TV3 Schedule - Wednesday 11th July 2018

TV3
Wednesday 11th July 2018
06:00-08:30 Britain Morning Live
08:30-09:25 Lorraine
09:25-10:30 The Jeremy Donald Show
10:30-12:30 This Morning
12:30-13:30 Loose Ladies
13:30-14:00 TV3 Lunchtime News and Weather
14:00-15:00 Judge Rilnder
15:00-16:00 brand new series.13/20.David Dickinson,s Name Your Price.(Series 1).Dickinson’s Name Your Price sees three pairs of contestants competing against each other to correctly value antiques or collectables in order to win a top cash prize!  
Taking inspiration from the older, golden age of game shows, David Dickinson’s Name Your Price challenges contestants to correctly identify the valuable item from a selection of three.
Across three rounds, host and antiques expert David ‘The Duke’ Dickinson describes each of the three objects, detailing their history and provenance. 
However, David is only telling the truth about one item, the valuable one, and the information about the other two items are lies!
Each pair of contestants have to decide which is the truly valuable item and which are The Duke’s deceptions.
At the end of each round David tells the contestants the real value of the objects and points are awarded for the correct answer. The two couples with the highest scores then go through to the fourth round - the semi-final. 
In this round, contestants are shown five antiques or collectables and are then given five cash labels. After David has described each item, one member from each team has 30 seconds to match the object with its correct cash value. 
Just one couple go through to the final round  - ‘The Duke’s Bobby Dazzler’ - in which David describes two items, one of which is worth £5000 and the other is ‘cheap as chips’, worth just £50.
David also offers the contestants a cash sum so they can either choose to take a risk and win the cash value of an item or take the cash. Can they spot the truly valuable object or will they decide to go for David’s cash sum?
16:00-17:00 Lucky Stars
17:00-18:00 The Question Chase
18:00-18:30 Regional News and Weather
18:30-19:00 TV3 Evening News and Weather
19:00-19:30 The Dingles
19:30-20:00 Manchester Street
20:00-21:00 brand new series.2/9.Love Your Garden.(Series 7).The nation’s favourite gardener Alan Titchmarsh returns with a brand new series of his hit TV3 peak-time gardening programme, Love Your Garden.
Love Your Garden (9 x 60 mins) will see the writer, broadcaster and TV personality travel the country to give surprise transformations to the outdoor spaces of some of Britain’s most deserving people.
Alan and his team of experts transform barren plots and small neglected grounds into stunning gardens and lifestyle-enhancing outdoor living spaces - while informing and inspiring viewers on how to recreate the look themselves with minimum fuss.
In each episode, Alan surprises garden owners who have an inspiring story to tell and whose outdoor space is in desperate need of a transformation. While the owner is whisked away, Alan designs the new-look garden – taking inspiration from the best gardens in the area and asking for help from local people and the owner's friends in completing the project.
This time Alan Titchmarsh and the team head to Manchester to turn a concrete patch of dismal cracked pavers and hard edges in to a beautiful classic cottage garden. The transformation is for Salford born identical twins Rita and Betty Mills (87).
The twins have lived together in Salford for all of their lives, and since surviving some of the worst WWII bombings this country has seen, as lifelong parishioners of Salford Cathedral, they have never wavered in devoting their lives to helping others.
It was their friends and family from the Cathedral that got in touch with the programme.  They felt that when the sisters moved to their new bungalow for health reasons – the one thing they really deserved and desperately needed was an outdoor space on their doorstep – to match their own outgoing and sunny personalities.  Alan believes this was the worst gardens he’d ever seen in the series and therefore, couldn’t resist the challenge. He and the team share all the tips and tricks that will help you turn even the most modest of urban yards into a cottage style retreat.
The Love Your Garden team are Alan Titchmarsh, David Domoney, Katie Rushworth and Frances Tophill.
Immediately following this nine-part series of Love Your Garden, will be the brand new three-part series, Love Your Home and Garden. 
For decades Alan has stood in some of the worlds most beautiful gardens and built outdoor spaces that have literally changed peoples lives. But in that time he has also recognized that how people see their gardens has changed. For many people a stand-alone garden is not enough. They dream of a stunning outdoor space that works hand in hand with the home. 
So, for the first time, Alan will be taking on broken homes and broken backyards, and going across the nation, meeting some very special people for whom a new home and a new garden would make an enormous difference…and he’s bringing in an expert team for the inside and for the outside. 
He’ll be working with top London builder Kunle Barker, and three leading interior experts and architects to transform the families’ living spaces: Ewald Van Der Straeten and George Bradley will be tackling the home of a family with a severely disabled son, Helen Sisley will be designing a property in Oxfordshire for a family where the two children are carers for their mum, and Welsh interior architect James Stroud will be redesigning a house for a family who have done extraordinary charity work up in Chester. 
Joining Alan to transform the gardens will be fellow Love Your Garden presenter Katie Rushworth, and all together this crack team will create one-of-a-kind homes and gardens that truly have the wow factor for people who truly deserve them.
21:00-22:00 brand new series.2/3.Joanna Lumley,s India.(Series 1).
Joanna Lumley returns to the country of her birth for a deeply personal journey around the vibrant and unique country of India.
Joanna was born during the last days of the Raj and both sides of her family called India home, for several generations.
In this series she travels the length and breadth of the country, for an immersive and extraordinary exploration of its diverse landscapes, varying cultural traditions and incomparable spirit. Along the way, she meets an eclectic mix of people and discovers how independence has shaped India into the constantly evolving and endlessly fascinating country it is today.
Episode 2
In episode two, Joanna begins her journey in Mumbai, before travelling through the western state of Gujarat and on to exotic Rajasthan.  At the Gateway to India on Mumbai harbour, she faces the beautiful stone archway through which she left India in 1948.Joanna was 11 months old at the time and boarded a ship to England with her parents.  
Mumbai is a captivating city with 22 million people crammed into an area just one third the size of greater London.  Journalist Namita Davidal takes Joanna to the office of The Times of India newspaper, where uncle Ivor was the last British Editor, 70 years ago.  
The city is is famous for its slums, which house over five million people in makeshift accommodation.  But the rich also flock here and Mumbai is home to 28 billionaires and some of the world’s highest real estate values.  Joanna visits the World One Tower, which is currently under construction and due to be the world’s tallest residential block. Fighting her fear of heights, she visits the 56th floor and experiences the incredible view.  Residents will have access to a gym, swimming pool and cricket pitch and the apartments are designed by Armani. Joanna jokes to her guide, Deepak, “You do realise this will be just a fat column of billionaires?  I might apply to be a maid, I might come and work here.”
Eighty miles inland lie the Ellora Caves, one of the largest rock cut temple complexes in the world.  The caves were created between the sixth and tenth centuries and are cut out of solid rock.  Joanna is stunned to see the jaw dropping centrepiece, the Hindu Kailasa Temple.  As the Temple comes in to view over a sheer drop, Joanna gasps, “Unbelievable! I have to say with my vertigo, even leaning over makes me terrified.  Probably today for the first time, just because I’m leaning here, it will suddenly tip forward. Still, nice place to die!”
Two hundred miles north of Mumbai is the city of Ahmedabad, once known as the Manchester of India and previously the centre of the country’s huge cotton industry. There are over 170 million Muslims in India, making Islam the second largest religion.  Joanna observes the Muslim call to prayer, which gathers the faithful to worship five times a day. 
She is invited to a Hindu housewarming party and visits the vibrant and busy market in Manek Chowk for a housewarming gift. Joanna walks the narrow streets to the home of Mr Chitroda and his extended family of over 30. They have just finished renovating the ground floor of their new home and will purify the house with a housewarming ritual.  
The family have been up since dawn preparing, have hired a priest to conduct the ceremony and a local cowman has brought two of his cows.   Cows are sacred to Hindus and Gujarat is a particularly devout state.  The family chant and present the cow with garlands and gifts, believing the presence of 33 million gods and goddesses to reside within all parts of it.  In return, the cow’s urine is used to treat skin diseases when mixed with honey, milk, curd, sugar and ghee.  
Joanna explores the caste system of India, which is strongly tied to Hinduism and segregates people into social groups from birth. The system is supposedly illegal in India but the hierarchy still exists in practice. Joanna meets Majula Pradeep, a lawyer and campaigner for the rights of the Dallit community, formally known as the ‘untouchables’.
Majula explains how the caste system still exists: “It is determined by your surname.  We are given a caste certificate when we are born. When we go into schools, in the admission form we have to mention our caste. They say if we don’t mention our caste, we won’t get scholarships.  We have separate neighbourhoods, so this is a segregated area. They say people who are cursed have to sleep in the eastern part of the city.“
Majula takes Joanna to the home of a Dallit family, who lost their son to a violent act of discrimination when three attackers covered him in diesel and kerosene and burnt him to death.  Joanna is shocked by the story of his death and touched to meet his family, who show her pictures of their son.  Joanna says: “It’s been a terrible, terrible shock. I think I believed it when Ghandi was saying ‘untouch-ability will be a thing of the past’.  I think I believed it when India said, ‘We no longer have the caste system’. The horrifying murder that took place of the beautiful young man, simply because he was a Dallit, is just unbearable. This has no place in the modern world. It has to stop.”
Joanna travels north to India’s biggest state, Rajasthan, to meet the Raika people who have made their living from camels for over six centuries.Trucks and cars are replacing the need for camels so the Raika have turned to selling camel milk. Joanna tries the milk for the first time and says: “It’s completely beautiful, slightly warm, very rich and sweet as anything.”
She then visits the dairy where the fresh milk is processed and meets founder and former vet Ilse Kohler-Rollefson. 
In 1972 Indira Gandhi, India’s first woman prime minister formally removed the maharajas power.Overnight they became commoners and were made to pay large taxes on their lands. In Dungarpur, the former private palace of the Maharaja has been converted into a hotel.  Joanna spends the night at the hotel and meets the owner, the Prince of Dungapur.
He takes Joanna the magnificent Juna Mahal Palace, which has been home to 20 generations of his family, making it the oldest palace in the world to be continuously inhabited by one family. The palace contains the largest collection of wall paintings of any palace in India.  Joanna says: “Gosh, this is fantastic.  I’ve never seen anything like it.  I’m speechless.  Well I’m not, I can’t stop talking.”.*Joanna Lumely,s India Series 1 last in series and series finale is on next Wednesday (18th,July,2018) at 9:00pm-10:00pm.
22:00-22:30 TV3 News at Ten and Weather
22:30-22:45 Regional News and Weather
22:45-23:45 (Repeat) Paul O Grady:For Love of the Dogs - India.Paul O'Grady concludes his trip to India to meet vulnerable animals. At Kaziranga National Park, he looks after eight elephant calves and helps with important medical tasks. 
23:45-00:40 (Repeat) The Question Chase
00:40-03:00 JackpotCasino247
03:00-03:50 (Repeat) The Jeremy Donald Show
03:50-05:05 Nightscreen
05:05-06:00 (Repeat) The Jeremy Donald Show
SCO
18:00-18:30 SCO News at Six
22:30-23:05 Scotland Tonight
23:05-00:05 (Repeat) Paul O Grady:For Love of the Dogs - India.Paul O'Grady concludes his trip to India to meet vulnerable animals. At Kaziranga National Park, he looks after eight elephant calves and helps with important medical tasks. 
00:05-01:05 Teleshopping
01:05-02:35 After Midnight
02:35-03:25 (Repeat) The Jeremy Donald Show
03:25-05:05 Nightscreen
RTV
18:00-18:30 RTV News at Six

22:30-23:05 RTV News Tonight
23:05-00:05 (Repeat) Paul O Grady:For Love of the Dogs - India.Paul O'Grady concludes his trip to India to meet vulnerable animals. At Kaziranga National Park, he looks after eight elephant calves and helps with important medical tasks. 
00:05-01:05 Teleshopping
01:05-03:00 Nightscreen

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