TV3 Schedule - Thursday 20th September 2018

TV3
Thursday 20th September 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
Presented by Philip Schofield and Holly Willoughby.
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 (Repeat) Dickinson's Anquites Real Deal.David Dickinson and his dealers are at the RAF Museum in Barnet, where Chris Stitch meets his match over a shagreen cigarette case, and Karen Dalmeny falls for some tiny teddies.
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 The Jewel Raiders - Tonight.David Dickinson and his dealers are at the RAF Museum in Barnet, where Chris Stitch meets his match over a shagreen cigarette case, and Karen Dalmeny falls for some tiny teddies.
20:00-20:30 The Dingles
20:30-21:00 brand new series and last in series and series finale.James Martin's French Adventure.(Paris).Paris: James's French adventure brings him to one of his favourite cities in the world. He has an early start, off to one of the largest wholesale food markets in Europe - Rungis.*a repeat of Paul O'Grady:For Love of the Dogs is on next Thursday (27th,September,2018) at 8:30pm-9:00pm.
21:00-22:00 brand new series.3/4.Safe House.(Series 2).
Tom (Stephen Moyer) makes a key break in the case. Tom links Roger Lane (Andrew Tiernan), an estate agent, to a number of locations related to the Crow abductions.  
Roger Lane is arrested. Jane grills him and the circumstantial evidence is telling. He’s associated with a number of the crime scenes. Not only that, but Simon Duke (Jason Watkins) picks Lane out of an ID parade. It transpires that Simon has worked for Lane in the past, photographing properties. However, despite these links Jane (Sunetra Sarker) is forced to let Lane go due to a lack of hard evidence. She and Tom are hugely frustrated. 
This is compounded when Lane gives Vedder (Gary Cargill), who is tailing him, the slip. The Crow is now at large.
Meanwhile, after Dani (Sacha Parkinson) gets herself in trouble the shocking reason behind her mistrust of John (Ashley Walters) is finally revealed.
Series overview
Safe House, produced by leading independent production company Eleventh Hour Films, returns to TV3 with an all new cast and crime story.
The series stars internationally renowned British actor Stephen Moyer (True Blood, The Bastard Executioner, Shots Fired) as charismatic yet impulsive ex-police officer Tom Brook who runs this season's police safe house, which stands at the edge of the sea on the rugged coastline of Anglesey, a wild and beautiful sanctuary.  
Stephen is joined by actress ZoĆ« Tapper (Mr Selfridge, Lewis) as his partner Sam. The drama has been written by Ed Whitmore (CSI, He Kills Coppers) and Tracey Malone (Born to Kill, Rillington Place) and directed by Marc Evans (Safe House S1, Collision).   
Tom and Sam’s world is turned upside down when news of a shocking crime breaks. Years previously Tom investigated a series of abductions perpetrated by an assailant known as 'The Crow’, who took wives away from their husbands as they helplessly watched. 
On hearing breaking news of a crime bearing the same hallmarks Tom heads to the crime scene, revealing to the police that, terrifyingly, he believes the Crow is active again.
The 4 x 60’ series also stars Dervla Kirwan, (Injustice, Blackout), Jason Watkins (Taboo, The Lost Honour of Christopher Jefferies), Sunetra Sarker (Ackley Bridge, Casualty), Ashley Walters (Cuffs, Top Boy), Sacha Parkinson (Mr Selfridge, The Driver) and Joel MacCormack (Wolf Hall). 
Eleventh Hour Films Creative Director Paula Cuddy (Strike Back, Wallander) is the Executive Producer alongside company founder and Chief Executive Jill Green (New Blood, Collision). Andrew Benson (Strike Back, Prime Suspect) has produced the new season.*Safe House Series 2 Episode 4 of 4 last in series and series finale airs on next Thursday (27th,September,2018) at 9:00pm-10:00pm.
22:00-22:30 TV3 News at Ten and Weather
22:30-22:40 Regional News and Weather
22:40-23:10 The Late Debate
23:10-00:10 (Repeat) brand new series.Jason Robinson Sports Life Stories. 
“When I look at it and I think just how things had gone for me from a council estate in Leeds, starting sport, Hunslet Boys' Club to then playing pro club which was amazing, to then going on winning the World Cup, having tea with the Queen, MBE, OBE, being paraded around London. All those things, it’s just hard to take in that actually that’s me.” - Jason Robinson 
In the seventh episode of this new series, Rugby World Cup winner and dual-code legend Jason Robinson speaks to Mark Durden-Smith about his journey from Hunslet Boys’ Club to glory with club and country in league and union.
With contributions from his World-Cup-winning coach Sir Clive Woodward and Wigan colleague Andy Farrell, Sports Life Stories traces Jason’s career from his tough upbringing in Leeds to scoring a try in the final in Sydney where he lifted the Webb Ellis Cup, via 15 major trophies in eight years at Wigan.
The programme also traces the highs and lows of Jason’s personal life - from not meeting his father until he was 34, to contemplating suicide after his arrest for affray, assault and criminal damage to finding God through his friend, legendary Samoan player Va’aiga Tuigamala.
Returning to his childhood home and the working men’s club where his family used to drink, Jason says he saw a lot of violence as a youngster: “I witnessed loads of things growing up, mini riots, I remember cars screeching around, handbrake turning, people picking up bricks [and] throwing them at each other."
He tried boxing at Hunslet, but it soon became apparent that his running speed meant he would be better suited to sprinting or rugby, earning him the nickname Billy Whizz. He says: “That was given to me quite a few years ago. In my amateur club, it’s from the tea ladies, [they] gave me it from the cartoon character Billy Whizz. It’s followed me all the way through and I even managed to get in the Beano comic as a character on the 2002 Lions tour. Billy Whizz is all about the speed, not the biggest player in the world, but certainly has good feet, good pace, and it’s done me alright.”
Jason signed a professional rugby league contract with Wigan at 16, joining the club during their glory years and fighting for his place in the team. He says: “You knew that if you had a poor game you may not see another one, such was the level of competition in there. Every time you were in the weights room, who could lift the most? Every time you were sprinting, who is the fastest?
“I wasn’t your Martin Offiah, watching him running it was like a gazelle. When I ran, it was just hammer and tongs, it was like I was in second gear going down the motorway.”
While he was winning trophies with the team on the pitch, off it he had taken to drinking heavily. He says: “I got into a situation where I was drinking sometimes six nights a week. Monday it was Wakefield, ten pence a pint night. Tuesday I would be over to Liverpool, Wednesday it would be Oldham. Thursday it would be Wigan. And after the game we would go out wherever.”
Andy Farrell says: “For a young kid to have what he had in such a short space of time, I suppose that was very hard to deal with. With the extra time he had, with having nobody around, made it easier for him to say yes and go out with the lads.”
But after Jason was arrested for violent offences, he says he considered committing suicide. Wigan colleague Tuigamala, who had recently signed, was concerned about him, and helped him to turn his life around by embracing Christianity. Jason says: “Had it not been for him, coming into the environment I was in and putting a different slant on it I certainly wouldn’t have the hope that I’ve got now. And hope is something that people can’t take away.”
Despite playing in the Rugby League World Cup final for England in 1996 against Australia, and appearing for the Great Britain side, in 2001 he switched codes and signed for union side Sale Sharks. He did so after discussing the move with England coach Sir Clive Woodward, who outlined his vision of winning the World Cup. Sir Clive says: “It was all very secretive to be honest, I was meeting various players in service stations, it was quite funny despite the fact it shouldn’t have been. I remember meeting him and what I was impressed by was that neither of us spoke money, neither of us mentioned a pound.”
He made his England debut in the 2002 Six Nations and that summer was selected for the British Lions tour of Australia. England won the Grand Slam in 2004 then beat Australia and New Zealand before heading Down Under for the Rugby World Cup as favourites. Having struggled in the earlier rounds, England beat Wales and France to reach the final against the hosts. In a hard-fought game, Jason scored arguably his most famous try - and celebrated by punching the ball skyward.
He says: “Lawrence [Dallaglio] made that run, gave the inside ball to Jonny [Wilkinson]. Thankfully I was on his outside and I caught his eye, and he threw the ball out to me. And I just knew of all the times, ain’t nobody can catch me here. I punched the ball and it must’ve gone so high because it went so high, it was such a release.”
As the game went into extra-time, Wilkinson kicked a drop-goal with just 20 seconds left on the clock - meaning England had won the World Cup for the first time. Jason says: “When you look at the emotion on those players’ faces, it was the reality and the relief that we have just won a World Cup. And I will never forget that. Jumping on Will Greenwood’s back. Hugging Lawrence Dallaglio. All the hard work. Everything we’ve done has been for this moment. Nothing will ever compare to winning the World Cup, and especially in the backyard of Australia.”
Jason went on to captain England in 2006, and appeared at the World Cup four years after winning it. Having retired from Sale, this was his last international tournament. He played in the team that lost the final against South Africa, despite tweaking his hamstring just before the match. He says: “I can remember hitting the bag thinking, ‘Ooh, my hamstring.’ It’s not what you want going into a World Cup Final. It was going to be my last ever game. I didn’t want to let people down and I didn’t know how long it’ll hold out for. As it happens in the second half I got smashed by the South African players at a ruck and I did my shoulder so I ended up going off.”
After a year in charge at Sale as head coach in 2010, he’s now looking forward to this year’s Rugby World Cup, and even jokingly suggests he’d like to strap his boots back on and get back out on the pitch. He says: “I’ve been retired now for over seven years, and I’ve never really had the feeling I want to be out there and the closer this World Cup gets, having played in three of them… And it’s on home soil, that desire is going to get stronger and stronger.”
00:10-01:00 (Repeat) brand new series.5/6.Bear Grylls:Mission Survive.(Series 2).The celebrities must build a raft that will get them across a dangerous estuary safely. Staying calm under pressure is key, but can they keep it together?
01:00-03:00 JackpotCasino247
03:00-03:25 (Repeat) The Jewel Raiders - Tonight.A gang of Romanian criminals raided 11 jewellery stores, getting away with loot worth more than three million pounds. Tonight reveals how the gang was tracked down and caught.
03:25-05:05 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) brand new series.Jason Robinson Sports Life Stories.“When I look at it and I think just how things had gone for me from a council estate in Leeds, starting sport, Hunslet Boys' Club to then playing pro club which was amazing, to then going on winning the World Cup, having tea with the Queen, MBE, OBE, being paraded around London. All those things, it’s just hard to take in that actually that’s me.” - Jason Robinson 
In the seventh episode of this new series, Rugby World Cup winner and dual-code legend Jason Robinson speaks to Mark Durden-Smith about his journey from Hunslet Boys’ Club to glory with club and country in league and union.
With contributions from his World-Cup-winning coach Sir Clive Woodward and Wigan colleague Andy Farrell, Sports Life Stories traces Jason’s career from his tough upbringing in Leeds to scoring a try in the final in Sydney where he lifted the Webb Ellis Cup, via 15 major trophies in eight years at Wigan.
The programme also traces the highs and lows of Jason’s personal life - from not meeting his father until he was 34, to contemplating suicide after his arrest for affray, assault and criminal damage to finding God through his friend, legendary Samoan player Va’aiga Tuigamala.
Returning to his childhood home and the working men’s club where his family used to drink, Jason says he saw a lot of violence as a youngster: “I witnessed loads of things growing up, mini riots, I remember cars screeching around, handbrake turning, people picking up bricks [and] throwing them at each other."
He tried boxing at Hunslet, but it soon became apparent that his running speed meant he would be better suited to sprinting or rugby, earning him the nickname Billy Whizz. He says: “That was given to me quite a few years ago. In my amateur club, it’s from the tea ladies, [they] gave me it from the cartoon character Billy Whizz. It’s followed me all the way through and I even managed to get in the Beano comic as a character on the 2002 Lions tour. Billy Whizz is all about the speed, not the biggest player in the world, but certainly has good feet, good pace, and it’s done me alright.”
Jason signed a professional rugby league contract with Wigan at 16, joining the club during their glory years and fighting for his place in the team. He says: “You knew that if you had a poor game you may not see another one, such was the level of competition in there. Every time you were in the weights room, who could lift the most? Every time you were sprinting, who is the fastest?
“I wasn’t your Martin Offiah, watching him running it was like a gazelle. When I ran, it was just hammer and tongs, it was like I was in second gear going down the motorway.”
While he was winning trophies with the team on the pitch, off it he had taken to drinking heavily. He says: “I got into a situation where I was drinking sometimes six nights a week. Monday it was Wakefield, ten pence a pint night. Tuesday I would be over to Liverpool, Wednesday it would be Oldham. Thursday it would be Wigan. And after the game we would go out wherever.”
Andy Farrell says: “For a young kid to have what he had in such a short space of time, I suppose that was very hard to deal with. With the extra time he had, with having nobody around, made it easier for him to say yes and go out with the lads.”
But after Jason was arrested for violent offences, he says he considered committing suicide. Wigan colleague Tuigamala, who had recently signed, was concerned about him, and helped him to turn his life around by embracing Christianity. Jason says: “Had it not been for him, coming into the environment I was in and putting a different slant on it I certainly wouldn’t have the hope that I’ve got now. And hope is something that people can’t take away.”
Despite playing in the Rugby League World Cup final for England in 1996 against Australia, and appearing for the Great Britain side, in 2001 he switched codes and signed for union side Sale Sharks. He did so after discussing the move with England coach Sir Clive Woodward, who outlined his vision of winning the World Cup. Sir Clive says: “It was all very secretive to be honest, I was meeting various players in service stations, it was quite funny despite the fact it shouldn’t have been. I remember meeting him and what I was impressed by was that neither of us spoke money, neither of us mentioned a pound.”
He made his England debut in the 2002 Six Nations and that summer was selected for the British Lions tour of Australia. England won the Grand Slam in 2004 then beat Australia and New Zealand before heading Down Under for the Rugby World Cup as favourites. Having struggled in the earlier rounds, England beat Wales and France to reach the final against the hosts. In a hard-fought game, Jason scored arguably his most famous try - and celebrated by punching the ball skyward.
He says: “Lawrence [Dallaglio] made that run, gave the inside ball to Jonny [Wilkinson]. Thankfully I was on his outside and I caught his eye, and he threw the ball out to me. And I just knew of all the times, ain’t nobody can catch me here. I punched the ball and it must’ve gone so high because it went so high, it was such a release.”
As the game went into extra-time, Wilkinson kicked a drop-goal with just 20 seconds left on the clock - meaning England had won the World Cup for the first time. Jason says: “When you look at the emotion on those players’ faces, it was the reality and the relief that we have just won a World Cup. And I will never forget that. Jumping on Will Greenwood’s back. Hugging Lawrence Dallaglio. All the hard work. Everything we’ve done has been for this moment. Nothing will ever compare to winning the World Cup, and especially in the backyard of Australia.”
Jason went on to captain England in 2006, and appeared at the World Cup four years after winning it. Having retired from Sale, this was his last international tournament. He played in the team that lost the final against South Africa, despite tweaking his hamstring just before the match. He says: “I can remember hitting the bag thinking, ‘Ooh, my hamstring.’ It’s not what you want going into a World Cup Final. It was going to be my last ever game. I didn’t want to let people down and I didn’t know how long it’ll hold out for. As it happens in the second half I got smashed by the South African players at a ruck and I did my shoulder so I ended up going off.”
After a year in charge at Sale as head coach in 2010, he’s now looking forward to this year’s Rugby World Cup, and even jokingly suggests he’d like to strap his boots back on and get back out on the pitch. He says: “I’ve been retired now for over seven years, and I’ve never really had the feeling I want to be out there and the closer this World Cup gets, having played in three of them… And it’s on home soil, that desire is going to get stronger and stronger.”
00:05-01:05 Teleshopping
01:05-02:35 After Midnight
02:35-03:00 (Repeat) The Jewel Raiders - Tonight.A gang of Romanian criminals raided 11 jewellery stores, getting away with loot worth more than three million pounds. Tonight reveals how the gang was tracked down and caught.
03:00-05:05 Nightscreen
RTV
18:00-18:30 RTV News at Six

22:30-23:05 RTV News Tonight
23:05-23:35 The Late Debate
23:35-00:35 (Repeat) brand new series.Jason Robinson Sports Life Stories. 
“When I look at it and I think just how things had gone for me from a council estate in Leeds, starting sport, Hunslet Boys' Club to then playing pro club which was amazing, to then going on winning the World Cup, having tea with the Queen, MBE, OBE, being paraded around London. All those things, it’s just hard to take in that actually that’s me.” - Jason Robinson 
In the seventh episode of this new series, Rugby World Cup winner and dual-code legend Jason Robinson speaks to Mark Durden-Smith about his journey from Hunslet Boys’ Club to glory with club and country in league and union.
With contributions from his World-Cup-winning coach Sir Clive Woodward and Wigan colleague Andy Farrell, Sports Life Stories traces Jason’s career from his tough upbringing in Leeds to scoring a try in the final in Sydney where he lifted the Webb Ellis Cup, via 15 major trophies in eight years at Wigan.
The programme also traces the highs and lows of Jason’s personal life - from not meeting his father until he was 34, to contemplating suicide after his arrest for affray, assault and criminal damage to finding God through his friend, legendary Samoan player Va’aiga Tuigamala.
Returning to his childhood home and the working men’s club where his family used to drink, Jason says he saw a lot of violence as a youngster: “I witnessed loads of things growing up, mini riots, I remember cars screeching around, handbrake turning, people picking up bricks [and] throwing them at each other."
He tried boxing at Hunslet, but it soon became apparent that his running speed meant he would be better suited to sprinting or rugby, earning him the nickname Billy Whizz. He says: “That was given to me quite a few years ago. In my amateur club, it’s from the tea ladies, [they] gave me it from the cartoon character Billy Whizz. It’s followed me all the way through and I even managed to get in the Beano comic as a character on the 2002 Lions tour. Billy Whizz is all about the speed, not the biggest player in the world, but certainly has good feet, good pace, and it’s done me alright.”
Jason signed a professional rugby league contract with Wigan at 16, joining the club during their glory years and fighting for his place in the team. He says: “You knew that if you had a poor game you may not see another one, such was the level of competition in there. Every time you were in the weights room, who could lift the most? Every time you were sprinting, who is the fastest?
“I wasn’t your Martin Offiah, watching him running it was like a gazelle. When I ran, it was just hammer and tongs, it was like I was in second gear going down the motorway.”
While he was winning trophies with the team on the pitch, off it he had taken to drinking heavily. He says: “I got into a situation where I was drinking sometimes six nights a week. Monday it was Wakefield, ten pence a pint night. Tuesday I would be over to Liverpool, Wednesday it would be Oldham. Thursday it would be Wigan. And after the game we would go out wherever.”
Andy Farrell says: “For a young kid to have what he had in such a short space of time, I suppose that was very hard to deal with. With the extra time he had, with having nobody around, made it easier for him to say yes and go out with the lads.”
But after Jason was arrested for violent offences, he says he considered committing suicide. Wigan colleague Tuigamala, who had recently signed, was concerned about him, and helped him to turn his life around by embracing Christianity. Jason says: “Had it not been for him, coming into the environment I was in and putting a different slant on it I certainly wouldn’t have the hope that I’ve got now. And hope is something that people can’t take away.”
Despite playing in the Rugby League World Cup final for England in 1996 against Australia, and appearing for the Great Britain side, in 2001 he switched codes and signed for union side Sale Sharks. He did so after discussing the move with England coach Sir Clive Woodward, who outlined his vision of winning the World Cup. Sir Clive says: “It was all very secretive to be honest, I was meeting various players in service stations, it was quite funny despite the fact it shouldn’t have been. I remember meeting him and what I was impressed by was that neither of us spoke money, neither of us mentioned a pound.”
He made his England debut in the 2002 Six Nations and that summer was selected for the British Lions tour of Australia. England won the Grand Slam in 2004 then beat Australia and New Zealand before heading Down Under for the Rugby World Cup as favourites. Having struggled in the earlier rounds, England beat Wales and France to reach the final against the hosts. In a hard-fought game, Jason scored arguably his most famous try - and celebrated by punching the ball skyward.
He says: “Lawrence [Dallaglio] made that run, gave the inside ball to Jonny [Wilkinson]. Thankfully I was on his outside and I caught his eye, and he threw the ball out to me. And I just knew of all the times, ain’t nobody can catch me here. I punched the ball and it must’ve gone so high because it went so high, it was such a release.”
As the game went into extra-time, Wilkinson kicked a drop-goal with just 20 seconds left on the clock - meaning England had won the World Cup for the first time. Jason says: “When you look at the emotion on those players’ faces, it was the reality and the relief that we have just won a World Cup. And I will never forget that. Jumping on Will Greenwood’s back. Hugging Lawrence Dallaglio. All the hard work. Everything we’ve done has been for this moment. Nothing will ever compare to winning the World Cup, and especially in the backyard of Australia.”
Jason went on to captain England in 2006, and appeared at the World Cup four years after winning it. Having retired from Sale, this was his last international tournament. He played in the team that lost the final against South Africa, despite tweaking his hamstring just before the match. He says: “I can remember hitting the bag thinking, ‘Ooh, my hamstring.’ It’s not what you want going into a World Cup Final. It was going to be my last ever game. I didn’t want to let people down and I didn’t know how long it’ll hold out for. As it happens in the second half I got smashed by the South African players at a ruck and I did my shoulder so I ended up going off.”
After a year in charge at Sale as head coach in 2010, he’s now looking forward to this year’s Rugby World Cup, and even jokingly suggests he’d like to strap his boots back on and get back out on the pitch. He says: “I’ve been retired now for over seven years, and I’ve never really had the feeling I want to be out there and the closer this World Cup gets, having played in three of them… And it’s on home soil, that desire is going to get stronger and stronger.”
00:35-01:25 (Repeat) brand new series.5/6.Bear Grylls:Mission Survive.(Series 2).The celebrities must build a raft that will get them across a dangerous estuary safely. Staying calm under pressure is key, but can they keep it together?
01:25-02:25 Teleshopping
02:25-03:00 Nightscreen

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