Presented by Winifred Robinson. Companies are promising legal help for publicans who risk prosecution by using foreign satellite services to screen premiership football matches. We speak to Paul Dixon, lawyer at Molesworth Bright Clegg, and Dan Johnson from the Premier League. We question a panel of experts about the current state of the housing market. With Peter Bolton-King, of the National Association of Estate Agents, John Slaughter of the Home Builders Federation and Ray Boulger, Mortgage Broker at John Charcol. Judges from BBC Radio 4's Food and Farming Awards 2008 have visited entrants who have made the final shortlist in the local retailer category. Judges Robert Clark and Gillian Carter visit Conrad Davies, who runs the Spar store at Pwlhelli in North Wales, to examine his commitment to local produce. Recently Debbie Purdy failed in the courts to clarify the circumstances in which her husband would be prosecuted if he helped her to die. Winifred Robinson speaks to a Christian expert in end-of-life care who has changed his mind about the ethics of assisted dying and now believes it should be legalised. We investigate reports today that indicate Woolworths may sell over 800 stores for as little as £1. The American retailer opened its first British store in 1909 in Liverpool. Jon Stobart, professor of social history at the University of Northampton talks about its chequered history.