
They also meet the series' youngest foundling to date: Natasha Carr, who was left in public toilets inside London's St Thomas's hospital in 1989. They begin with Andy Hallsworth, who was left on the steps of a church more than 50 years ago and knows almost nothing about his birth.

Long Lost Family: Born Without Trace Monday/Tuesday/Wednesday, ITV, 9pm Have a box of hankies at the ready for this series, shown across three nights, as Davina McCall and Nicky Campbell knit together the stories of people who were abandoned as babies.

Sam summons Nikki and her team to help with the investigation, but does Sam know more about the case than she’s letting on? And why does the DNA evidence reawaken ghosts from Nikki’s past? Sam has just begun a new company, but no sooner has she launched it than the country is rocked by the high-profile assassination of Britain’s health secretary. Emilia Fox returns as pathologist Dr Nikki Alexander, and, to celebrate the series’ 25th anniversary, she’s joined by a former star Amanda Burton as pathologist Sam Ryan. Twenty-five years after first airing, Silent Witness is still one of the BBC’s most consistently popular crime dramas, surpassed only by Line of Duty in the ratings. Silent Witness Monday/Tuesday, BBC One, 9pm The programme also looks at the science behind menopause, and the work being done in the realm of biomedicine to alleviate its effects, with expert interviewees Dr Deirdre Lundy, Dr Caoimhe Hartley and Dr Sarah Callaghan helping shine a light on this often-hidden topic. This documentary emerges from those Liveline conversations, exploring how women in Ireland experience menopause, and the challenges they face at home and at work as they navigate the symptoms. They challenged the taboo around “the change” and reminded listeners that the menopause is more than just a buzzword from women’s magazines, but a real-life event that affects a huge section of the population and their families. Last year on Liveline, many women talked to Joe about their experiences going through menopause. The Change – Ireland's Menopause Story Monday, RTÉ One, 9.35pmĭr Deirdre Lundy, interviewed on The Change - Ireland’s Menopause Story Birbalsingh describes the reasoning behind her controversial methods, claiming being lenient has led to a slide in standards and a loss of control for teachers, and prompted parents to give up.

We meet children who have been given detention for not making eye-contact, or because they've forgotten a second pencil. Some try to hide in plain sight while others attempt a more conspicuous means of transport – only to be pipped at the post.īritain's Strictest Headmistress Sunday, ITV, 10.15pm Cameras go inside Michaela Community School in Wembley run by Katharine Birbalsingh, who has been dubbed the country's strictest headmistress, for the first time in this intriguing documentary.

In the opener, the fugitives must make their way from the Isle of Wight to the mainland, having been left on a deserted beach with only a change of clothes and a small amount of cash.
#SWITCHED AT BIRTH SEASON 3 WATCH SERIES SERIES#
Hunted Sunday/Monday, Channel 4, 9pm The nailbiting series is back for a new run as 11 people, including an ex-military veteran, a serving police officer, a mother of two, a couple of experienced urban explorers and two profoundly deaf young men, aim to spend 23 days evading an elite team of hunters, led by the assistant chief constable of Cleveland Police, Lisa Theaker, and win a share of £100,000. The absorbing programme features the Bacewicz Overture, Tchaikovsky's rousing Fourth Symphony and Mendelssohn's Violin Concerto, where the orchestra is joined by Radio 3 New Generation Artist Johan Dalene. In the opener, Marta Gardolinska conducts the National Orchestra of Wales at Hoddinott Concert Hall in the Wales Millennium Centre Cardiff. Inside Classical: Women's Words and Voices Sunday, BBC Four, 8pm This new series showcases concerts by the BBC Orchestras and specially invited guests, all performed in prestigious concert halls.
