Pennine Productions (Archive) LLP
programmes for BBC Radio in 2006
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22:15 |
presenter: Mark Whitaker |
producer: Mark Whitaker | ||
| A myth has been constructed that makes Don Bradman the 'ideal Australian' - but it doesn't bear much relation to the real country or to what's becoming known about the real man. | |
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11:45 |
presenter: Mark Whitaker |
producer: Mike Hally | ||
| The ingredients of the Remembrance Day service – the Cenotaph, the Last Post, the two-minute silence, the marching veterans and the laying of wreaths – have been in place since just after World War I. But how did this enduring ceremony, so moving in its simplicity and so widely copied in local commemorations in the UK and around the world, come about in the first place? This programme reveals the surprising origins and evolution of Remembrance Day, including the protests that greeted it in some parts of the country in its first year. | ||||
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15:30 |
presenter: TBN |
producer: Janet Graves | ||
| "The Witch" concludes a week of crime stories set in Manchester during the month of October. Written by Mandasue Heller it tells the story of how a stolen dog uncovers a crime nearly half a century old. | ||||
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15:30 |
presenter: Brigit Forsyth |
producer: Janet Graves | ||
| "Basic Skills" is the fourth in a week of crime stories set in Manchester during the month of October. Written by Ann Cleeves, it tells the story of Maddy who has made a fresh start in a classroom bringing her love of literature to adult students. | ||||
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15:30 |
presenter: Mike Harding |
producer: Janet Graves | ||
| Snorting Charlie is the third in a week of crime stories set in Manchester during the month of October. Written and read by singer and comedian Mike Harding | ||||
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15:30 |
presenter: Wendy Kweh |
producer: Janet Graves | ||
| The second and final instalment of "Boom" by Cath Staincliffe which creates an explosive start to a week of crime stories set in Manchester during the month of October. | ||||
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15:30 |
presenter: Wendy Kweh |
producer: Janet Graves | ||
| "Manchester Crime Wave" marks the fact that there are more crime writers in the North of England than anywhere else in Britain, and that a Manchester high street bookshop sells more crime fiction than any other genre. | ||||
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11:00 |
presenter: Tim Whewell |
producer: Clare Jenkins | ||
| Children of the Blunkett generation remember what was it like to grow up under the Red Flag in Sheffield during its days as capital of the "Socialist Republic of South Yorkshire". | ||||
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20:00 |
presenter: Garry Richardson |
producer: Janet Graves | ||
| We spend six months following the careers of two football players as they learn the skills to become football managers. Former graduates of the course include Tony Adams, Stuart Pearce and Mark Hughes. | ||||
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15:45 |
presenter: Mark Whitaker |
producer: Janet Graves | ||
| Return of the First Cuckoo celebrates the nature diaries kept by Radio 4 listeners and others and which came to light after the broadcast of the First Cuckoo and the Last Swallow in August 2005. | ||||
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11:00 |
presenter: Mark Whitaker |
producer: Mark Whitaker | ||
| Lack of housing was perhaps the most urgent social problem facing post-war Britain. In the summer of 1946 tens of thousands of people took the situation - and the law - into their own hands, squatting first military camps and then luxury flats and hotels in London. Those still alive tell what happened and how the authorities responded. | |
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02:45 |
presenter: Clare Jenkins |
producer: Clare Jenkins | ||
| Four ancient British trades - trades that help give Britain its unique appearance - are in danger of dying out. Can the experts chosen for this four-part series do a 'Jamie Oliver' and keep them alive by enthusing young apprentices? | ||||
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78: Nerves of Steel |
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11:00 |
presenter: Clare Jenkins |
producer: Clare Jenkins | ||
| A look at Sheffield's regenerating steel industry - decimated a decade ago, but now forging ahead as a world-class centre for medical instruments. | ||||
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14:45 |
presenter: Clare Jenkins |
producer: Clare Jenkins | ||
| Four ancient British trades - trades that help give Britain its unique appearance - are in danger of dying out. Can the experts chosen for this four-part series do a 'Jamie Oliver' and keep them alive by enthusing young apprentices? | ||||
| (pic when available) | ||||
14:45 |
presenter: Clare Jenkins |
producer: Clare Jenkins | ||
| Four ancient British trades - trades that help give Britain its unique appearance - are in danger of dying out. Can the experts chosen for this four-part series do a 'Jamie Oliver' and keep them alive by enthusing young apprentices? | ||||
| (pic when available) | ||||
14:45 |
presenter: Clare Jenkins |
producer: Clare Jenkins | ||
| Four ancient British trades - trades that help give Britain its unique appearance - are in danger of dying out. Can the experts chosen for this four-part series do a 'Jamie Oliver' and keep them alive by enthusing young apprentices? | ||||
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15:30 |
presenter: Angela Mounsey |
producer: Gillian Hush/Mark Whitaker/Mike Hally | ||
| A week of readings highlighting the best work from Creative Writing Groups in the North of England. Over 250 groups were invited to submit their best two stories, on any theme. This selection is the pick of more than 130 stories submitted. Today's story is “Water Mouse” by Maureen Fenton, Clitheroe Writing Group, read by Angela Mounsey | ||||
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15:30 |
presenter: Emma Lowndes |
producer: Gillian Hush/Mark Whitaker/Mike Hally | ||
| A week of readings highlighting the best work from Creative Writing Groups in the North of England. Over 250 groups were invited to submit their best two stories, on any theme. This selection is the pick of more than 130 stories submitted. Today's story is “Whitby Pier” by Mary C Clarke, Airedale Writers Circle, read by Emma Lowndes | ||||
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15:30 |
presenter: David Fleeshman |
producer: Gillian Hush/Mark Whitaker/Mike Hally | ||
| A week of readings highlighting the best work from Creative Writing Groups in the North of England. Over 250 groups were invited to submit their best two stories, on any theme. This selection is the pick of more than 130 stories submitted. Today's story is “Working from Home” by Iris Woodford, Lancaster Writers, read by David Fleeshman | ||||
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15:30 |
presenter: Carol McGuigan |
producer: Gillian Hush/Mark Whitaker/Mike Hally | ||
| A week of readings highlighting the best work from Creative Writing Groups in the North of England. Over 250 groups were invited to submit their best two stories, on any theme. This selection is the pick of more than 130 stories submitted. Today's story is “Old Blood” by Christiane Algar, Alnwick Playhouse Writers Group, read by Carol McGuigan | ||||
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15:30 |
presenter: Barbara Marten |
producer: Gillian Hush/Mark Whitaker/Mike Hally | ||
| A week of readings highlighting the best work from Creative Writing Groups in the North of England. Over 250 groups were invited to submit their best two stories, on any theme. This selection is the pick of more than 130 stories submitted. The first story is “Squirrels” by Karen Whitchurch, of the Hornsea Writers, read by Barbara Marten | ||||
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11:00 |
presenter: Allan Beswick |
producer: Mike Hally | ||
| The story of the Government's response to an earlier epidemic of binge-drinking - the nationalisation of Carlisle's pubs and breweries as a wartime experiment in 1916, an experiment that lasted until 1971. | |
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11:30 |
presenter: Mark Whitaker |
producer: Mark Whitaker | ||
| An insight into the secretive work of the Spoliation Advisory Panel - a small team of academics and art historians who advise government - and British galleries and museums - in relation to claims that works held in this country were looted during the Nazi era and should be returned to their rightful owners. | ||||
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20:00 |
presenter: Mark Whitaker |
producer: Mark Whitaker | ||
| The North African countries of Morocco and Tunisia are both celebrating fifty years of independence from French colonial rule. They're two of the most pro-western states in the Arab world and both claim to be on the road to political democracy. Yet young Moroccans and Tunisians are prominent among those accused of involvement in Islamic terror groups in western Europe. Mark Whitaker investigates. | ||||
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