Sentences with phrase «more television programmes»

Not exact matches

The culture of the «freedom to choose», channeled by the Internet, movies, television, music, fashion, slogans, publicity, education programmes, NGOs, seduces ever more young people in all cultures, mainly in urban areas, but it manages to filter down to the local country areas.
Pictures of the bust were shared widely on social media, with some critics suggesting it bore more of a resemblance to former Arsenal and Manchester City forward Niall Quinn or The Head from BBC television programme «Art Attack» than Ronaldo.
To add to this the media regularly report on surveys showing how the sleepless nights of baby and toddlerdom lead to breakdowns in relationships and now television producers want a slice of the pie with new programmes, like the shockingly awful Bedtime Live, springing up and with no doubt more to come.
If a person has more than two television sets, it is possible to feed all sets from one set top box but, they will all show the same programme that this is selected.
But more recently we heard about how Bangladesh was spending its allocated amount on a television programme, about how India received money from the UK for years whilst it had its own foreign support department, and about how # 11 million of the British international assistance budget went «missing» in Uganda due to corruption and embezzlement.
Omeje who was speaking at a live Television Continental programme Breakfast on Wednesday said the Lekki - Epe Expressway has also witnessed more fatal cases since the construction and conccesionning of the road.
This sequence, one of the most gripping and interesting in the television programmes, teaches more than a dozen books on cave art.
Despite the encouraging findings, Attenborough warned that people's growing appetite for science could be dulled if today's high - quality science and technology programmes on prime - time television are pushed aside as ITV moves downmarket and the BBC commissions more programmes from independent producers (see Comment, this issue).
Turkey has passed two new decrees expelling more than 4,000 civil servants and banning television dating programmes.
Guests who attended the Awards included the former President of Ireland Mary McAleese and Michael D. Higgins; actors Pierce Brosnan, Brendan Gleeson, Saoirse Ronan, Kim Cattrall, Joely Richardson, Colm Meaney, Stephen Rea, Amy Huberman, Charlene McKenna, Martin McCann, Ruth McCabe and Ruth Bradley; film and programme makers including PJ Dillon, Tom Hall, Juanita Wilson, Thaddeus O'Sullivan, Morgan O'Sullivan, James Flynn, Joan Bergin and Tim Fleming; and television names such as Gay Byrne, Pat Kenny, Miriam O'Callaghan plus many more.
Everyone has their own way of finding inspiration, and whilst the majority of my hubs are (more or less) planned, I find that many just materialise as the result of a chance sighting or in some cases an excerpt from a television programme which strikes me as fascinating, and which causes me to research further and to expand the theme, perhaps in a new direction.
More TV shows on your phone Independent Television company has released an application for the Google mobile OS powered devices, which allows for the viewing of programmes and in much the same way as BBC's iPlayer.
International Cat Care is pleased to release details of an exclusive evening with Dr Sarah Ellis, feline behaviour specialist from the very popular BBC2 Horizon television programmes «The Secret Lives of Cats» and «Cat Watch 2014» and, more recently, from this week's BBC2 «Cats v Dogs» programme with Chris Packham and Liz Bonnin, to talk all things cat!
Many of our specialist speakers have published works in their chosen fields, others, such as Industrial Britain expert Emma Griffin, have worked extensively in television and radio and have consulted on and presented a variety of popular historical programmes, this ranges from Emma's involvement in More 4's «The Real Mill» alongside Tony Robinson, to Mark Roodhouse's consultation on the BBC2 documentary series «Wartime Farm».
Artist statement: «Neither text was taught to me when I was in school or college, and even though I knew about the Easter Rising and the civil war, it was more through word of mouth, television programmes or some event happening in Northern Ireland.
More recently, he also emerged as a media personality, presenting television programmes for Channel 4, Channel 5, and the BBC.
This programme was the first documentary film about a living artist made for British television and its producer John Read went on to make five more about Henry Moore throughout his life as well as many others on leading artistic figures of the 1960s and 1970s.
More interestingly, Stephen Schneider said in a 1978 television programme called «The Coming Ice Age» that: «We can't predict with any certainty what's happening to our own climatic future.
Eighteen years after Grand Designs first appeared on our television screens in April 1999, Kevin McCloud says he is more enthused by the programme now than he has ever been.
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