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BBC One
Daytime Drama Returns
BBC One's daytime series Moving On, created by writer Jimmy
McGovern, is to return with five standalone films.
Stars include Fay Ripley, Reece Dinsdale, Paul Rhys, Alastair
McKenzie, Christine Bottomley, Dean Lennox Kelly, Ben Daniels, Eva Pope,
Sally Philips, Warren Brown and Rob James Collier.
The series was filmed on location in and around Liverpool by Liverpool-based
company LA Productions. The series explores contemporary issues, from
gambling addiction and the lot of a soldier's wife to infertility, teenage
depression and gentrification – all linked by the common theme of characters
who reach a turning point in life and then move on.
Liam Keelan, Controller of BBC Daytime and Executive Producer for the BBC,
said: "It's very exciting to have such a high profile cast for this series
again and it will be something really special for our viewers to look
forward to."
October
18
2011 - waveguide.co.uk
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Jamie Oliver Hits Out At Swearing Chefs
Jamie Oliver has hit out at chefs who use foul language,
despite coming under fire for swearing on-screen himself.
Oliver, 36, previously sparked viewers' complaints after swearing more than
20 times during an episode of Ministry Of Food, in which he dished out
healthy cooking advice to the residents of Rotherham.
But, while not naming Gordon Ramsay, who is known for losing his temper and
uttering profanities, Jamie said: "I don't like chefs that go round shouting
and swearing.
"If they treated my students like that they'd get pans round their heads.
You can't do it."
He told the Radio Times: "Working with kids who have had a difficult time,
you can't bully them, because that's all they've ever had. You've got to
make it as fun as possible."
Jamie has previously been quoted as saying that he does not swear on his
cookery programmes because it is 'not appropriate', but that on his
documentaries he is wearing his heart on his sleeve.
But after the complaints in 2009, he said: "I'll have to make an effort not
to swear, or hope that the production company covers my a*** and edits out
all that naughty swearing."
The star also told the Radio Times he believed chefs in the past had been
given too much respect.
He said of the start of his career: "Back then, a lot of my counterparts on
TV were in chef whites. We respected them way too much - the way we
respected doctors or nurses.
"And that made the information (they were imparting) more exclusive."
October
18
2011 - waveguide.co.uk
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