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New Bbc Documentaries
new bbc documentaries










The BBC Studios Natural History Unit (NHU) is a department of BBC Studios that produces television, radio and online content with a natural history or wildlife theme. It is best known for its highly regarded nature documentaries, including The Blue Planet and Planet Earth, and has a long association with David Attenboroughs authored documentaries, starting with 1979s Life on Earth.With Nirvana ​ ’s iconic second album Nevermind turning 30 this month (on September 24, to be precise), BBC Music have announced several different birthday celebrations – including a new documentary featuring Dave Grohl and Krist Novoselic.Prince William will present a new five-part BBC documentary which will explore solutions to repairing the environment. In a short trailer for The Earthshot Prize: Repairing Our Planet, William said this is a moment for hope, not fear.Prince William will present a new five-part BBC documentary which will explore solutions to repairing the environment.

After touring the UK I remember going back to America to the same bars and clubs where we were playing to 99 people… 150 people… it was definitely not like what it was in the UK. It really is like a second home. It’s for this very reason that I launched the Earthshot Prize, the.DOCUMENTARY. More than a dozen members of the British Royal Family offer their personal thoughts in a new documentary as they pay tribute to the life of His Royal Highness Prince Philip , Duke of.

UPF is cheap, convenient, and yet scientists know little about it. Despite decades of trying, why are we unable to tackle this problem?Over the past 40 years, UPF has become entrenched in UK diets and it now accounts for the majority of our calories – in children it accounts for 64% of their diets and in adolescents it is 67%. In the UK, 21% of children are living with obesity when they leave primary school – the highest it’s ever been. Is ultra-processed food (UPF) causing obesity in children and could it even be addictive? Across the world childhood obesity rates have risen tenfold in 50 years. A new BBC One documentary sees a UCL academic eating ultra-processed food for one month, to highlight the harm it causes the body and brain.Honorary Senior Lecturer Dr Chris van Tulleken (UCL Infection & Immunity) presents the show as he tries out the diet, in a self-experiment overseen by Professor Rachel Batterham (UCL Medicine), head of the UCL Centre for Obesity Research and Obesity Theme Lead for the NIHR UCLH Biomedical Research Centre.The documentary, airing Thursday 27 May on BBC One, asks several questions.

new bbc documentaries

This could be due to the UPF diet itself or the altered hormones. After four weeks of UPF diet Chris’ brain connection changed. The UPF diet changed these hormones so Chris felt hungrier and therefore ate more and gained weight.

For example, Chile have banned advertisements of UPF to children under the age of 14. Several countries (but not the UK) have brought in measures to reduce the consumption of UPFs. UPF foods are usually cheaper and we know that people eat the food that they can afford to eat. “We already know that there is a strong link between consumption of UPFs and the risk of heart disease of having a stroke and of dying. We need further research to understand the real impact of UPFs.”Professor Batterham says this is worrying because UPF is very common in the diets of children and may be contributing to the obesity epidemic.

new bbc documentaries