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1-19 of 19
- Noah Baumbach's incisive and compassionate look at a marriage breaking up and a family staying together.
- In 1961, Kempton Bunton, a 60 year old taxi driver, steals Goya's portrait of the Duke of Wellington from the National Gallery in London.
- A flat world sitting on the backs of four elephants who hurtle through space balanced on a giant turtle. In truth, the Discworld is not so different from our own. Yet, at the same time, very different . . . but not so much. In this, the maiden voyage through Terry Pratchett's divinely and recognizably twisted alternate dimension, the well-meaning but remarkably inept wizard Rincewind encounters something hitherto unknown in the Discworld: a tourist. Twoflower has arrived, Luggage by his side, to take in the sights and, unfortunately, has cast his lot with a most inappropriate tour guide-a decision that could result in Twoflower's becoming not only Discworld's first visitor from elsewhere . . . but quite possibly, portentously, its very last. And, of course, he's brought Luggage along, which has a mind of its own. And teeth.
- Teach your little ones to relax and focus with this collection of calming exercises.
- In How to be a Human, Ruby Wax tries to come up with some answers to the question about who we are. With the input of a monk (an expert on our inner lives) and a neuroscientist (an expert on the brain), Ruby explores how to find happiness in the modern world - despite the constant bombardment of bad news, the need to choose between 5,000 different types of toothpaste, and the loneliness of having hundreds of friends who we've never met and don't know us. Filled with witty anecdotes from Ruby's own life, and backed up by scientific authority, How to be a Human is the only guide you need for building a healthy, happy relationship with yourself.
- TV Series
- "Kid" Wolffe is an up-and-coming boxer in 1920s New York. An honest fighter's got little chance at success on the mob-controlled circuit-until ambitious lieutenant "Hinky" Friedman starts making moves to take over her boss's business, and sees a use for the kid. Teitelstam is a struggling tattoo artist, whose natural talent for ink magic won't amount to much without formal training. So he's got no idea why Hinky would offer him ten times what he's worth to come work for her. But Hinky has a vision for a better world, and her high-stakes plan to make it reality requires both Wolffe's fists and Teitelstam's magic. What neither Wolffe nor Teitelstam expects is to fall in love; and in this world, love might be more dangerous than deadly magic or an underworld turf war.
- From identity to heritage to sex and dating and everything in between, explore meaningful conversations with some of the most inspiring people from the world of music, art, literature and fashion.
- Mark Kelley looks at whether the next mass shooting could be stopped if one could get inside the mind of a mass murderer; exclusive conversations with Alexandre Bissonnette's family and the leading profilers who've studied him.
- Canadian soldiers sue the federal government after being given an anti-malaria drug; Scotty Bowman the NHL's winning-est coach.
- An opera tells the story of Salem's first accused witch; a young female rapper takes the music industry by storm.
- Drew will interviews The Late Late Show's James Corden, drops some of the dating tips in Drew's LoveBug, and shares curated list of her top picks that for your weekend in The Weekender.
- Kate takes an 11-mile walk along a section of the South West Coast Path starting at Porlock Weir. She visits a tiny parish church, the valley that inspired Lorna Doone, rides on a water powered railway before finishing at Valley of Rocks.
- The series telling the story of epic trips along waterways returns with a look at the River Bure in Norfolk. Cameras travel from the tranquillity of the upper river, through the holiday hub of Wroxham, and through historical open fenlands.