Episodi
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From his hilltop glass mansion in ancient Tbilisi, he’s accused of cultivating Georgia’s shift from the west over the past decade.
And, with his political party’s recent victory in the parliamentary elections, that trajectory appears set to continue for some time yet.
Bidzina Ivanishvili is the guiding force behind the Georgian Dream party, but what else do we know about the mysterious billionaire?
In this edition of Profile, Mark Coles takes a closer look at the man who keeps animals, collects rare trees, and who spent much of the 1990s in Russia founding companies.
Production team Producers: Ben Cooper, Marianna Brain, Kirsteen Knight Editor: Ben Mundy Sound: Neil Churchill Production Co-ordinator: Maria Ogundele
CreditsIMEDI TV
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The Liverpool-born comedian, known for his razor-sharp wit, has traded in his stand-up routines for some serious dance moves of late.
Chris McCausland is the first blind contestant to take part in the BBC show, Strictly Come Dancing - and he's being tipped as a possible winner.
In his 20s, Chris lost most of his sight due to retinitis pigmentosa. But that didn’t slow down his career. He's been lighting up the comedy scene since 2003, with regular appearances on hit programmes like 8 Out of 10 Cats Does Countdown and Would I Lie to You. He's also taken to the iconic stage of Live at the Apollo.
In this edition of Profile, Stephen Smith talks to some of his closest friends, fellow comedians and former colleagues about his life, Strictly success - and the time he attended a job interview in the wrong trousers.
Production teamProducers: Caroline Bayley, Julie Ball, Natasha FernandesEditor: Ben MundySound: James BeardProduction Co-ordinators: Maria Ogundele
CreditsLive at the Apollo, Open Mike Production, 04/01/2018
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He's the man who masterminded Labour's general election campaign, and now holds one of the most important positions in Downing Street.
Morgan McSweeney was recently appointed the prime minister's chief of staff, after Sue Gray quit the role. But what do we know about him?
Born in Macroom, County Cork, he moved to London aged 17. He soon joined the Labour party under Tony Blair, working in a junior role at their headquarters.
He rose through the ranks, forging a reputation as a skilled campaign strategist, and has been credited with being the brains behind this year's landslide victory.
Mark Coles speaks to the people who know him - from school friends back home in Ireland, to others who've worked with him.
Production teamProducers: Bob Howard, Caroline Bayley, Ellie House, Natasha FernandesEditor: Ben MundySound: Neil ChurchillProduction Co-ordinators: Maria Ogundele
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She’s a girl from New York's Lower East Side whom grew up to a life of stardom and is now known by just one name.
Gaga, a classically trained pianist, has secured Grammy-winning songs like Poker Face and Rain on Me. While her performance in A Star Is Born was Oscar-nominated.
Along the way, there’s been a meat dress, a high-profile stance against US military policy, and a collaborative album with Tony Bennett.
Her latest work, Harlequin, is a companion album to her new big screen performance in Joker: Folie à Deux.
From all-conquering song thrush to screen favourite, Stephen Smith has been find out about the life of Gaga.
Production teamProducers: Diane Richardson, Kirsteen Knight and Ben CooperEditor: Ben MundySound: Neil ChurchillProduction Co-ordinators: Maria Ogundele
Credits Joker: Folie à Deux (Official Trailer) - Writer/director/producer Todd Phillips. Warner Bros.A Star is Born (Official Trailer) - Director Bradley Cooper. Warner Bros.The inauguration of Joe Biden, 2021, CSPAN.The Late Show, RTE.2016 Academy Awards.
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He’s not yet completed a hundred days in his new job, but David Lammy finds himself overseeing the UK’s response to rising tensions in the Middle East.
Born to Guyanese parents in north London, and raised by his mother from the age of 12 after his father left them, the foreign secretary is known for his advocacy for social justice, equality, and human rights.
His journey to the top of British politics began with a legal career – becoming the first black Briton to study a masters in law at Harvard. At 27, David Lammy became Parliament’s youngest MP when he was elected in Tottenham, and he went on to become a junior minister under Sir Tony Blair.
In opposition, he spent some of his time on Labour’s back benches – though now finds himself front and centre, facing countless fast-moving global challenges.
Mark Coles meets some of the people who know David Lammy best - from childhood friends, to his beloved 'Aunty May'.
ContributorsDecca Aitkenhead - Chief Interviewer, The Sunday TimesPaul Waugh - Labour MP for RochdaleBen Rhodes - Political commentatorMayfield Griffith - Godmother of David Lammy
Production teamProducers: Di Richardson, Michaela Graichen and Ben CooperEditor: Ben MundySound: Neil ChurchillProduction Co-ordinators: Maria Ogundele and Janet Staples
ArchiveUnited Nations General Assembly Political Thinking with Nick Robinson, 11 May 2018Channel 4 News
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It’s a tiny computer with a catchy name: Raspberry Pi. But what's the story behind the man who thought up this affordable device?
His name is Eben Upton. He has gone from being a child desperate to make computer games, to the head of a company described as a ‘city darling’.
The firm reported higher than expected profits in its first report, after being listed on the London Stock Exchange.
Stephen Smith has been speaking to Eben Upton’s childhood friends, former colleagues and some big hitters in tech and business.
ContributorsHolly Williams - Business Editor, Press Association news agencyHermann Hauser - Entrepreneur, venture capitalist and co-founder of Amadeus Capital PartnersHarriet Green - Investor, philanthropist. Former chair and CEO of IBM Asia PacificPete Thornhill - School friendVictoria Drew - School friendDavid Cleevely - Entrepreneur and former Raspberry Pi chairman
Production teamProducers: Julie Ball, Farhana Haider, Ben Morris, Michaela GraichenEditor: Tom BigwoodSound: Gareth JonesProduction Co-ordinator: Maria Ogundele
ArchiveCentre for Computing History, CambridgeKerbal Space Program: Take-Two Interactive, publisher Private Division, developer SquadSensible Soccer: developer Sensible Software
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Some call it one of the trickiest jobs in the country. How do you stop the small boats trying to cross the English Channel and smash the smuggling gangs?
The government has appointed Martin Hewitt to the role- he’s leading the UK’s new border security command. It’s a tough job, so can he do it?
Martin Hewitt is a former senior police officer and chair of the National Police Chiefs’ Council. He is also the man who oversaw the policing of Covid lockdowns.
Mark Coles has been speaking to some of his colleagues, former colleagues and the journalists who reported on him.
ContributorsTim Smith - Chief Constable, Kent PoliceDanny Shaw - Former BBC CorrespondentFestus Akinbusoye - Former Police and Crime Commissioner for BedfordshireRuth Turner - Senior Director at the Forward Institute Dal Babu – Former Chief Superintendent in the Metropolitan PoliceVikram Dodd - Guardian Police and Crime Correspondent
Production teamProducers: Farhana Haider, Ben Morris, Ben Cooper, Michaela GraichenEditor: Richard VadonSound: Gareth JonesProduction Co-ordinators: Sabine Schereck and Maria Ogundele
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This week we delve into the life of the First Minister of Wales Eluned Morgan, the first woman to hold the position. Morgan was introduced to politics at a very young age by her parents, who were both councillors. Her early career was spent working in broadcasting before her political career began at the age of 27, elected as the youngest Member of the European Parliament in 1994. She went on to take up a seat in the House of Lords and was Welsh Health Secretary during the Covid pandemic. Stephen Smith talks to friends and political figures, hearing how a girl from a deprived part of Cardiff, became the most powerful person in Wales. Contributors:Lord Neil Kinnock - Former Labour LeaderGloria Yates - NeighbourRuth Mosalski - Political Editor of Wales OnlineCeri Innes Parry- Childhood FriendClaudia Velez – School Friend Production Team:Presenter: Stephen SmithProducers: Diane Richardson, Julie Ball and Ben MorrisEditors: Ben Mundy and Alex LewisSound: James BeardProduction Co-ordinator: Maria Ogundele
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Some of world football's biggest names have been linked to England's top job since Gareth Southgate hung up his waistcoat. But, for now at least, it is Lee Carsley who takes over as England's interim manager.
The modest, methodical and quietly spoken coach started his footballing journey at Derby County – before making his name at Everton.
Family and charity work are Lee Carsley’s other priorities. He’s a patron of the Solihull Down Syndrome Support Group – after they helped his middle child, Connor following his diagnosis. Lee also volunteers at the Solihull Moors Foundation.
Some say this collection bucket rattler has all the attributes required to lead England to glory, so Mark Coles speaks to his friends, and colleagues to find out more.
ContributorsBecci Fox - CEO, Solihull Moors FoundationKevin Turner - Former PE Teacher, Cockshut Hill SchoolKevin Kilbane - Former footballer, Everton Football ClubJack Gaughan - Northern Football Reporter, Daily Mail
Production teamProducers: Di Richardson, Farhana Haider, Drew Hyndman and Ben MorrisEditor: Ben MundySound: John ScottProduction Co-ordinator: Maria Ogundele
ArchiveRAMS TVThe Football AssociationMatch of The Day 11/12/04 (BBC)BBC Radio 5 Live
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James Graham’s writing obsession started at the age of six in the shadow of Nottinghamshire's former coalmines. Equipped with a typewriter from his mother he created hundreds of stories from the family home in Kirkby-in-Ashfield.
Accelerating through university in Hull and a writing residency in west London, Graham’s work started to attract wider audiences following a break at the National Theatre in 2012. Building on his thrilling political drama This House, he went on to write plays and TV series including Sherwood, Dear England, Quiz, Best of Enemies and Brexit: The Uncivil War.
During this year’s MacTaggart lecture at the Edinburgh TV Festival, he called for more working-class people in TV.
But what next for this prolific playwright? Stephen Smith speaks to his family, friends and colleagues to find out more.
ContributorsAnne Ellis - MotherDavid Morrissey - Actor Kate Wasserberg - Artistic Director, Theatr ClwydDr Sarah Jane Dickenson - Senior Lecturer, University of HullMartin Humphrey - Former Head of Creative Arts, Ashfield School, NottinghamSusannah Clapp - Theatre Critic for The Observer
Production teamProducers: Julie Ball, Ben Cooper, Miriam QuayyamEditor: Ben MundySound: John ScottProduction Co-ordinator: Maria Ogundele
Archive2012 National Theatre production of This House written by James Graham and directed by Jeremy Herrin.The cast in the extract features Phil Daniels playing Bob Mellish, Philip Glenister playing Walter Harrisonand Lauren O’Neil playing Ann Taylor.
PictureBBC/PA Media
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From ‘hillbilly’ roots to becoming Donald Trump’s nominee for vice-president. At 39, if JD Vance is elected, he would be one of America’s youngest ever Vice-Presidents. A lot has been laid bare in his own words, in ‘Hillbilly Elegy: A Memoir of a Family and Culture in Crisis’. He talks about being raised by his grandparents who moved from the Appalachian Mountains area of Kentucky to Ohio, to a Middle America Rust Belt town looking for a better life. His mother struggled with drug addiction and a string of chaotic relationships. So how did he go from a sometimes unstable, sometimes violent, upbringing to being in the running to take one of the highest offices in American politics? There’s another transformation many wonder about too: why did he change his mind on Trump? Only in 2016 JD Vance said ‘I can't stomach Trump. I think that he's noxious and is leading the white working class to a very dark place.’ Mark Coles finds out.
Credit: NPR Fresh Air
Presenter: Mark ColesProducers: Phoebe Keane, Diane RichardsonEditor: Penny Murphy
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Shabana Mahmood is the new Lord Chancellor and Secretary of State for Justice.
Born in Birmingham in a Kashmiri Pakistani family, she has three siblings, one of whom is her twin. From an early age her father ensured that the children were aware of the world around them, and made them each read five minutes from the Times newspaper every evening.
Inspired by the 1990's TV series, 'Kavanagh QC' to become a lawyer, Shabana Mahmood attended Lincoln College, Oxford University, a year below a certain Rishi Sunak.
After a few years working in law, she changed career and moved into politics, in 2010 winning the seat of Birmingham Ladywood for Labour, which she has held to date. Stephen Smith talks to those who know her.
Presenter: Stephen SmithProducers: Diane Richardson and Julie BallEditor: Penny MurphyProduction Co-ordinators: Maria Ogundele and Rosie StrawbridgeSound mix: Hal Haines
CONTRIBUTORSWilliam Audland KC, 12 Kings' Bench Walk ChambersDavid Gauke, former Lord Chancellor and Secretary of State for JusticeJane Haynes, Journalist Birmingham Live/MailBaroness Sayeeda Warsi, former, Chair of the Conservative Party and Minister without Portfolio.Lord Tom Watson, former MP West Bromwich East & deputy leader of the Labour party
CREDITSKavanagh QC - Central TV for ITV productionsPolitical Thinking - Nick Robinson BBC R4/BBC Sounds
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Evan Gershkovich is the Wall Street Journal's Moscow reporter. He's been imprisoned in Russia since March last year, and has just gone on trial there - the first American journalist to be jailed in Russia since the Cold War. He's accused of espionage, something he, his employer and his government all strenuously deny.
To his friends, like Jeremy Berke, he is "the most extroverted person that I've ever met in my whole life". He loves football and is a dedicated Arsenal fan - so much so that he'd get his flatmates in Brooklyn up at 7am on Sunday mornings - despite them having been out on the town together till the early hours - to watch Arsenal matches with him on TV.
The son of Soviet-born, Jewish parents who'd fled to the USA in the late 70s, he grew up speaking Russian at home. Once in Moscow as a reporter, his fellow correspondents - many of whom quickly became friends too - were impressed by his drive, his knowledge of Russia's language and culture, his ease at making contacts, and his willingness to go the extra mile - often literally, to places like the remote Russian republics of Udmurtia and Yakutia.
He's now been detained for fifteen months and counting. Gershkovich's friends and family say his release can't come too soon; they're waiting to welcome him home with hugs, and the desire "to never let him leave again".
Presenter: Mark ColesProducers: Arlene Gregorius and Julie Ball Editor: Penny MurphyProduction Coordinator: Maria Ogundele
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Before she became one of the best-selling musicians of all time, Shania Twain worked for the family tree-planting business, singing for tips in lumberjack bars to help make ends meet. Stephen Smith charts the rise of a hard-up Canadian country girl, from a violent family home, to a country-pop crossover superstar.
This year's Glastonbury 'Legends' slot will be the first time some will have seen or heard from Shania in decades - we hear about the disease that robbed her of her voice at the peak of her powers in the early 2000s and, along with a devastating divorce, led to a 15-year gap between albums. Contributors:
John Kim Bell, former producer and boyfriend Lindsay Ell, guitaristJake Gosling, music producerMarc Bouwer, fashion designer
Presenter: Stephen SmithProducers: Simon Tulett and Natasha FernandesSound: Neil ChurchillProduction Coordinators: Maria Ogundele and Sabine SchereckEditor: Penny Murphy
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Sometimes known as the “sultan of swing,” Professor Sir John Curtice has become an institution of election coverage in the UK. But is there more to the man than stats and figures? There might be some broad beans and jam, as Mark Coles finds out.
Rev Dr Lisa Curtice, John’s wifePhil Tremewan, childhood friend John Leston, friend from universityDavid Dimbleby, broadcasterPaddy O’Connell, BBC broadcaster
Presenter: Mark ColesProducers: Ivana Davidovic, Diane Richardson and Julie BallSound: James BeardProduction Coordinator: Maria OgundeleEditor: Tom Bigwood
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Who is National Rally's 28-year-old leader, Jordan Bardella? Stephen Smith looks at the life of the boy from the Paris suburbs who joined the far-right as a teenager and rapidly became the face of National Rally, helping to bring success for the party in the European elections.
ContributorsCécile Alduy, Professor of French Studies, Stanford University, Political Scientist, Sciences PO ParisAymeric Durox, National Rally Senator Pascal Humeau, Communications Advisor and Media TrainerBénédicte Paviot, UK Correspondent France 24Pierre-Stéphane Fort, Jordan Bardella biographer
Presenter: Stephen SmithProducers: Diane Richardson, Ivana Davidovic and Julie BallSound: Neil ChurchillProduction Coordinators: Maria Ogundele and Rosie StrawbridgeEditor: Tom Bigwood
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Rylan Clark is on the cusp of becoming a national treasure. Having defied the odds of most reality TV stars, he has managed to stay the course, cementing his already steady career rise to the top with his most recent television outing with Rob Rinder 'Rob and Rylan's Grand Tour', which showed the viewing public a whole new side to his talents.
Brought up in the East End by his mum, Linda. Rylan or Ross as his family and friends know him, was always performing from a young age, according to his mum. The family moved to Essex when he was around 11 going to school in Upminster, where Ross was a mischievous and talented student.
After a few years in retail he started modelling and went off to Ibiza where he was in tribute bands to Take That and Westlife. His big break came when he appeared on X Factor in 2012. Although he didn't win, he did make an impression, and after winning Celebrity Big Brother his career took off.
Mark Coles charts the rise of Rylan Clark.
Presenter: Mark Coles
Contributors
Scott Bryan, TV critic and broadcaster
Linda Clark, Mother
Bernice Cole, Make-up artist and friend
Nader Dehdashti, Agent and friend
Mark Duncan, Deputy Headmaster, Coopers' Company and Coborn School
Robert Rinder, Broadcaster and barrister
CREDITS
X Factor - Thames and Syco EntertainmentRob and Rylan's Grand Tour - Rex Productions Keeping Up Appearances - BBCMasterchef - Endemol Shine UK How to Be a Man - Mindhouse production for BBC SoundsHow to Be in the Spotlight - Mindhouse production for BBC Sounds
Production Team
Producers: Julie Ball, Diane Richardson & Ivana DavidovicEditor: Tom BigwoodSound: James BeardProduction Co-ordinator: Maria Ogundele
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Alan Bleasdale, the Liverpudlian screenwriter and playwright, is in the spotlight this week as a stage version of his iconic 1980's TV series 'Boys from the Blackstuff' opened at the National Theatre. Born in Liverpool, an only child who first went into teaching, his first public work was 'Scully' for Radio Merseyside, a kind of Liverpudlian Adrian Mole, which he wrote whilst he was still teaching.
But it was 'Boys from the Blackstuff' that made him a household name with one of the characters, Yosser Hughes' line 'Gissa job' providing a chant on the stands of his beloved Liverpool Football Club.
His work has courted controversy with successive governments, although he says he's not political, only voting for the first time at the age of 38. Now in his late 70's and 40 years on from the original television series, he's back in the spotlight. Stephen Smith talks to friends and colleagues about his work, phobias and how to tell if you're having a heart attack.
Presenter: Stephen Smith
PRODUCTION TEAM
Producers: Julie Ball and Diane RichardsonResearcher: Marianna BrainEditor: Bridget HarneySound: Neil ChurchillProduction co-ordinators: Maria Ogundele and Sabine Schereck
Contributors
Peter Ansorge, former Script Producer, BBC Drama and Commissioning Editor, Drama C4
James Graham, Playwright and Screenwriter
Robert Lindsay, Actor
Sir Michael Palin, Actor and Author
Tony Schumacher, Author and Screenwriter
Trevor Stent, former teaching colleague
CREDITS
Boys from the Blackstuff, BBC Drama
Desert Island Discs, BBC R4
GBH - Channel 4
Scully's New Years Eve, BBC
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Ann-Marie Powell, is the exuberant and colourful, garden designer, whose' Octavia Hill 'Garden was one of the eight main gardens in competition at the Chelsea Flower Show this year.
After dropping out of college she spent six months travelling in India, Nepal and New Zealand, which inspired her to take up gardening. Attending Capel Manor horticultural college her first job was working in sales for a large nursery. But Ann-Marie's colourful personal style and outgoing personality led her employer to encourage her to apply for a job as a presenter on a TV gardening show. She soon blossomed into a popular gardening show host working with fellow gardeners like Carol Klein, Joe Swift and gardening supremo, Monty Don.
In addition to running her own successful garden design business from the home she shares with her husband and two boys, on the Hampshire borders, she feels it's important that everyone should have access to green spaces, no matter where they live. During lockdown her Instagram page 'My Real Garden' was a big hit broadcasting garden tips and advice everyday.
Presenter: Mark Coles
CONTRIBUTORS
Julian Bundy - HusbandAngela Halksworth - Co-owner, Tendercare NurseriesJanet Morgan - FriendJane Owen - Garden Designer Mark Straver - Hortus LociCleve West - Award winning Garden Designer Tamsin Westhorpe- Gardener and Horticulture Writer
CREDITS
Gardens, Weeds and Words Podcast - Presented by Andrew O'BrienReal Gardens - Channel 4RHSNational TrustMy Real Garden - Instagram - Ann-Marie Powell
PRODUCTION TEAM
Producers: Julie Ball and Diane RichardsonEditor: Bridget HarneyProduction Co-ordinator: Maria OgundeleSound: David Crackles
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You may know her from Play School, Bafta or the House of Lords, Baroness Floella Benjamin doesn’t sit still, she’s even appeared in panto.
Stephen Smith hears about the remarkable life of the Trinidad-born actress, TV presenter and author, who campaigns passionately for children and the Windrush generation.
ContributorsColin Webb, Publisher, 'Coming to England'Nero Ughwujabo, Senior Strategy Adviser - Equality Diversity and Inclusion, The Prince's TrustLord Simon Woolley, Principal at Homerton College, Cambridge UniversityJohnny Ball, Children's TV presenterPaul Nicholas, ActorLinzi Beuselinck, ActressJeremy Swan, Children's TV producer Ros Edwards, TV producer
CreditsBAFTAAladdin and The Forty Thieves, BBC 1984Desert Island Discs, Baroness Floella Benjamin, BBC Radio 4, October 2020
Presenter: Stephen SmithProducers: Diane Richardson and Drew HyndmanEditor: Tom BigwoodSound: Neil ChurchillProgramme Coordinators: Maria Ogundele and Sabine Schereck
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