TV3
Monday 12th 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.11/80.Tenable.(Series 2).Warwick Davis hosts the quiz show based on top ten lists. A team of five IT workers from London 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.3/4.The Harbour.(Series 1).Tenby, the jewel in Pembrokeshire's crown. At its heart, the harbour – one of the most photographed views in Wales. Filmed through the four seasons - this is the story of the men and women of the harbour - a way of life in tune with the sea, the seasons and the tourists.
Episode 3
It's high season and its time to get the tills ringing with the first big sporting event of the season, a three day triathlon festival. It's a tense time for the harbourmasters who must marshall the course. Meanwhile Roger the mackerel boatman is busy organising a big charity fishing event while Phil gets the Lifeboat station ready for the big open day. But will August storms put a dampener on proceedings.Documentary series about Tenby Harbour. It is high season and time to get the tills ringing with the first big sporting event of the season - a three-day triathlon festival.*The Harbour Series 1 Episode 4 of 4 last in series and series finale airs on next Monday (19th,November,2018) at 8:00pm-8:30pm.
20:30-21:00 Manchester Street
21:00-22:00 brand new three-parter-series.1/3.Gone to Pot:American Road Trip.(Series 1).(Episode 1).Five famous faces embark on a road trip like no other when they board a magical mystery bus in the US, to explore the legalisation of marijuana. Birds of a Feather actress and Loose Women panellist Linda Robson, ex EastEnders actress Pam St Clement, actor Christopher Biggins, retired footballer and TV presenter John Fashanu and darts supremo Bobby George explore the use of marijuana for both medical and recreational purposes in US states where it is legal and meet people who have experienced both the benefits and the downsides.
The issue of legalisation has long been the subject of debate in the UK with marijuana having been reported to ease symptoms of arthritis, epilepsy, multiple sclerosis and several other conditions. However, it remains the most commonly used and trafficked illicit drug in the world and evidence suggests that frequent and prolonged use can be detrimental to both mental and physical health.
Each have their own reasons for exploring the issue; Pam has polymyalgia rheumatica and has had a knee replacement, Linda is going through the menopause and gets hot flushes and mood swings, Fash is developing arthritis in his knee, Biggins has pain in his hip and back and Bobby broke his back, has had a new hip and knee, has had arthritis in his right hand and has had three toes cut off.
The celebrities begin their three-week voyage of discovery in San Francisco where the city is celebrating the 50th anniversary of the Summer of Love. After a consultation over Skype with a doctor during which they list their health concerns, they are each given a medical certificate, which allows them to legally buy marijuana at a special dispensary.
Back on board their psychedelic bus, driver Chris leads the tour and takes the group to Harbourside, the largest medical marijuana dispensary in the world, 15 miles east of San Francisco. Taking in all of the products for sale, from oils, tinctures and balms to crisps, nuts, cookies and popcorn, Pam can't believe her eyes and compares it to a British supermarket. All of the celebs, bar Fash, splash some cash, and before they've even left the store, Biggins has managed to scoff one of his medicated chocolate beans. It’s a big no-no in California, where you can only legally consume marijuana on private property.
They then head inland, travelling 100 miles from San Francisco to Atwater and check into a typical American Motel. Linda finds it creepy saying, ‘It’s like a serial killer could get in here. Look, it’s all ground floor.’ Bobby, Biggins and Pam take the marijuana medicines they bought earlier at Harbourside and hope for a good night. Unable to sleep, at 4.30am Linda tucks into the marijuana chocolate brownie she picked up earlier in the dispensary.
The next morning Pam and Biggins are feeling unusually spritely and Linda admits she felt extremely relaxed after her brownie and drifted off to sleep easily after eating it.
The following day, the group head out to meet the ‘Sisters of the Valley’, a group of women living a lifestyle based on the spiritual beliefs of a thirteenth century order called ‘The Begins’. Their purpose is to rescue others from poverty and they live on a farm where they grow marijuana and make products from it including oils, salves and soaps. Their products are made out of the non-psychoactive compound of marijuana, Cannabidol, also known as CBD. They won’t make you high, but the same can't be said about the type of marijuana the Sisters smoke. Pam and Bobby can't resist a couple of puffs on a joint and take to smoking marijuana like ducks to water. Bobby compares the effects to having drunk four and half pints.
Fash has never taken drugs or had an alcoholic drink in his life and decides to start with a medicated CBD massage from one of the Nuns. He admits that meeting the nuns has been an eye opener.
Finally, the group head down Route 101 to Surfer’s Paradise in Santa Cruz, to meet marijuana master chef, 94-year-old Nonna Marijuana. Nonna has been cooking with marijuana for the past five years after her daughter, Val, discovered it eased the seizures she suffered after a road traffic accident. Val has since set up a charity to help others and the pair have cooked medicated food for patients with a wide variety of illnesses including AIDS, cancer, brain tumours and epilepsy.
The group are given the opportunity to eat the drug, which is metabolised differently to when it is smoked. The food needs to be digested and the effects can take up to two hours to be felt. Nonna has prepared a variety of dishes, some of which include marijuana. Biggins and Bobby in particular develop a taste for Nonna's italian cuisine with its special ingredient and Pam comments that they have “pushed the boat out”. Val then brings out Nonna’s pièce de résistance, marijuana ice-cream and the group are tempted. Will even Fash be tempted to break the habit of a lifetime and try a little?
The group then board the bus for a bumpy four-hour journey to their next pit stop. Tonight’s accommodation is the famously kitsch, Madonna Inn. An hour and a half after eating Nonna’s food, Biggins begins to complain of a dry mouth and the others notice the food he has eaten is beginning to take effect, as he stops giggling and goes very quiet. By the time the group arrive, both Biggins and Bobby are feeling distinctly unwell. Both are sick and have to be helped off the bus and into the hotel.
The next morning Biggins admits to Linda and Pam that he doesn’t think he’s ever been more ill. And Bobby says he’s realised that, “You can’t muck about eating it.” He claims to have learnt his lesson and vows never to eat marijuana again. The group are beginning to realise that there can be big consequences to over-indulging.Five famous faces embark on a road trip like no other when they board a magical mystery bus in the US, to explore the legalisation of marijuana.
*Gone to Pot:American Road Trip continues with Series 1 Episode 2 of 3 airs on Wednesday (14th,November,2018) at 9:00pm-10:00pm,Series 1 Episode 3 of 3 airs on Friday (16th,November,2018) at 9:00pm-10:00pm.
22:00-22:30 TV3 News at Ten and Weather
22:30-22:45 Regional News and Weather
22:45-23:45 (Repeat) brand new one-off-documentary.The Murder of Becky Watts : - Police Tapes with Rachel Davidson-Smith.“When we saw her in the morgue, that's when it really hit us. I mean, they did their best to cover up where he cut her up and things like that. But I could still see where he’d decapitated her. And no parent should have to see that.” - Becky Watts’s father Darren
In this new documentary for TV3, Rachel Davidson-Smith gains unprecedented access to never seen before police tapes from the investigation into the murder of Becky Watts, revealing the inner workings of the case and the strategies detectives used to snare her killers.
When 16-year-old Becky went missing in 2016, it sparked the largest police investigation ever launched in Bristol and dominated headlines nationwide. Initially it was assumed that Becky had simply run away, but as detectives began to unearth clues surrounding her disappearance their attention turned to stepbrother Nathan Matthews and his girlfriend Shauna Hoare.
This programme, which is part of TV3’s Crime & Punishment season, pieces together the methods the police used to build their case against Matthews and Hoare using previously unseen police footage from the heart of the investigation, including interview room tapes, forensic crime scene videos, and the moment the killers were arrested.
Several contributors, including Becky’s grandmother Pat Watts and officers involved in the case, speak for the first time since Matthews was sentenced for murder and Hoare for manslaughter.
Rachel speaks to Becky’s father Darren at the home where Becky died, along with her stepmother [and Nathan’s mother] Anjie, about their thoughts and emotions during the investigation, and the impact the crime has had on their family.
She also interviews senior investigating officer DCI Richard Ocone who gives her a vivid insight into the techniques and strategies officers used to elicit evidence in the interview room following forensic searches, which led to the grim discovery of Becky’s body and the dark motivation behind her murder being revealed.
Initially it seemed Becky had simply run away and would return. But DCI Ocone says he had an instinct because she had simply stopped using her phone, and not spoken to any friends, that something bad had happened. He says: “On day one you know I am fairly confident here, that something bad has happened to this young lady, I just don't know exactly what.“
Police then discovered Becky’s stepbrother and his girlfriend were the last people to see her, but they proved difficult to pin down. Once at the station, officers found Hoare ‘giggly’ and Matthews seemingly unconcerned. At Becky’s house, the forensic team found a key clue. Jon Draper from the team says: “That's when we came across what appeared to be blood or red staining on the architrave of the doorframe leading into Becky’s room.”
When a fingerprint in the blood turned out to belong to Matthews, the pair were arrested, initially on suspicion of kidnap. Becky’s grandmother Pat says: “If was going to be something bad, it didn’t surprise me. Nathan hated Becky and made it obvious.”
Detectives didn't tell Matthews they now knew it was his fingerprint in Becky’s blood, but hinted at what they’d found, to increase his unease. Det Con Marie Stephen explains: “Without giving that to them on a plate, if you like, it leaves them having to think about it, and puts them under more pressure.”
Police searched the pair's own house, finding that despite the fact it was filthy and crammed full of furniture, the bath was sparkling clean. The search also uncovered incriminating receipts which indicated a gruesome truth. DCI Ocone says: “Those receipts indicated that somebody on the Friday, when Becky was reported missing, had been to B&Q and had bought a circular saw, some gloves, goggles, and a face mask… Does it really mean he has tried to dismember a body?”
The investigation then turned into a murder inquiry, and dad Darren says: “Your whole world folds in on itself. They told me this [was] a murder inquiry and I know I started shouting at that point, ‘Oh, no, no, no, no you’re wrong, she’s got to be alive.’”
Detectives withheld the receipts find from Matthews, increasing the pressure by saying his home had been forensically searched. DCI Ocone says: “I think it probably felt like he was battling against a rising tide, and actually, you could feel the evidence starting to come on top, and actually it was starting to weigh quite heavily.”
Matthews then confessed in a prepared statement that he’d used the circular saw to dismember Becky’s body in the bath. He admitted wrapping up the body parts and hiding them in a shed a few hundred metres from his home. DCI Ocone admits nothing prepared him for what they found there: “The nature of the find is horrific and shocking, I have never dealt with anything like this. And it will stay with me throughout my service, it will stay with me probably throughout my life.”
With Matthews claiming sole culpability, detectives couldn’t yet link Hoare to the murder. She was initially charged with perverting the course of justice, before a series of deleted texts were recovered from one of her phones. They revealed a disturbing motivation behind the murder - text messages between the pair talking about abducting young girls, taking them home and putting them in their loft. DCI Ocone says: “I think they showed that Shauna’s involvement was far tighter, far closer to actually what had happened... It suggested that she had been involved in the dismemberment and the packaging of Becky, after she’d been killed.”
Darren takes Rachel into Becky’s locked bedroom, which is filled with posters and soft toys one might expect a teenage girl’s room to contain. There, he explains the impact the case has had on him. He says: “I believe they came both up here, they burst in on her, with masks on, and attacked her. She must have been absolutely bloody terrified.
“The image I have, in my nightmares, is him holding her down on the floor, and [Hoare’s placing her hand] over her mouth... They did it together, they planned it together, I don't know what they expected to gain from it. ‘Cause there was nothing in it for them. So, it was all pointless.”.Featuring incredible video footage revealing for the first time how detectives used strategy and skill to catch the killers of Becky Watts.
23:45-00:45 (Repeat) brand new series.11/12.The Jonathan Ross Show.(Series 12).This week on The Jonathan Ross Show on TV3, In a TV exclusive,Emma Bunton,Mel B,Mel C,and Geri Horner will be chatting together on the sofa.,legendary icon of music, fashion and screen Grace Jones, X Factor judge Nicole Scherzinger, Great British Bake Off winner, presenter and author Nadiya Hussain and the hilarious Micky Flanagan join Jonathan, while the Number 1 album-selling artist Stormzy returns to perform in the studio.
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.The Murder of Becky Watts : - Police Tapes with Rachel Davidson-Smith.“When we saw her in the morgue, that's when it really hit us. I mean, they did their best to cover up where he cut her up and things like that. But I could still see where he’d decapitated her. And no parent should have to see that.” - Becky Watts’s father Darren
In this new documentary for TV3, Rachel Davidson-Smith gains unprecedented access to never seen before police tapes from the investigation into the murder of Becky Watts, revealing the inner workings of the case and the strategies detectives used to snare her killers.
When 16-year-old Becky went missing in 2016, it sparked the largest police investigation ever launched in Bristol and dominated headlines nationwide. Initially it was assumed that Becky had simply run away, but as detectives began to unearth clues surrounding her disappearance their attention turned to stepbrother Nathan Matthews and his girlfriend Shauna Hoare.
This programme, which is part of TV3’s Crime & Punishment season, pieces together the methods the police used to build their case against Matthews and Hoare using previously unseen police footage from the heart of the investigation, including interview room tapes, forensic crime scene videos, and the moment the killers were arrested.
Several contributors, including Becky’s grandmother Pat Watts and officers involved in the case, speak for the first time since Matthews was sentenced for murder and Hoare for manslaughter.
Rachel speaks to Becky’s father Darren at the home where Becky died, along with her stepmother [and Nathan’s mother] Anjie, about their thoughts and emotions during the investigation, and the impact the crime has had on their family.
She also interviews senior investigating officer DCI Richard Ocone who gives her a vivid insight into the techniques and strategies officers used to elicit evidence in the interview room following forensic searches, which led to the grim discovery of Becky’s body and the dark motivation behind her murder being revealed.
Initially it seemed Becky had simply run away and would return. But DCI Ocone says he had an instinct because she had simply stopped using her phone, and not spoken to any friends, that something bad had happened. He says: “On day one you know I am fairly confident here, that something bad has happened to this young lady, I just don't know exactly what.“
Police then discovered Becky’s stepbrother and his girlfriend were the last people to see her, but they proved difficult to pin down. Once at the station, officers found Hoare ‘giggly’ and Matthews seemingly unconcerned. At Becky’s house, the forensic team found a key clue. Jon Draper from the team says: “That's when we came across what appeared to be blood or red staining on the architrave of the doorframe leading into Becky’s room.”
When a fingerprint in the blood turned out to belong to Matthews, the pair were arrested, initially on suspicion of kidnap. Becky’s grandmother Pat says: “If was going to be something bad, it didn’t surprise me. Nathan hated Becky and made it obvious.”
Detectives didn't tell Matthews they now knew it was his fingerprint in Becky’s blood, but hinted at what they’d found, to increase his unease. Det Con Marie Stephen explains: “Without giving that to them on a plate, if you like, it leaves them having to think about it, and puts them under more pressure.”
Police searched the pair's own house, finding that despite the fact it was filthy and crammed full of furniture, the bath was sparkling clean. The search also uncovered incriminating receipts which indicated a gruesome truth. DCI Ocone says: “Those receipts indicated that somebody on the Friday, when Becky was reported missing, had been to B&Q and had bought a circular saw, some gloves, goggles, and a face mask… Does it really mean he has tried to dismember a body?”
The investigation then turned into a murder inquiry, and dad Darren says: “Your whole world folds in on itself. They told me this [was] a murder inquiry and I know I started shouting at that point, ‘Oh, no, no, no, no you’re wrong, she’s got to be alive.’”
Detectives withheld the receipts find from Matthews, increasing the pressure by saying his home had been forensically searched. DCI Ocone says: “I think it probably felt like he was battling against a rising tide, and actually, you could feel the evidence starting to come on top, and actually it was starting to weigh quite heavily.”
Matthews then confessed in a prepared statement that he’d used the circular saw to dismember Becky’s body in the bath. He admitted wrapping up the body parts and hiding them in a shed a few hundred metres from his home. DCI Ocone admits nothing prepared him for what they found there: “The nature of the find is horrific and shocking, I have never dealt with anything like this. And it will stay with me throughout my service, it will stay with me probably throughout my life.”
With Matthews claiming sole culpability, detectives couldn’t yet link Hoare to the murder. She was initially charged with perverting the course of justice, before a series of deleted texts were recovered from one of her phones. They revealed a disturbing motivation behind the murder - text messages between the pair talking about abducting young girls, taking them home and putting them in their loft. DCI Ocone says: “I think they showed that Shauna’s involvement was far tighter, far closer to actually what had happened... It suggested that she had been involved in the dismemberment and the packaging of Becky, after she’d been killed.”
Darren takes Rachel into Becky’s locked bedroom, which is filled with posters and soft toys one might expect a teenage girl’s room to contain. There, he explains the impact the case has had on him. He says: “I believe they came both up here, they burst in on her, with masks on, and attacked her. She must have been absolutely bloody terrified.
“The image I have, in my nightmares, is him holding her down on the floor, and [Hoare’s placing her hand] over her mouth... They did it together, they planned it together, I don't know what they expected to gain from it. ‘Cause there was nothing in it for them. So, it was all pointless.”.Featuring incredible video footage revealing for the first time how detectives used strategy and skill to catch the killers of Becky Watts.
00:05-01:35 Teleshopping
01:35-03:05 After Midnight
03:05-03:55 (Repeat) The Jeremy Donald Show
03:55-05:05 Nightscreen
02:20-03:50 After Midnight
03:50-04:40 (Repeat) The Jeremy Donald Show
04:40-05:05 Nightscreen
RTV
18:00-18:30 RTV News at Six
22:30-23:05 RTV News Tonight
23:05-00:05 View from Stormont
00:05-01:05 (Repeat) brand new one-off-documentary.The Murder of Becky Watts - : Police Tapes with Rachel Davidson-Smith.When we saw her in the morgue, that's when it really hit us. I mean, they did their best to cover up where he cut her up and things like that. But I could still see where he’d decapitated her. And no parent should have to see that.” - Becky Watts’s father Darren.
In this new documentary for TV3, Rachel Davidson-Smith gains unprecedented access to never seen before police tapes from the investigation into the murder of Becky Watts, revealing the inner workings of the case and the strategies detectives used to snare her killers.
When 16-year-old Becky went missing in 2016,it sparked the largest police investigation ever launched in Bristol and dominated headlines nationwide. Initially it was assumed that Becky had simply run away, but as detectives began to unearth clues surrounding her disappearance their attention turned to stepbrother Nathan Matthews and his girlfriend Shauna Hoare.
This programme, which is part of TV3’s Crime & Punishment season, pieces together the methods the police used to build their case against Matthews and Hoare using previously unseen police footage from the heart of the investigation, including interview room tapes, forensic crime scene videos, and the moment the killers were arrested.
Several contributors, including Becky’s grandmother Pat Watts and officers involved in the case, speak for the first time since Matthews was sentenced for murder and Hoare for manslaughter.
Rachel speaks to Becky’s father Darren at the home where Becky died, along with her stepmother [and Nathan’s mother] Anjie, about their thoughts and emotions during the investigation, and the impact the crime has had on their family.
She also interviews senior investigating officer DCI Richard Ocone who gives her a vivid insight into the techniques and strategies officers used to elicit evidence in the interview room following forensic searches, which led to the grim discovery of Becky’s body and the dark motivation behind her murder being revealed.
Initially it seemed Becky had simply run away and would return. But DCI Ocone says he had an instinct because she had simply stopped using her phone, and not spoken to any friends, that something bad had happened. He says: “On day one you know I am fairly confident here, that something bad has happened to this young lady, I just don't know exactly what.“
Police then discovered Becky’s stepbrother and his girlfriend were the last people to see her, but they proved difficult to pin down. Once at the station, officers found Hoare ‘giggly’ and Matthews seemingly unconcerned. At Becky’s house, the forensic team found a key clue. Jon Draper from the team says: “That's when we came across what appeared to be blood or red staining on the architrave of the doorframe leading into Becky’s room.”
When a fingerprint in the blood turned out to belong to Matthews, the pair were arrested, initially on suspicion of kidnap. Becky’s grandmother Pat says: “If was going to be something bad, it didn’t surprise me. Nathan hated Becky and made it obvious.”
Detectives didn't tell Matthews they now knew it was his fingerprint in Becky’s blood, but hinted at what they’d found, to increase his unease. Det Con Marie Stephen explains: “Without giving that to them on a plate, if you like, it leaves them having to think about it, and puts them under more pressure.”
Police searched the pair's own house, finding that despite the fact it was filthy and crammed full of furniture, the bath was sparkling clean. The search also uncovered incriminating receipts which indicated a gruesome truth. DCI Ocone says: “Those receipts indicated that somebody on the Friday, when Becky was reported missing, had been to B&Q and had bought a circular saw, some gloves, goggles, and a face mask… Does it really mean he has tried to dismember a body?”
The investigation then turned into a murder inquiry, and dad Darren says: “Your whole world folds in on itself. They told me this [was] a murder inquiry and I know I started shouting at that point, ‘Oh, no, no, no, no you’re wrong, she’s got to be alive.’”
Detectives withheld the receipts find from Matthews, increasing the pressure by saying his home had been forensically searched. DCI Ocone says: “I think it probably felt like he was battling against a rising tide, and actually, you could feel the evidence starting to come on top, and actually it was starting to weigh quite heavily.”
Matthews then confessed in a prepared statement that he’d used the circular saw to dismember Becky’s body in the bath. He admitted wrapping up the body parts and hiding them in a shed a few hundred metres from his home. DCI Ocone admits nothing prepared him for what they found there: “The nature of the find is horrific and shocking, I have never dealt with anything like this. And it will stay with me throughout my service, it will stay with me probably throughout my life.”
With Matthews claiming sole culpability, detectives couldn’t yet link Hoare to the murder. She was initially charged with perverting the course of justice, before a series of deleted texts were recovered from one of her phones. They revealed a disturbing motivation behind the murder - text messages between the pair talking about abducting young girls, taking them home and putting them in their loft. DCI Ocone says: “I think they showed that Shauna’s involvement was far tighter, far closer to actually what had happened... It suggested that she had been involved in the dismemberment and the packaging of Becky, after she’d been killed.”
Darren takes Rachel into Becky’s locked bedroom, which is filled with posters and soft toys one might expect a teenage girl’s room to contain. There, he explains the impact the case has had on him. He says: “I believe they came both up here, they burst in on her, with masks on, and attacked her. She must have been absolutely bloody terrified.
“The image I have, in my nightmares, is him holding her down on the floor, and [Hoare’s placing her hand] over her mouth... They did it together, they planned it together, I don't know what they expected to gain from it. ‘Cause there was nothing in it for them. So, it was all pointless.”.Featuring incredible video footage revealing for the first time how detectives used strategy and skill to catch the killers of Becky Watts.
01:05-02:05 (Repeat) brand new series.11/12.The Jonathan Ross Show.(Series 12).This week on The Jonathan Ross Show on TV3,in a TV exclusive,Emma Bunton,Mel B,Mel C,and Geri Horner will be chatting together on the sofa.,legendary icon of music, fashion and screen Grace Jones, X Factor judge Nicole Scherzinger, Great British Bake Off winner, presenter and author Nadiya Hussain and the hilarious Micky Flanagan join Jonathan, while the Number 1 album-selling artist Stormzy returns to perform in the studio.
02:05-03:00 Nightscreen
Interntal PPP1 Northern Ireland
01:05-03:00 Teleshopping
Monday 12th 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.11/80.Tenable.(Series 2).Warwick Davis hosts the quiz show based on top ten lists. A team of five IT workers from London 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.3/4.The Harbour.(Series 1).Tenby, the jewel in Pembrokeshire's crown. At its heart, the harbour – one of the most photographed views in Wales. Filmed through the four seasons - this is the story of the men and women of the harbour - a way of life in tune with the sea, the seasons and the tourists.
Episode 3
It's high season and its time to get the tills ringing with the first big sporting event of the season, a three day triathlon festival. It's a tense time for the harbourmasters who must marshall the course. Meanwhile Roger the mackerel boatman is busy organising a big charity fishing event while Phil gets the Lifeboat station ready for the big open day. But will August storms put a dampener on proceedings.Documentary series about Tenby Harbour. It is high season and time to get the tills ringing with the first big sporting event of the season - a three-day triathlon festival.*The Harbour Series 1 Episode 4 of 4 last in series and series finale airs on next Monday (19th,November,2018) at 8:00pm-8:30pm.
20:30-21:00 Manchester Street
21:00-22:00 brand new three-parter-series.1/3.Gone to Pot:American Road Trip.(Series 1).(Episode 1).Five famous faces embark on a road trip like no other when they board a magical mystery bus in the US, to explore the legalisation of marijuana. Birds of a Feather actress and Loose Women panellist Linda Robson, ex EastEnders actress Pam St Clement, actor Christopher Biggins, retired footballer and TV presenter John Fashanu and darts supremo Bobby George explore the use of marijuana for both medical and recreational purposes in US states where it is legal and meet people who have experienced both the benefits and the downsides.
The issue of legalisation has long been the subject of debate in the UK with marijuana having been reported to ease symptoms of arthritis, epilepsy, multiple sclerosis and several other conditions. However, it remains the most commonly used and trafficked illicit drug in the world and evidence suggests that frequent and prolonged use can be detrimental to both mental and physical health.
Each have their own reasons for exploring the issue; Pam has polymyalgia rheumatica and has had a knee replacement, Linda is going through the menopause and gets hot flushes and mood swings, Fash is developing arthritis in his knee, Biggins has pain in his hip and back and Bobby broke his back, has had a new hip and knee, has had arthritis in his right hand and has had three toes cut off.
The celebrities begin their three-week voyage of discovery in San Francisco where the city is celebrating the 50th anniversary of the Summer of Love. After a consultation over Skype with a doctor during which they list their health concerns, they are each given a medical certificate, which allows them to legally buy marijuana at a special dispensary.
Back on board their psychedelic bus, driver Chris leads the tour and takes the group to Harbourside, the largest medical marijuana dispensary in the world, 15 miles east of San Francisco. Taking in all of the products for sale, from oils, tinctures and balms to crisps, nuts, cookies and popcorn, Pam can't believe her eyes and compares it to a British supermarket. All of the celebs, bar Fash, splash some cash, and before they've even left the store, Biggins has managed to scoff one of his medicated chocolate beans. It’s a big no-no in California, where you can only legally consume marijuana on private property.
They then head inland, travelling 100 miles from San Francisco to Atwater and check into a typical American Motel. Linda finds it creepy saying, ‘It’s like a serial killer could get in here. Look, it’s all ground floor.’ Bobby, Biggins and Pam take the marijuana medicines they bought earlier at Harbourside and hope for a good night. Unable to sleep, at 4.30am Linda tucks into the marijuana chocolate brownie she picked up earlier in the dispensary.
The next morning Pam and Biggins are feeling unusually spritely and Linda admits she felt extremely relaxed after her brownie and drifted off to sleep easily after eating it.
The following day, the group head out to meet the ‘Sisters of the Valley’, a group of women living a lifestyle based on the spiritual beliefs of a thirteenth century order called ‘The Begins’. Their purpose is to rescue others from poverty and they live on a farm where they grow marijuana and make products from it including oils, salves and soaps. Their products are made out of the non-psychoactive compound of marijuana, Cannabidol, also known as CBD. They won’t make you high, but the same can't be said about the type of marijuana the Sisters smoke. Pam and Bobby can't resist a couple of puffs on a joint and take to smoking marijuana like ducks to water. Bobby compares the effects to having drunk four and half pints.
Fash has never taken drugs or had an alcoholic drink in his life and decides to start with a medicated CBD massage from one of the Nuns. He admits that meeting the nuns has been an eye opener.
Finally, the group head down Route 101 to Surfer’s Paradise in Santa Cruz, to meet marijuana master chef, 94-year-old Nonna Marijuana. Nonna has been cooking with marijuana for the past five years after her daughter, Val, discovered it eased the seizures she suffered after a road traffic accident. Val has since set up a charity to help others and the pair have cooked medicated food for patients with a wide variety of illnesses including AIDS, cancer, brain tumours and epilepsy.
The group are given the opportunity to eat the drug, which is metabolised differently to when it is smoked. The food needs to be digested and the effects can take up to two hours to be felt. Nonna has prepared a variety of dishes, some of which include marijuana. Biggins and Bobby in particular develop a taste for Nonna's italian cuisine with its special ingredient and Pam comments that they have “pushed the boat out”. Val then brings out Nonna’s pièce de résistance, marijuana ice-cream and the group are tempted. Will even Fash be tempted to break the habit of a lifetime and try a little?
The group then board the bus for a bumpy four-hour journey to their next pit stop. Tonight’s accommodation is the famously kitsch, Madonna Inn. An hour and a half after eating Nonna’s food, Biggins begins to complain of a dry mouth and the others notice the food he has eaten is beginning to take effect, as he stops giggling and goes very quiet. By the time the group arrive, both Biggins and Bobby are feeling distinctly unwell. Both are sick and have to be helped off the bus and into the hotel.
The next morning Biggins admits to Linda and Pam that he doesn’t think he’s ever been more ill. And Bobby says he’s realised that, “You can’t muck about eating it.” He claims to have learnt his lesson and vows never to eat marijuana again. The group are beginning to realise that there can be big consequences to over-indulging.Five famous faces embark on a road trip like no other when they board a magical mystery bus in the US, to explore the legalisation of marijuana.
*Gone to Pot:American Road Trip continues with Series 1 Episode 2 of 3 airs on Wednesday (14th,November,2018) at 9:00pm-10:00pm,Series 1 Episode 3 of 3 airs on Friday (16th,November,2018) at 9:00pm-10:00pm.
22:00-22:30 TV3 News at Ten and Weather
22:30-22:45 Regional News and Weather
22:45-23:45 (Repeat) brand new one-off-documentary.The Murder of Becky Watts : - Police Tapes with Rachel Davidson-Smith.“When we saw her in the morgue, that's when it really hit us. I mean, they did their best to cover up where he cut her up and things like that. But I could still see where he’d decapitated her. And no parent should have to see that.” - Becky Watts’s father Darren
In this new documentary for TV3, Rachel Davidson-Smith gains unprecedented access to never seen before police tapes from the investigation into the murder of Becky Watts, revealing the inner workings of the case and the strategies detectives used to snare her killers.
When 16-year-old Becky went missing in 2016, it sparked the largest police investigation ever launched in Bristol and dominated headlines nationwide. Initially it was assumed that Becky had simply run away, but as detectives began to unearth clues surrounding her disappearance their attention turned to stepbrother Nathan Matthews and his girlfriend Shauna Hoare.
This programme, which is part of TV3’s Crime & Punishment season, pieces together the methods the police used to build their case against Matthews and Hoare using previously unseen police footage from the heart of the investigation, including interview room tapes, forensic crime scene videos, and the moment the killers were arrested.
Several contributors, including Becky’s grandmother Pat Watts and officers involved in the case, speak for the first time since Matthews was sentenced for murder and Hoare for manslaughter.
Rachel speaks to Becky’s father Darren at the home where Becky died, along with her stepmother [and Nathan’s mother] Anjie, about their thoughts and emotions during the investigation, and the impact the crime has had on their family.
She also interviews senior investigating officer DCI Richard Ocone who gives her a vivid insight into the techniques and strategies officers used to elicit evidence in the interview room following forensic searches, which led to the grim discovery of Becky’s body and the dark motivation behind her murder being revealed.
Initially it seemed Becky had simply run away and would return. But DCI Ocone says he had an instinct because she had simply stopped using her phone, and not spoken to any friends, that something bad had happened. He says: “On day one you know I am fairly confident here, that something bad has happened to this young lady, I just don't know exactly what.“
Police then discovered Becky’s stepbrother and his girlfriend were the last people to see her, but they proved difficult to pin down. Once at the station, officers found Hoare ‘giggly’ and Matthews seemingly unconcerned. At Becky’s house, the forensic team found a key clue. Jon Draper from the team says: “That's when we came across what appeared to be blood or red staining on the architrave of the doorframe leading into Becky’s room.”
When a fingerprint in the blood turned out to belong to Matthews, the pair were arrested, initially on suspicion of kidnap. Becky’s grandmother Pat says: “If was going to be something bad, it didn’t surprise me. Nathan hated Becky and made it obvious.”
Detectives didn't tell Matthews they now knew it was his fingerprint in Becky’s blood, but hinted at what they’d found, to increase his unease. Det Con Marie Stephen explains: “Without giving that to them on a plate, if you like, it leaves them having to think about it, and puts them under more pressure.”
Police searched the pair's own house, finding that despite the fact it was filthy and crammed full of furniture, the bath was sparkling clean. The search also uncovered incriminating receipts which indicated a gruesome truth. DCI Ocone says: “Those receipts indicated that somebody on the Friday, when Becky was reported missing, had been to B&Q and had bought a circular saw, some gloves, goggles, and a face mask… Does it really mean he has tried to dismember a body?”
The investigation then turned into a murder inquiry, and dad Darren says: “Your whole world folds in on itself. They told me this [was] a murder inquiry and I know I started shouting at that point, ‘Oh, no, no, no, no you’re wrong, she’s got to be alive.’”
Detectives withheld the receipts find from Matthews, increasing the pressure by saying his home had been forensically searched. DCI Ocone says: “I think it probably felt like he was battling against a rising tide, and actually, you could feel the evidence starting to come on top, and actually it was starting to weigh quite heavily.”
Matthews then confessed in a prepared statement that he’d used the circular saw to dismember Becky’s body in the bath. He admitted wrapping up the body parts and hiding them in a shed a few hundred metres from his home. DCI Ocone admits nothing prepared him for what they found there: “The nature of the find is horrific and shocking, I have never dealt with anything like this. And it will stay with me throughout my service, it will stay with me probably throughout my life.”
With Matthews claiming sole culpability, detectives couldn’t yet link Hoare to the murder. She was initially charged with perverting the course of justice, before a series of deleted texts were recovered from one of her phones. They revealed a disturbing motivation behind the murder - text messages between the pair talking about abducting young girls, taking them home and putting them in their loft. DCI Ocone says: “I think they showed that Shauna’s involvement was far tighter, far closer to actually what had happened... It suggested that she had been involved in the dismemberment and the packaging of Becky, after she’d been killed.”
Darren takes Rachel into Becky’s locked bedroom, which is filled with posters and soft toys one might expect a teenage girl’s room to contain. There, he explains the impact the case has had on him. He says: “I believe they came both up here, they burst in on her, with masks on, and attacked her. She must have been absolutely bloody terrified.
“The image I have, in my nightmares, is him holding her down on the floor, and [Hoare’s placing her hand] over her mouth... They did it together, they planned it together, I don't know what they expected to gain from it. ‘Cause there was nothing in it for them. So, it was all pointless.”.Featuring incredible video footage revealing for the first time how detectives used strategy and skill to catch the killers of Becky Watts.
23:45-00:45 (Repeat) brand new series.11/12.The Jonathan Ross Show.(Series 12).This week on The Jonathan Ross Show on TV3, In a TV exclusive,Emma Bunton,Mel B,Mel C,and Geri Horner will be chatting together on the sofa.,legendary icon of music, fashion and screen Grace Jones, X Factor judge Nicole Scherzinger, Great British Bake Off winner, presenter and author Nadiya Hussain and the hilarious Micky Flanagan join Jonathan, while the Number 1 album-selling artist Stormzy returns to perform in the studio.
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.The Murder of Becky Watts : - Police Tapes with Rachel Davidson-Smith.“When we saw her in the morgue, that's when it really hit us. I mean, they did their best to cover up where he cut her up and things like that. But I could still see where he’d decapitated her. And no parent should have to see that.” - Becky Watts’s father Darren
In this new documentary for TV3, Rachel Davidson-Smith gains unprecedented access to never seen before police tapes from the investigation into the murder of Becky Watts, revealing the inner workings of the case and the strategies detectives used to snare her killers.
When 16-year-old Becky went missing in 2016, it sparked the largest police investigation ever launched in Bristol and dominated headlines nationwide. Initially it was assumed that Becky had simply run away, but as detectives began to unearth clues surrounding her disappearance their attention turned to stepbrother Nathan Matthews and his girlfriend Shauna Hoare.
This programme, which is part of TV3’s Crime & Punishment season, pieces together the methods the police used to build their case against Matthews and Hoare using previously unseen police footage from the heart of the investigation, including interview room tapes, forensic crime scene videos, and the moment the killers were arrested.
Several contributors, including Becky’s grandmother Pat Watts and officers involved in the case, speak for the first time since Matthews was sentenced for murder and Hoare for manslaughter.
Rachel speaks to Becky’s father Darren at the home where Becky died, along with her stepmother [and Nathan’s mother] Anjie, about their thoughts and emotions during the investigation, and the impact the crime has had on their family.
She also interviews senior investigating officer DCI Richard Ocone who gives her a vivid insight into the techniques and strategies officers used to elicit evidence in the interview room following forensic searches, which led to the grim discovery of Becky’s body and the dark motivation behind her murder being revealed.
Initially it seemed Becky had simply run away and would return. But DCI Ocone says he had an instinct because she had simply stopped using her phone, and not spoken to any friends, that something bad had happened. He says: “On day one you know I am fairly confident here, that something bad has happened to this young lady, I just don't know exactly what.“
Police then discovered Becky’s stepbrother and his girlfriend were the last people to see her, but they proved difficult to pin down. Once at the station, officers found Hoare ‘giggly’ and Matthews seemingly unconcerned. At Becky’s house, the forensic team found a key clue. Jon Draper from the team says: “That's when we came across what appeared to be blood or red staining on the architrave of the doorframe leading into Becky’s room.”
When a fingerprint in the blood turned out to belong to Matthews, the pair were arrested, initially on suspicion of kidnap. Becky’s grandmother Pat says: “If was going to be something bad, it didn’t surprise me. Nathan hated Becky and made it obvious.”
Detectives didn't tell Matthews they now knew it was his fingerprint in Becky’s blood, but hinted at what they’d found, to increase his unease. Det Con Marie Stephen explains: “Without giving that to them on a plate, if you like, it leaves them having to think about it, and puts them under more pressure.”
Police searched the pair's own house, finding that despite the fact it was filthy and crammed full of furniture, the bath was sparkling clean. The search also uncovered incriminating receipts which indicated a gruesome truth. DCI Ocone says: “Those receipts indicated that somebody on the Friday, when Becky was reported missing, had been to B&Q and had bought a circular saw, some gloves, goggles, and a face mask… Does it really mean he has tried to dismember a body?”
The investigation then turned into a murder inquiry, and dad Darren says: “Your whole world folds in on itself. They told me this [was] a murder inquiry and I know I started shouting at that point, ‘Oh, no, no, no, no you’re wrong, she’s got to be alive.’”
Detectives withheld the receipts find from Matthews, increasing the pressure by saying his home had been forensically searched. DCI Ocone says: “I think it probably felt like he was battling against a rising tide, and actually, you could feel the evidence starting to come on top, and actually it was starting to weigh quite heavily.”
Matthews then confessed in a prepared statement that he’d used the circular saw to dismember Becky’s body in the bath. He admitted wrapping up the body parts and hiding them in a shed a few hundred metres from his home. DCI Ocone admits nothing prepared him for what they found there: “The nature of the find is horrific and shocking, I have never dealt with anything like this. And it will stay with me throughout my service, it will stay with me probably throughout my life.”
With Matthews claiming sole culpability, detectives couldn’t yet link Hoare to the murder. She was initially charged with perverting the course of justice, before a series of deleted texts were recovered from one of her phones. They revealed a disturbing motivation behind the murder - text messages between the pair talking about abducting young girls, taking them home and putting them in their loft. DCI Ocone says: “I think they showed that Shauna’s involvement was far tighter, far closer to actually what had happened... It suggested that she had been involved in the dismemberment and the packaging of Becky, after she’d been killed.”
Darren takes Rachel into Becky’s locked bedroom, which is filled with posters and soft toys one might expect a teenage girl’s room to contain. There, he explains the impact the case has had on him. He says: “I believe they came both up here, they burst in on her, with masks on, and attacked her. She must have been absolutely bloody terrified.
“The image I have, in my nightmares, is him holding her down on the floor, and [Hoare’s placing her hand] over her mouth... They did it together, they planned it together, I don't know what they expected to gain from it. ‘Cause there was nothing in it for them. So, it was all pointless.”.Featuring incredible video footage revealing for the first time how detectives used strategy and skill to catch the killers of Becky Watts.
00:05-01:35 Teleshopping
01:35-03:05 After Midnight
03:05-03:55 (Repeat) The Jeremy Donald Show
03:55-05:05 Nightscreen
02:20-03:50 After Midnight
03:50-04:40 (Repeat) The Jeremy Donald Show
04:40-05:05 Nightscreen
RTV
18:00-18:30 RTV News at Six
22:30-23:05 RTV News Tonight
23:05-00:05 View from Stormont
00:05-01:05 (Repeat) brand new one-off-documentary.The Murder of Becky Watts - : Police Tapes with Rachel Davidson-Smith.When we saw her in the morgue, that's when it really hit us. I mean, they did their best to cover up where he cut her up and things like that. But I could still see where he’d decapitated her. And no parent should have to see that.” - Becky Watts’s father Darren.
In this new documentary for TV3, Rachel Davidson-Smith gains unprecedented access to never seen before police tapes from the investigation into the murder of Becky Watts, revealing the inner workings of the case and the strategies detectives used to snare her killers.
When 16-year-old Becky went missing in 2016,it sparked the largest police investigation ever launched in Bristol and dominated headlines nationwide. Initially it was assumed that Becky had simply run away, but as detectives began to unearth clues surrounding her disappearance their attention turned to stepbrother Nathan Matthews and his girlfriend Shauna Hoare.
This programme, which is part of TV3’s Crime & Punishment season, pieces together the methods the police used to build their case against Matthews and Hoare using previously unseen police footage from the heart of the investigation, including interview room tapes, forensic crime scene videos, and the moment the killers were arrested.
Several contributors, including Becky’s grandmother Pat Watts and officers involved in the case, speak for the first time since Matthews was sentenced for murder and Hoare for manslaughter.
Rachel speaks to Becky’s father Darren at the home where Becky died, along with her stepmother [and Nathan’s mother] Anjie, about their thoughts and emotions during the investigation, and the impact the crime has had on their family.
She also interviews senior investigating officer DCI Richard Ocone who gives her a vivid insight into the techniques and strategies officers used to elicit evidence in the interview room following forensic searches, which led to the grim discovery of Becky’s body and the dark motivation behind her murder being revealed.
Initially it seemed Becky had simply run away and would return. But DCI Ocone says he had an instinct because she had simply stopped using her phone, and not spoken to any friends, that something bad had happened. He says: “On day one you know I am fairly confident here, that something bad has happened to this young lady, I just don't know exactly what.“
Police then discovered Becky’s stepbrother and his girlfriend were the last people to see her, but they proved difficult to pin down. Once at the station, officers found Hoare ‘giggly’ and Matthews seemingly unconcerned. At Becky’s house, the forensic team found a key clue. Jon Draper from the team says: “That's when we came across what appeared to be blood or red staining on the architrave of the doorframe leading into Becky’s room.”
When a fingerprint in the blood turned out to belong to Matthews, the pair were arrested, initially on suspicion of kidnap. Becky’s grandmother Pat says: “If was going to be something bad, it didn’t surprise me. Nathan hated Becky and made it obvious.”
Detectives didn't tell Matthews they now knew it was his fingerprint in Becky’s blood, but hinted at what they’d found, to increase his unease. Det Con Marie Stephen explains: “Without giving that to them on a plate, if you like, it leaves them having to think about it, and puts them under more pressure.”
Police searched the pair's own house, finding that despite the fact it was filthy and crammed full of furniture, the bath was sparkling clean. The search also uncovered incriminating receipts which indicated a gruesome truth. DCI Ocone says: “Those receipts indicated that somebody on the Friday, when Becky was reported missing, had been to B&Q and had bought a circular saw, some gloves, goggles, and a face mask… Does it really mean he has tried to dismember a body?”
The investigation then turned into a murder inquiry, and dad Darren says: “Your whole world folds in on itself. They told me this [was] a murder inquiry and I know I started shouting at that point, ‘Oh, no, no, no, no you’re wrong, she’s got to be alive.’”
Detectives withheld the receipts find from Matthews, increasing the pressure by saying his home had been forensically searched. DCI Ocone says: “I think it probably felt like he was battling against a rising tide, and actually, you could feel the evidence starting to come on top, and actually it was starting to weigh quite heavily.”
Matthews then confessed in a prepared statement that he’d used the circular saw to dismember Becky’s body in the bath. He admitted wrapping up the body parts and hiding them in a shed a few hundred metres from his home. DCI Ocone admits nothing prepared him for what they found there: “The nature of the find is horrific and shocking, I have never dealt with anything like this. And it will stay with me throughout my service, it will stay with me probably throughout my life.”
With Matthews claiming sole culpability, detectives couldn’t yet link Hoare to the murder. She was initially charged with perverting the course of justice, before a series of deleted texts were recovered from one of her phones. They revealed a disturbing motivation behind the murder - text messages between the pair talking about abducting young girls, taking them home and putting them in their loft. DCI Ocone says: “I think they showed that Shauna’s involvement was far tighter, far closer to actually what had happened... It suggested that she had been involved in the dismemberment and the packaging of Becky, after she’d been killed.”
Darren takes Rachel into Becky’s locked bedroom, which is filled with posters and soft toys one might expect a teenage girl’s room to contain. There, he explains the impact the case has had on him. He says: “I believe they came both up here, they burst in on her, with masks on, and attacked her. She must have been absolutely bloody terrified.
“The image I have, in my nightmares, is him holding her down on the floor, and [Hoare’s placing her hand] over her mouth... They did it together, they planned it together, I don't know what they expected to gain from it. ‘Cause there was nothing in it for them. So, it was all pointless.”.Featuring incredible video footage revealing for the first time how detectives used strategy and skill to catch the killers of Becky Watts.
01:05-02:05 (Repeat) brand new series.11/12.The Jonathan Ross Show.(Series 12).This week on The Jonathan Ross Show on TV3,in a TV exclusive,Emma Bunton,Mel B,Mel C,and Geri Horner will be chatting together on the sofa.,legendary icon of music, fashion and screen Grace Jones, X Factor judge Nicole Scherzinger, Great British Bake Off winner, presenter and author Nadiya Hussain and the hilarious Micky Flanagan join Jonathan, while the Number 1 album-selling artist Stormzy returns to perform in the studio.
02:05-03:00 Nightscreen
Interntal PPP1 Northern Ireland
01:05-03:00 Teleshopping



Comments
Post a Comment