TV3 Schedule - Friday 2nd November 2018

TV3
Friday 2nd November 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 Eammon Holmes and Ruth Langsford.
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.5/80.Tenable.(Series 2).Warwick Davis hosts the quiz show based on top ten lists. Five members of an LGBT hockey team attempt to walk away with a big cash prize.
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
20:00-20:30 brand new series.4/7.Australian Wilderness with Ray Mears.(Series 1).This brand-new seven part series sees renowned bushcraft expert Ray Mears delving further into the outback. 
Ray travels across Australia to discover how the wildlife and people thrive and adapt in some of the planet’s last great areas of wilderness. 
In this series Ray ventures through turquoise waters, across majestic mangroves, high above mountain ranges and deep into pre-historic forests. In each episode Ray journeys through Australia in search of its  remarkable landscapes, the extraordinary wildlife and the people who have survived this  wilderness.  
Episode 4 - Kangaroo Island
Ray travels the length of Kangaroo Island, off Australia’s South Coast, described as the “wild jewel” in the continent’s crown.  When the early explorers came to the island they found a land teeming with kangaroos and other species with no predators to harm them. Ray sets out to discover just how much of this original paradise is left.  First he comes across a sooty kangaroo, which is unique to Kangaroo Island, and then meets Paul Stanton, who has been farming on the island for 30 years.  Ray learns how Paul lives in harmony with his kangaroo neighbours. 
After an encounter with a mob of kangaroos, Ray moves down to the middle of the island to Lathami
National Park.  Here he meets naturalist Karleah Berris, who shows him the last refuge of the South Australian glossy black cockatoo, which is extinct on the mainland. He learns that the bird is rare because it only nests in the hollows of large, old gum trees.  Most of these big trees were taken out in the 1950s, and the new ones are not yet mature.   Karleah shows him how the cockatoos are being encouraged to nest in artificial hollows in the young trees, made of plastic water pipes. Through this they have doubled the population in the last 22 years.
Still heading south, Ray meets Peggy Rismiller, who has spent 30 years studying one of the world’s most elusive- and weirdest- creatures.  It’s the echidna, or spiny ant eater.  Ray and Peggy go off to track down an echnida, surprising a large lizard, Rosenberg’s goanna, along the way.
Finally, they find an echnida.  It’s the only mammal with a true beak, and it lays eggs!  Ray learns that the echnida is an ancient, living bridge between  reptiles and  mammals.
He arrives at Kangaroo Island’s south coast, at Flinders Chase National Park, where he finds fur seals being battered in the surf of the southern ocean.  Next stop would be Antarctica!.Kangaroo Island: Ray Mears goes down under. On Kangaroo Island Ray meets an echidna - the only mammal with a real beak - but it also lays eggs.
20:30-21:00 Manchester Street
21:00-22:00 brand new one-off-documentary.Bear's Mission with Rob Brydon.Funny man, Rob Brydon, joins Bear Grylls for an adventure he won’t forget as he takes on a mission with Bear on the Mountains of Snowdonia.
Bear’s Mission with Rob Brydon sees the comedian return to the homeland and attempt to survive some of the harshest wilderness in the UK, the North Welsh coast.
Of the mission, Rob said: “This is reminding me of when I was six, I joined the Cubs for a week and I left because it was too rough. There is a fear of bottling it.”
He continued: “I like the outdoors, I used to love building dens and I climbed trees and would make rope swings on trees, that was my big thing. I once, when I was about 10 or 11, was up a tree and I fell and I knocked myself out but I’ve never broken a bone. I hope that record is going to stand at the end of today!”
Rob’s first mission is to climb down into a giant sinkhole.
Bear admits: “Before this journey, I dropped what we are eventually going to be having for dinner into here so we’ve got to go in to retrieve that. We’ve also seen this sheep that is running around down there, not looking very happy. I’m thinking we could do our good deed for the day, not only retrieve our dinner but also try and help this sheep get out. So that’s a mission.”
Rob and Bear attempt to rescue a sheep, that has got stuck in the sinkhole, unable to get out.
On the rescue, Rob says: “That was an experience. He is strong, he can bite and he can kick. Bear assures me he would be stuck here, they don’t get out on their own so we have done him a favour.”
Rob speaks to Bear about his comedy career: “I’m always telling my kids about my failures and embarrassments, that’s a big thing. I’m always telling them about the jobs I go up for and don’t get, audiences that don’t particularly take to me. Almost all actors suffer incredible knockbacks… But they have to keep their self belief.”
And on knockbacks from auditions, he says: “I remember trying to get commercial work and I sent my photo into this guy that cast commercials and I walked into the office and he looked at me and he went ‘Ooh dear, I didn’t realise your skin was quite so bad, it doesn’t really come across in the photograph.’ He said to me, to my face, ‘I could hardly send you up for a chocolate commercial could I? Eat our chocolate and you’ll look like me.’ He said it to my face.”
And on his big break, Rob says: “I took years to break through in comedy. I was 35! I did two shows in 2001, one was called Marion and Geoff and I did another show called Human Remains. They won awards and they got me noticed and then all of a sudden it just changed, it was remarkable, suddenly people were interested.”
Rob also spoke about his friend, the late Ronnie Corbett. Asked what Ronnie would say of Rob traversing the mountains in windy and cold conditions, Rob said: “He would say, ‘Well we really are very, very high, especially for me!’ I was very lucky, I got to know him as a friend. He was so sweet to me. He loved [my impressions of him.] We would phone each other up and he would come to the phone and say is it me, and I’d say, ‘Yes it is.’ He was nothing but lovely to me and a great man.”
And on what he wants his legacy to be, Rob says: “I see comedians and actors talking about their legacy to do with their work. I couldn’t give a monkeys, what does it matter your legacy? I think it’s within your family and friends and loved ones and there I want them to think I was a great bloke who was trying to do the right thing. I’ve discovered that the greatest happiness is not winning awards, or someone writing something nice about you, or audiences cheering - as lovely as that is, it’s a big dinner round a table with the people you love.”.Rob Brydon spends two days in the wilderness of Snowdonia with Bear Grylls, as the pair jump into freezing water, abseil down sinkholes and travel deep inside an old mine.
22:00-22:30 TV3 News at Ten and Weather
22:30-22:40 Regional News and Weather
22:40-23:15 brand new series and last in series and series finale.20/20.After the News.(Series 1).After The News.
This new live topical discussion programme for TV3
debates Britain’s biggest talking points with a range of high-profile guests from news, politics, and popular culture.
Hosted separately five nights a week by broadcasters Emma Barnett and Nick Ferrari, they will be joined for the duration of the 30-minute programme by two guests with passionately-held and differing views for a lively and combative discussion on a range of stories and issues.
The programme aims to be the last word on the major talking points of the day and to combine them with fresh insights into the next morning’s big stories, taking perspectives from social media to fuel the conversation in the studio.
Guests lined up to appear on the show include Nigel Farage, Alastair Campbell, Ann Widdecombe, Nick Clegg, Nicky Morgan, Jason Isaacs, Shami Chakrabarti, Chuka Umunna, Quentin Letts, Julia Hartley-Brewer, and Alex Salmond.
Depending on the news agenda, the panel may be joined by an additional interviewee or contributor who is at the heart of a major news story, and the programme will make room for single interviews on particularly high-profile topics.
Emma, who hosts her own show on Radio 5 live, will present every Tuesday and Friday night, while LBC host Nick will front the show on Wednesdays and Thursdays. The pair will alternate on Mondays.
Emma Barnett said: “News has never been so newsworthy - which is ironic in an era when we've got more access to the hard stuff than ever before. I love being in the middle of the day's biggest issues and separating truth from spin. I look forward to getting going with this new late night news show. So bring it on."
Nick Ferrari said: "With everything from the recent terror attacks, to the complexities of Brexit and even the horror of one of the worst peacetime disasters in history with the Grenfell tragedy, rarely has the news agenda been so compelling and ever-changing. This show seeks to reflect that."
Executive producer Ian Rumsey, Head of Topical Programmes, ITN Productions said: “We’re aiming to go behind the headlines every night – and also bring some of the next day’s big stories forward. We won’t just be sticking simply to the news agenda, our programme will also focus on many of the other things that Britain is really talking about that day.”
23:15-23:45 (Repeat) brand new comedy sitcom series and last in series and series finale.6/6.Bad Move.(Series 1).(Party Time)
Starring Jack Dee as Steve and Kerry Godliman as his wife Nicky, they play a married couple who are both on their second marriages and have decided that moving to the countryside from the city is the answer to all their dreams. 
They’ve watched all the TV relocation shows and read the glossy lifestyle magazines and fell in love with the idea of ‘getting away from the rat race’.
Unfortunately living a simple existence in beautiful surroundings is not all it’s cracked up to be and Steve and Nicky soon find living in the countryside might not be for them after all. Especially when they discover that the house they’ve bought is situated in what locals refer to as ‘In’t Dip’ – a place where internet signals cannot reach, but floodwater most definitely can.
Thanks to unscrupulous estate agents, architects and builders squeezing more money out of the couple, they find themselves in a financial situation that means there is no going back.
The couple must put on a brave face as the last thing they want is for all their friends back in the city to be proven right after they all said it was a ‘bad move’.
When Nicky and Steve discover that their kitchen has flooded, they have to call on Nicky’s Dad for help.
The ever-unimpressed Ken duly arrives with a pump - but Steve is convinced that the source of the flooding could be a natural spring.  He hopes that this will prove to be the answer to all their problems.
Nicky, meanwhile, takes a more practical approach to their finances and decides to earn some money by walking a villager’s dog.
But when the locally based rock star Grizzo turns up with some alarming news, it’s not just Nicky’s job that might be at risk. 
Filmed in the picturesque North York Moors, Bad Move is a family comedy set in the most stunning countryside location, where their nearest neighbours Matt (Miles Jupp) and Meena (Manjinder Virk) annoyingly make it all look so easy. Other villagers include Grizzo (Seann Walsh) - a rock star that needs village life to keep him grounded , Ken  (Philip Jackson) - Steve’s no-nonsense disapproving father in-law, and Shannon (Sue Vincent)  - the local shopkeeper.
Bad Move is a new single camera scripted comedy for TV3 by 
Open Mike Productions written by Jack Dee and Pete Sinclair.
Bad Move was commissioned by Comedy Commissioning Editor Saskia Schuster and Head of Comedy Entertainment Peter Davey. It’s written by Jack Dee and Pete Sinclair and will be produced by Open Mike Productions with Andrew Beint executive producing.Nicky and Steve are missing the hustle and bustle of the city. They fantasise about all the exciting things they could be getting up to if they hadn’t left their old life in Leeds and moving to the middle of nowhere. Instead, all Steve has to look forward to is a day of chasing up invoices for his web design business. Nicky’s day seems to be going even worse when she’s conned into taking Alice, an old lady from the village, to the doctor’s. Whilst Nicky’s day takes a turn for the better, Steve’s takes a bizarre and frightening twist. But at least someone’s happy – Nicky’s dad Ken has won the meat raffle at the bowls club.Party Time: Offbeat sitcom. Nicky and Steve decide to put a brave face on things and invite all their old friends from Leeds for a long-overdue housewarming party.
23:45-00:45 (Repeat) brand new series and last in series and series finale.8/8.Tonight at the London Palladium.Bradley Walsh hosts the variety show, with music from Clean Bandit, illusion from James More, comedy from James Acaster and performances from School of Rock and Les Miserables. 
00:45-00:30 JackptoCasino247
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
20:00-20:30 SCO's Children Appeal 2018 Live
Presented by Lorraine Kelly and Ross King.
21:00-22:00 SCO's Children Appeal 2018 Live
Presented by Lorraine Kelly and Ross King.
22:30-22:45 SCO News
23:15-00:15 brand new one-off-documentary.Bear's Mission with Rob Brydon.Funny man, Rob Brydon, joins Bear Grylls for an adventure he won’t forget as he takes on a mission with Bear on the Mountains of Snowdonia.
Bear’s Mission with Rob Brydon sees the comedian return to the homeland and attempt to survive some of the harshest wilderness in the UK, the North Welsh coast.
Of the mission, Rob said: “This is reminding me of when I was six, I joined the Cubs for a week and I left because it was too rough. There is a fear of bottling it.”
He continued: “I like the outdoors, I used to love building dens and I climbed trees and would make rope swings on trees, that was my big thing. I once, when I was about 10 or 11, was up a tree and I fell and I knocked myself out but I’ve never broken a bone. I hope that record is going to stand at the end of today!”
Rob’s first mission is to climb down into a giant sinkhole.
Bear admits: “Before this journey, I dropped what we are eventually going to be having for dinner into here so we’ve got to go in to retrieve that. We’ve also seen this sheep that is running around down there, not looking very happy. I’m thinking we could do our good deed for the day, not only retrieve our dinner but also try and help this sheep get out. So that’s a mission.”
Rob and Bear attempt to rescue a sheep, that has got stuck in the sinkhole, unable to get out.
On the rescue, Rob says: “That was an experience. He is strong, he can bite and he can kick. Bear assures me he would be stuck here, they don’t get out on their own so we have done him a favour.”
Rob speaks to Bear about his comedy career: “I’m always telling my kids about my failures and embarrassments, that’s a big thing. I’m always telling them about the jobs I go up for and don’t get, audiences that don’t particularly take to me. Almost all actors suffer incredible knockbacks… But they have to keep their self belief.”
And on knockbacks from auditions, he says: “I remember trying to get commercial work and I sent my photo into this guy that cast commercials and I walked into the office and he looked at me and he went ‘Ooh dear, I didn’t realise your skin was quite so bad, it doesn’t really come across in the photograph.’ He said to me, to my face, ‘I could hardly send you up for a chocolate commercial could I? Eat our chocolate and you’ll look like me.’ He said it to my face.”
And on his big break, Rob says: “I took years to break through in comedy. I was 35! I did two shows in 2001, one was called Marion and Geoff and I did another show called Human Remains. They won awards and they got me noticed and then all of a sudden it just changed, it was remarkable, suddenly people were interested.”
Rob also spoke about his friend, the late Ronnie Corbett. Asked what Ronnie would say of Rob traversing the mountains in windy and cold conditions, Rob said: “He would say, ‘Well we really are very, very high, especially for me!’ I was very lucky, I got to know him as a friend. He was so sweet to me. He loved [my impressions of him.] We would phone each other up and he would come to the phone and say is it me, and I’d say, ‘Yes it is.’ He was nothing but lovely to me and a great man.”
And on what he wants his legacy to be, Rob says: “I see comedians and actors talking about their legacy to do with their work. I couldn’t give a monkeys, what does it matter your legacy? I think it’s within your family and friends and loved ones and there I want them to think I was a great bloke who was trying to do the right thing. I’ve discovered that the greatest happiness is not winning awards, or someone writing something nice about you, or audiences cheering - as lovely as that is, it’s a big dinner round a table with the people you love.”.Rob Brydon spends two days in the wilderness of Snowdonia with Bear Grylls, as the pair jump into freezing water, abseil down sinkholes and travel deep inside an old mine.
Saturday 3rd November 2018
00:15-00:45 (Repeat) brand new comedy sitcom series and last in series and series finale.6/6.Bad Move.(Series 1).(Party Time)
Starring Jack Dee as Steve and Kerry Godliman as his wife Nicky, they play a married couple who are both on their second marriages and have decided that moving to the countryside from the city is the answer to all their dreams. 
They’ve watched all the TV relocation shows and read the glossy lifestyle magazines and fell in love with the idea of ‘getting away from the rat race’.
Unfortunately living a simple existence in beautiful surroundings is not all it’s cracked up to be and Steve and Nicky soon find living in the countryside might not be for them after all. Especially when they discover that the house they’ve bought is situated in what locals refer to as ‘In’t Dip’ – a place where internet signals cannot reach, but floodwater most definitely can.
Thanks to unscrupulous estate agents, architects and builders squeezing more money out of the couple, they find themselves in a financial situation that means there is no going back.
The couple must put on a brave face as the last thing they want is for all their friends back in the city to be proven right after they all said it was a ‘bad move’.
When Nicky and Steve discover that their kitchen has flooded, they have to call on Nicky’s Dad for help.
The ever-unimpressed Ken duly arrives with a pump - but Steve is convinced that the source of the flooding could be a natural spring.  He hopes that this will prove to be the answer to all their problems.
Nicky, meanwhile, takes a more practical approach to their finances and decides to earn some money by walking a villager’s dog.
But when the locally based rock star Grizzo turns up with some alarming news, it’s not just Nicky’s job that might be at risk. 
Filmed in the picturesque North York Moors, Bad Move is a family comedy set in the most stunning countryside location, where their nearest neighbours Matt (Miles Jupp) and Meena (Manjinder Virk) annoyingly make it all look so easy. Other villagers include Grizzo (Seann Walsh) - a rock star that needs village life to keep him grounded , Ken  (Philip Jackson) - Steve’s no-nonsense disapproving father in-law, and Shannon (Sue Vincent)  - the local shopkeeper.
Bad Move is a new single camera scripted comedy for TV3 by 
Open Mike Productions written by Jack Dee and Pete Sinclair.
Bad Move was commissioned by Comedy Commissioning Editor Saskia Schuster and Head of Comedy Entertainment Peter Davey. It’s written by Jack Dee and Pete Sinclair and will be produced by Open Mike Productions with Andrew Beint executive producing.Nicky and Steve are missing the hustle and bustle of the city. They fantasise about all the exciting things they could be getting up to if they hadn’t left their old life in Leeds and moving to the middle of nowhere. Instead, all Steve has to look forward to is a day of chasing up invoices for his web design business. Nicky’s day seems to be going even worse when she’s conned into taking Alice, an old lady from the village, to the doctor’s. Whilst Nicky’s day takes a turn for the better, Steve’s takes a bizarre and frightening twist. But at least someone’s happy – Nicky’s dad Ken has won the meat raffle at the bowls club.Party Time: Offbeat sitcom. Nicky and Steve decide to put a brave face on things and invite all their old friends from Leeds for a long-overdue housewarming party.
00:45-01:45 (Repeat) brand new series and last in series and series finale.8/8.Tonight at the London Palladium.Bradley Walsh hosts the variety show, with music from Clean Bandit, illusion from James More, comedy from James Acaster and performances from School of Rock and Les Miserables. 
01:45-03:15 Teleshopping
03:15-04:05 (Repeat) The Jeremy Donald Show
04:05-05:05 Nightscreen
Interntal PPP1 Scotland
Saturday 3rd November 2018
01:45-03:15 After Midnight
03:15-05:05 Nightscreen
RTV
18:00-18:30 RTV News at Six

22:30-22:45 RTV News
00:45-01:45 Teleshopping
01:45-03:00 Nightscreen

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