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- In the 1980s the X-Men must defeat an ancient all-powerful mutant, En Sabah Nur, who intends to thrive through bringing destruction to the world.
- Academy Award-winning film-maker Oliver Stone interviews Russian president Vladimir Putin about divisive issues related to U.S.-Russia relations.
- In the personal and inspiring stories of four patients urgently searching for answers to mysterious symptoms, Below the Belt exposes widespread problems in our health care systems.
- The BBC's flagship morning news programme covering current affairs, business and sports, plus guest interviews and weather reports.
- Sunday morning political interview and discussion programme presented by Laura Kuenssberg. The big names behind the big stories. Laura talks to those making the news, inside and outside politics.
- A BBC documentary on the fall of legendary porn star Ron Jeremy following his arrest after many allegations of sexual abuse and rape by many women who worked in the porn industry. Featuring interviews with victims and industry insiders, and a reporter who covered the case.
- Serious news reports, analysis and no-holds-barred interviews with leading politicians and public figures.
- Daily evening and nightly news bulletins for North West England.
- Max Clifford was a powerful media publicist to the stars. But in 2014 he was jailed for historic sex crimes. Now, the survivors of his abuse tell their stories.
- The Lazarus Heist is a true crime news podcast that investigates the 2014 Sony Pictures hack. The program is hosted by Geoff White and Jean Lee who discuss the circumstances behind the hack and the investigation that seemed to point the finger at North Korea though Pyongyang denies involvement.
- After a six-week trial, four men have been convicted in the United States in a high-profile case connected to the storming of Capitol Hill in Washington two years ago. The four members of the far-right Proud Boys group were convicted on a charge of seditious conspiracy, defined as a plot to overthrow the government. US Prosecutors have now charged more than 1,000 people with offences in relation to the January 6, 2021 attack, but there is little agreement in a bitterly divided America about exactly what happened on that day. The dispute threatens to poison American democracy. The BBC's David Grossman was there as events unfolded and filmed the Proud Boys and spoke to their leaders. He assesses what this infamous date means for the United States.
- Konnie Huq explores and celebrates the very best of British children's programming from the past 100 years.
- Mariam Mola is a self-styled entrepreneur - and a career con artist. In this wild game of cat-and-mouse, she's exposed by her victims as the fraudster she really is.
- Johanna Young was 14 when she went missing from her family home in Watton, Norfolk, on 23 December 1992. Three days later her body was found partially clothed, covered in scratches and lying face down in water.
- Swedish documentary filmmaker Nahid Persson follows the Irani-exiled Masih Alinejad, her fight against the Iranian regime's forced hijab laws and her viral movement My Stealthy Freedom.
- Every year dozens of young women make a risky choice to escape their family homes in the North Caucasus in Russia. This film follows three cases of women forced into early marriages or simply into living the life they didn't want to live. Refusal to comply is punished by physical or psychological violence, restriction of freedom or worse. As the women attempt to escape, they must cut ties with everything they know.
- British early morning news bulletin broadcast on weekdays at 9 a.m.
- The day's top stories from BBC News.
- The Chevalier d'Éon was an 18th Century French nobleman, trusted spy to King Louis XV, and for the last 33 years of their long and colourful life, a woman.
- The Church of the Holy Sepulchre in the Old City of Jerusalem - the most sacred place in Christendom - is shared by six different Christian sects: Greek Orthodox, Catholics, Armenians, Copts, Syrians and the Ethiopians - all of whom are constantly trying to maintain the ancient, fragile Status Quo. The guardians of the key to the Church are two Moslem families, both of which claim to be the key custodian. And one Israeli Police officer, Johnny, who's responsible for keeping the peace in the Church.
- Katty Kay in Washington and Christian Fraser in London report on the events that are shaping our world.
- Four young QI researchers - known by Stephen Fry's affectionate nickname as 'The QI Elves' - tell each other the most interesting things they've discovered in the news this week.
- Adi Jaffe was a crystal meth dealer in Los Angeles, purchasing his supply from local meth labs and making his way up to dealing with Mexican cartels. Jaffe was arrested five times, with the final arrest resulting in his incarceration. Jaffe speaks with Insider about the practicalities of running crystal meth labs. He discusses the methods behind different methamphetamine recipes, the effects of anti-drug policies on the supply, how the cartels managed to take over the trade with super labs, and P2P meth precursor chemicals supplied from China.
- Live mid-morning rolling news coverage by the BBC.
- A BBC News tribute to David Bowie, broadcast on BBC One on the day his death was announced.
- A timeline of the tragic Grenfell Tower fire as told through personal accounts of survivors and eyewitnesses.
- The price of war is every life it touches. In the United Kingdom, that includes a town of people who build fighter jets, Quaker activists determined to stop arms sales to Saudi Arabia, and refugees caught in the middle.
- Three foreign art students face the challenge to do their final collaborative thesis during level 4 lock down in London.
- Influencers across the globe are promoting Apetamin as a quick fix for Kardashian-esque curves. But there's a lot they don't know about this 'miracle' syrup.
- 360 film: Desert on fire Early in summer 2016, the so-called Islamic State set fire to one of Iraq's largest oil fields.It has taken Iraqi firefighters 10 months put the flames out. The smoke has poisoned the air, the land, and the water across a vast region of Northern Iraq.
- BBC Sport travels to Bryne, Norway, to hear from the people who shaped Manchester City footballer Erling Haaland into the complete modern-day striker.
- Short lunchtime news bulletin for North West England.
- In February 2020, a shocking video began to circulate on Chinese social media. A group of African children are being instructed, by a voice off-camera, to chant phrases in Chinese. The kids repeat the words with smiles and enthusiasm - but they don't understand that what they're being told to say is "I am a black monster and my IQ is low." The clip ignited outrage in China and beyond. But no-one ever answered the crucial questions: Why was this filmed? Where was it shot? Who made it? These questions send #BBCAfricaEye and #BBCEyeInvestigations reporters Runako Celina and Henry Mhango on a journey into a Chinese video-making industry that exploits vulnerable children across the continent.
- Documents the secret, overnight attempt to set a 100 mph record for the newly-built steam locomotive Tornado, between Newcastle and York on the East Coast Main Line, the first time that such a speed has been attempted in the UK by a steam locomotive since British Rail withdrew them in the 1960s.
- Fergal Keane finds surprises and hope among people he first met more than twenty years ago in hard pressed communities, in a powerful film directed by Oscar winner Alice Doyard.
- A documentary about the newsreel footage that cameraman Geoffrey Malins shot of the first few days' fighting of the Battle of the Somme in July 1916, during the First World War. He was allowed extensive access to the trenches at the front line, as what would nowadays be termed an "embedded journalist". His footage, edited into a feature-length film, were shown as a propaganda film and seen by an estimate 20 million people back home - half the British population at the time.
- The BBC explores the TikTok trend 'Turkey Teeth', in which young people are travelling to Turkey to get a brand new smile - by shaving down their natural teeth.
- The Russian Revolution of 1917 sparked a political and social earthquake that would define the 20th century. 100 years on, how do Russians view the revolution that came to be known as Red October?
- In the 94-year-history of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, only seven women have ever been nominated in the best director category. Why is that? And what is getting in the way of achieving gender parity in film-making? Kim Chakanetsa travels to the heart of Hollywood and meets Keri Putnam, a film executive and producer, and the founder of Putnam Pictures, and Stephanie Allain, a film producer and writer, and the newly elected co-president of the Producers Guild of America.
- International, national and regional news and weather at 8pm on BBC One.
- Live from Broadcasting House in London, an in-depth look back at the day's national and international news, sport and weather with Huw Edwards and Clive Myrie.
- BBC News Review programmes looking back at the year.
- A lively and informed conversation about the next day's headlines.