Paul Morley traces the life and works of Manchester punk poet John Cooper Clarke.
DetailsRageh Omaar asks what Britain can learn from Somalia's news-reporting poets.
DetailsHow historic house owners are struggling to balance the books and keep their estate going.
DetailsSue Armstrong investigates the battle for the hearts and lungs of new smokers.
DetailsCan new money and new ideas save the Harris Tweed industry of the Outer Hebrides?
DetailsThe battle within the BBC to make programmes about homosexuality in the 1950s and 60s.
DetailsRichard Collins reveals the links between the worlds of business and Beatrix Potter
DetailsCloset campanologist Ian McMillan spends a day at the Whitechapel Bell Foundry.
DetailsMartin Bashir profiles the controversial American broadcaster Howard Stern.
DetailsPatrick Humphries explores the life and career of author Paul Brickhill.
DetailsMartin Wainwright looks at the decline of Blackpool as a holiday resort.
DetailsGeoff Watts finds out what the last year has held for the Large Hadron Collider.
DetailsClassical accordionist James Crabb sets out to rescue his instrument's dodgy reputation.
DetailsThe story of the arrival and survival of the large juicy navel orange in the United States
DetailsMichael Portillo and leading historians discuss the causes and effects of the Blitz.
DetailsGerry Kennedy tells the story of sibling American radicals Joan and William Hinton.
DetailsConservationist Richard Peirce explores the feral wild boar situation in Britain.
DetailsBob Dickinson talks to performance artists who have used their own bodies for art.
DetailsLucy Fleming embarks upon a quest to discover more about her mysterious uncle Ian.
DetailsRobin Denselow tells the story of The Bhundu Boys, pioneers of African music in the 1980s.
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