making sure the operation is a success. First up, the team attempt to track down a man who is wanted on a weapons offence and hasn't turned up for court. They find him at home in bed but have to make an unscheduled stop before they take him into custody. The team also go on the hunt for a man who is known to become aggressive when he has had a few too many.
The Sunderland team are called to the city centre when one of their regulars has been found hiding in a bush after being accused of stealing money from a student.
11:45-12:15 brand new series.2/20.Caught on the Camera.(Series 6).(Episode 2).A carer steals from a former member of the royal household, a deli specialising in cheese attracts a local rat, and an armed robber who attacks a petrol station gets more than he bargained for.
12:15-13:00 (Repeat) brand new series.31/32.Bargain Hunt.(Series 44).(Carmarthen 32).The bargain hunters are in west Wales at the National Botanic Gardens of Wales, with Christina Trevanion at the helm and expert assistance supplied by Richard Madley and Caroline Hawley. Christina explains the history of a curious piece of Georgian treen.
13:00-13:30 R4 News at One
13:30-14:00 Regional News and Weather
14:00-14:30 Doctors
14:30-15:00 GPS
15:00-15:45 brand new quiz series.17/25.The Boss.(Series 2).Susan Calman hosts the quiz show where being in control is everything. Who will emerge as the boss and walk away with the cash?
15:45-16:30 brand new game show.7/20.Peliclitions.(Series 1).Matthew Barrowman hosts the quiz show One thousand pounds is up for grabs in each game but only by achieving absolute will contestants win the prize. If they fail to achieve the money rolls over to create an even bigger jackpot for the next game.
16:30-17:15 brand new series.7/20.Anquites Road Trip.(Series 5).(Episode 7).Charles Hanson drafts in some extra help from his two-year-old daughter Matilda, but can Natasha Raskin Sharp's canny buys see her beat her Derbyshire rival on his own patch?
While the 1969 Morris Minor provides most of the transport, Charles also hitches a ride on a horse and cart and buys a Flying Scotsman, while Natasha takes a trip in the oldest lift shaft in the world. Charles is confident his medieval items that were found in a riverbed will make him a profit at the auction in the West Midlands.
17:15-18:00 Pointgameless
18:00-18:30 R4 News at Six
18:30-19:00 Regional News and Weather
19:00-19:30 The One Show.Lord Alan Sugar joins Alex Jones and Amol Rajan to talk about the new series of The Apperentice.Scarlette Douglas heads to Birmingham, to the new National College for High Speed Rail, to meet some of the apprentice engineers who will be working on the new High Speed Two (HS2) train.also the cast of the drama about the third and final series of the show and all many more.also The Business also and all many more.
19:30-20:00 LondonEnds
20:00-21:00 brand new series.52/64.Hospital City.(Series 19)
21:00-22:00 brand new series and last in series and series finale.5/5.Doctor Foster.(Series 2).(Episode 5).Drama. Gemma goes to extreme lengths in order to come out on top and win back her old life. But has she gone too far this time?.Starring Suranne Jones,Bertie Carvel,Sian Brooke,Thusitha Jayasundera,Anna Madeley,Prasanna Puwanarajah,Tom Taylor,Philip Wright,Emily Lloyd-Saini,Jade Williams
,Helena Lymbery,Dean Ashton,and Shazia Nicholls.*Doctor Foster return with the third series in the year 2020.*Our Girl:Nepal Tour will be new 4 epsiodes starts on next Tuesday (9th,October,2018) at 9:00pm-10:00pm.
22:00-22:30 R4 News at Ten
22:30-23:00 Regional News and Weather
23:00-00:00 brand new series.5/10.Doctor Reynolds.(Series 2)
00:00-00:50 brand new series.2/3.The Insider:Reggie Yates.(Series 2).(In a Refugee Camp).Reggie Yates visits the Middle East to spend a week living and sleeping in the largest refugee camp in Iraq alongside 30,000 Syrian refugees. Since the war in Syria first began, nearly 11 million people have fled their homes in search of safety. The news has been dominated by those trying to cross into Europe, but some five million people ended up in refugee camps.
But what is it really like to be a 21st-century refugee? And what is it like to plan for your future when you can't go home and you can't move on?
00:50-01:25 brand new one-off-documentary.The Monkey Lab.Documentary exploring one of the world's most heated and divisive debates: is it right to take monkeys' lives to try to improve the lives of humans? Who decides what is acceptable, and where do you draw the line?
Despite huge advances in medicine, scientists argue that the use of monkeys in medical testing is still crucial to cure certain diseases. However, anti-vivisection activists and three quarters of the British public disagree with testing on monkeys. In this documentary we visit the Biomedical Primate Research Centre in the Netherlands, where 200 rhesus macaque monkeys are used each year to help find cures to some of the world's most deadly diseases. We meet those on the front line of this work, from the deputy director of the lab, who believes their work is essential to help stop human suffering, to the animal trainers who get to know the monkeys well and have to wrestle with their emotions every day, knowing that the animals they work with will die in the research lab. We also speak to the activists who protest outside the facility daily in the hope that one day it will be shut down.
The film also hears from the people whose lives rely on this kind of research, including 27-year-old Rich, who recently contracted HIV. Thanks to the last 30 years of research, in which monkey testing played a crucial role, Rich's future looks very different to that of people diagnosed in the early 1980s.
Twenty-one-year-old Jordan is currently on a cocktail of drugs to help treat the symptoms of his young-onset Parkinson's. However, they have terrible side effects, and Jordan is desperate for new and improved drugs. Crucial to this is the research taking place at King's College London, where marmoset monkeys are given the symptoms of Parkinson's disease before being used to test new medicines.
In Oxford we meet leading neurosurgeon and advocate of animal testing Tipu Aziz, whose controversial use of monkeys 30 years ago lead to a non-drug-based treatment of Parkinson's symptoms using deep brain stimulation.
What does the future have in store for the research monkeys? The film explores the work of Professor Paul Furlong at Aston University in Birmingham, who is using state-of-the-art computer imaging to find new ways to understand the human brain and is challenging the continued use of monkeys in research. We also return to the Biomedical Primate Research Centre in the Netherlands and spend time with the head of their Alternatives Department, whose job is to reduce the number of monkeys used in research with the hope of eventually not using monkeys at all.
01:25-01:30 Weather for the Week Ahead
01:30-06:00 Joins R4 News Channel
R4 One Wales
13:30-14:00 R4 Wales Today
18:30-19:00 R4 Wales Today
22:30-23:00 R4 Wales Today
Tuesday 2nd October 2018
06:00-09:15 Breakfast
09:15-10:00 brand new series.12/20.Rip Off Britain.(Series 9).Gloria Hunniford, Julia Somerville and Angela Rippon expose devastating problems that have left homeowners seriously out of pocket. Former neighbours relive the moment they watched as mysterious cracks suddenly appeared in their new-build homes, leading to their properties having to be demolished.
There is also a look at how a rogue builder who had left a string of houses damaged or uninhabitable was finally brought to justice, and why a product supposed to weatherproof a home has left one woman dreading what might happen every time it rains.
10:00-11:00 brand new series.39/.Homes Under the Hammer.(Series 21).(Episode 39).More tales from the auction rooms as Martin, Dion and Martel follow developments across the country. Dion catches up with an impressive new build running alongside a tourist steam train track in Cottishall in Norfolk, while Martin meets a developer who has made it three in a row of terraced houses in Bootle in Liverpool. Martel talks to a husband-and-wife team who, along with a sister, are taking on a house in Maidstone in Kent where the outside loo is further away than the next-door pub.
11:00-11:45 brand new series.7/10.Neighbourhood Blues.(Series 8).(Episode 7).Northumbria Police launch Operation Flynn to target wanted and active criminals across their area. Run from police HQ, the neighbourhood teams with their links to the community are integral to making sure the operation is a success. First up, the team attempt to track down a man who is wanted on a weapons offence and hasn't turned up for court. They find him at home in bed but have to make an unscheduled stop before they take him into custody. The team also go on the hunt for a man who is known to become aggressive when he has had a few too many.
The Sunderland team are called to the city centre when one of their regulars has been found hiding in a bush after being accused of stealing money from a student.
11:45-12:15 brand new series.2/20.Caught on the Camera.(Series 6).(Episode 2).A carer steals from a former member of the royal household, a deli specialising in cheese attracts a local rat, and an armed robber who attacks a petrol station gets more than he bargained for.
12:15-13:00 (Repeat) brand new series.31/32.Bargain Hunt.(Series 44).(Carmarthen 32).The bargain hunters are in west Wales at the National Botanic Gardens of Wales, with Christina Trevanion at the helm and expert assistance supplied by Richard Madley and Caroline Hawley. Christina explains the history of a curious piece of Georgian treen.
13:00-13:30 R4 News at One
13:30-14:00 Regional News and Weather
14:00-14:30 Doctors
14:30-15:00 GPS
15:00-15:45 brand new quiz series.17/25.The Boss.(Series 2).Susan Calman hosts the quiz show where being in control is everything. Who will emerge as the boss and walk away with the cash?
15:45-16:30 brand new game show.7/20.Peliclitions.(Series 1).Matthew Barrowman hosts the quiz show One thousand pounds is up for grabs in each game but only by achieving absolute will contestants win the prize. If they fail to achieve the money rolls over to create an even bigger jackpot for the next game.
16:30-17:15 brand new series.7/20.Anquites Road Trip.(Series 5).(Episode 7).Charles Hanson drafts in some extra help from his two-year-old daughter Matilda, but can Natasha Raskin Sharp's canny buys see her beat her Derbyshire rival on his own patch?
While the 1969 Morris Minor provides most of the transport, Charles also hitches a ride on a horse and cart and buys a Flying Scotsman, while Natasha takes a trip in the oldest lift shaft in the world. Charles is confident his medieval items that were found in a riverbed will make him a profit at the auction in the West Midlands.
17:15-18:00 Pointgameless
18:00-18:30 R4 News at Six
18:30-19:00 Regional News and Weather
19:00-19:30 The One Show.Lord Alan Sugar joins Alex Jones and Amol Rajan to talk about the new series of The Apperentice.Scarlette Douglas heads to Birmingham, to the new National College for High Speed Rail, to meet some of the apprentice engineers who will be working on the new High Speed Two (HS2) train.also the cast of the drama about the third and final series of the show and all many more.also The Business also and all many more.
19:30-20:00 LondonEnds
20:00-21:00 brand new series.52/64.Hospital City.(Series 19)
21:00-22:00 brand new series and last in series and series finale.5/5.Doctor Foster.(Series 2).(Episode 5).Drama. Gemma goes to extreme lengths in order to come out on top and win back her old life. But has she gone too far this time?.Starring Suranne Jones,Bertie Carvel,Sian Brooke,Thusitha Jayasundera,Anna Madeley,Prasanna Puwanarajah,Tom Taylor,Philip Wright,Emily Lloyd-Saini,Jade Williams
,Helena Lymbery,Dean Ashton,and Shazia Nicholls.*Doctor Foster return with the third series in the year 2020.*Our Girl:Nepal Tour will be new 4 epsiodes starts on next Tuesday (9th,October,2018) at 9:00pm-10:00pm.
22:00-22:30 R4 News at Ten
22:30-23:00 Regional News and Weather
23:00-00:00 brand new series.5/10.Doctor Reynolds.(Series 2)
00:00-00:50 brand new series.2/3.The Insider:Reggie Yates.(Series 2).(In a Refugee Camp).Reggie Yates visits the Middle East to spend a week living and sleeping in the largest refugee camp in Iraq alongside 30,000 Syrian refugees. Since the war in Syria first began, nearly 11 million people have fled their homes in search of safety. The news has been dominated by those trying to cross into Europe, but some five million people ended up in refugee camps.
But what is it really like to be a 21st-century refugee? And what is it like to plan for your future when you can't go home and you can't move on?
00:50-01:25 brand new one-off-documentary.The Monkey Lab.Documentary exploring one of the world's most heated and divisive debates: is it right to take monkeys' lives to try to improve the lives of humans? Who decides what is acceptable, and where do you draw the line?
Despite huge advances in medicine, scientists argue that the use of monkeys in medical testing is still crucial to cure certain diseases. However, anti-vivisection activists and three quarters of the British public disagree with testing on monkeys. In this documentary we visit the Biomedical Primate Research Centre in the Netherlands, where 200 rhesus macaque monkeys are used each year to help find cures to some of the world's most deadly diseases. We meet those on the front line of this work, from the deputy director of the lab, who believes their work is essential to help stop human suffering, to the animal trainers who get to know the monkeys well and have to wrestle with their emotions every day, knowing that the animals they work with will die in the research lab. We also speak to the activists who protest outside the facility daily in the hope that one day it will be shut down.
The film also hears from the people whose lives rely on this kind of research, including 27-year-old Rich, who recently contracted HIV. Thanks to the last 30 years of research, in which monkey testing played a crucial role, Rich's future looks very different to that of people diagnosed in the early 1980s.
Twenty-one-year-old Jordan is currently on a cocktail of drugs to help treat the symptoms of his young-onset Parkinson's. However, they have terrible side effects, and Jordan is desperate for new and improved drugs. Crucial to this is the research taking place at King's College London, where marmoset monkeys are given the symptoms of Parkinson's disease before being used to test new medicines.
In Oxford we meet leading neurosurgeon and advocate of animal testing Tipu Aziz, whose controversial use of monkeys 30 years ago lead to a non-drug-based treatment of Parkinson's symptoms using deep brain stimulation.
What does the future have in store for the research monkeys? The film explores the work of Professor Paul Furlong at Aston University in Birmingham, who is using state-of-the-art computer imaging to find new ways to understand the human brain and is challenging the continued use of monkeys in research. We also return to the Biomedical Primate Research Centre in the Netherlands and spend time with the head of their Alternatives Department, whose job is to reduce the number of monkeys used in research with the hope of eventually not using monkeys at all.
01:25-01:30 Weather for the Week Ahead
01:30-06:00 Joins R4 News Channel
R4 One Scotland
13:30-14:00 Reporting Scotland
18:30-19:00 Reporting Scotland
20:00-21:00 Scotland City
22:30-23:00 Reporting Scotland
23:00-00:00 brand new series.52/64.Hospital City.(Series 19)
00:00-01:00 brand new series.5/10.Doctor Reynolds.(Series 2)
01:00-01:50 brand new series.2/3.The Insider:Reggie Yates.(Series 2).(In a Refugee Camp).Reggie Yates visits the Middle East to spend a week living and sleeping in the largest refugee camp in Iraq alongside 30,000 Syrian refugees. Since the war in Syria first began, nearly 11 million people have fled their homes in search of safety. The news has been dominated by those trying to cross into Europe, but some five million people ended up in refugee camps.
But what is it really like to be a 21st-century refugee? And what is it like to plan for your future when you can't go home and you can't move on?
01:50-02:25 brand new one-off-documentary.The Monkey Lab.Documentary exploring one of the world's most heated and divisive debates: is it right to take monkeys' lives to try to improve the lives of humans? Who decides what is acceptable, and where do you draw the line?
Despite huge advances in medicine, scientists argue that the use of monkeys in medical testing is still crucial to cure certain diseases. However, anti-vivisection activists and three quarters of the British public disagree with testing on monkeys. In this documentary we visit the Biomedical Primate Research Centre in the Netherlands, where 200 rhesus macaque monkeys are used each year to help find cures to some of the world's most deadly diseases. We meet those on the front line of this work, from the deputy director of the lab, who believes their work is essential to help stop human suffering, to the animal trainers who get to know the monkeys well and have to wrestle with their emotions every day, knowing that the animals they work with will die in the research lab. We also speak to the activists who protest outside the facility daily in the hope that one day it will be shut down.
The film also hears from the people whose lives rely on this kind of research, including 27-year-old Rich, who recently contracted HIV. Thanks to the last 30 years of research, in which monkey testing played a crucial role, Rich's future looks very different to that of people diagnosed in the early 1980s.
Twenty-one-year-old Jordan is currently on a cocktail of drugs to help treat the symptoms of his young-onset Parkinson's. However, they have terrible side effects, and Jordan is desperate for new and improved drugs. Crucial to this is the research taking place at King's College London, where marmoset monkeys are given the symptoms of Parkinson's disease before being used to test new medicines.
In Oxford we meet leading neurosurgeon and advocate of animal testing Tipu Aziz, whose controversial use of monkeys 30 years ago lead to a non-drug-based treatment of Parkinson's symptoms using deep brain stimulation.
What does the future have in store for the research monkeys? The film explores the work of Professor Paul Furlong at Aston University in Birmingham, who is using state-of-the-art computer imaging to find new ways to understand the human brain and is challenging the continued use of monkeys in research. We also return to the Biomedical Primate Research Centre in the Netherlands and spend time with the head of their Alternatives Department, whose job is to reduce the number of monkeys used in research with the hope of eventually not using monkeys at all.
02:25-02:30 Weather for the Week Ahead
02:30-06:00 Joins R4 News Channel
R4 One Northern Ireland
13:30-14:00 R4 Newsline
18:30-19:00 R4 Newsline
22:30-23:00 R4 Newsline
23:00-23:35 Spotlight.(Paedophile Hunters).
Chris Moore reports on the paedophile hunter groups now operating in Northern Ireland and, in an exclusive interview, challenges the self-styled hunter who confronted a man who later took his own life.
23:35-00:35 brand new series.5/10.Doctor Reynolds.(Series 2)
00:35-01:25 brand new series.2/3.The Insider:Reggie Yates.(Series 2).(In a Refugee Camp).Reggie Yates visits the Middle East to spend a week living and sleeping in the largest refugee camp in Iraq alongside 30,000 Syrian refugees. Since the war in Syria first began, nearly 11 million people have fled their homes in search of safety. The news has been dominated by those trying to cross into Europe, but some five million people ended up in refugee camps.
But what is it really like to be a 21st-century refugee? And what is it like to plan for your future when you can't go home and you can't move on?
01:25-02:00 brand new one-off-documentary.The Monkey Lab.Documentary exploring one of the world's most heated and divisive debates: is it right to take monkeys' lives to try to improve the lives of humans? Who decides what is acceptable, and where do you draw the line?
Despite huge advances in medicine, scientists argue that the use of monkeys in medical testing is still crucial to cure certain diseases. However, anti-vivisection activists and three quarters of the British public disagree with testing on monkeys. In this documentary we visit the Biomedical Primate Research Centre in the Netherlands, where 200 rhesus macaque monkeys are used each year to help find cures to some of the world's most deadly diseases. We meet those on the front line of this work, from the deputy director of the lab, who believes their work is essential to help stop human suffering, to the animal trainers who get to know the monkeys well and have to wrestle with their emotions every day, knowing that the animals they work with will die in the research lab. We also speak to the activists who protest outside the facility daily in the hope that one day it will be shut down.
The film also hears from the people whose lives rely on this kind of research, including 27-year-old Rich, who recently contracted HIV. Thanks to the last 30 years of research, in which monkey testing played a crucial role, Rich's future looks very different to that of people diagnosed in the early 1980s.
Twenty-one-year-old Jordan is currently on a cocktail of drugs to help treat the symptoms of his young-onset Parkinson's. However, they have terrible side effects, and Jordan is desperate for new and improved drugs. Crucial to this is the research taking place at King's College London, where marmoset monkeys are given the symptoms of Parkinson's disease before being used to test new medicines.
In Oxford we meet leading neurosurgeon and advocate of animal testing Tipu Aziz, whose controversial use of monkeys 30 years ago lead to a non-drug-based treatment of Parkinson's symptoms using deep brain stimulation.
What does the future have in store for the research monkeys? The film explores the work of Professor Paul Furlong at Aston University in Birmingham, who is using state-of-the-art computer imaging to find new ways to understand the human brain and is challenging the continued use of monkeys in research. We also return to the Biomedical Primate Research Centre in the Netherlands and spend time with the head of their Alternatives Department, whose job is to reduce the number of monkeys used in research with the hope of eventually not using monkeys at all.
02:00-03:00 (Repeat) brand new series.6/8.Ambulance.(Series 2).(Episode 6).Crewmates Justin and Dawn's first job of the day is a call to a woman whose waters have broken - Dawn hates delivering babies, but Justin loves them and within just a couple of minutes of arriving he has delivered the baby. Justin reveals he used to be a butcher, but this job makes him feel self-worth that he had never felt before.
When Justin and Dawn are dispatched to their next patient, it's a name all too familiar to them. The woman has called 999 four times already that day and is one of a handful of prolific frequent callers staff across the ambulance service all know well. Although she has carers, like many such cases, her support workers are not available out of hours so it falls to the ambulance service to go round to reassure her. As they leave, Justin reflects that nowadays the paramedic role feels like they are 'social workers with first-aid skills'. It won't be their only visit to the woman this evening.
With pubs and clubs beginning to close, Justin and Dawn are called to a very drunk male in the city centre. Justin employs his unexpected Punjabi language skills, picked up from his days as a waiter in a curry house, to help coax the nearly incoherent man off the floor.
In the control room, another of the region's most prolific callers is on the phone saying he is having an epileptic fit. A past brain injury affects his behaviour and he is one of 50 patients in the West Midlands who have to have police to accompany the ambulance crew every time they attend. This man has called 999 six times already that day but when the crew arrive, they find he is running low on medication and food supplies.
Natalie and Nat are dispatched to Jean, who hasn't left the house in over a year as the family haven't been able to afford to pay for a ramp to be installed. It takes five crew and the daughters to help her out to the ambulance so they can take her to hospital for some much needed tests.
Whilst a crew are sent to deal with a suspected deceased male that no one has spotted for two weeks, Darren and Mel are dispatched to the male repeat caller again. They are the 274th crew to have been dispatched to him in the past three months, along with a paramedic officer and the specialist mental health car. The man does not need to go to hospital despite his assertion that he will die if they don't. Like most of their frequent caller cases, it is not a medical emergency but as the crews discuss the challenges of the case outside, they can't see an easy solution - he needs better support but frequently refuses that, as is his right, so it becomes a vicious circle. Justin reflects that the role of the ambulance service has changed, with the ageing population, spiralling demand for social care and cuts in funding, more than ever they are being for called for non-emergencies.
03:00-03:05 Weather for the Week Ahead
03:05-06:00 Joins R4 News Channel
13:30-14:00 R4 Wales Today
18:30-19:00 R4 Wales Today
22:30-23:00 R4 Wales Today




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