TV3
Wednesday 7th 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 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 brand new series.8/80.Tenable.(Series 2).Warwick Davis hosts the quiz show based on top ten lists. A team of five from Cumbria 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.1/.Gino's Italian Costal Escape.Gino D’Acampo is back in his homeland of Italy, and in this eight-part series he is exploring the Mediterranean coast, from the glittering elegance of its cliff-top towns, to its mountainous rustic villages. He’ll be immersing himself in the rugged, wild islands, traveling along dramatic coastal roads, and across the sea, to reveal the best-kept secrets of this coast.
Along the way, of course, he’ll be serving up plenty of mouth watering authentic food.
Gino says: “I'm exploring the places that I think reveal the very best of the Italian west coast and its cuisine, from the Tuscan coast in the north, the middle stretch studded with show-stopping Sorrento and Capri, and right down to the southern tip of the boot and the Aeolian Islands.”
Episode 1
In the first episode, Gino is starting his travels on the famous Amalfi Coast, experiencing both its glamour as well as revealing its hidden side. The Amalfi Coast, often voted in the top 10 destinations to visit in Italy, stretches for 37 iconic kilometres, and includes many picturesque towns. Tonight, Gino is stopping at three of his favourites: Cetara, Minori, and, of course, the picture postcard Positano.
In Minori, he visits a local family that is still producing the town’s local speciality - a unique hand-made pasta using ricotta cheese, and even gets a masterclass in making this delightfully named Ndunderi.
He also visits the picturesque fishing village of Cetara, where Gino says: “This is the one place that I didn’t visit when I was younger, and I’m really excited to be here now, because it’s foodie heaven.”
Cetara, lying at the eastern end of the Amalfi Coast, is home to just over 2000 people, and fishing is at the heart of this tiny community. As Gino discovers, it’s made a name for itself producing Colatura di Alici - an anchovy oil made from the natural process of salting anchovies.
Gino says: “This was the ancient Romans’ favourite condiment and it’s still a staple found in every Italian’s kitchen.”.Sorrento and Capri: Gino D'Acampo chooses ten gems along the Mediterranean coast, some where he has strong personal connections, but all for their incredible ingredients.
20:30-21:00 Manchester Street
21:00-22:00 brand new series and last in series and series finale.8/8.Doc Martin.(Series 8).(All My Trials)
Series overview
Martin Clunes returns to play the nation’s favourite grumpy medic in a brand new series of Doc Martin for TV3.
He stars as Dr. Martin Ellingham, the GP with a brusque bedside manner and a phobia of blood, in eight new episodes of the hugely successful drama produced by Buffalo Pictures and set in the idyllic hamlet of Portwenn in Cornwall.
Picturesque Port Isaac provides the beautiful backdrop for the popular series, with all regular members of the cast reprising their roles alongside guest stars Art Malik, Caroline Quentin and Sigourney Weaver.
Caroline Catz plays Doc Martin’s wife and local school headmistress, Louisa Ellingham. Dame Eileen Atkins plays Doc Martin’s formidable Aunt Ruth, with Ian McNeice as Bert Large and Joe Absolom as his son Al. John Marquez is back as Portwenn PC Joe Penhale, with Jessica Ransom as the Doc’s receptionist, Morwenna Newcross, and Selina Cadell as pharmacist Mrs Tishell.Following the complaint to the medical authorities by a patient the Doc was treating he has been advised by Chris Parsons (Vincent Franklin) not to practice for a week before his hearing.
However this does not stop patients asking for his help. Bill Potter (Tom Mothersdale), a local potter, approaches Martin with a suspected ganglion. Martin sends him to a surgery in Wadebridge, but Bill decides against it – he has too much work on.
With no patients to deal with, Louisa encourages Martin to get out of the house and go for a walk, as she really needs to focus on her end of module essay.
Ruth tells Martin she has done some research into who is going to be on the panel at the hearing, which doesn’t fill him with confidence.
Penhale has commissioned a bust from Bill but it is not finished when he goes to collect it. Bill blames the ganglion and asks Penhale to use the technique of smacking it with a book to help speed things along. Penhale smacks the ganglion, which doesn’t go according to plan.
American tourist Beth Traywick (Sigourney Weaver) returns to Portwenn to do some research into her family tree. She manages to flatter Mrs Tishell into sharing her local knowledge.
Mrs Tishell’s opinion of Beth quickly changes though, when she finds out Beth has a medical issue she wants to see Martin about, which could jeopardise his position with regards to the hearing.
Louisa goes to see Chris Parsons to find out how serious the hearing is. Chris opens up to Louisa about his marital problems, after having a few too many glasses of Bert’s “special” blend of Large Whisky. Chris tries to kiss Louisa, but then has a ‘grand mal seizure’. The following morning Chris makes a clumsy apology and manages to spill water all over Louisa’s computer: how will she get her essay in on time?
Martin, on his way to the hearing, is forced to take a detour when Mrs Tishell calls with an emergency: Beth has collapsed. Now late for the hearing, Martin rushes in, only for the hearing to be interrupted again by Penhale and Bill. Bill’s ganglion was a radial artery aneurysm, which has now burst and needs an emergency procedure to save his hand...All My Trials: Comedy-drama about a grumpy but loveable GP. Martin has not been able to practice ahead of his hearing but this does not stop patients asking for medical advice.*Gone to Pot:American Road Trip Series 1 Episode 2 of 3 airs on next Wednesday (14th,November,2018) at 9:00pm-10:00pm.*Doc Martin returns with the ninth series will be last and final series will air in the year 2020 will be new 8 episodes in the year 2020.
22:00-22:30 TV3 News at Ten and Weather
22:30-22:45 Regional News and Weather
22:45-23:45 (Repeat) 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 2000, 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.
23:45-00:45 (Repeat) brand new one-off-documentary.Road Rage Britain:Caught on the Camera.“I’ve been chased by cab drivers, minicabs, van drivers, the works… Fisticuffs have been thrown in the past, yes.” - Cycle courier Nick Swinden, 37, from Archway, London
“The shiny bum brigade... I can’t be doing with cyclists. If I’m paying tax on the road then I want to be able to ride on the road. They don’t pay tax so why should they ride three or four deep…” - White van driver Gaz McPartland, 38, from Preston
There are more cars on the roads than ever before – and we’re cycling far more than we used to. But that’s leading to regular bouts of road rage, with the two tribes most often at loggerheads: cyclists and drivers.
The difference is that, new, cheap technology means that when the red mist descends, many incidents are caught on camera by the cyclists and motorists in the thick of it.
An ITN Productions production for TV3, Road Rage Britain: Caught on Camera features astonishing footage of shocking road rage – plus a unique experiment, in which two committed cyclists, one from London and one from Manchester, swap modes of transport with a London cabbie and a white van man from Preston, both of whom view their two wheeled counterparts as a menace.
How will they cope experiencing life on the road from the perspective of their road rage rivals? At the end of the experiment they come face to face in a showdown to share their views.The British lead the world in road rage, but what is causing these regular traffic temper tantrums? Featuring video clips and interviews with victims and perpetrators.
00:45-03:00 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) 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 2000, 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.
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) 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 2000, 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.
00:05-01:05 (Repeat) brand new one-off-documentary.Road Rage Britain:Caught on the Camera.“I’ve been chased by cab drivers, minicabs, van drivers, the works… Fisticuffs have been thrown in the past, yes.” - Cycle courier Nick Swinden, 37, from Archway, London
“The shiny bum brigade... I can’t be doing with cyclists. If I’m paying tax on the road then I want to be able to ride on the road. They don’t pay tax so why should they ride three or four deep…” - White van driver Gaz McPartland, 38, from Preston
There are more cars on the roads than ever before – and we’re cycling far more than we used to. But that’s leading to regular bouts of road rage, with the two tribes most often at loggerheads: cyclists and drivers.
The difference is that, new, cheap technology means that when the red mist descends, many incidents are caught on camera by the cyclists and motorists in the thick of it.
An ITN Productions production for TV3, Road Rage Britain: Caught on Camera features astonishing footage of shocking road rage – plus a unique experiment, in which two committed cyclists, one from London and one from Manchester, swap modes of transport with a London cabbie and a white van man from Preston, both of whom view their two wheeled counterparts as a menace.
How will they cope experiencing life on the road from the perspective of their road rage rivals? At the end of the experiment they come face to face in a showdown to share their views.The British lead the world in road rage, but what is causing these regular traffic temper tantrums? Featuring video clips and interviews with victims and perpetrators.
01:05-02:05 Teleshopping
02:05-03:00 Nightscreen
Wednesday 7th 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 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 brand new series.8/80.Tenable.(Series 2).Warwick Davis hosts the quiz show based on top ten lists. A team of five from Cumbria 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.1/.Gino's Italian Costal Escape.Gino D’Acampo is back in his homeland of Italy, and in this eight-part series he is exploring the Mediterranean coast, from the glittering elegance of its cliff-top towns, to its mountainous rustic villages. He’ll be immersing himself in the rugged, wild islands, traveling along dramatic coastal roads, and across the sea, to reveal the best-kept secrets of this coast.
Along the way, of course, he’ll be serving up plenty of mouth watering authentic food.
Gino says: “I'm exploring the places that I think reveal the very best of the Italian west coast and its cuisine, from the Tuscan coast in the north, the middle stretch studded with show-stopping Sorrento and Capri, and right down to the southern tip of the boot and the Aeolian Islands.”
Episode 1
In the first episode, Gino is starting his travels on the famous Amalfi Coast, experiencing both its glamour as well as revealing its hidden side. The Amalfi Coast, often voted in the top 10 destinations to visit in Italy, stretches for 37 iconic kilometres, and includes many picturesque towns. Tonight, Gino is stopping at three of his favourites: Cetara, Minori, and, of course, the picture postcard Positano.
In Minori, he visits a local family that is still producing the town’s local speciality - a unique hand-made pasta using ricotta cheese, and even gets a masterclass in making this delightfully named Ndunderi.
He also visits the picturesque fishing village of Cetara, where Gino says: “This is the one place that I didn’t visit when I was younger, and I’m really excited to be here now, because it’s foodie heaven.”
Cetara, lying at the eastern end of the Amalfi Coast, is home to just over 2000 people, and fishing is at the heart of this tiny community. As Gino discovers, it’s made a name for itself producing Colatura di Alici - an anchovy oil made from the natural process of salting anchovies.
Gino says: “This was the ancient Romans’ favourite condiment and it’s still a staple found in every Italian’s kitchen.”.Sorrento and Capri: Gino D'Acampo chooses ten gems along the Mediterranean coast, some where he has strong personal connections, but all for their incredible ingredients.
20:30-21:00 Manchester Street
21:00-22:00 brand new series and last in series and series finale.8/8.Doc Martin.(Series 8).(All My Trials)
Series overview
Martin Clunes returns to play the nation’s favourite grumpy medic in a brand new series of Doc Martin for TV3.
He stars as Dr. Martin Ellingham, the GP with a brusque bedside manner and a phobia of blood, in eight new episodes of the hugely successful drama produced by Buffalo Pictures and set in the idyllic hamlet of Portwenn in Cornwall.
Picturesque Port Isaac provides the beautiful backdrop for the popular series, with all regular members of the cast reprising their roles alongside guest stars Art Malik, Caroline Quentin and Sigourney Weaver.
Caroline Catz plays Doc Martin’s wife and local school headmistress, Louisa Ellingham. Dame Eileen Atkins plays Doc Martin’s formidable Aunt Ruth, with Ian McNeice as Bert Large and Joe Absolom as his son Al. John Marquez is back as Portwenn PC Joe Penhale, with Jessica Ransom as the Doc’s receptionist, Morwenna Newcross, and Selina Cadell as pharmacist Mrs Tishell.Following the complaint to the medical authorities by a patient the Doc was treating he has been advised by Chris Parsons (Vincent Franklin) not to practice for a week before his hearing.
However this does not stop patients asking for his help. Bill Potter (Tom Mothersdale), a local potter, approaches Martin with a suspected ganglion. Martin sends him to a surgery in Wadebridge, but Bill decides against it – he has too much work on.
With no patients to deal with, Louisa encourages Martin to get out of the house and go for a walk, as she really needs to focus on her end of module essay.
Ruth tells Martin she has done some research into who is going to be on the panel at the hearing, which doesn’t fill him with confidence.
Penhale has commissioned a bust from Bill but it is not finished when he goes to collect it. Bill blames the ganglion and asks Penhale to use the technique of smacking it with a book to help speed things along. Penhale smacks the ganglion, which doesn’t go according to plan.
American tourist Beth Traywick (Sigourney Weaver) returns to Portwenn to do some research into her family tree. She manages to flatter Mrs Tishell into sharing her local knowledge.
Mrs Tishell’s opinion of Beth quickly changes though, when she finds out Beth has a medical issue she wants to see Martin about, which could jeopardise his position with regards to the hearing.
Louisa goes to see Chris Parsons to find out how serious the hearing is. Chris opens up to Louisa about his marital problems, after having a few too many glasses of Bert’s “special” blend of Large Whisky. Chris tries to kiss Louisa, but then has a ‘grand mal seizure’. The following morning Chris makes a clumsy apology and manages to spill water all over Louisa’s computer: how will she get her essay in on time?
Martin, on his way to the hearing, is forced to take a detour when Mrs Tishell calls with an emergency: Beth has collapsed. Now late for the hearing, Martin rushes in, only for the hearing to be interrupted again by Penhale and Bill. Bill’s ganglion was a radial artery aneurysm, which has now burst and needs an emergency procedure to save his hand...All My Trials: Comedy-drama about a grumpy but loveable GP. Martin has not been able to practice ahead of his hearing but this does not stop patients asking for medical advice.*Gone to Pot:American Road Trip Series 1 Episode 2 of 3 airs on next Wednesday (14th,November,2018) at 9:00pm-10:00pm.*Doc Martin returns with the ninth series will be last and final series will air in the year 2020 will be new 8 episodes in the year 2020.
22:00-22:30 TV3 News at Ten and Weather
22:30-22:45 Regional News and Weather
22:45-23:45 (Repeat) 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 2000, 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.
23:45-00:45 (Repeat) brand new one-off-documentary.Road Rage Britain:Caught on the Camera.“I’ve been chased by cab drivers, minicabs, van drivers, the works… Fisticuffs have been thrown in the past, yes.” - Cycle courier Nick Swinden, 37, from Archway, London
“The shiny bum brigade... I can’t be doing with cyclists. If I’m paying tax on the road then I want to be able to ride on the road. They don’t pay tax so why should they ride three or four deep…” - White van driver Gaz McPartland, 38, from Preston
There are more cars on the roads than ever before – and we’re cycling far more than we used to. But that’s leading to regular bouts of road rage, with the two tribes most often at loggerheads: cyclists and drivers.
The difference is that, new, cheap technology means that when the red mist descends, many incidents are caught on camera by the cyclists and motorists in the thick of it.
An ITN Productions production for TV3, Road Rage Britain: Caught on Camera features astonishing footage of shocking road rage – plus a unique experiment, in which two committed cyclists, one from London and one from Manchester, swap modes of transport with a London cabbie and a white van man from Preston, both of whom view their two wheeled counterparts as a menace.
How will they cope experiencing life on the road from the perspective of their road rage rivals? At the end of the experiment they come face to face in a showdown to share their views.The British lead the world in road rage, but what is causing these regular traffic temper tantrums? Featuring video clips and interviews with victims and perpetrators.
00:45-03:00 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) 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 2000, 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.
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) 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 2000, 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.
00:05-01:05 (Repeat) brand new one-off-documentary.Road Rage Britain:Caught on the Camera.“I’ve been chased by cab drivers, minicabs, van drivers, the works… Fisticuffs have been thrown in the past, yes.” - Cycle courier Nick Swinden, 37, from Archway, London
“The shiny bum brigade... I can’t be doing with cyclists. If I’m paying tax on the road then I want to be able to ride on the road. They don’t pay tax so why should they ride three or four deep…” - White van driver Gaz McPartland, 38, from Preston
There are more cars on the roads than ever before – and we’re cycling far more than we used to. But that’s leading to regular bouts of road rage, with the two tribes most often at loggerheads: cyclists and drivers.
The difference is that, new, cheap technology means that when the red mist descends, many incidents are caught on camera by the cyclists and motorists in the thick of it.
An ITN Productions production for TV3, Road Rage Britain: Caught on Camera features astonishing footage of shocking road rage – plus a unique experiment, in which two committed cyclists, one from London and one from Manchester, swap modes of transport with a London cabbie and a white van man from Preston, both of whom view their two wheeled counterparts as a menace.
How will they cope experiencing life on the road from the perspective of their road rage rivals? At the end of the experiment they come face to face in a showdown to share their views.The British lead the world in road rage, but what is causing these regular traffic temper tantrums? Featuring video clips and interviews with victims and perpetrators.
01:05-02:05 Teleshopping
02:05-03:00 Nightscreen



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