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The Age from Melbourne, Victoria, Australia • Page 44

Publication:
The Agei
Location:
Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Issue Date:
Page:
44
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

73UNE 1992-: 18 KSnxiM Sunday Age DIGEST i 9m hi STARTING ABC NINE SEVEN TEN SBS challenger takes on i big guns 6.00 Rage. Music videos continue. 8.00 Basketball. The 1992 Mobil Challenge. 9.00 Couch Potato With Grant Plro.

Children's program. 10.00 Super League Highlights. 11.00 Cathedrals Of Australia. St Andrew's, Sydney. R.

12.00 Landline. Rural affairs series. 1.00 Review. Peter Ross reviews the arts and entertainment. R.

1.30 Sunday Afternoon With Peter Rose. With guest, composer Carl Vine. Featuring Marilyn Richard-I eon In Recital (1.32); Public Hangings, Art Gallery Collections (2.00); Palettes, Miracle In The Loggia (2.10); Tales From Prague, a documentary looking at art under the Communist regime (2.35); Peter Ross With Cart Vine (3.30 and 3.48); OS Today, London's Japan Festival (3.40); Relative Values, final of the series exploring the forces which give value to art (3.50); Bookchat, with American feminist author, Susan Faludl (4.45). 5.00 The Loet Boys. In 1887, J.M.

Barrie met the two eldest Llewellyn Davies boys and began telling them fairy stories. During their walks and games together, the idea for Peter Pan was bom. S. 6.00 Brush Strokes. British comedy series with Karl Howman.

S. 6.30 Surgical Spirit. British comedy series: Joyce's Little Turn. With Nicola McAuliffe. G.

7.00 News, Sport, Weather. Pre sented py sue Mcmtosn. 7.30 Rumpole Of The Bailey. British comedy-drama series: Rumpole And The Last Resort. Rumpole comes under pressure to collect some outstanding fees.

With Leo McKern. S. Superbly written capers ot a portly London legal eagle lose none ot their sparkle on rerun. 8.2S News. 8.30 True Stories: An Astronaut's View Of Earth.

The ultimate home movie a look at our fragile planet from space, with commentary from veteran astronauts Kath-ryn Sullivan, Charles Bolden and John Blaha. S. 9.30 The Men's Room. In the two years since Mark last saw Charity, his wife has thrown him out and his daughters have grown up. Jane allows him back, but life is bleak.

With Harriet Walter, Bill Nlghy. PGR, S. Penultimate episode ot an absorbing BBC drama series, made In 1991, which charts changing attitudes to love, marriage, sex and careers among a group ot middle-class Londoners during the '80s. 10.20 Compass: Catholics And Sex. A history of the Roman Catholic Church's attitudes to sex and birth control from the 1930s to the present day.

11.10 Hill Street Blues. US drama series: Come And Get It. The capture of a mass murderer causes an uproar on the Hill. With Daniel J. Travantl.

AO. 12.00 Close. Ttovd on Spain', 7.30 pm, SBS ENDING 'Wide World of Sports: French Open Tennis', tonight, 10.50, Channel Nina HICHUCNT Channel Nine's murder-mystery show 'Cluedo' (Wednesday, 7.30 pm) Is an entertaining and engaging romp. Hosted by. Ian McFadyen, it Intercuts a dastardly drama being played out at Brindabella Homestead that results In murder, with efforts by the studio audience to solve the crime.

Someone must establish who did It. Where and with what. The cast. Including George Mallaby, Nicola Paull, Frank Gallacher and Andrew Daddo, brings to life the board-game characters in suitable tongue-in-cheek style and with appropriate color co-ordination. Capitalising on Spain as the flavor of 1992, wandering British chef Keith Floyd this week kicks off a seven-part series in Spain from the region of Galicia.

As tetchy as ever and very keen to sample the local drop, Floyd finds "chums" everywhere as he sautes and stews his way cross country. Olel FOR KIDS Two new shows begin this week. 'Vldlot' (Monday, 5 pm, ABC) is a quiz show for teenagers hosted by Eden Gaha with the aid of an array of celebrity guest hosts (Including Ironman Guy Leech, actor Oeorgle Parker, singer Melissa and basketballer Oamlen Keogh). Designed to be fast paced In the best tradition of the video generation the show features questions on music, TV, films and sport. The 'Shorn Sheep Show' (Saturday and Sunday, 7 am, Channel Ten) Is geared towards younger viewers and is hosted by Joy Smlthers REPEATS Recorded during the filming of 'LA Story', Melvyn Bragg's profile of actor-writer-comedian Steve Martin screened last year as part of 'Masterpiece'.

It returns for an encore this week (Wednesday, midnight, SBS) and anyone who has appreciated Martin's work as a stand-up comic or actor (in such films as 'The Lonely Guy', 'Parenthood' and 'Grand Canyon') will enjoy the opportunity to hear his thoughful and intelligent views on comedy, art and film-making. SET THE VCR 'Supermom's Daughter' (Tuesday, 4.35 am, Channel Nine) Is an Emmy Award-winning 1987 telemovle about a feminist mother (Barbara Bosson) coming to terms with her daughter's right to choose a career. It is a sensitive and intelligent film about making choices and living with compromises. CURRENT AFFAIRS 'The Cutting Edge' series this week looks at the AIDS epidemic in the US in 'The Silent War' (Tuesday, 8.30 pm, SBS). Doctors, political and religious figures, entertainers and AIDS sufferers are Interviewed with a view to emphasising how little the public knows about the disease.

Also on SBS, 'Connections' (Friday, 8.30 pm) examines the trial of Father Bernard Lynch, an Irish-Catholic priest from New York Indicted by the Grand Jury on charges of sexual abuse. 'A Priest on Trial' examines an extraordinary case and a disturbing issue. AD BREAK Muddy Waters' classic mid-1950s song, 'Mannish Boy', is proving "good lor notes Maurice Dowd, of Clemengef Melbourne, of the 'Just Jeans' ads. The song was re-recorded by Chris Coping, a Melbourne musician. The Jeans company's advertising coordinator, Alan McKibbin, says viewers regularly ring to ask about the song.

Larry Schwartz SPORT Mowing the lawns might be a better alternative than the Brisbane-Melbourne AFL clash from Carrara this afternoon on Seven, but an hour's highlights of the Carfton-Geelong game at 6.30 pm should sate the football appetite. Nine has the men's final of the French Open tennis from 1 1 pm. Seven has a two-hour replay at 8.30 pm tomorrow, featuring the Collingwood-St Kllda and Hawthorn-Adelaide matches. On Thursday morning at 4. 1 5, SBS has the opening game in the European soccer championship from Sweden, between the home country and France.

Rofiwi ConnoMy 6.00 Turn Round Australia. Religious program. G. 6.30 Thle, That And The Other. Religious program.

G. 7.00 KTV. Educational children's series. C. 7.30 Bush Beat.

Children's wildlife series. C. 8.00 Business Sunday. Financial affairs, presented by Jim Waley. 9.00 Sunday.

Presented by Jim Waley. Comprehensive current affairs. 11.00 Wide World Of Sports Sunday Edition, Live sports pro- -gram, presented by Max Walker. Including an AFL segment hosted by Dermott Brereton, Simon O'Donnell and Sam Newman (noon). G.

1.00 Life Goes On. US drama series about a working-class family. With Bill Smitrovlch, Patti LuPone. G. 2.00 Film: The Night Of The Grizzly.

1966 Western starring Clint Walker and Martha Hyer. An ex-lawman takes his family to Wyoming to start a new life. With Keenan Wynn, Nancy Kulp, Ron Ely, Regis too-mey. Directed by Joseph Pevney. G.

Minor pioneer Western. 4.00 Sports Sunday. Live sports program, presented by Sutcllffe and Tony Greig. G. 6.00 Newsi Sport, Pre- sented by Peter Hltchener.

6.30 Our World. Series of documenta ries: Adventure Bound The Coorong. Further adventures with Alby Mangels. S. 7.30 BO Minutes.

Public affairs program. Bob Hawke interviews golfer Greg Norman at his American residence, 8.30 Robocop 2. 1990 SCi-fi thriller starring Peter Weller (right) and Nancy Allen. A cyborg crime-fighter has to contend with an outbreak of a lethal addle-1 tive drug as well as a newer and deadlier version of himself. Directed by trvln Kershner.

AO, S. Written by Frank Miller and WalonQreen, It lacks the brilliance ot the original but Is one of the better sequels. 10.55 News. 11.00 Tennis. The finals of the 1992 French Open Tournament, live from the i Roland Garros Centre in Paris.

Hosted by Fred StoJIeiiwith commentators John NewcOmbe, Tony Trabert and Betsy Nagelsen. G. The going is usually slow on the clay, but tonight's men's final will be worth watching. 4.00 Rugby League. Highlights from round 10 of the 1992 Winfield League Cup season.

Commentators: Ray Warren, Peter Sterling and Paul Vautln. More sensible programming from Nine, which presumes, quite logically, that all rugby league fans will be wide awake at 4 o'clock on Mon day morning. 5.00 Carson's Comedy -Classics. Comic highlights from Johnny uarsons lonigm snow, u. 5.30 The Sulllvans.

G. pain is Devilish: Jeremy Beadle takes delight In embarrassing the unsuspecting park as part of an alleged military exercise. The event becomes a Pyth-onesque parody of the petty bureaucrat as the woman debates her authorisation to park in the ill-fated spot. As the car burns in the background, the bespectacled Beadle plant says snifflly, "If your car burst into flames, madam, maybe there was something the matter with If you think It's all terribly tacky, mean and unspeakably low-brow, take heart from assurances of the program's producer, Robert Randell, who declares, "We'll never become Just a big-bang THE subject of humiliation also crops up in a six-part BBC series 'From Wimps to Warriors', starting Thursday at 9.30 pm on the ABC. Although It is not a preoccupation of the production, it is the focus of the second episode, 'Pain and Pleasure', '1 6.00 Thle Is The.Ufe.

G. 6.30 MassFOr You At Home. 7.00 Kids' Stuff! Featuring Shorn Sheep (7 Hans Christian Andersen: The Emperor's New Clothes p.30); Peter Pan 'And The Pirates (8.00); Muneters Today (8.30). 9.00 Video Hits. Music videos.

G. 12.00 Rim; ho Boat. 1936 musl-: cal starring Irene Dunne, Jonesiand Paul Robeson. G. Jamea Whale's enjoyable screen version of the famous iU-y HammeratelnKern musical set on the Mississippi.

2.25 Film! Genevieve; 1953 comedy starring Dinah. Sheridan and John Jt Gregson. Friendly -rivals challenge each other to a cross-country vintage car With Kay Kendall, Kenneth More. Directed by Henry Cornelius. G.

Llkeably whimsical British road comedy. 4.15 Only Fools And Horses. British comeay series, o. 5.00 Healthy, Wealthy And Wise. Lifestyle series.

G. Infotainment show which works. Repeat of Monday night's edition featur- Ing some spectacular scenes of hot-air ballooning over the Northern Territory desert. 6.00 News, Sport, Weather. 6.30 New Faces With Bert Newton.

Talent series. G. 7.30 The Simpsons. US cartoon series: Black Widower. Selma marries a supposedly reformed ex-convfct.

G. 7'ne show that brought animation back to prime time continues to Impress with Its wit and Inventiveness. 8.00.Uneie Buck. New US comedy series about an unorthodox man who agrees to raise his late broth-, er's three children. With Kevin Dah-Ve Chodan, Jacob Gelman, Sarah Martlneck.

G. 8.30 Film: Bom On The Fourth Of July. 1989 drama starring Tom (fj Cruise and Wlllem Dafoe. The true story of Ron Kovlc, a marine recruit who became a committed anti-war activist after experiencing the horrors of the Vietnam War and the ordeal of rehabilitation. With mond J.

Barry, Caroline Kava, Kyra Sedgwick, Bryan Larkin. r'- AO. Oliver Stone's passionately powerful but simple-minded saga based on a true story. 11.20 11.30 Film: Racing With The Moon. 1984 drama starring Sean Penn and Elizabeth McGovem.

A small-town teenager falls In love: just as he and a friend are preparing to Join the marines In the early years of World War II. With Nicolas Cage. Directed by Richard Benjamin. AO. Meandering sentimental romantic drama.

1.40 World Sports. G. 2.10 Film: Scandalous. 1984 comedy starring Robert Hays and tee John Glelgud. AO.

British comedy thriller. 4.00 Film: The Bermuda Depths. 1978 science fiction starring Burl 'ft Ives. PGR. -k Bermuda Triangle science fiction telemovle.

5.55 Aboriginal Australia. G. in the which candidly and explicitly examines sado-masochistic sex. The series is a frank and timely examination of contemporary masculinity. It presents an array of men speaking In Intimate detail about their lives, loves, beliefs, childhood experiences and family relationships.

While the gains of the feminist movement are again the subject of impassioned debate, one unassailable truth since Women's Lib erupted with a vengeance is that men have not entered into the process of publicly questioning their roles and their power with anything like the spirit of women. Maybe they're less motivated, maybe they're less able, or less frustrated, or maybe they're Just not raised to express their emotions. A recent episode of 'Murphy Brown' addressed this problem well. Using the fledgling men's movement In the US as a springboard, It packed Frank, Miles and Jim off to a consciousness-raising session led by a guru modelled on author Robert Bly. During the meeting, each of the men underwent a cathartic emotional experience: they divulged burled traumas, they cried, they hugged.

Next day at the office, all three were mortally embarrassed by their behavior, while Murphy who had Insinuated herself into the gathering enthused wildly about the quantum emotional leaps made by one and all. Her colleagues, meanwhile, skulked around looking distinctly uncomfortable, pretending It never happened, eventually seeking refuge in 6.00 Buford Files And Galloping Ghost. Cartoon series. G. 6.20 Agro's Sunday.

Children's pro- Sam, hosted by Agro, Ann-Maree, Ibbo and Uncle Vic. G. 7.20 AFL Squadron. Garry Lyon hosts a series for young rooty fans. G.

7.30 Now You See It. Children's game show, hosted by Mike Meade. C. 8.00 The, Mouse Factory. Disney cartoons with Johnny Brown.

C. 8.30 Sugar And Spice. Australian children's series. C. 9.00 Sportsworld.

G. 12.00 The Magical World Of Disney: Little Spies. A group of neighborhood children uncover a dognapplng ring. G. Disney telemovle yarn.

2.00 Football. AFL match: Brisbane Melbourne, live from Carrara on the Gold Coast. S.00 Motor Racing. Highlights from round seven of the Australian Touring Car Championship from Wanneroo Park, WA. An annoying Interlude In the football action It you're not a petrolhead.

6.00 News, Sport, Weather. 6.30 Football. Highlights of the AFL match: Carlton Geelong, played this afternoon at the MCG. 7.30 Full House. US comedy -series: The Devil Made Me Do It.

Michelle wrestles with her. conscience. With John Stamos, Bob saget, Lon Loughlin. G. 8.00 Dinosaurs.

US series: Power Erupts. Robbie Invents a cheap, pollution-free method of generating energy. G. 9 Kids relish the jokes, adults enjoy the smart satire, and everyone gets a giggle from this family sitcom with a prehistoric twist. 8.30 Film: Betsy's Wedding.

1990 comedy starring Alan Alda (right) and Molly Rlngwald. A man Is determined to raise enough money to give his daughter an elaborate wedding that she doesn't want. PGR. Soggy domestic comedy written and directed by Alan Alda. 10.30 Film: Witness For The Prosecution.

1957 drama starring Ty-ifj rone Power and Charles Laughton. An ageing lawyer defends a man accused of murdering a wealthy friend for her money. With Mariene Dietrich, Elsa Lanchester. PGR. ir Billy Wilder's uninspired screen adaptation ot the Agatha Christie play.

1.00 NBC Sunday Today. Presented by Garrick Utley. G. 2.30 Meet The Press. Interview program.

G. 3.00 Film: The Black Marble. 1980 drama starring Paula Prentiss and Robert Foxworth. AO. Solid cop drama directed bv Harold 9 Becker with Joseph Wambaugh adapting his own novel tor the screen.

4.58 Aboriginal Australia. G. 5.00 Laura McKenzle's Travel Tips. DEBI.ENKER 'mEvisiON" 1986 debut, the show is hosted by Jeremy Beadle, a high priest of pranks who looks suitably devilish. The nasty twist in Beadle's show is that people are invited to nominate their nearest and dearest for disgrace (cutting down the show's research costs considerably).

Not only do family members and best pals write in suggesting victims, they also offer Ideas on their areas of vulnerability (he's very fond of his car; she Just moved Into a new flat) then lure the victim Into the trap. An elaborate ruse is organised in which the designated stooge is accompanied to the appointed destination to witness, for example, a cherished car being torched, a new home being biill-dozed, or a plush flat being flooded. It can get very funny, particularly when the conversational banality that often manifests itself In times of crisis occurs (for example, the poor woman on a trip to the Imperial War Museum at Duxford accompanied by her conniving sister who discovers her Honda being incinerated In the car FL 9.30 English At Work. R. 10.00 Italian Football.

R. 11.00 Road To Sweden. Les Murray previews the 1992 European Soccer Championships. 12.00 World Soccer, 1.00 Anne's International Kitchen. Cooking series.

R. 1.30 Italia News, 2.00 Greek News, 2.30 Dateline. International current affairs with Paul Murphy. R. 3.30 The Cutting Edge: We Know Where You Live.

G. Repeat of an American program dealing with journalist Erik Larson's quest to get to the bottom ot the seemingly omniscient and omnipresent junk mall Industry. 4.30 M.C. Tee Vae. The latest dance music 5.00 The Noise.

International rock music series 'with Annette Shun Wah. 9 sbul music special with guest hosts Oeni Nines and Rock-melona' vocalist Bryon Jones. 6.00 Hotline, viewer feedback with Silvio Rivler. i 6.30 World News. With Lee Lin Chin.

7.00: Vox Popull. Multilingual current affairs with Rhoda Roberts. 7.30 Passions Of The Soul. Second Of a four-part Dutch documentary series analysing the life, writings and Influence of Swiss psychiatrist and founder of depth psychology, Cart Jung. 8.30 Film: A Tale Of Love.

1986 Ital- Ian drama starring Valeria Gollna JJ and Bias Roca-Rey. A slum-dweller finds herself torn between two meh, With Llvlo Panlerl. AO. Dark sexual triangle drama, directed by Francesco Masellt. 10.20 The Movie Show.

Film news and views with David Stratum and Margaret Pomeranz. R. 10.50 Film: The Theme. 1979 Russian drama starring Inna Churikova and Mikhail Ulyanov. A successful but mediocre Moscow writer pays dearly for his lack of artistic Integrity.

PGR. 1r Gleb Pantllov's hard-; edged character drama, unearthed In 1987 through glasnost. 12.25 Film: The Secret Shore. 1985 Welsh suspense starring Gillian Ellsa Thomas and Dafydd Hywel. PGR.i 1.45 Film: In The Year Of Our Lord.

1969 Italian comedy starrine Nino Manfred! and Ugo Tognazzl. AO. 3.45 The Monkey Player. British documentary. R.

4.16 Soeoer. International match: Uruguay Australia, live from Montevideo. 6.30 Close. TV comments by Debt EnkerV Film comments by Tom Ryan. Sports comments by Rohan Connolly.

Picks of the day In boxes. Don't bother. Maybe. Good viewing. Don't miss it.

that classic emergency exit, a bull session about sports. Because of men's discomfort with the notion of revealing themselves emotionally, the initiatives in 'From Wimps to Warriors' are welcome and overdue. It Is a polished and audacious production, appreciatively presenting male bodies with the kind of images generally confined to females In mainstream culture. It strategically places its Interviewees In appropriate, but unusual, settings, interviewing men in bed as they discuss -their lovers, or driving to work as they talk of how the pressures of being the bread-winner contributed to the break-up of a marriage. The men span a broad spectrum, from the cross-dressing 'Rosie' who enjoys being dominated to this week's 'Bermonsey Boy', a debt collector-bouncer facing charges of attempted murder who declares his natural gift to be "rowing" (not as in boats but as In fighting).

In 'A Nice Bit of Skirt' (25 June), three men offer radically different but equally well-considered and articulated views on feminism. Some of the series is shocking, some of it Is Infuriating, and some of It notably the Woody AllenNick Broom-fleld-lnsplred 'Mother Father Me' Is quite funny. All of It is well-conceived and imaginatively directed and shot. Let's hope that when SBS presents Its week-long season devoted to men, 'About Men', screening at the end of this month, the programs are of comparable quality. V.oai.

deceiving ALEXSHABS F)R more than a year, Melbourne's top-rating AM stations 3MP, 3AW and 3LO have regularly occupied three of the top-five positions in the market In the recently concluded survey No. 4, of 1992, 3MP recorded its hlgh-est-ever rating of 14.8 per cent and retained its No. 1 position, while news-talk stations 3AW and 3L0 finished fourth and fifth with respective shares of 11.8 and 11.2 per cent. Given fiat these three stations attract more than 60 per cent of Melbourne's over-40-year-old listeners, It is not surprising that Melbourne's newest commercial station 3EE Is likely to compete with these when it debuts later this month, i 3EE will be the reincarnation of 3XY, which has been off air since September last year. However, when the.

station rejoins the airwaves; It wlllf have not only a new call-sign but also a new spot on the AM band, a new target audience and a new program format. Although 3EE's Sydney-based owner AWA Media is still reluctant to provide too many program details, it has revealed that the station will be targeting over-30s listeners with a magazine-style format which will Include music, news, talk and sport And It is likely that the station will seek to imitate closely 3LO. In recent years 3LO has been the ABC's most successful metropolitan! service, achieving rating shares which have been the envy of many commer-f cial competitors. 3EE's owner claims its new position of 693 on the AM band was chosen -principally for technical reasons. But many Industry observers, including Bob Peters, media analyst with ANZ Capel Court, believe that it is more than coincidental that this band position also lies between 3RN and 3LO.

Thus, 3EE is probably hoping to build its new listenership as much from the ABC's listener base as it is fromieom-merclal broadcasters 3MP and 3AW. AWA Media's managing director, Chris Joscelynei recently explained the-technical advantkees of mnirins from the upper to the lower end of the hot uaiiu. nucuiuiug. io josceiyne, Melbourne's tram Hoes-create electrical interference, with particular problems for those at the lOwer end. He believes that AM listeners, particularly those in cars near a tram line, will receive a much stronger and clearer signal from the station's new frequency position.

If Josceiyne Is correct and 3EE succeeds In delivering a clear, new and popular form of programming to Melbourne's older listeners, 3MP and 3AW, which recently have dominated 40-plus commercial listening, may soon have to share that audience. This would mirror the situation faced by FOX and Triple a few years ago when GOLD 104 and TT FM crossed from the AM band. Many industry eyes and ears will be focused on 693 AM later this month to see whether 3EE can deliver the goods. IT'S film-festival time in Sydney and Melbourne. Next Thursday Radio National's Cassie Plate will Interview Kenneth Anger during her 'Screen' program.

Anger, who wrote the now notorious book, 'Hollywood Babylon', is also an experimental film-maker with quite a track record. Meanwhile New Zealand director' Alison McLean, whose film 'Kltcheni Sink' which begins with a woman pull-j ing her hair from a plug hole of a kitchen sink, and turns into a gothlc nightmare, talks to Ms Plate about her first feature film 'Crush', 'Screen' airs at 10.0S am and is repeated at 8.30 pm. THIS month 'Tuesday Night's Drama' on ABC-FM presents a mostly BBC series of radio plays by Tom Stoppard, one of Britain's most Innovative dramatists. He recently adapted and directed the film version of his first great success, 'Rosenerantz and Guilderstern are Dead'. I The pleasure of A MONG the many constants of television is a fascination f- with humiliation.

Apparently as enduring and universal as cop shows or soap operas are the game shows and prank-based programs that rely on the profound and very public embarrassment of voluntary or unsuspecting suckers. Many a Saturday night has been spent watching Clive James' snippets from Japanese shows in which contestants are subjected to tortures befitting a latter-day Inquisition, and all in the name of good, clean, family fun (and a chance to win cash prizes). The dating shows are another variation on the theme. Romantic hopefuls (and those seeking a free weekend away) allow themselves to be subjected to often-ruthless post-date analyses of their appearances, dress sense and mating moves. It strikes me as a high price to pay for the possibility of a night away in Albury, but lots of people seem willing to risk it.

In addition to the dating games and the shows with the 'It's a Knockout'-type tortures are 'Candid Camera' and its clones. Here, some hapless soul is spied upon as something goes wildly, unexpectedly wrong. The perceived success of the stunt rises in direct proportion to the hysteria exhibited by the luckless victim: the more shrieks and expletives, the more fury and frenzy, the better. The latest variation on this theme, 'Beadle's About', premieres this week (Tuesday, 7.30 pm, Channel Ten). Immensely popular in Britain since its mm Indian Dhurries artd rugs.

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