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All Seasons

Season 1

  • S01E01 07/04/2015

    • April 7, 2015
    • BBC Two

    In the first edition of a brand new programme, Victoria Derbyshire looks at the growing number of children under 10 with transgender feelings getting help from the NHS, speaks to the mother of missing Yorkshire chef Claudia Lawrence, and exactly a month before polls open, asks a studio audience how they feel about the election campaign.

  • S01E02 08/04/2015

    • April 8, 2015
    • BBC Two

    With original stories, exclusive interviews, audience debate and breaking news, Victoria Derbyshire presents the BBC's new daily news and current affairs programme. She looks at the issue of dementia, with a moving insight into the lives of three sufferers at different stages of the disease. The US reacts to the shooting of an unarmed black man by a police officer in South Carolina. The audience panel discusses welfare and benefits in the run up to the general election.

  • S01E03 09/04/2015

    • April 9, 2015
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire looks at whether 11-year-olds should learn about sexual consent, and also at the circumstances around the shooting of a Syrian-born former imam in London. The audience panel gets heated over the issue of stop and search in a debate on crime.

  • S01E04 10/04/2015

    • April 10, 2015
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire examines the issue of human trafficking to the UK, focusing on the account of a young Nigerian woman forced into prostitution. Rory Bremner pays tribute to cricket legend Richie Benaud. The audience panel of first-time voters talks immigration, mental health and the economy.

Season 2016

  • S2016E01 04/01/2016

    • January 4, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling presents the BBC's daily news and current affairs programme with original stories, exclusive interviews, audience debate and breaking news. Victoria Derbyshire talks about the harrowing experience of losing her hair as a side-effect of chemotherapy treatment for breast cancer. Plus, an exploration of the reasons why the Saudi execution of a Shia cleric is so controversial.

  • S2016E02 05/01/2016

    • January 5, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire asks if 'smart drugs' really work and reporter Benjamin Zand tries them out. Plus, David Rathband's twin brother says he was 'let down by his police service'.

  • S2016E03 06/01/2016

    • January 6, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling speaks to the couple who missed out on a £35 million jackpot. A flood hit Cockermouth resident records a video diary. Plus a American gun shop owner who says his sales go up every time President Obama speaks.

  • S2016E04 07/01/2016

    • January 7, 2016
    • BBC Two

    The programme looks at the impact of loneliness on all age groups. One year on from the Charlie Hebdo massacre, the wife of one cartoonist talks about life as a widow. Plus the online scam to be wary of if you are buying a house.

  • S2016E05 08/01/2016

    • January 8, 2016
    • BBC Two
  • S2016E06 11/01/2016

    • January 11, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Norman Smith presents the BBC's daily news and current affairs programme with original stories, exclusive interviews, audience debate and breaking news.

  • S2016E07 12/01/2016

    • January 12, 2016
    • BBC Two
  • S2016E08 13/01/2016

    • January 13, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling presents the BBC's daily news and current affairs programme. An unlicensed sperm donor explains why he's fathered 800 children.

  • S2016E09 14/01/2016

    • January 14, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Two teenagers tell the Victoria Derbyshire programme how they were assaulted by a group of men in Paris on New Year's Eve. The report that reveals transgender people in the UK face 'high levels of transphobia'. And the push to recruit high-calibre graduates into children's social work.

  • S2016E10 15/01/2016

    • January 15, 2016
    • BBC Two
  • S2016E11 18/01/2016

    • January 18, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire presents the BBC's daily news and current affairs programme with original stories, exclusive interviews, audience debate and breaking news.

  • S2016E12 19/01/2016

    • January 19, 2016
    • BBC Two
  • S2016E13 20/01/2016

    • January 20, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire speaks to Claire Throssell who lost her two sons in a house fire deliberately set by their father. Plus Karen, a foster carer, who has offered a home to a 14-year-old boy who fled Afghanistan.

  • S2016E14 21/01/2016

    • January 21, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Reaction to the Litvinenko Inquiry, which found that the murder of the ex-Russian spy in the UK was 'probably' approved by President Vladimir Putin.

  • S2016E15 22/01/2016

    • January 22, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Presented by Joanna Gosling. The programme looks at how confident people are feeling about the UK economy, and tries out a new dementia symptoms simulator.

  • S2016E16 25/01/2016

    • January 25, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling presents the BBC's daily news and current affairs programme, looking at how charity fundraising needs to clean up its act and if Google is paying enough UK tax.

  • S2016E17 26/01/2016

    • January 26, 2016
    • BBC Two

    The BBC's daily news and current affairs programme with original stories, exclusive interviews, audience debate and breaking news. Stories include an MP giving an 'apology' to Paula Radcliffe for linking her to a doping scandal.

  • S2016E18 27/01/2016

    • January 27, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling presents the BBC's daily news and current affairs programme. Joanna speaks to women who will be worse off because of pension age changes.

  • S2016E19 28/01/2016

    • January 28, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling presents the BBC's daily news and current affairs programme. Including a report on a diabetic woman with a severe needle phobia and an examination of the UK's promise to accept more unaccompanied child refugees from Syria and other conflict zones. Plus, following Levi Bellfield's admission that he murdered Milly Dowler, the programme talks with the man who led the efforts to catch the serial killer.

  • S2016E20 29/01/2016

    • January 29, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling presents the daily news and current affairs programme, discussing topics including the Zika virus outbreak and hand transplants on the NHS.

  • S2016E21 01/02/2016

    • February 1, 2016
    • BBC Two

    How did the Kids Company charity fold? A report looks at its demise We discuss changes being debated to women's state pensions A father calls for better mental health care for the young.

  • S2016E22 02/02/2016

    • February 2, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling presents the daily news and current affairs programme. Jean Mackenzie speaks to 10-year-old Becky, who had to wait six years for a diagnosis of autism; Joanna and guests debate the complexities of reaching a diagnosis. And Boxer David Haye talks about being fighting fit and back in the ring.

  • S2016E23 03/02/2016

    • February 3, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling presents the BBC's daily news and current affairs programme. Topics include debating the UK's role in the European Union, living with microcephaly and the Belfast's gay cake row that is reaching court.

  • S2016E24 04/02/2016

    • February 4, 2016
    • BBC Two

    How a boy got narcolepsy from the swine flu vaccine. Julian Assange's friend says his health is 'poor'. Debating the need for better services for bereaved parents.

  • S2016E25 05/02/2016

    • February 5, 2016
    • BBC Two

    A survivor of female genital mutilation tells the programme about the psychological effects of being cut. What next for Julian Assange? Supporters and opponents on what they think should happen to the Wikileaks founder. And can the discount supermarkets compete with easyFoodstore and its 'everything for 25p' offer?

  • S2016E26 08/02/2016

    • February 8, 2016
    • BBC Two

    The BBC's daily news and current affairs programme. Victoria discusses the dramatic increase in cosmetic surgery in the UK.

  • S2016E27 09/02/2016

    • February 9, 2016
    • BBC Two

    The BBC's daily news and current affairs programme. Victoria looks at the discrimination faced by people with dyslexia.

  • S2016E28 10/02/2016

    • February 10, 2016
    • BBC Two

    The BBC's daily news and current affairs programme with original stories, exclusive interviews, audience debate and breaking news. Victoria Derbyshire presents and striking junior doctors face questions from patients and government.

  • S2016E29 11/02/2016

    • February 11, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire discusses calls for better child cancer diagnosis. Baroness Shirley Williams talks about her life, love and the Lib Dems as she steps down from 50 years in politics. And the mum who survived being stabbed five times while seven months pregnant.

  • S2016E30 12/02/2016

    • February 12, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling speaks to two women who went on strike at Ford's Dagenham factory to demand equal pay in 1968, and discusses the current gender wage gap. A woman convicted of drug smuggling in Peru explains how she paid corrupt police officers to help her flee the country. And a family who escaped after their tumble dryer caused a house fire.

  • S2016E31 15/02/2016

    • February 15, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire discusses the corruption allegations facing Fifa and where they go next with David Ginola, a former French international footballer, and Isha Johansen, the president of Sierra Leone's Football Association. They are also joined by chairman of England's FA Greg Dyke and former England goalkeeper Rachel Brown-Finnis. Three people who suffer with mental illness talk about the recent review which has concluded that mental health services in England are failing most psychiatric patients.

  • S2016E32 16/02/2016

    • February 16, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire discusses the impact of gang violence on mental health. A man who was wrongfully accused of sexual assault after brushing past a woman at a station describes the impact it had on his life. The controller of BBC Three talks about the reasons why the channel is becoming online-only.

  • S2016E33 17/02/2016

    • February 17, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire discusses the new scheme to try and reform those convicted of domestic abuse with a woman who was assaulted by her former partner. Two women explain why they used skin-lightening cosmetics, after an undercover investigation shows illegal selling of the creams is happening in London. Plus an examination of why the US has as many guns as it does people.

  • S2016E34 18/02/2016

    • February 18, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Models speak out about the pressures to be thin. Bereaved relatives call for a meningitis jab. A family describes living with a life-limiting disease.

  • S2016E35 19/02/2016

    • February 19, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire talks to people with disabilities about why their sex lives are still considered by some to be a taboo subject. A new report shows that a high number of boys aged between eight and 18 are dying while fighting for so-called Islamic State. A woman addicted to shoplifting discusses her compulsion and explains why she cannot stop stealing.

  • S2016E36 22/02/2016

    • February 22, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling speaks the mother of Mason Timmins, who contracted meningitis B and was declared brain dead the same day she noticed he was ill. She is calling for all children under 11 to get the vaccine. There is a debate on the UK's membership of the European Union and Norman Smith explains the key issues in the run-up to the referendum. The 92-year-old grandma who faces deportation to South Africa explains she wants to stay in the UK with her daughter.

  • S2016E37 23/02/2016

    • February 23, 2016
    • BBC Two

    There are more than 700,000 people in the UK who legally own firearms, a report looks at who they are and how they feel about British gun laws. Joanna Gosling speaks to a vet who helped deliver a baby gorilla by caesarean section, believed to be the first time it has happened in the UK. The programme also looks at how much it costs to win an Oscar.

  • S2016E38 24/02/2016

    • February 24, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling speaks to Megaman, whose real name is Dwayne Vincent, from So Solid Crew about the lack of diversity among nominees for the Brit Awards. Cats are being killed and mutilated in Croydon and South London and police are yet to find the culprit, a report investigates. A man explains how he crowdfunded to cover his best friend's medical bills after he was hit by a lorry in Las Vegas without health insurance.

  • S2016E39 25/02/2016

    • February 25, 2016
    • BBC Two

    'He said no-one would believe me' - a Jimmy Savile abuse survivor tells his story. A British farmer explains why he has to rely on east European workers.

  • S2016E40 26/02/2016

    • February 26, 2016
    • BBC Two

    The BBC's daily news and current affairs programme with original stories, exclusive interviews, audience debate and breaking news, presented by Joanna Gosling. A Rotherham abuse survivor tells her story, debating free speech on student campuses and the sisters who were reunited by a mutual love of bingo.

  • S2016E41 29/02/2016

    • February 29, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Charlotte Hayman talks to Joanna Gosling about the difficulty of living with a parent who is an alcoholic. A passenger on board the Ryanair flight which had to be diverted to Berlin because of a disruptive stag party explains what happened. After the Academy Awards Akua Gyamfi, who started a database of black british actors, discusses the issue of diversity at the Oscars.

  • S2016E42 01/03/2016

    • March 1, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling speaks to Richard, who has been homeless for almost four years and sometimes has to sleep in bins. She also talks to a member of the NHS choir who met Justin Bieber about beating the Canadian pop star to Christmas number one. And the amount of salt in various supermarket ready meals is examined to see the impact it could have on health.

  • S2016E43 02/03/2016

    • March 2, 2016
    • BBC Two

    A man who broke his neck playing rugby at school explains why he is still not in favour of tackling being banned. Some Americans who live in the UK explain their reactions to Super Tuesday and the continuing success of Donald Trump. A former pensions minister warns some young people may have to work 'until they are 77' in order to have enough a sufficient pension.

  • S2016E44 03/03/2016

    • March 3, 2016
    • BBC Two

    The doctor who had to eat his friends' bodies to survive after a plane crash in the Andes in 1972. Young people discuss a report from ChildLine that suggests children are plagued by low self-esteem and loneliness. And how does it feel to be catfished? We hear how fake profiles on social media affect lives.

  • S2016E45 04/03/2016

    • March 4, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling talks to the parents of twins born with cerebral palsy who want the NHS to allow surgery that was offered to only one of their children to be made available to everyone who needs it. Martin Lewis discusses the relationship between mental health and debt, as he launches a new charity. A leading fertility lawyer is calling for the UK law on surrogacy to be changed to make it less complicated.

  • S2016E46 07/03/2016

    • March 7, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling presents, and Victoria Derbyshire shares her latest video diary having had her final session of chemotherapy. The 92-year-old who has been given indefinite leave to remain in the UK gives her reaction to the news, and Christian Fraser shows scenes from the Greece-Macedonia border.

  • S2016E47 08/03/2016

    • March 8, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling speaks to four women involved in football, as a report highlights that a quarter who are involved in the national game have faced bullying. A family make an emotional appeal to find more information about the night their son and brother was killed in London. Campaigners claim that a ritual called 'breast ironing' is on the rise across the UK.

  • S2016E48 09/03/2016

    • March 9, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire is joined by junior doctors and the public to discover how much support there is for their third strike. Tributes are paid to the 'fifth Beatle', Sir George Martin. A man who has been on antidepressants since the age of 15 explains the impact the drugs are having on his life.

  • S2016E49 10/03/2016

    • March 10, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire meets the boy who overcame his phobia of talking and found his voice. The parents of a child who died in 2014 explain why they are now pleading with authorities to give them legal aid to hire a barrister for their son's inquest. An MP explains why he is happy to accept a pay rise.

  • S2016E50 11/03/2016

    • March 11, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire discusses unwanted sexual attention with a panel of guests as the British Transport Police tries to raise awareness of the issue in a new online campaign. Plus Down's syndrome and the workplace - how one company is helping to create employment opportunities.

  • S2016E51 14/03/2016

    • March 14, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire meets Babar Ahmad in an exclusive interview about his conviction for providing material support for terrorism. The father of a man killed in the Germanwings crash calls for more help for pilots. A mother whose son was murdered by a man he met on the internet talks about why she's received compensation from the police.

  • S2016E52 15/03/2016

    • March 15, 2016
    • BBC Two

    If more free childcare is provided for certain age groups, Victoria meets mothers who it could impact. Victoria introduces the Doctor Who-loving Leicester City fan who will be your guide for the rest of the football season. And a migrant who travelled to the UK in the back of a lorry opens up about his journey.

  • S2016E53 16/03/2016

    • March 16, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Charity workers in England are calling for help as it's revealed some women are using newspapers as sanitary towels because of the cost. A panel of MPs joins Victoria to discuss what they expect to see in the chancellor's Budget. As Wales debates a possible ban on e-cigarettes, both sides of the argument are put forward.

  • S2016E54 17/03/2016

    • March 17, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Friends of Paul Daniels pay tribute to the magician, hours after he passed away. Joanna Gosling looks at how the Chancellor's Budget will affect people in different parts of the economy. A woman who lost an arm after being attacked by a dog tells her story.

  • S2016E55 18/03/2016

    • March 18, 2016
    • BBC Two

    As EU leaders meet again to try and resolve the migrant crisis, experts look at what lessons can be learnt from Australia. Figures show that people with autism are dying earlier than those without the condition, and one father explains why he's not surprised. Joanna Gosling hears from a mother who says she wanted to die, following her battle with perinatal mental health.

  • S2016E56 21/03/2016

    • March 21, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire speaks to Arsenal Ladies captain Alex Scott about her experience in Iraq where she visited a football training centre set up by her club in conjunction with Save the Children. There is a look at the latest changes to disability benefits in the wake of Iain Duncan Smith's resignation. Plus, the Leicester City fan diaries continue, as does the team's good form after a 1-0 victory over Crystal Palace.

  • S2016E57 23/03/2016

    • March 23, 2016
    • BBC Two

    As Belgians come to terms with the attacks on Brussels, Victoria Derbyshire speaks to three residents of the city about the mood there. The former home secretary Lord Reid reveals why he thinks there will be another terror attack on the UK. Counterterrorism experts explain what can be done to combat the rise in extremism.

  • S2016E58 24/03/2016

    • March 24, 2016
    • BBC Two

  • S2016E59 29/03/2016

    • March 29, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria covers the EgyptAir plane hijacking, speaking to eyewitnesses and aviation experts.

  • S2016E60 30/03/2016

    • March 30, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria speaks to the Rotherham child sex abuse whistleblower, Jayne Senior.

  • S2016E61 31/03/2016

    • March 31, 2016
    • BBC Two

    A 'crash for cash' victim tells Victoria Derbyshire that scams have cost him thousands. Could Britain learn from a Spanish rehabilitation model for young offenders? And Jack Daly describes the cancer treatment he underwent from the age of seven, as UK scientists begin work to genetically test tumours from children.

  • S2016E62 01/04/2016

    • April 1, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Workers affected by the Tata Steel crisis talk to Joanna Gosling about their concerns for the industry and their jobs. How can the NHS learn from its mistakes? Plus, a look at a report that suggest many people are not getting enough sleep and how that impacts on health.

  • S2016E63 04/04/2016

    • April 4, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Daily news and current affairs. Tax havens explained, and a look into the world of cage fighting.

  • S2016E64 05/04/2016

    • April 5, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling presents daily news and current affairs. A look at racial slurs and the use of parental leave.

  • S2016E65 06/04/2016

    • April 6, 2016
    • BBC Two

    The programme, presented by Joanna Gosling, looks at post-traumatic stress disorder among British military veterans.

  • S2016E66 07/04/2016

    • April 7, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Presenter Joanna Gosling discusses the trend of 'chemsex' and its consequences. Plus how social issues can have an impact on mental health, and the Green Party candidate for London mayor, Sian Berry, discusses her plan to close London City Airport.

  • S2016E67 08/04/2016

    • April 8, 2016
    • BBC Two

    The BBC's daily news and current affairs programme with original stories, exclusive interviews, audience debate and breaking news. How teenagers are being let down by an over-emphasis on higher education. The 13-year-old who was kidnapped by a man she had met online. And the programme takes a look at Robin Williams' final film, Boulevard.

  • S2016E68 11/04/2016

    • April 11, 2016
    • BBC Two

    The BBC's daily news and current affairs programme. Joanna Gosling speaks to Sam Brown, who was abused by Jimmy Savile as a child.

  • S2016E69 12/04/2016

    • April 12, 2016
    • BBC Two

  • S2016E70 13/04/2016

    • April 13, 2016
    • BBC Two

  • S2016E71 14/04/2016

    • April 14, 2016
    • BBC Two

    What is the right age to have a baby? Victoria discusses a new project to educate teenagers about fertility. Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn sets out why he thinks Britain should stay in the EU. And the hunt for London's cat killer steps up with the offer of a £5,000 reward for information from charity PETA.

  • S2016E72 15/04/2016

    • April 15, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Are women being denied caesareans because of the cost? Joanna Gosling discusses the options for expectant mums. Boxer Anthony Joshua on how he feels humbled by his success in the ring. And why are so many children suffering from rotten teeth?

  • S2016E73 18/04/2016

    • April 18, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria speaks to a mother who had her baby taken away from her at birth.

  • S2016E74 19/04/2016

    • April 19, 2016
    • BBC Two

    The BBC's daily news and current affairs programme with original stories, interviews, audience debate and breaking news. Joanna Gosling looks into sexual harassment in schools.

  • S2016E75 20/04/2016

    • April 20, 2016
    • BBC Two

    The BBC's daily news and current affairs programme with original stories, exclusive interviews, audience debate and breaking news. Prince William talks about his royal duties.

  • S2016E76 21/04/2016

    • April 21, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire looks at the Queen's life and legacy as the monarch celebrates her 90th birthday. Rory Bremner pays tribute to Victoria Wood. And Leicester City fans discuss that Vardy 'dive' and their hopes for the club.

  • S2016E77 22/04/2016

    • April 22, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Norman Smith hears from guests reacting to the death of Prince.

  • S2016E78 25/04/2016

    • April 25, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire is joined by a group of 50 students to debate whether free speech is a dying concept on university campuses. Also joining the discussion are human rights campaigner Peter Tatchell and feminist writer Julie Bindel.

  • S2016E79 26/04/2016

    • April 26, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire reports from the picket line outside St Thomas's Hospital in London as junior doctors stage the first all-out strike in NHS history.

  • S2016E80 27/04/2016

    • April 27, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire speaks to some people who lost family members in the Hillsborough disaster, after the inquests concluded that the 96 were unlawfully killed. The programme looks back at that day, and how so many fans died. A mother describes her experience of being left paralysed by an epidural while giving birth.

  • S2016E81 28/04/2016

    • April 28, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Norman Smith stands in for Victoria Derbyshire and looks at claims that children in care are being failed when it comes to mental health. He also speaks to one doctor who says smokers switching to e-cigarettes is a 'no-brainer'.

  • S2016E82 29/04/2016

    • April 29, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling stands in for Victoria Derbyshire and looks at the story of an elderly women who was scammed out of £130,000.

  • S2016E83 03/05/2016

    • May 3, 2016
    • BBC Two

    The BBC's daily news and current affairs programme with original stories, exclusive interviews, audience debate and breaking news. Victoria Derbyshire speaks to children, parents and teachers to find out what it is like to grow up as a transgender child.

  • S2016E84 04/05/2016

    • May 4, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire speaks to the parents of a two-year-old girl who died after contracting Meningitis B, and hears how they feel an online campaign for children to be vaccinated against the disease has been ignored.

  • S2016E85 05/05/2016

    • May 5, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling is joined by a father whose baby died in a midwife-led maternity unit. The panel discusses how effective the units are. People living in Syria talk to Joanna about how life is for them in the conflict, and what difference a ceasefire would make to their lives. As pressure on GP services grows, a panel of doctors looks at how patients can be better served.

  • S2016E86 09/05/2016

    • May 9, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria speaks to Helen Wood, a former escort, about the effectiveness of injunctions. One of her clients, a famous actor, took legal action in 2011 to prevent his name being made public. David speaks out about his experience of abuse as a teenager. Lord Alli and John Redwood discuss the upcoming government white paper on the future of the BBC.

  • S2016E87 10/05/2016

    • May 10, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling stands in for Victoria Derbyshire and looks at whether the government should target suspected terrorists using drone strikes. DCI Julie MacKay talks about the DNA match that finally caught the man who killed Melanie Road, three decades after her murder. In the wake of the Sats test leak, the shadow education secretary, Lucy Powell, talks about the current state of National Curriculum assessments.

  • S2016E88 11/05/2016

    • May 11, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire reporter James Longman, whose father and grandfather killed themselves, looks at whether mental illness can be inherited. Undecided voters discuss the effectiveness of the scare tactics of both campaigns in the EU referendum debate. Experts discuss the reaction of China and Nigeria to comments made by the Queen and David Cameron, when they did not realise they were being recorded.

  • S2016E89 12/05/2016

    • May 12, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling is joined by MPs and the public to discuss the future of the BBC, and what it should provide. Three victims of revenge porn share their experiences, including one person whose brother posted pictures of her online. As seizures of fake Viagra soar, one reporter accompanies authorities trying to find those responsible.

  • S2016E90 13/05/2016

    • May 13, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Jon Platt explains why he took his daughter out of school to go on holiday and Joanna Gosling discusses the issue with parents and experts. The programme has exclusive access to the new police training graduate scheme. There is a proposal to ban advertisements for unhealthy food and drink which are aimed at children, the Advertising Standards Authority discusses the issue.

  • S2016E91 16/05/2016

    • May 16, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Kevani Kanda talks to Victoria about being branded a witch when she was only six years old, and Victoria speaks to an inmate who saw their cellmate self-harming. Plus the diary of two Leicester City fans.

  • S2016E92 17/05/2016

    • May 17, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Eurovision 2016 winner Jamala talks about her top song for Ukraine. The parents of a man missing for six years tell Victoria they are elated that he is alive. And how do you insure a driverless car?

  • S2016E93 18/05/2016

    • May 18, 2016
    • BBC Two

    A tour of the world's biggest cruise ship - and a word with its captain. EU membership and the pound in your pocket. Debating whether homophobia exists in sport.

  • S2016E94 19/05/2016

    • May 19, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Nick Winton pays tribute to his father, Sir Nicholas Winton, as a memorial service honours the man who helped rescue hundreds of children from the Nazis. There are warnings about the use of antibiotics as the threat of drug-resistant infections increases. Plus why are so many women suffering in silence when going through the menopause?

  • S2016E95 20/05/2016

    • May 20, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Kindertransport veterans call for more help for children stranded in Calais. The mental health patients forced to travel long distances for care. Plus Tessa Sanderson talks about life after adopting two children.

  • S2016E96 23/05/2016

    • May 23, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling stands in for Victoria Derbyshire and speaks to rock legend Wilko Johnson about surviving terminal cancer. Jade Sharp shares her experiences of being refused by taxis because of her guide dog. And should we be eating more fat?

  • S2016E97 24/05/2016

    • May 24, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling stands in for Victoria Derbyshire and speaks to Andrew Marriott about his experience with the controversial anti-malarial drug Lariam. Campaigners and owners talk about whether the third party sale of puppies should be banned. And should restaurants do more to protect those with nut allergies?

  • S2016E98 25/05/2016

    • May 25, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling stands in for Victoria Derbyshire and speaks to Victoria Valentino who alleges she was raped by Bill Cosby. Campaigners and a former user discuss whether the upcoming ban on legal highs will work. And the Brain family are facing deportation after the visa they need to stay in Scotland was abolished.

  • S2016E99 26/05/2016

    • May 26, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Norman Smith hosts as Victoria Derbyshire completes her video diary documenting her treatment for breast cancer. The programme looks at a study revealing the factors that can push teenagers to suicide, and Facebook reveals why there are fewer women entrepreneurs.

  • S2016E100 27/05/2016

    • May 27, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling speaks to the granddaughter of a Hiroshima survivor as President Obama becomes the first serving US president to visit the city since World War II. The programme also hears from an addiction psychiatrist who is encouraging parents to broach the subject of drugs with their children, and an author who investigated the Neapolitan mafia, forced to live under police protection for a decade.

  • S2016E101 31/05/2016

    • May 31, 2016
    • BBC Two

    The Brain family explain why they think they have been 'set up to fail' over their proposed deportation. Experts discuss whether it was right to shoot dead a gorilla at Cincinnati Zoo after a child climbed into the enclosure. Two women with cancer talk about life with the disease.

  • S2016E102 01/06/2016

    • June 1, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Former snooker champion Willie Thorne explains his troubles with a gambling addiction that cost him thousands of pounds. Mark Saunders talks about his son Dean, who killed himself in prison, and why more needs to be done to prevent further suicides. Norman Smith examines the claims from both campaigns about how the result of the EU referendum will affect universities in the UK.

  • S2016E103 02/06/2016

    • June 2, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire asks if children with special needs are getting the support they require at school. Who will pay the price for the expansion of the Right to Buy scheme? There is also a look at media coverage of the Johnny Depp domestic abuse allegations.

  • S2016E104 03/06/2016

    • June 3, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Norman Smith speaks to Diane Gray, whose son died at Deepcut Barracks. Plus the team tackling radicalisation through football, and Effie Brown talks about problems with 'inclusiveness' in Hollywood.

  • S2016E105 The EU Debate

    • June 6, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire hosts an EU referendum debate live from Manchester with an audience of 150 voters and senior politicians.

  • S2016E106 07/06/2016

    • June 7, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire looks at controversial classes in Norway aimed at spreading an anti-rape message amongst migrant groups. As voters are reminded it's their last chance to register for their EU referendum vote, a panel of young voters discuss which way they will be voting. AIDS campaigners explain why they're fighting an NHS decision to stop a preventative treatment.

  • S2016E107 08/06/2016

    • June 8, 2016
    • BBC Two

    A woman who's brother was captured and killed by Pol Pot's army speaks about his death. As the owner of BHS appears before the Commons Works and Pensions committee, one MP calls for former owner Sir Philip Green to be stripped of his knighthood. With campaigning for the EU referendum picking up the pace, experts join Victoria Derbyshire to look at the facts behind either side of the debate.

  • S2016E108 09/06/2016

    • June 9, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Hero mountaineer Leslie Binns talks to the woman whose life he saved on Everest. Jailed in Iran - the father trying to secure the release of his wife, imprisoned without charge. And the report that suggests the government has failed to tackle flood threats adequately.

  • S2016E109 10/06/2016

    • June 10, 2016
    • BBC Two

    As the European Championships kick off in France, Louis Saha explains why he thinks his home country still has problems with racism. Sheila Hall tells Joanna Gosling about life at 90 and sharing a birthday with the queen. Two men from Falluja in Iraq, whose families only recently fled, talk about the violence and suffering in the Iraqi city.

  • S2016E110 13/06/2016

    • June 13, 2016
    • BBC Two

    A relative of a victim of the Orlando shootings remembers their 'amazing' cousin. Undecided voters question the experts on leaving or remaining in the EU. And are high-stakes gambling machines addictive?

  • S2016E111 14/06/2016

    • June 14, 2016
    • BBC Two

  • S2016E112 15/06/2016

    • June 15, 2016
    • BBC Two

  • S2016E113 16/06/2016

    • June 16, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Reporting on the children left behind in Romania as their parents seek better-paid jobs abroad, the man who lost two of his sons to ecstasy on the same night, and the tank commander hero who survived D-Day.

  • S2016E114 17/06/2016

    • June 17, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Politicians, friends and the public pay tribute to MP Jo Cox who was killed on Thursday. Russian athletes await a decision on being able to compete in Rio. And what is it like to grow old without children?

  • S2016E115 20/06/2016

    • June 20, 2016
    • BBC Two

  • S2016E116 21/06/2016

    • June 21, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria is joined by undecided EU referendum voters and MPs supporting Leave and Remain. She also speaks to parents about how to talk to children about bereavement.

  • S2016E117 22/06/2016

    • June 22, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria is joined by Neal Gray who talks about the murder of his granddaughter, Ellie Butler. There is a look at the EU referendum and what people can expect after the vote. Plus a report on the missing children's author who left her home in April and has not been seen since.

  • S2016E118 23/06/2016

    • June 23, 2016
    • BBC Two

    A former inmate describes the 'psychological hell' of an indefinite prison sentence. Tensions rise amongst locals as Donald Trump prepares to visit Scotland. Doctors and service users voice their fears at possible HIV funding cuts.

  • S2016E119 27/06/2016

    • June 27, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire looks at the rise of racist abuse post-Brexit and following the EU referendum vote asks 'Just how divided is Britain?'.

  • S2016E120 28/06/2016

    • June 28, 2016
    • BBC Two
  • S2016E121 29/06/2016

    • June 29, 2016
    • BBC Two

    As new rules for undercover police officers ban them from having sex with targets, Victoria Derbyshire speaks to a woman who was in a relationship with Mark Kennedy while he was undercover. Young Labour supporters discuss whether Jeremy Corbyn can move the party forward. And Harjeet Sahota shares how she has been subject to racist abuse since the EU referendum.

  • S2016E122 30/06/2016

    • June 30, 2016
    • BBC Two

  • S2016E123 01/07/2016

    • July 1, 2016
    • BBC Two

  • S2016E124 04/07/2016

    • July 4, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Former Labour leader Ed Miliband investigates the rent-to-buy market. Conservatives debate who should be their next leader. And can Wales overcome the odds to reach the Euro 2016 final?

  • S2016E125 05/07/2016

    • July 5, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Will the EU referendum result help Calais migrants enter the UK? The mother of a man detained at a Donald Trump rally in the US speaks of her fears. And parents speak about their struggles to conceive through IVF treatment.

  • S2016E126 06/07/2016

    • July 6, 2016
    • BBC Two

    The long-awaited Chilcot report into the 2003 invasion of Iraq is published. Oscar Pistorius is sentenced for the murder of his girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp. And Welsh football fans look ahead to their team's Euro 2016 semi-final clash with Portugal.

  • S2016E127 07/07/2016

    • July 7, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Families of those killed in the Iraq War talk to Victoria Derbyshire about the Chilcot report. Comedian Omid Djalili on his film looking at the Stop the War protests of 2003. And football fans react to Wales's exit from Euro 2016.

  • S2016E128 08/07/2016

    • July 8, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Eyewitnesses to the Dallas shootings describe the scene. Should homeopathy be used by vets to treat animals? And a panel of guests discuss the merits of the two candidates vying to become the Conservative Party leader.

  • S2016E129 11/07/2016

    • July 11, 2016
    • BBC Two

    The team are granted access to a Sharia court to see what takes place behind closed doors, and they celebrate a wonderful weekend of sport, including Murray's Wimbledon win. Plus, events gather pace in the Tory and Labour leadership races.

  • S2016E130 12/07/2016

    • July 12, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire presents the show from College Green as the UK awaits a new PM. Politicians and members of the public debate what the future might hold. Plus, a look back at Theresa May's journey to the top and past voting history.

  • S2016E131 13/07/2016

    • July 13, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Standing in for Victoria Derbyshire, Joanna Gosling looks at what voters think of new British prime minister Theresa May. Alison Saunders, director of prosecutions for the CPS, talks about the surge in hate crime. And some of David Cameron's former colleagues talk about his legacy.

  • S2016E132 14/07/2016

    • July 14, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire is live from Westminster as Theresa May takes office as prime minister.

  • S2016E133 18/07/2016

    • July 18, 2016
    • BBC Two
  • S2016E134 19/07/2016

    • July 19, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria is joined by a man who has to give police 24 hours notice of when he plans to have sex, despite being cleared of rape. Reporter Jim Reed investigates whether new evidence could prove that a group of fishermen jailed for a total of 104 years for masterminding a drug smuggling operation are innocent. And after the House of Commons voted to renew Trident, Victoria looks at life on board a submarine.

  • S2016E135 20/07/2016

    • July 20, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria speaks to Owen Smith about his political ambitions as he stands to challenge the leader of the Labour Party. An aid worker based in Fallujah shares her experiences of life in a warzone. And as Theresa May gears up for her first appearance as PM at Prime Minister's Questions, Victoria finds out what it takes to deliver a polished performance.

  • S2016E136 21/07/2016

    • July 21, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire goes in search of Pokemon characters in the studio as the phenomenon sweeps the globe. Jeremy Corbyn sets out his reasons to remain leader of the Labour Party. America's First Lady Michelle Obama rocks out with James Corden.

  • S2016E137 22/07/2016

    • July 22, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling assesses the Republican mood as Donald Trump accepts the Republican presidential nomination. A new study links alcohol to seven different types of cancer. And calls for a change in the way government deals with counter-terrorism.

  • S2016E138 25/07/2016

    • July 25, 2016
    • BBC Two

    We hear from a teenager arrested after a bullying claim. Russia's anti-doping agency boss guarantees athletes will be clean at Rio. And we hear from a family stuck at Dover for 18 hours.

  • S2016E139 26/07/2016

    • July 26, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling talks to a man who was jailed after a false rape allegation. The programme investigates how criminals are selling O2 customers' information online. Plus claims that Turkey is torturing and threatening opponents of the government.

  • S2016E140 27/07/2016

    • July 27, 2016
    • BBC Two

    A Deepcut recruit speaks for the first time about the dehumanising culture at the barracks. Shock and sadness in France following a priest's killing. A mother describes how her son became radicalised without her knowledge.

  • S2016E141 28/07/2016

    • July 28, 2016
    • BBC Two

    We hear from a woman whose father died after being put on the Liverpool Care Pathway. We ask whether the media should stop showing pictures of terrorists. And sitting in an office is bad for you - we get tips on exercising at work.

  • S2016E142 29/07/2016

    • July 29, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Rape survivors tell us why they need specialist maternity care. What should be done about drunken plane passengers? We discuss. And we hear from a woman working at the premature baby unit that saved her life 20 years ago.

  • S2016E143 01/08/2016

    • August 1, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling talks to a Pokemon fan with autism about how the game has transformed his life. A doctor who has worked in Syria discusses his fear about missing colleagues in Aleppo. And would you donate your brain in the name of science?

  • S2016E144 02/08/2016

    • August 2, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling speaks to the campaigners who have won a high court ruling on whether a drug which prevents people being infected with HIV should be funded by the NHS in England. The race to succeed Nigel Farage as leader of Ukip is on, and four of the candidates who have thrown their hat into the ring explain why they should be the one for the job. And Iranian men have been taking to social media dressed in a hijab, the Muslim headscarf, in a show of solidarity with women across the country who oppose being forced to cover their heads in public. We talk to the woman driving the campaign.

  • S2016E145 03/08/2016

    • August 3, 2016
    • BBC Two

    As security measures tighten across Europe, Joanna Gosling looks at what people need to know if they are heading to the continent on holiday. There is also a look at what is it like to live in a devout community as a transgender person - Adrienne from Belfast tells her story.

  • S2016E146 04/08/2016

    • August 4, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Chloe Tilley has been looking back at the shooting by police of Mark Duggan in Tottenham that sparked major riots across England in 2011. People in Tottenham say deep social issues led to the violence - what has changed since? Are UKIP the latest political party to tumble into crisis? We will be discussing the resignation of three UKIP NEC members that follows the exclusion of Steven Woolfe from the leadership ballot. And are you addicted to your digital device? We have been speaking to Lizzie Cree who has been on a 'digital detox'.

  • S2016E147 05/08/2016

    • August 5, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Chloe Tilley talks to relatives of Viola Beach - whose debut album looks set to reach number one - six months after the band and their manager were killed in a car crash. There is a look at Rio's preparation for the opening ceremony of the Olympic Games. And does the UK really need its own Black Lives Matter movement?

  • S2016E148 08/08/2016

    • August 8, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire speaks the family of Adam Peaty, Britain's newest Olympic champion. Actor Adam Deacon opens up, and speaks to Stephen Fry, about living with bipolar disorder. And are schoolboys increasingly concerned about body image?

  • S2016E149 09/08/2016

    • August 9, 2016
    • BBC Two

    The Victoria Derbyshire programme takes a look at the cupping craze sweeping the Olympic Games. Banks are told to overhaul their services in order to promote more competition. And would you want your child to be present for the birth of their sibling?

  • S2016E150 10/08/2016

    • August 10, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire and her guests discuss the scourge of sexual harassment at work. Former students debate the pros and cons of attending ever-more expensive university courses. Leicester City fans look forward to the new season after their dramatic title win.

  • S2016E151 11/08/2016

    • August 11, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Tina Daheley speaks to the father of Olympic champion diver Jack Laugher. Doctors in the Syrian city of Aleppo tell of horrific conditions in the war-torn city's hospitals. And young Hungarians explain why they still want to move to the UK, despite Brexit.

  • S2016E152 12/08/2016

    • August 12, 2016
    • BBC Two

  • S2016E153 15/08/2016

    • August 15, 2016
    • BBC Two
  • S2016E154 16/08/2016

    • August 16, 2016
    • BBC Two
  • S2016E155 Labour Leaders Debate

    • August 17, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Who should be the leader of the Labour Party? Victoria Derbyshire hosts a live debate in Nottingham where Jeremy Corbyn and Owen Smith answer audience questions.

  • S2016E156 18/08/2016

    • August 18, 2016
    • BBC Two

    One woman tells of the Islamophobia she has experienced on social media. Parents, campaigners and advertisers discuss government plans to cut childhood obesity. Plus, living with the threat of homelessness.

  • S2016E157 19/08/2016

    • August 19, 2016
    • BBC Two
  • S2016E158 22/08/2016

    • August 22, 2016
    • BBC Two

    A mother is raising awareness of toxic shock after her son needed amputation following a misdiagnosis. The programme reveals how government doctors allowed drug trials on children in the 1960s - without their parents' consent. And Victoria looks back at the highlights of Team GB's golden Olympics and hears from aspiring athletes.

  • S2016E159 23/08/2016

    • August 23, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Reporting live from Heathrow Airport as Team GB touch down. We hear from Olympians past and present - from Sally Gunnell to golden couple, Laura Trott and Jason Kenny And after a report has said the gender pay gap widens over the years, why do mums earn less than men?

  • S2016E160 24/08/2016

    • August 24, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling stands in for Victoria Derbyshire and speaks to people affected by a deadly earthquake in Italy. A former MET police officer tells her story after winning a case against the force for wrongly using its powers to investigate her. Users of MDMA explain why the drug is growing in popularity.

  • S2016E161 25/08/2016

    • August 25, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling stands in for Victoria Derbyshire and discusses France's burkini ban. A panel of experts looks at whether tech companies are doing enough to tackle online radicalisation. Tracey Norman describes what it was like being a black transgender model in the 1970s.

  • S2016E162 26/08/2016

    • August 26, 2016
    • BBC Two

    How safe is exercise during pregnancy? Jane Hill hears from an ex-Olympian and several mothers. Plus she talks to Muslims who've been arrested many times under the Schedule 7 terror law and discusses whether the ban on 'legal highs' has been effective.

  • S2016E163 30/08/2016

    • August 30, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling hears from families who have been forced into social housing because of rising living costs in London. One woman tells how she mistook symptoms of a heart attack for indigestion. Plus we hear from an actor who worked with Gene Wilder in Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory.

  • S2016E164 31/08/2016

    • August 31, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling speaks to the former head of the British Army who says he had fears over the side effects of anti-malaria drug Lariam and refused to take it, even though he knew it was being prescribed to his troops. Mothers speak of their experience of being discriminated against at work. Plus experts explain why children as young as three are suffering from body image issues.

  • S2016E165 01/09/2016

    • September 1, 2016
    • BBC Two

  • S2016E166 02/09/2016

    • September 2, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Actress Juliet Stevenson describes the 'desperate plight' of children at the Calais refugee camp. Labour MP Ruth Smeeth talks about the 'vile' anti-Semitic abuse she has received. And find out how the Doorstep Library is encouraging disadvantaged kids to read.

  • S2016E167 05/09/2016

    • September 5, 2016
    • BBC Two
  • S2016E168 06/09/2016

    • September 6, 2016
    • BBC Two
  • S2016E169 07/09/2016

    • September 7, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire holds a debate on the long-running junior doctors' strike. She speaks to the junior doctors planning to walk out, other NHS workers and the patients that will be affected.

  • S2016E170 08/09/2016

    • September 8, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Theresa May is paving the way for new grammar schools and Victoria Derbyshire looks at the details. Female students tell us that sexual harassment at university is out of control, especially on boozy nights out in freshers' week. And, we speak to the father of a schoolgirl who has been sent home twice over having the wrong school uniform.

  • S2016E171 09/09/2016

    • September 9, 2016
    • BBC Two

    The Wikileaks editor who helped secure US whistleblower Edward Snowden asylum in Russia talks exclusively to the programme. Plus a major review looks into the health benefits of statins. And what exactly is the Hajj pilgrimage to Mecca?

  • S2016E172 12/09/2016

    • September 12, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria discusses the problems in young offender institutions with prison mentor and a former offender Marie-Claire O'Brien, former young offender prison officer Paul Miller, former prisons minister Andrew Selous and justice select committee member Victoria Prentis. Two women share their experiences of finding out their husbands were gay after years of marriage. And Neil Carmichael tries to answer a question from a grammar school entrance exam.

  • S2016E173 13/09/2016

    • September 13, 2016
    • BBC Two

    The Victoria Derbyshire programme has learned that a 19-year-old mum had her child tax credits stopped by a private firm used by HMRC, after she was accused of being married to a dead 74-year-old man. Victoria speaks to others affected by the decisions of the US firm Concentrix, who are employed by HMRC to cut tax credit fraud and overpayment. Lieutenant Colonel Andrew Marriott and Dr Julian Lewis speak about the anti-malarial Lariam. And Lara Smith and Faye Jones explain the medical reasons why they use cannabis.

  • S2016E174 14/09/2016

    • September 14, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria is joined by Julie Walters for a wide-ranging discussion on everything from her work and politics to her long-time collaboration with the late Victoria Wood. Lis Howell and Jake Kanter speak about what Mel and Sue's departure from the Great British Bake Off means for its move to Channel 4. The programme hears from a former employee of Concentrix about her experience of working for the US outsourcing firm.

  • S2016E175 15/09/2016

    • September 15, 2016
    • BBC Two

    As London Fashion Week prepares to get underway, Victoria looks at what the fashion industry brings to Britain, and how it shapes our identity. The number of drivers using their phone at the wheel is an 'epidemic' according to new research the RAC. The programme hears from people whose lives were destroyed by distracted drivers. And Victoria looks at what new rules for protecting vulnerable witnesses mean.

  • S2016E176 16/09/2016

    • September 16, 2016
    • BBC Two

    The Victoria Derbyshire programme has an exclusive interview with the woman who inspired the song Brimful of Asha, Bollywood singing superstar, Asha Bhosle. An Italian journalist talks about the suicide of a woman who battled for months to have a viral video that showed her having sex taken down from the internet. And the British 'hacker' the US wants to extradite.

  • S2016E177 19/09/2016

    • September 19, 2016
    • BBC Two
  • S2016E178 20/09/2016

    • September 20, 2016
    • BBC Two
  • S2016E179 21/09/2016

    • September 21, 2016
    • BBC Two
  • S2016E180 22/09/2016

    • September 22, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria speaks to a woman who experienced a horrific acid attack and also looks at the work of the Family Drug and Alcohol Court.

  • S2016E181 23/09/2016

    • September 23, 2016
    • BBC Two

  • S2016E182 26/09/2016

    • September 26, 2016
    • BBC Two

  • S2016E183 27/09/2016

    • September 27, 2016
    • BBC Two

  • S2016E184 28/09/2016

    • September 28, 2016
    • BBC Two

  • S2016E185 29/09/2016

    • September 29, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire looks at how police body cameras are dramatically cutting the number of complaints against officers. The latest video diary from an aid worker in Iraq who is treating families displaced by so-called Islamic State. And the hero police officer who managed to stop an out-of-control car on a motorway with his own vehicle.

  • S2016E186 30/09/2016

    • September 30, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling speaks to the scientists behind the Rosetta probe project. Plus tributes to Shimon Peres who has been laid to rest in Jerusalem and the former heroin addict who has been saved by an overdose antidote three times.

  • S2016E187 03/10/2016

    • October 3, 2016
    • BBC Two

    A former MI5 spy talks about foiling an imminent terror plot and the difficulty of finding a new job. Will a new test to identify babies with Down's Syndrome lead to terminations? And an interview with the man who tried to kiss Kim Kardashian-West's bottom. Is it assault or a prank?

  • S2016E188 04/10/2016

    • October 4, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire looks at the problem of vaginal injuries during childbirth. Plus she hears from the parents of a man killed by an offender on probation and discusses why there's been a rise in the number of children excluded from school.

  • S2016E189 05/10/2016

    • October 5, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Greedy and despicable or a coerced victim? We hear from Anne Darwin, who was jailed for helping her husband fake his death in a canoe accident to scam the insurance company. Nigel Farage talks about Ukip's latest leadership crisis after Diane James quit after just 18 days. And we discuss why low earners are less likely to be allowed flexible working arrangements.

  • S2016E190 06/10/2016

    • October 6, 2016
    • BBC Two

    The BBC's daily news and current affairs programme catches up with Vicky Balch, who lost a leg in a rollercoaster crash at Alton Towers but says she is not angry about it. Plus a discussion of whether longer sentences would stop teenagers carrying knives. And Kylie Minogue's friend, author Kathy Lette, explains why the singer will not marry until Australia backs gay marriage.

  • S2016E191 07/10/2016

    • October 7, 2016
    • BBC Two

    The Victoria Derbyshire programme discusses the state of Ukip. Why has Howard Gayle, the first black footballer to play for Liverpool, turned down an MBE? And why Kylie Minogue's fiancé won't be walking her down the aisle just yet.

  • S2016E192 10/10/2016

    • October 10, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Three former heads of the British Army criticise the mechanism set up to investigate allegations of historic abuse by UK troops in the Iraq war. Former Labour leader Ed Miliband calls for a Commons vote on any Brexit deal. And what are doxing and dog-piling?

  • S2016E193 11/10/2016

    • October 11, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire talks to guests, including Poppy Delevingne, about child marriage in Ethiopia. And a clown describes how a new craze of people dressing up in clown costume to scare people, is ruining the business.

  • S2016E194 12/10/2016

    • October 12, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Lily Allen describes why the Calais 'jungle' camp moved her to tears. Victoria talks to a lady who was diagnosed with HIV after unknowingly having the illness for 30 years. And Noisettes singer Shingai Shoniwa discusses stalking.

  • S2016E195 13/10/2016

    • October 13, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Film director Ron Howard talks about his new film and what he thinks of Donald Trump. The programme asks grieving mothers what is the best thing to say after the loss of a baby. And, love it or hate it, Marmite is removed from Tesco's shelves following a dispute with their manufacturer.

  • S2016E196 14/10/2016

    • October 14, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Is your child a fussy eater? Joanna Gosling talks to mums and reveals it could be down to genetics rather than bad parenting.

  • S2016E197 17/10/2016

    • October 17, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Celebrating Rio 2016, Victoria Derbyshire is joined by dozens of gold medal winning Olympians and Paralympians ahead of the victory parade in Manchester.

  • S2016E198 18/10/2016

    • October 18, 2016
    • BBC Two
  • S2016E199 19/10/2016

    • October 19, 2016
    • BBC Two

  • S2016E200 20/10/2016

    • October 20, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria is joined by two victims of stalking who are campaigning for a change in the law. A man who was convicted of now-abolished sexual offences explains the tactics police used to use to catch people. A mother makes a desperate appeal for help in finding her son, who went missing in September.

  • S2016E201 21/10/2016

    • October 21, 2016
    • BBC Two

    As a taskforce recommends universities take a zero-tolerance approach to sexual violence, the programme hears from a woman who was raped as a student. A survivor of the Aberfan disaster describes the moment her school was engulfed by coal waste 50 years ago. And a man explains how he lost everything through his online gambling addiction.

  • S2016E202 24/10/2016

    • October 24, 2016
    • BBC Two
  • S2016E203 25/10/2016

    • October 25, 2016
    • BBC Two
  • S2016E204 26/10/2016

    • October 26, 2016
    • BBC Two
  • S2016E205 27/10/2016

    • October 27, 2016
    • BBC Two
  • S2016E206 28/10/2016

    • October 28, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling ask if councils should do more to help the homeless, plus 'Vine Cop' on the closure of the service.

  • S2016E207 31/10/2016

    • October 31, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling asks if drug 'fix rooms' can save lives and speaks to a mother calling for an end to child funeral costs.

  • S2016E208 01/11/2016

    • November 1, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling presents the BBC's daily news and current affairs programme with original stories, exclusive interviews, audience debate and breaking news. She speaks to mothers about Adele's postnatal depression and meets Tilly, the young girl who won a Daily Mirror Pride of Britain award.

  • S2016E209 02/11/2016

    • November 2, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling speaks to women about the pain of suffering several miscarriages. There is also an investigation into care homes that have banned visits from certain relatives.

  • S2016E210 03/11/2016

    • November 3, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Police have apologised to a woman who was strip searched and left naked in a cell - she tells of her ordeal. A woman describes how her mother was told to leave her care home after a family complaint. And a publicist explains why she had to sue a fundraiser over an unpaid bill.

  • S2016E211 04/11/2016

    • November 4, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Presented by Joanna Gosling, who is joined by a man who has been living under a curfew imposed by the Home Office. Also joining from the US are Republicans and Democrats who say they are still undecided ahead of the presidential election. And researchers explain the science behind catchy songs that get stuck in our heads.

  • S2016E212 07/11/2016

    • November 7, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire speaks to cancer survivors about their return to work, as a new survey suggests 18% of people diagnosed with cancer face discrimination from employers or colleagues. After a prison riot at HMP Bedford, Frances Crook from the Howard League for Penal Reform, and Jonathan Robinson, who spent 7 weeks in Bedford prison, discuss the situation in jails in England and Wales. And single mum Marie Buchan tells Victoria why she's considering quitting work to live on benefits.

  • S2016E213 08/11/2016

    • November 8, 2016
    • BBC Two

    An investigation by this programme has found that the number of high-stake slot machines in bingo halls has tripled. Victoria talks to people who have lost life-changing amounts of money on the machines. Anna Turley, Labour MP for Redcar, explains how she came to find a recording device, which she claims was meant to bug private discussions, during a tour of a Sports Direct warehouse in Derbyshire. And Deliveroo workers talk about their bid to gain union recognition and workers' rights.

  • S2016E214 10/11/2016

    • November 10, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Reaction to Donald Trump's victory in the US presidential election. Olympic champion cyclists Jason Kenny and Laura Trott talk marriage, medals and camper vans.

  • S2016E215 11/11/2016

    • November 11, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling looks back at the life and music of singer-songwriter Leonard Cohen who has died aged 82, just a month after releasing his final album. George, 22, who has recently been diagnosed with HIV, meets 54-year-old Edwin, who was diagnosed 30 years ago, to discuss how different an HIV diagnosis was in the 1980s. And how much is your housework worth? Joanna looks at a new calculator, created by the Office for National Statistics, to calculate the value of unpaid work.

  • S2016E216 14/11/2016

    • November 14, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Conservative MP and former army officer Johnny Mercer wants the government to do more to support service veterans and their families. The programme also hears from some of Julian Assange's supporters as Swedish prosecutors prepare to question the WikiLeaks founder over a rape allegation.

  • S2016E217 15/11/2016

    • November 15, 2016
    • BBC Two

    A Catholic couple who have been banned from adopting their two foster children because of their views on same-sex parenting say they won't give up their fight to adopt the pair. And Victoria Derbyshire speaks to a 29-year-old mother of three, accused of beating herself up and faking her own rape, who says she wants to clear her name.

  • S2016E218 16/11/2016

    • November 16, 2016
    • BBC Two

    A man who spent 22 years on death row for a crime he did not commit explains how he made it through the experience. And the former conservative MP Harvey Proctor tells Victoria Derbyshire about the impact false claims of child abuse made against him have had on his life.

  • S2016E219 17/11/2016

    • November 17, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire speaks to former professional footballer Andy Woodward, who has waived his right to anonymity to talk about the sexual abuse he suffered as a child. The growing calls for the government to intervene in the private rental market in order to stop spiralling costs. And why is the Isle of Skye Britain's most desirable place to live?

  • S2016E220 18/11/2016

    • November 18, 2016
    • BBC Two

    The Victoria Derbyshire programme looks at the problems facing the independent inquiry into historical child sex abuse. And can cryogenics really offer humans a life after death?

  • S2016E221 21/11/2016

    • November 21, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire asks whether new laws are needed to prevent parental alienation. She also speaks to the husband of a British mum stuck in an Iranian jail and discusses the legalisation of cannabis.

  • S2016E222 22/11/2016

    • November 22, 2016
    • BBC Two

    The programme hears from people who have been stripped of their mobility benefits - despite having a degenerative condition. The BBC's John Simpson talks about life as a foreign correspondent and his 10 near-death experiences. And we ask why so few women were nominated at the world's biggest gaming awards.

  • S2016E223 23/11/2016

    • November 23, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire speaks to the step-parents of Dean Evans, who died fighting the so-called Islamic State in Syria. Plus we hear from Don Maguire, the husband of murdered school teacher Ann Maguire.

  • S2016E224 24/11/2016

    • November 24, 2016
    • BBC Two

    The family of one of the victims of serial killer Stephen Port tell the programme that they hold the police partly to blame for his death. Plus further information and analysis on the football sex abuse allegations.

  • S2016E225 25/11/2016

    • November 25, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Four former footballers speak to Victoria Derbyshire about the traumatic sexual abuse they experienced as young trainees.

  • S2016E226 28/11/2016

    • November 28, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Meet the people who have experienced abuse because of their facial disfigurements - and hear how awareness is being raised. A couple who spent thousands of pounds to try and boost their chance of IVF success tell their story.

  • S2016E227 29/11/2016

    • November 29, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Scars and self-harm: Two inspiring stories of recovery. Plus a wheelchair dancer explains why he is claiming discrimination on the dance floor.

  • S2016E228 30/11/2016

    • November 30, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Former Newcastle United player Derek Bell describes being abused by a football coach in the 1970s and explains why he is speaking out. Plus why more than 30,000 children in England and Wales go missing from school.

  • S2016E229 01/12/2016

    • December 1, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Former Newcastle United footballer David Eatock speaks about the sexual abuse he endured from a sports coach and the impact it has had on his life. A ten-year-old transgender child describes his journey as he has treatment to pause the onset of puberty.

  • S2016E230 02/12/2016

    • December 2, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling hears from one of the police officers leading the inquiry into child abuse in football, who says 55 clubs are now involved. The son of Fawlty Towers star Andrew Sachs pays tribute to his father, who has died aged 86.

  • S2016E231 05/12/2016

    • December 5, 2016
    • BBC Two

  • S2016E232 06/12/2016

    • December 6, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire presents BBC's daily news and current affairs programme with original stories, exclusive interviews, audience debate and breaking news.

  • S2016E233 07/12/2016

    • December 7, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria is joined by the families of three men, murdered by the same serial killer, who are to sue the police over their failure to properly investigate their deaths. Former boxing promoter Kellie Maloney travels to France to look at the plight of LGBT refugees. As a new report shows increasing numbers of people are living in poverty, parents from around Britain explain how they are struggling with money problems.

  • S2016E234 08/12/2016

    • December 8, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria discusses the rising rate of knife crime with Vicky Foxcroft, Labour MP for Lewisham Deptford, Jonathon Toy, a youth violence expert, Tekisha Henry, deputy young mayor of Lewisham, and Orlando Miller, who knows people jailed for knife crime. Former footballer Gary Johnson speaks about being paid for his silence by Chelsea FC over claims he was abused while at the club. There is also a look at a new study that reports some cases of psychosis may actually be a treatable immune disorder.

  • S2016E235 09/12/2016

    • December 9, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Michelle Thomson MP explains why she talked publicly about being raped at the age of 14. New fathers talk about suffering from post-natal depression. A teenage stroke survivor tells his story - and explains how he wants to help others.

  • S2016E236 12/12/2016

    • December 12, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire speaks to former Football Association executives David Bernstein and Greg Dyke about reforms.

  • S2016E237 13/12/2016

    • December 13, 2016
    • BBC Two

    The programme features a discussion on what should happen to people who return home from IS-controlled areas. Commuters reveal how they have had to give up their jobs due to Southern Rail industrial action. A UN adviser talks about concerns for civilians as government forces retake Aleppo.

  • S2016E238 14/12/2016

    • December 14, 2016
    • BBC Two

    The programme features an interview with a journalist in Aleppo, as shelling and tank fire continues in the Syrian city. British actor Douglas Booth discusses his recent trip to Iraq, and a sports psychiatrist explains how to put things in perspective for a successful 2017.

  • S2016E239 15/12/2016

    • December 15, 2016
    • BBC Two

    A look at the differences between real and fake fur and how it is labelled in shops. Middle East editor Jeremy Bowen answers viewers' questions on the conflict in Syria. The programme speaks to an Australian man who was acquitted after blowing over a million pounds of his bank's money.

  • S2016E240 16/12/2016

    • December 16, 2016
    • BBC Two

    Presented by Joanna Gosling. Judy Murray talks about the success of her tennis player sons, Jamie and Andy, in 2016. There is an update on a toddler who survived meningitis after a life-saving operation last Christmas Day.

Season 2017

  • S2017E01 03/01/2017

    • January 3, 2017
    • BBC Two

  • S2017E02 04/01/2017

    • January 4, 2017
    • BBC Two

    The man who interrogated Saddam Hussein gives his impressions of the former Iraqi leader. Some private ambulance staff claim there is not enough training to do their job. Mothers aged 50 and over talk about their experiences of having a baby later in life.

  • S2017E03 05/01/2017

    • January 5, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Men who murder their families - why the perpetrators kill those closest to them. Plus remembering the homeless people who lost their lives in the cold and Warwick Davis shares his memories of acting with the late Carrie Fisher.

  • S2017E04 06/01/2017

    • January 6, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Discussing the impact of being kept for too long in a secure ward. Plus Ray BLK, winner of BBC's Sound of 2017, gives her reaction to the accolade.

  • S2017E05 09/01/2017

    • January 9, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire discusses whether the UK should open its first "fix room", a safe space where addicts can take illegal narcotics under medical supervision. She's joined by doctors who say the NHS has reached a crisis point. And she hears from a woman who says she was sacked because of mental health issues.

  • S2017E06 10/01/2017

    • January 10, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Actress Nicole Kidman speaks to Victoria Derbyshire about Hollywood, family and Donald Trump.

  • S2017E07 11/01/2017

    • January 11, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire speaks to the father of Claudia Lawrence, who went missing in 2009, about why he wants a change in the law.

  • S2017E08 12/01/2017

    • January 12, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire speaks to Erica Stewart from the stillbirth and neonatal death charity Sands.

  • S2017E09 13/01/2017

    • January 13, 2017
    • BBC Two

    News and current affairs. Joanna Gosling speaks to Josh and Cameron Cliff, who lost their sister to cervical cancer.

  • S2017E10 16/01/2017

    • January 16, 2017
    • BBC Two

  • S2017E11 17/01/2017

    • January 17, 2017
    • BBC Two

    News and current affairs. Victoria Derbyshire talks exclusively to George Michael's childhood friend Andros Georgiou.

  • S2017E12 18/01/2017

    • January 18, 2017
    • BBC Two

    A volunteer shares her video diary on board a migrant rescue ship. Wheelchairs or buggies? Discussing priorities on public transport. Grandparents talk about missing out on money they are entitled to.

  • S2017E13 19/01/2017

    • January 19, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Meet the man who monitors media reporting about Muslims and tackles the inaccuracies he finds. What is clean food - and does it make you healthier? Singer Saara Aalto talks about life after the X Factor and coming to the UK.

  • S2017E14 20/01/2017

    • January 20, 2017
    • BBC Two

    As Donald Trump takes on the mantle of 45th US president, some women explain why they are staging protest marches. Joanna and guests assess Donald Trump's policies and discuss the likely impact of his presidency on the UK.

  • S2017E15 23/01/2017

    • January 23, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Online dating scams have reached record levels, the programme hears from some women who've been conned. Dean Saunders has electrocuted himself in prison, his devastated father talks about how his mentally-ill son should have been in hospital, rather than jail. Plus, could your toast be harmful? The Food Standards Agency offers advice.

  • S2017E16 24/01/2017

    • January 24, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Live coverage of the Supreme Court as they ruled against the government, saying that Parliament must be consulted in starting the Brexit process. Plus, political expert Norman Smith gave us his analysis, there's reaction from across the political spectrum and some viewers joined the programme to give their views.

  • S2017E17 25/01/2017

    • January 25, 2017
    • BBC Two

  • S2017E18 26/01/2017

    • January 26, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire speaks to Raffaele Sollecito, who is seeking compensation after clearing his name in the Meredith Kercher murder case. The NSPCC calls for a 'loophole' that allows sports coaches to legally have sex with 16- and 17-year-olds in their care to be closed. And the 'Spielberg of Gaming', Hideo Kojima, gives a rare interview about virtual reality.

  • S2017E19 27/01/2017

    • January 27, 2017
    • BBC Two

    A holocaust survivor tells the Victoria Derbyshire programme why society must remain vigilant against anti-Semitism. How gender stereotypes start affecting children as young as six. And why one GP surgery was forced to close because of financial pressures.

  • S2017E20 30/01/2017

    • January 30, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Another former footballer speaks out about being sexually abused as a child. Plus Victoria gets some tips on how to spot fake news.

  • S2017E21 31/01/2017

    • January 31, 2017
    • BBC Two

  • S2017E22 01/02/2017

    • February 1, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Teenager Chelsea Cameron explains why she's grateful to her drug addict parents. Plus we hear from one woman who feared doctors would turn off her life support system when she had locked-in syndrome.

  • S2017E23 02/02/2017

    • February 2, 2017
    • BBC Two

    A look at how complicated leasehold contracts are leaving homeowners out of pocket, plus a feature on challenging the stigma surrounding mental health.

  • S2017E24 03/02/2017

    • February 3, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Why London is labelled the tuberculosis capital of Western Europe. A backlash against plans to cut disability payments, and Black Sabbath get ready to bow out in Birmingham.

  • S2017E25 06/02/2017

    • February 6, 2017
    • BBC Two

    The programme features a debate on the state of the NHS. A range of medics, patients and officials discuss whether the NHS can continue in its current form and whether charging for some procedures is inevitable.

  • S2017E26 07/02/2017

    • February 7, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Featuring an exclusive report about a small Hungarian town which has banned Muslim dress and 'homosexual propaganda'. As the government unveils more plans for affordable housing, Victoria meets several generations who expect to rent their whole lives. And after David Beckham's leaked emails, a look at how you get recognised by the honours system.

  • S2017E27 08/02/2017

    • February 8, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Victoria speaks to widowed mothers about the difficulties of bringing up children alone, as the government prepares to cut financial support for widowed parents. Plus she asks whether a school racially discriminated against two young pupils, after it called the police over their toy guns.

  • S2017E28 09/02/2017

    • February 9, 2017
    • BBC Two

    One woman who found hidden cameras around her flat says she was served an eviction notice after she complained to her landlord. Plus, with A&E waiting times at their worst on record, health experts give their solutions to the crisis.

  • S2017E29 10/02/2017

    • February 10, 2017
    • BBC Two

    The programme speaks to Bafta-nominated film director Ken Loach about why he thinks the current welfare system makes poverty the fault of the poor. Plus Joanna Gosling asks what is being done in schools to support children's mental health, as a charity survey suggests more children are bringing their worries into the classroom.

  • S2017E30 13/02/2017

    • February 13, 2017
    • BBC Two
  • S2017E31 14/02/2017

    • February 14, 2017
    • BBC Two

  • S2017E32 15/02/2017

    • February 15, 2017
    • BBC Two

  • S2017E33 16/02/2017

    • February 16, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling sits in for Victoria Derbyshire and talks about the pros and cons of HRT with women who have been through the menopause. She also hears from a woman who says winning the lottery at the age of 17 ruined her life. Plus, Emma Freud and Richard Curtis spill the details on Comic Relief's Love Actually sequel.

  • S2017E34 17/02/2017

    • February 17, 2017
    • BBC Two

  • S2017E35 20/02/2017

    • February 20, 2017
    • BBC Two

    The programme gains exclusive access inside Amy's Place, a recovery house set up in Amy Winehouse's memory for women aged 18-30. David Baddiel shares his experience of dealing with his father's Pick's disease, a rare form of dementia. Plus a look at whether people convicted of cruelty against animals should face harsher prison sentences.

  • S2017E36 21/02/2017

    • February 21, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire looks at claims that some lords are collecting a £300 daily allowance whilst contributing absolutely nothing. In the lead up to the Stoke-on-Trent Central by-election, Gillian Hargreaves asks what the voters of Stoke want from their new MP. And how will a planned re-evaluation of business rates affect small enterprises?

  • S2017E37 22/02/2017

    • February 22, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire talks to people affected by income rules which stop thousands of British citizens bringing their foreign spouse to the UK. Ahead of the Brit Awards, Victoria looks at the shake-up to the judging panel following 2016's #BritSoWhite controversy. Plus, how was a British man - who was a former Guantanamo Bay detainee - allowed to leave the UK and carry out a suicide attack for the so called Islamic State?

  • S2017E38 23/02/2017

    • February 23, 2017
    • BBC Two

  • S2017E39 24/02/2017

    • February 24, 2017
    • BBC Two

  • S2017E40 27/02/2017

    • February 27, 2017
    • BBC Two

    As a major inquiry into child abuse gets underway, Victoria speaks to Clifford Walsh, who was sexually abused after being sent to Australia in 1954, and Margaret Humphreys of the Child Migrants Trust. The programme also looks at what the real-terms cuts in spending for schools in England mean for students. And how did the best picture Oscar go to the wrong film? A look at all the winners - and one loser - from the 89th Academy Awards.

  • S2017E41 28/02/2017

    • February 28, 2017
    • BBC Two

    As the conclusions from the inquest into the deaths of 30 Britons in a terror attack at a Tunisian resort are released, Victoria speaks to survivors about their ordeal. Plus a look at Spontaneous Coronary Artery Dissection (SCAD), a rare and often undiagnosed condition that mainly affects women around pregnancy. And how much would you pay to fly around the moon?

  • S2017E42 01/03/2017

    • March 1, 2017
    • BBC Two
  • S2017E43 02/03/2017

    • March 2, 2017
    • BBC Two

    How cuts to police services are affecting the public. How high house prices are putting home ownership out of reach for many families. And the women who were sick up to 30 times a day during pregnancy.

  • S2017E44 03/03/2017

    • March 3, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling speaks to the man who spent nearly 24 years in prison for a crime he did not commit. The referee calling for a strike after receiving abuse on the pitch. And the gay Syrian refugee who is starting a new life in Britain.

  • S2017E45 06/03/2017

    • March 6, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire speaks to students who say they are being put under pressure to do GCSE resits in English and maths until they achieve a C grade. Mums explain the struggle they face trying to get their toddlers to sleep. And experts give their opinion on the Cumbrian zoo where over 500 animals have died.

  • S2017E46 07/03/2017

    • March 7, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire speaks to Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn about the future of his party. She hears from a woman who says her husband's nightmares caused her to miscarry five times. And she's also joined by parents fighting in court to keep their seven-month-old baby alive.

  • S2017E47 08/03/2017

    • March 8, 2017
    • BBC Two

    A young man who was sectioned after multiple suicide attempts explains how football saved his life. And the people volunteering for the Ebola vaccine trials tell us why they take part.

  • S2017E48 09/03/2017

    • March 9, 2017
    • BBC Two
  • S2017E49 10/03/2017

    • March 10, 2017
    • BBC Two

  • S2017E50 13/03/2017

    • March 13, 2017
    • BBC Two

  • S2017E51 14/03/2017

    • March 14, 2017
    • BBC Two

  • S2017E52 15/03/2017

    • March 15, 2017
    • BBC Two

  • S2017E53 16/03/2017

    • March 16, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire looks at how disability benefits claimants are affected by new rule changes. And how one vlogger documented her battle with acne.

  • S2017E54 17/03/2017

    • March 17, 2017
    • BBC Two

  • S2017E55 20/03/2017

    • March 20, 2017
    • BBC Two

  • S2017E56 21/03/2017

    • March 21, 2017
    • BBC Two

  • S2017E57 22/03/2017

    • March 22, 2017
    • BBC Two

  • S2017E58 23/03/2017

    • March 23, 2017
    • BBC Two

  • S2017E59 24/03/2017

    • March 24, 2017
    • BBC Two

  • S2017E60 27/03/2017

    • March 27, 2017
    • BBC Two

  • S2017E61 28/03/2017

    • March 28, 2017
    • BBC Two

  • S2017E62 29/03/2017

    • March 29, 2017
    • BBC Two

  • S2017E63 30/03/2017

    • March 30, 2017
    • BBC Two

  • S2017E64 31/03/2017

    • March 31, 2017
    • BBC Two

  • S2017E65 03/04/2017

    • April 3, 2017
    • BBC Two

  • S2017E66 04/04/2017

    • April 4, 2017
    • BBC Two

  • S2017E67 05/04/2017

    • April 5, 2017
    • BBC Two

  • S2017E68 06/04/2017

    • April 6, 2017
    • BBC Two

  • S2017E69 07/04/2017

    • April 7, 2017
    • BBC Two

  • S2017E70 10/04/2017

    • April 10, 2017
    • BBC Two

  • S2017E71 11/04/2017

    • April 11, 2017
    • BBC Two

  • S2017E72 12/04/2017

    • April 12, 2017
    • BBC Two

  • S2017E73 13/04/2017

    • April 13, 2017
    • BBC Two

  • S2017E74 18/04/2017

    • April 18, 2017
    • BBC Two

  • S2017E75 19/04/2017

    • April 19, 2017
    • BBC Two

    A snap debate for a snap election.

  • S2017E76 20/04/2017

    • April 20, 2017
    • BBC Two

  • S2017E77 21/04/2017

    • April 21, 2017
    • BBC Two

  • S2017E78 24/04/2017

    • April 24, 2017
    • BBC Two

  • S2017E79 25/04/2017

    • April 25, 2017
    • BBC Two

  • S2017E80 26/04/2017

    • April 26, 2017
    • BBC Two

  • S2017E81 27/04/2017

    • April 27, 2017
    • BBC Two

  • S2017E82 28/04/2017

    • April 28, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling talks to a woman whose husband kept his heroin addiction secret for more than three years. A friend of a former marine released from prison after his conviction for killing a Taliban fighter talks about the moment he was freed. Plus Anthony Joshua's physiotherapist talks about Saturday night's big fight against Wladimir Klitschko.

  • S2017E83 02/05/2017

    • May 2, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Victoria speaks to disabled people who have been forced to go to court to get their benefits reinstated. She talks to the innocent couple who are about to be reunited with their baby after they were cleared of harming her. And a look at the elegance and extravagance on show at 'fashion's biggest night out' at the New York Met Gala.

  • S2017E84 03/05/2017

    • May 3, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Around a third of people are expected not to vote, and we debate the reason why with non-voters. People kept on bail for months on end say it left them suicidal, amid concerns that new rules won't speed up police investigations. And why a photo of 14 black students at Cambridge University is going viral.

  • S2017E85 04/05/2017

    • May 4, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire gets reaction to the news that Prince Philip is to step down from royal duties in the autumn. We hear from the team trialling the use of body cameras in psychiatric units. And Adele is now the richest musician under 30 in the UK. We talk to the man who discovered her.

  • S2017E86 08/05/2017

    • May 8, 2017
    • BBC Two

    The BBC's daily news and current affairs programme, featuring an exclusive report into mistakes recorded on maternity wards in English hospitals. Victoria Derbyshire finds out more Emmanuel Macron, who will be the youngest leader of France since Napoleon. Plus classic 'What the?' moments from the general election campaign.

  • S2017E87 09/05/2017

    • May 9, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Victoria is live in Cornwall to see what matters to voters there Alexander Blackman 'Marine A' gives his first TV interview since his release from prison Plus the woman fighting to block Fox News owner Rupert Murdoch's bid for Sky.

  • S2017E88 10/05/2017

    • May 10, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Victoria talks to victims of the tainted blood scandal. Some of them plan to sue the government after they or their relatives received contaminated blood and went on the develop HIV and Aids. Our reporter goes inside the Iraqi city of Mosul to discover what life is like for the residents who have returned after parts of the city were recaptured from so-called Islamic State. And tips on how to protect yourself from internet fraud - there are calls for it to be part of the national curriculum.

  • S2017E89 11/05/2017

    • May 11, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Victoria speaks to the family of a man who died in a mental health hospital after he was restrained by 11 policemen. One young lady describes how her stroke symptoms were dismissed as being a migraine. And as rapper Bow-Wow makes a social media boo-boo, there's a look at other famous online gaffes.

  • S2017E90 12/05/2017

    • May 12, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Former Olympic gold medal winner and reality TV star Caitlyn Jenner talks to Joanna Gosling about life after her transition to living as a woman. We talk about the worrying increase in the number of weapons being brought into schools by children. And Joanna meets the super-fans in a look ahead to the Eurovision Song Contest.

  • S2017E91 15/05/2017

    • May 15, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Leader of Plaid Cymru Leanne Wood goes on the road with Victoria in the first of our Vic's Van Share series. As Jeremy Corbyn addresses the Royal College of Nursing's annual conference, we talk to nurses about what they want politicians to do for the NHS. And former footballer Andy Woodward talks to Victoria. His decision to come forward and speak about the sexual abuse he suffered as a child led to the programme being awarded a Bafta.

  • S2017E92 16/05/2017

    • May 16, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Following the death of Ian Brady, Victoria Derbyshire talks to some of those who met the notorious Moors murderer. We speak to the canvassers who are too young to go to the ballot box themselves, but who spend their time persuading others to vote for the party they believe in. And Sex in the City star Kim Cattrall talks to Victoria about ageism and sexism in Hollywood.

  • S2017E93 17/05/2017

    • May 17, 2017
    • BBC Two

  • S2017E94 18/05/2017

    • May 18, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Martine Croxall stands in for Victoria and gets reaction to the Conservative manifesto launch. Nicola Adams is live in the studio to talk about boxing, falling in love and life growing up. Plus a mother's warning about Meningitis W.

  • S2017E95 19/05/2017

    • May 19, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Martine Croxall speaks to the Rochdale whistleblower about BBC drama Three Girls and Maxine Peake's portrayal of her. Plus a look at the growing number of children in America undergoing electroconvulsive therapy and how BBC Click fooled HSBC's voice recognition security software.

  • S2017E96 22/05/2017

    • May 22, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Victoria talks to the families of some of those who killed themselves at a mental health trust in Essex. The programme has learned that a police enquiry into deaths at the Linden Centre could investigate up to 20 cases. Plus she speaks to an alleged victim of the entertainer Bill Cosby. He is up in court on a charge of sexual assault. And a look at the winners and losers at the Billboard Music Awards.

  • S2017E97 24/05/2017

    • May 24, 2017
    • BBC Two

  • S2017E98 25/05/2017

    • May 25, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling asks what impact leaks to the US media will have on the Manchester bombing investigation. Local heroes discuss how they are trying to help those affected by the attack. And a senior Met copper talks about his 25 years in the force.

  • S2017E99 26/05/2017

    • May 26, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Chloe Tilley looks at how security is being stepped up for sporting and entertainment events this weekend. Alan Shearer reveals who his money is on for Saturday's FA Cup final, and Chloe speaks to the man who was abandoned as a baby and used a DNA detective to track down his siblings.

  • S2017E100 The Big Debate

    • May 29, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire hosts an election debate live from Dunstable with an audience of 120 voters and senior politicians - debating the issues that matter to you.

  • S2017E101 30/05/2017

    • May 30, 2017
    • BBC Two

    In the first of the Election Blind Dates, UKIP's Nigel Farage dines with Liberal Democrat supporting Rachel Johnson. As tributes are paid to the zookeeper killed by a tiger, Victoria speaks to an eyewitness. Plus Jonathan Trott talks about the highs and lows of life as an England cricketer.

  • S2017E102 31/05/2017

    • May 31, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Made in Chelsea's Georgia Toffolo and austerity blogger Jack Monroe are the latest political polar opposites to take part in our Election Blind Dates. Victoria speaks to one of the victims of breast surgeon Ian Paterson, as he is sentenced for carrying out multiple unnecessary operations. And the Green Party's Caroline Lucas gets a lift in Victoria's white van and talks drugs, tears and prostitution.

  • S2017E103 01/06/2017

    • June 1, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Including an exclusive interview with the sons of the man who shot his wife and daughter in a carpark in Spalding last year, Peter Stringfellow and Mary Beard are in the third Election Blind Date and, regarding female hair loss, we speak to two famous musicians about how it affected them.

  • S2017E104 02/06/2017

    • June 2, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Chloe Tilley presents. Labour's Jess Phillips discusses ambition, heavy metal and rubbish with Conservative John Whittingdale on an Election Blind Date. The parents of ill baby Charlie Gard tell Victoria Derbyshire they will keep fighting their legal case. And there is reaction to Donald Trump's decision to withdraw from the Paris climate deal.

  • S2017E105 05/06/2017

    • June 5, 2017
    • BBC Two

  • S2017E106 06/06/2017

    • June 6, 2017
    • BBC Two

  • S2017E107 07/06/2017

    • June 7, 2017
    • BBC Two

    An election blind date between the SNP's Tommy Sheppard and Ayesha Hazarika, former Labour advisor. A former border agent on how one of the London terrorists got into the UK, despite being on an EU watch list. And the 20-year-old American girl on trial for urging her boyfriend to kill himself.

  • S2017E108 08/06/2017

    • June 8, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Election Day 2017. 'Scambaiters' - the volunteers trying to expose online con-artists. And drug testing at festivals - is it a good idea?

  • S2017E109 12/06/2017

    • June 12, 2017
    • BBC Two

    As the fallout from the general election continues, Victoria is joined by a group of voters on a rooftop overlooking the Houses of Parliament. She examines what happens next for Theresa May and interviews politicians from across the parties. And the programme looks at how artists from the grime industry may have mobilised young voters and contributed to Jeremy Corbyn's success.

  • S2017E110 13/06/2017

    • June 13, 2017
    • BBC Two

    What is the most important thing you want from your MP - Victoria asks an audience of voters to draw up an MPs' charter. One year on - the parents of Jo Cox pay tribute to their daughter. Abortion in Northern Ireland - meet the campaigners who say no to termination, whatever the circumstances.

  • S2017E111 15/06/2017

    • June 15, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Victoria is in west London getting analysis and reaction to the Tower block fire.

  • S2017E112 16/06/2017

    • June 16, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Joanna speaks to residents of Grenfell Tower including the brother of Mohammed Alhajali, who died in the fire. Ebola nurse Pauline Cafferkey returns to Sierra Leone. And reaction to the news that a 'revolutionary' breast cancer drug will be available once more on the NHS.

  • S2017E113 19/06/2017

    • June 19, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling reports from Finsbury Park in London after a van drove into a crowd of people outside a mosque. She gets reaction from eyewitnesses, community leaders and politicians.

  • S2017E114 20/06/2017

    • June 20, 2017
    • BBC Two

  • S2017E115 21/06/2017

    • June 21, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling looks at what might be in the Queen's Speech and why this year's is so important. Plus the travel scam that might lead to British tourists being banned from all-inclusive holidays in Spain, and the Grenfell Tower charity single is released a week on from the fire.

  • S2017E116 22/06/2017

    • June 22, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling presents. Theresa May reveals that tests since the Grenfell Tower fire show a number of tower blocks have the same combustible cladding - the programme hears from residents living in one such block. Joanna speaks to the journalist to whom Prince Harry commented that no senior royal wants to be king or queen.

  • S2017E117 23/06/2017

    • June 23, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Chloe Tilley gets reaction to Theresa May's pledge to allow around three million EU citizens to stay in the UK after Brexit. The programme investigates what is being done to ensure tower blocks are safe after the Grenfell Tower tragedy. And two families living with sickle cell disease appeal for more black people to donate blood.

  • S2017E118 26/06/2017

    • June 26, 2017
    • BBC Two

    The NHS hernia mesh repairs 'leaving patients in chronic pain'. The man who was sexually assaulted by two former BBC radio presenters tells Victoria why he's speaking out. The British tourist who saw a shark swimming with unsuspecting holidaymakers in Majorca.

  • S2017E119 27/06/2017

    • June 27, 2017
    • BBC Two

    In an exclusive interview, murdered soldier Lee Rigby's mum tells Victoria she feels the Ministry of Defence has failed to support her family. Victoria speaks to a Sikh couple who claim they were advised they wouldn't be allowed to adopt a white child. And snooker legend Ronnie O'Sullivan is in the studio, talking about his life, his career and dealing with depression.

  • S2017E120 28/06/2017

    • June 28, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Two weeks on from the Grenfell Tower fire, Victoria is in North Kensington with survivors and residents to find out how their lives have unfolded since that evening, and they put their questions and complaints to housing minister Alok Sharma.

  • S2017E121 29/06/2017

    • June 29, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Victoria gets the reaction of one of the Grenfell Tower survivors to the appointment of Sir Martin Moore Bick to lead the public inquiry. We hear exclusively from the parents of the 21-year-old man who became known as Jihadi Jack after travelling to Syria. Plus the woman who says her son was circumcised without her knowledge and consent- we explore the issues.

  • S2017E122 30/06/2017

    • June 30, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling has the latest news on the Grenfell Tower fire and speaks to Dr Ahmed Kazmi, a GP looking after survivors. Plus the rise of knife crime in London and people who are too busy for smear tests.

  • S2017E123 03/07/2017

    • July 3, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Survivors of the Grenfell Tower fire tell of the devastating impact it has had on their mental health and the lack of the support they are getting from the authorities. Plus, the girls as young as nine who want surgery on their vaginas because they are ashamed and embarassed by how they look. And Victoria hears from a victim of the Rochdale grooming gang who is speaking publicly for the first time.

  • S2017E124 04/07/2017

    • July 4, 2017
    • BBC Two

    The youngest Manchester attack victim Saffie Roussos would have turned nine today - her dad Andrew remembers her love of dancing and gymnastics. Snapchat's new map feature is raising concerns over stalking and bullying. £17m has been raised for survivors of Grenfell - we find out if it's getting through.

  • S2017E125 05/07/2017

    • July 5, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Victoria speaks to a woman who was stabbed and left for dead by her stalker in 2013. She had reported him to the police 125 times before the attack. The programme hears from survivors of the Grenfell Tower fire on why most of them have turned down offers of temporary accommodation. And there is a look at claims that black people are being failed by the mental health system because of institutional racism.

  • S2017E126 06/07/2017

    • July 6, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling asks a panel of guests about Sir John Chilcot's comments that Tony Blair was not straight with the nation in the lead-up to the Iraq War. Donald Trump sets out more of his thinking on North Korea as he takes his second overseas trip as president. And why sham marriages are being used by some British-Asian gay men and women to mask their sexuality.

  • S2017E127 07/07/2017

    • July 7, 2017
    • BBC Two

    As Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin prepare to meet face to face, a panel of experts tell Joanna Gosling what they think will happen at the G20. Joanna talks to the lorry driver whose heroic actions averted a massive disaster on a busy road. And people who've had a near death experience.

  • S2017E128 10/07/2017

    • July 10, 2017
    • BBC Two

    The programme has exclusive access to serving prison officers who say the service is at crisis point and it is 'only a matter of time before a prison officer is killed on duty'. Victoria speaks to the president of the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health who says interventions made by individuals such as the Pope and Donald Trump into the case of terminally ill baby Charlie Gard are 'unhelpful'. Plus a talk with the prime minister's second in command, one year after Theresa May took office.

  • S2017E129 11/07/2017

    • July 11, 2017
    • BBC Two

  • S2017E130 12/07/2017

    • July 12, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Four weeks after the Grenfell Tower fire, Victoria looks into what councils have been doing about cladding on tower blocks. Victoria speaks to the gay man who's won a legal battle for his husband to get the same pension rights a wife would enjoy in a heterosexual relationship. And when it comes to writing songs, when does inspiration become outright copying?

  • S2017E131 13/07/2017

    • July 13, 2017
    • BBC Two

    A look at why more teachers from ethnic minority backgrounds are not being recruited by schools. The programme hears from the father of a child who had the same rare genetic disorder as baby Charlie Gard. And Theresa May admits she shed a tear on election night when she heard the exit poll result.

  • S2017E132 14/07/2017

    • July 14, 2017
    • BBC Two

    After five acid attacks in the space of one evening in London, Joanna Gosling talks to a criminologist about why this kind of crime is increasing. An exclusive interview with a mum whose son was groomed by a criminal gang and started dealing drugs, as a new report says children from middle class backgrounds are being targeted. Plus Joanna talks to the couple who ended up in A&E after attempting the classic lift from Dirty Dancing as they practised their wedding dance.

  • S2017E133 17/07/2017

    • July 17, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Jodie Whittaker tells fans not to be scared of her gender as she's revealed as the new Doctor Who, Victoria gets reaction. Stacy Banner, whose mother and sister were killed by her stepfather, returns to the farm where it happened. And the woman who 'stole' her own bike back from the man who was trying to sell it on Facebook.

  • S2017E134 18/07/2017

    • July 18, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Campaigners call for vaginal mesh ban after investigation by this programme. The R.Kelly 'abusive cult' claims. Plus Johanna Konta answers viewers questions.

  • S2017E135 19/07/2017

    • July 19, 2017
    • BBC Two

    The BBC's daily news and current affairs programme. Victoria meets survivors of the Grenfell fire to see what progress is being made five weeks on.

  • S2017E136 20/07/2017

    • July 20, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Victoria speaks to the deputy leader of Kensington and Chelsea council five weeks on from the Grenfell fire. Plus Alton Towers victim Vicky Balch is live in the studio. And the results are in for the state of mental health care in England - Victoria looks at the best and worst practices.

  • S2017E137 21/07/2017

    • July 21, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling hears from tourists caught up in an earthquake on the Greek island of Kos. A British woman is questioned by terror police over a Syrian art book. And there are tributes to Linkin Park's Chester Bennington, who had died.

  • S2017E138 24/07/2017

    • July 24, 2017
    • BBC Two
  • S2017E139 25/07/2017

    • July 25, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Victoria gets reaction from some of those who have supported the parents of terminally ill baby Charlie Gard after their decision to end their legal fight to take him to the US for treatment. Plus an exclusive interview with the parents of an autistic man pinned to the floor, and to his bed, for up to 11 hours by nine members of staff at a private hospital in Birmingham. And three former Jehovah's Witnesses explain how leaving their faith has left them isolated, shunned by friends and family and even feeling suicidal.

  • S2017E140 26/07/2017

    • July 26, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Victoria asks a group of MPs if the culture of abuse towards politicians is growing out of control The programme learns that Kensington and Chelsea council were warned in 2010 that building a new school at the base of Grenfell Tower could block access to fire trucks. And should drivers over 90 have to resit their test? Victoria gets behind the wheel with a very new- and a very experienced- driver.

  • S2017E141 27/07/2017

    • July 27, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Chloe Tilley talks to one mother about warnings that children's lives are being risked by delays to plans to protect them from violent fathers during custody battles. Adam Peaty's flatmate talks about the swimmer's success in the World Aquatic Championships. Plus how hard is it to be vegan, healthy and still live a very active lifestyle?

  • S2017E142 28/07/2017

    • July 28, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Sixty tower blocks fail new 'Grenfell safety test', family warns of diet pills following daughter's death, and is Venezuela on the brink of civil war?

  • S2017E143 31/07/2017

    • July 31, 2017
    • BBC Two

    100 years on from the battle of Passchendaele, one of the bloodiest of the First World War, we are live at commemorations in Belgium. Chloe Tilley discusses plans to recruit thousands more mental health workers to the NHS in England with campaigners, medical professionals and patients. And we ask if Channel 4 should broadcast private tapes of Princess Diana talking frankly about her life.

  • S2017E144 01/08/2017

    • August 1, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Tina Daheley stands in for Victoria as this programme learns that Greater Manchester Police are facing new investigations over three firearms deaths. A mother, whose daughter Sarah had mental health problems and killed herself in prison, gives her reaction to the inquest that said she was failed. And should breastfeeding be on the curriculum?

  • S2017E145 02/08/2017

    • August 2, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Tina Daheley presents. The programme features a baby who survived against all the odds, weighing just one pound when she was born. Prison governors despair at the 'complete decline' of the prison service. Swimmer Adam Peaty answers viewers' quickfire questions.

  • S2017E146 03/08/2017

    • August 3, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Tina Daheley presents. Rugby legend Jonny Wilkinson talks about his career and how his performance coach changed his life. Catrin Nye reports on how Deliveroo has taken steps to protect its drivers from violence after a run of attacks. The programme hears from a panel of guests on why the UK's poorest children are finishing secondary school two years behind their classmates.

  • S2017E147 04/08/2017

    • August 4, 2017
    • BBC Two

    On the day the deadline expires for people to have their say on what should be included in the Grenfell Tower inquiry, Tina Daheley hears from residents who escaped the devastating fire. As a grand jury is set up in the United States to determine whether criminal charges should be brought after claims of Russian meddling in the US election, Tina discusses another whirlwind week at the White House. And Tina speaks to people affected by long delays at European airports because of tighter security checks.

  • S2017E148 07/08/2017

    • August 7, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Victoria catches up with two of the UK's youngest transgender children who we've been following for the past two years. The glamour model who was kidnapped and held for six days in Italy talks about her ordeal. Plus she talks to an American NHS doctor who has been separated from his family because of a mix up over their visa.

  • S2017E149 08/08/2017

    • August 8, 2017
    • BBC Two

    An exclusive report on the British South Asian women who are hiding their cancer diagnosis because of stigma. Plus an exclusive interview with a friend and colleague of Chloe Ayling, the model who was kidnapped in Italy, who tells Victoria how models are put in danger. And the latest on the norovirus bug that's struck London 2017 athletes.

  • S2017E150 09/08/2017

    • August 9, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Victoria hears from people having surgery to stop themselves needing the loo when out because of a lack of accessible disabled toilets. A firefighter's account of one of the worst disasters they've ever faced. The programme is live in Guam as North Korea threatens to attack the US military base.

  • S2017E151 10/08/2017

    • August 10, 2017
    • BBC Two

    A look at children in the most deprived parts of Wales who go back to school in the holidays for free meals. Victoria talks to a family from Guam about being caught in a war of words between President Trump and North Korea. A former Vogue editor is being praised on social media for posting a bikini selfie without airbrushing or filters.

  • S2017E152 11/08/2017

    • August 11, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling presents. A 12-year-old boy who lost all his possessions in the Grenfell Tower fire discusses his experiences and there is a look at eggs in the UK following the recent contamination scare. As CCTV is to become compulsory in all abattoirs in England, the programme hears from Animal Aid, which since 2009 has secretly filmed inside 13 British slaughterhouses.

  • S2017E153 14/08/2017

    • August 14, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling talks to the sisters of two men who have waited years to be released from prison, despite the abolition of indefinite 'public protection' sentences. We look into a 50 per cent rise in the number of people arrested suspected of being drunk at UK airports and on flights. And Joanna talks to three families about the legacy of partition, 70 years after British colonial rule came to an end in India.

  • S2017E154 15/08/2017

    • August 15, 2017
    • BBC Two

    In his first BBC interview, model Chloe Ayling's former agent tells Joanna Gosling about the ransom demands he received when she was kidnapped in Milan and talks about how she is coping following her ordeal. We speak to retired judge Denzil Lush who says it is too risky giving just one person power of attorney, which allows them to make welfare or financial decisions on your behalf. And Taylor Swift has won her case against the former radio DJ who groped her. We hear from an American journalist who was in court and says this is a win for all women.

  • S2017E155 16/08/2017

    • August 16, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Joana Gosling looks at Brexit plans for a 'seamless' Irish border, NHS figures which suggest one in 15 women will have vaginal mesh complications, and why benefits being stopped for Joy Watson, 'Alzheimer's ambassador'.

  • S2017E156 17/08/2017

    • August 17, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Students get their A Level results. Can a new 'homeless village' in Edinburgh set a precedent? A look inside the fast-track graduate scheme for prison officers. With Joanna Gosling.

  • S2017E157 21/08/2017

    • August 21, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling presents an exclusive investigation into fraudsters posing as charities. Love Island's Olivia discusses a crack-down on online hate crime. Plus a look back at Mo Farah's track career.

  • S2017E158 22/08/2017

    • August 22, 2017
    • BBC Two

    President Trump rules out withdrawal from Afghanistan. The programme compares marijuana drug controls. The NHS healthy new towns where residents get rewards for exercising.

  • S2017E159 23/08/2017

    • August 23, 2017
    • BBC Two

    A whistleblower on the Rotherham abuse scandal exclusively reveals that she feels 'vilified' by the investigation into her over claims she has made money from the scandal. Also, the first legal online auction of rhino horn in South Africa -conservationists say it will push the endangered species towards extinction. And the debate over whether women-only train carriages would help protect women against violence on public transport.

  • S2017E160 24/08/2017

    • August 24, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling with results of the new-style GCSEs, the half-British teenager who has been rejected for permanent UK residency, and the violinist with brain damage who plays via brainwaves.

  • S2017E161 25/08/2017

    • August 25, 2017
    • BBC Two

    British singer and songwriter Charlie XCX joins Chloe Tilley in the studio to talk about selling 23 million singles worldwide. Women who've left the armed forces explain that not enough is being done to support them with mental health problems Plus the man in charge of a new trial of Wi-Fi controlled lorries. They could be on British roads by the end of 2018.

  • S2017E162 29/08/2017

    • August 29, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Victoria speaks to eyewitnesses after North Korea fired a missile across northern Japan. There is a report on a sterilisation device that in some cases is causing women so much pain that some need to have a hysterectomy to remove it. As figures suggest a big rise in people driving without insurance, the programme hears from a woman who suffered a broken back when she was hit by an uninsured driver.

  • S2017E163 30/08/2017

    • August 30, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Further coverage of storm Harvey as flood-hit Houston imposes a curfew and there are more extraordinary rescues. Plus a stark warning from the Danish ambassador on Brexit, and reports that over a quarter of teenagers are affected by 'fear of crime'.

  • S2017E164 31/08/2017

    • August 31, 2017
    • BBC Two

    Victoria talks to Kezia Dugdale and other MPs about coming out as gay. The woman who's been on 77 first dates in a (long) bid to meet Mr Right tells us where men are going wrong. And on the 20th anniversary of Princess Diana's death her former bodyguard talks about her legacy.

Season 2018

  • S2018E01 08/01/2018

    • January 8, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria meets an 18-year-old who has a condition which causes his skin to tear and blister at the slightest touch. She also hears about the winners and losers at the Golden Globe film awards - which was dominated by powerful speeches about Hollywood's sexual abuse scandal. And she talks to two women who had heart attacks in their 30s - after a new study finds fewer women would die after suffering a heart attack if they were given the same treatments as men.

  • S2018E02 09/01/2018

    • January 9, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria gets reaction to the resignation of journalist Toby Young from the universities watchdog - after widespread criticism of crude and offensive comments he'd written in the past about women's breasts, people in poverty and people with disabilities. We travel to Calais, where around 700 migrants are living rough again, a year after the so-called jungle camp was destroyed. And fantasy romance The Shape of Water leads the Bafta nominations with 12 nods. We look at that and the other films in the running this award season.

  • S2018E03 10/01/2018

    • January 10, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Charities who work with drug users in Manchester explain how a new strain of the synthetic drug 'spice' is having a devastating effect on the city. Victoria asks whether the law does enough to protect free speech in universities. Plus there is reaction to an open letter signed by 100 French women which attacks recent feminist social media campaigns, arguing men should be allowed to 'hit on women' without being forced out of their jobs.

  • S2018E04 11/01/2018

    • January 11, 2018
    • BBC Two

    The Conservative MP Nick Boles who has had cancer twice tells Victoria that a 'National Health Insurance' would encourage people to pay more for the NHS. Theresa May outlines plans to ease plastic pollution. And YouTube cuts its business ties with Logan Paul - despite his apology for posting a video of a body at a suicide hotspot in Japan.

  • S2018E05 12/01/2018

    • January 12, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Chloe Tilley asks why Donald Trump cancelled his visit to open the new US embassy in London and whether it marks the end of the special relationship. Could social services be missing serious cases of child abuse as the number of families being referred to them dramatically increases? Plus Norwegian pop singer Sigrid is named the winner of the BBC's Sound of 2018 competition. She talks exclusively to Chloe about whether fame will change her.

  • S2018E06 15/01/2018

    • January 15, 2018
    • BBC Two

    As one of Britain's biggest construction companies goes into liquidation, Victoria speaks to one of the thousands of employees whose job is at risk. She talks to teenage mums as councils are given new guidance on how to reduce the number of teenagers getting pregnant. UKIP's leader splits up with his girlfriend over offensive and racist remarks she made about Prince Harry's fiancee Meghan Markle, but insists he will not resign. Victoria talks to one UKIP MEP who says Henry Bolton should go.

  • S2018E07 16/01/2018

    • January 16, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria hears more about 13 brothers and sisters who were rescued from a house in California. Some of them had been chained to their beds. She speaks to users of a Marie Stopes clinic in London, which could become the first to be surrounded by a special protection zone to shield women from anti-abortion protesters holding vigils outside. Plus the programme hears about claims by Olympic champion gymnast Simone Biles, who says she was sexually abused by the former USA team doctor Larry Nassar.

  • S2018E08 17/01/2018

    • January 17, 2018
    • BBC Two

  • S2018E09 18/01/2018

    • January 18, 2018
    • BBC Two

    The story of Evelyn Hernandez, a teenager from El Salvador who says she's been sentenced for murder after suffering a miscarriage. Researchers find thousands of lives could be saved if all women were tested for the so-called 'Angelina Jolie gene'. Plus, a leading barrister tells Victoria there's a systemic problem with the police, as England's top legal minds meet to discuss the recent collapse of a number of rape trials.

  • S2018E10 19/01/2018

    • January 19, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Chloe Tilley talks to the producer of a film about 'Pad Man', a school drop-out from southern India who helped millions of women by designing cheap sanitary towels. Researchers welcome the development of a simple blood test for several different kinds of cancer. Plus, one year since President Trump's inauguration, how has America changed with him in charge?

  • S2018E11 22/01/2018

    • January 22, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Why do so many women put themselves at risk of cervical cancer because they are too embarrassed to go for a smear test? As doctors warn about the dangers of button batteries, a mum describes what happened when her one-year-old daughter swallowed one. And there's to be another Royal wedding this year as Princess Eugenie gets engaged.

  • S2018E12 23/01/2018

    • January 23, 2018
    • BBC Two
  • S2018E13 24/01/2018

    • January 24, 2018
    • BBC Two

  • S2018E14 25/01/2018

    • January 25, 2018
    • BBC Two

    On an exciting day for British tennis, Kyle Edmund's coach and friends tell Victoria how good they think he is. The woman who set up a campaign group after her son was convicted for murder under a law called joint enterprise says he was just a bystander. Plus as record numbers of people are sleeping rough, Victoria hears from people who've lost their homes.

  • S2018E15 26/01/2018

    • January 26, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria talks to Bradley Lowery's mum and striker Jermaine Defoe about the foundation they're setting up to help other children with cancer. She also hears that US president Donald Trump has said he's prepared to apologise for retweeting posts from the far-right group Britain First. Plus a discussion of the gender pay gap - following the announcement that several male BBC presenters will take a pay cut.

  • S2018E16 29/01/2018

    • January 29, 2018
    • BBC Two

    British farmers tell Victoria they are the subject of death threats from increasingly militant vegan activists. Should misogyny be considered a hate crime? A former women's minister exclusively tells the programme why she is seeking a change to the law. Plus new figures show co-sleeping is a factor in the deaths of nearly three infants a week.

  • S2018E17 30/01/2018

    • January 30, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria discusses leaked government assessments which suggest that economic growth is going to be lower than it would have been if Britain hadn't voted to leave the EU. Could the universal credit system leave up to one million working people exposed to benefit sanctions when it's fully rolled out? Plus, a look at the BBC's proposal to cap the pay of its news presenters at £320,000 a year.

  • S2018E18 31/01/2018

    • January 31, 2018
    • BBC Two

    One American family or a fractured nation? Victoria Derbyshire gets reaction to Donald Trump's keynote State of the Union address. Researchers and parents discuss whether folic acid should be added to flour to help protect babies from birth defects. Plus the killer whale that can say hello and goodbye and count to three.

  • S2018E19 01/02/2018

    • February 1, 2018
    • BBC Two
  • S2018E20 02/02/2018

    • February 2, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Chloe Tilley speaks to two men with prostate cancer, as the number of men dying in Britain from the disease overtakes the number of women killed by breast cancer. She also hears from Tory MPs on Theresa May's future, as the prime minister travels back from her three day trade trip to China. Plus Chloe talks to a heterosexual couple who argue that they should be allowed to have a civil partnership.

  • S2018E21 05/02/2018

    • February 5, 2018
    • BBC Two

    The timeshare trap: thousands desperate to get out of their contracts cannot because it is too complex and costly. Chloe Tilley speaks to the father of computer hacker Lauri Love on the day the High Court rules if he will be extradited to the USA. Plus the parents of 20-month-old Alfie Evans are told there is no hope for him as they try to block a decision to switch off his life support.

  • S2018E22 06/02/2018

    • February 6, 2018
    • BBC Two

    On the hundreth anniversary of some women getting the vote, Victoria talks to 102-year-old Greta Brandler about how things have changed for women during her lifetime. Lauri Love is on the programme, fresh from his victory at the High Court which blocked his extradition to the United States to face charges of hacking. Plus Victoria asks whether e-cigarettes should be available on prescription after a call by Public Health England.

  • S2018E23 07/02/2018

    • February 7, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria talks to a lawyer representing around 100 female Tesco workers who are launching Britain's largest ever equal pay claim. In her only broadcast interview, we talk to Facebook's most powerful executive in Europe, Nicola Mendelsohn, about being diagnosed with an incurable form of blood cancer. And what happens to a town when the main source of work is taken away? Two years after the steelworks shut in Redcar in North Yorkshire, our reporter visits to find out.

  • S2018E24 08/02/2018

    • February 8, 2018
    • BBC Two

    A group of firefighters who tackled the Grenfell tower blaze tell the show 'it's very difficult to take praise' as so many people passed away. We get reaction to a report saying one in five people working at Westminster has seen or experienced sexual harassment. And from Nigeria, we bring you the story of 13-year-old Falmata, who was abducted by militant group Boko Haram, not once, but twice.

  • S2018E25 09/02/2018

    • February 9, 2018
    • BBC Two

  • S2018E26 12/02/2018

    • February 12, 2018
    • BBC Two

  • S2018E27 13/02/2018

    • February 13, 2018
    • BBC Two

  • S2018E28 14/02/2018

    • February 14, 2018
    • BBC Two

    A group of MPs says there's a pervasive lack of trust in benefits assessments - Victoria hears from an assessor who quit her job because she was disgusted with the system. A BBC investigation finds children as young as 13 are buying the prescription drug Xanax on social media. Plus running your own business from home can be a tempting prospect, but are some of the marketing schemes advertised too good to be true?

  • S2018E29 15/02/2018

    • February 15, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria speaks to the parents of Beth Shipsey, a 21-year-old woman who died after taking illegal weight loss pills. A new study suggests there's a link between highly processed foods and cancer. Plus boxer David Haye turns mentor.

  • S2018E30 16/02/2018

    • February 16, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Football's biggest crisis - a two hour special on the football abuse scandal. Four men abused by Barry Bennell share their stories exclusively with Victoria. New revelations about who knew what and when.

  • S2018E31 19/02/2018

    • February 19, 2018
    • BBC Two

  • S2018E32 20/02/2018

    • February 20, 2018
    • BBC Two

  • S2018E33 21/02/2018

    • February 21, 2018
    • BBC Two

    The dark side of artificial intelligence and what might happen if it gets in the wrong hands. Plus, Victoria talks to a victim of the black cab rapist John Worboys, at the centre of a Supreme Court ruling on how the police investigated her attack. And women with endometriosis who've had their wombs or ovaries removed call for more aftercare.

  • S2018E34 22/02/2018

    • February 22, 2018
    • BBC Two

    After two more teenagers are stabbed to death in London, Victoria talks to victims, campaigners and politicians to discuss how to tackle the rise in knife crime across the UK. As a report from a group of scientists claims antidepressants are effective we hear from people who have taken the medication. Victoria also speaks to survivors of domestic abuse as judges in England and Wales are told to issue tougher sentences.

  • S2018E35 23/02/2018

    • February 23, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Former England footballer Andy Cole talks to Tina about organ donation, after his nephew saved his life by giving him one of his kidneys. Health secretary Jeremy Hunt on why errors with drugs across the NHS could be linked to thousands of deaths. Plus the elderly care home which has been putting on pole dancing displays for its residents.

  • S2018E36 26/02/2018

    • February 26, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria is live from a Pupil Referral Unit, which is where children go when they're kicked out of mainstream school or in danger of being kicked out. She sees how pupils are given the help they need to turn their behaviour and lives around. She also meets parents and headteachers who share their experiences.

  • S2018E37 27/02/2018

    • February 27, 2018
    • BBC Two

    A special report for the programme exclusively reveals that Facebook have funded a project using their own messenger app to try to deradicalise extremists. After the incredible response to yesterday's live show from a pupil referral unit, Victoria hears more stories from parents and former pupils. Plus, we take a look at the disruption the wintry weather has been causing across England and Wales.

  • S2018E38 28/02/2018

    • February 28, 2018
    • BBC Two

  • S2018E39 01/03/2018

    • March 1, 2018
    • BBC Two
  • S2018E40 02/03/2018

    • March 2, 2018
    • BBC Two

    With Chloe Tilley. An extraordinary 999 call from Gareth Williams in Wales. His partner was having stomach pains, then something unexpected happened. The hero bus driver whose quick actions in dodging a car on an icy road in Edinburgh have gone viral. Plus Clowns Without Borders, they entertain refugee children who have fled some of the world's most dangerous places.

  • S2018E41 05/03/2018

    • March 5, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria talks to a family whose two children were caught up in two separate US school shootings. Plus should transgender women have access to services such as women-only changing rooms and refuges? Including the highlights from the red carpet at the Oscars.

  • S2018E42 06/03/2018

    • March 6, 2018
    • BBC Two

    We report from a prescription pill party, where we find out why some young people are using Xanax pills laced with a powerful painkiller as their drug of choice. Victoria finds out why health officials want portion sizes of some of Britain's most popular foods to be cut. Plus Serena Williams talks about how motherhood will make her a better player.

  • S2018E43 07/03/2018

    • March 7, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Chloe Tilley finds out why ticket resellers are having to face the music, hearing from music fans who paid hundreds of pounds to see their favourite performers. As the mystery of the suspected poisoning of a former Russian double agent and his daughter deepens, Chloe gets the inside track on relations with the Kremlin from the author of McMafia. Plus the programme gets a rare insight into what it is like to be in a coercive relationship, in which a person is emotionally, not just physically, abused by their partner.

  • S2018E44 08/03/2018

    • March 8, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria talks to a man whose profile has been stolen by scammers and posted on a dating website to con women out of money. A look at the rise in the number of women in Northern Ireland seeking free abortions. Plus new measures have proposed that suspected domestic abusers be electronically tagged.

  • S2018E45 09/03/2018

    • March 9, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Chloe Tilley talks to a victim of an acid attack to find out how life has changed. Plus the show hears stories of childbirth around the world ahead of Mother's Day, and a look at whether there should be a latte levy on throwaway coffee cups.

  • S2018E46 12/03/2018

    • March 12, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria talks to a parent who lost her baby to sudden infant death syndrome and wants to warn other families of the dangers. Tributes are paid to Sir Ken Dodd - one of the last great music hall acts of his time - who has died at the age of 90. Plus a special film about a group of homeless people in London who have set up a squat in an abandoned building where any homeless person is welcome.

  • S2018E47 13/03/2018

    • March 13, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria hears from a victim of the abuse scandal in Telford which may have seen almost 1,000 girls groomed. TV star Noel Edmonds explains why he is trying to sue Lloyds Banking Group for over 60 million pounds. And Victoria talks to two people who claim they were rejected from a restaurant because of their race.

  • S2018E48 14/03/2018

    • March 14, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria looks at the struggle of getting men to work with kids in nurseries, with exclusive access to proposals being drawn up to advise the government on how they can help. Tributes are paid to Professor Stephen Hawking, who has died at the age of 76. And ballroom star Len Goodman talks Strictly and the campaign he is fronting to try to stop over-60s falling victim to bank scams.

  • S2018E49 15/03/2018

    • March 15, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria hears from a girl who tried to take her own life nine times in ten days before getting the help she needed, and speaks to people living in Syria on the seventh anniversary of the start of the conflict. And could it be possible to produce individualised cancer vaccines? Victoria learns more about major trials planned on both sides of the Atlantic.

  • S2018E50 16/03/2018

    • March 16, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Chloe hears from Malorie Bantala who was eight months pregnant when her ex-boyfriend attacked her, killing her baby. One of the nation's favourite soaps - Coronation Street - is to screen a harrowing male rape storyline. And why Topman has withdrawn a shirt after criticism it could be seen as referring to the Hillsborough disaster.

  • S2018E51 19/03/2018

    • March 19, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire finds out why 72 English football league clubs are coming together for a day of action. We find out what it is like when a centre for over 200 asylum seekers opens at the end of your street. And gambling addicts speak out about their experience of highly addictive fixed odds betting terminals.

  • S2018E52 20/03/2018

    • March 20, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Actor Michael Sheen tells Victoria why he is taking an aim at high cost 'rent to own' firms. Rapper Paigey Cakey explains why she decided to get a hair transplant in her twenties. Plus we ask if the world's seen the last of the northern white rhino following the death of the last surviving male.

  • S2018E53 21/03/2018

    • March 21, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Chloe Tilley asks if enough is being done to help people who are addicted to prescription painkillers. We hear from some of the increasing number of women donating eggs to people who can't get pregnant. Plus what next for the future of Ant and Dec after Ant's arrest on suspicion of drink driving?

  • S2018E54 22/03/2018

    • March 22, 2018
    • BBC Two

    The sisters of a man who died after being restrained by the police tell Victoria they want shocking CCTV footage of how he was treated to be made public A new study says two genes could be responsible for extreme morning sickness And why some blueberry muffins contain more than the recommended daily intake of sugar for adults.

  • S2018E55 23/03/2018

    • March 23, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Double Oscar-winning actor Cate Blanchett talks to Chloe Tilley about her trip to Bangladesh to meet Rohingya refugees. Chloe hears from the family of Anna Campbell - the young British woman who was killed fighting alongside Kurdish forces in Syria. And an investigation into online GP services.

  • S2018E56 26/03/2018

    • March 26, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria speaks to the parents who took the Scouts to court, and won, because their autistic son's Cubs group was discriminating against him. She also talks to some of the bereaved parents losing up to £100,000 because of changes to bereavement benefits. Plus John Mann says Jeremy Corbyn won't be PM if he can't sort out antisemitism issues in Labour.

  • S2018E57 27/03/2018

    • March 27, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Tina Daheley speaks to the mother of missing RAF airman Corrie McKeague in her first interview since learning that the police investigation into his disappearance is to be stood down. An exclusive report reveals that more than half of the police forces in England and Wales are now routinely downloading the contents of people's mobiles during investigations. Plus we speak to the bride who was upstaged by a ring-bearing owl at her wedding in Cheshire.

  • S2018E58 28/03/2018

    • March 28, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Charities tell Tina Daheley that discrimination against elderly LGBT people by their carers is 'alive and kicking'. The government announces plans for a deposit scheme for bottles and cans. Plus Tina finds out why Twitter is asking 'Who bit Beyonce?'.

  • S2018E59 29/03/2018

    • March 29, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Tina Daheley presents the BBC's daily news and current affairs programme with original stories, exclusive interviews, audience debate and breaking news.

  • S2018E60 03/04/2018

    • April 3, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria exclusively speaks to the mothers who regret having children. The head of the National Union of Students tells Victoria that some universities are more concerned about their reputations than properly confronting racist abuse on campus. And Victoria speaks to a youth worker and former gang member about the spike in violent crime in London after a 17-year-old girl is shot dead.

  • S2018E61 04/04/2018

    • April 4, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria examines the unspoken problem with alcohol among Punjabis in the UK. A former gang member explains what he thinks is behind the rise of violent deaths in London. A man asks for a hotel chain to rescind his ban, 17 years after seagulls totally trashed his room.

  • S2018E62 05/04/2018

    • April 5, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria asks outreach group GANG how to tackle growing street violence in London. What is the sugar tax, and will it work? Plus the police male voice choir forced to change its name because it went against equal opportunities policies.

  • S2018E63 06/04/2018

    • April 6, 2018
    • BBC Two

    As the spate of violent crime in London continues, Matthew Price asks what's causing it and how to tackle it. Will a new rogues database bring an end to problem landlords? Plus would you spend £7 million to spend twelve days in space?

  • S2018E64 09/04/2018

    • April 9, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria is in Tottenham to ask residents, youth workers, leaders and the relatives of victims about what should be done about gangs and street violence.

  • S2018E65 10/04/2018

    • April 10, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria looks at the anti-abortion protests 'buffer zone' vote, Trump's reaction to the suspected chemical attack in Syria and speaks to Richard Bacon about his ADHD diagnosis.

  • S2018E66 11/04/2018

    • April 11, 2018
    • BBC Two

    The grandfather of Ellie Butler, the eight-year-old murdered by her dad, tells Victoria the authorities are passing the buck over her death. London Mayor Sadiq Khan on what he's doing about knife and gun crime in London. Plus a gay couple refused entry to a bar by a bouncer who said they only let in straight couples.

  • S2018E67 12/04/2018

    • April 12, 2018
    • BBC Two

    The prime minister has summoned her cabinet to discuss military action on Syria. A family of five has forced been to live in hotels for three years after being wrongly refused a place on the housing list. Mariah Carey reveals she has bipolar disorder.

  • S2018E68 13/04/2018

    • April 13, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Chloe Tilley finds out why scientists think drinking even a moderate amount of booze could knock years off your life. Plus a man who believes his wife would still be alive if the probation service had acted on warnings and sent a convicted murderer back to prison. And as the biggest day of the racing calendar approaches, has enough been done at the Grand National to keep the horses safe?

  • S2018E69 16/04/2018

    • April 16, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria explores the hidden problem of modern slavery and hears from Sara, who worked up to 20 hours a day as a college cleaner while no-one in the school realised she was a slave. Victoria also talks to a 44-year-old woman who is in a polyamorous relationship with four men - her husband, her fiance and two boyfriends. Plus a discussion of the recent airstrikes on Syria.

  • S2018E70 17/04/2018

    • April 17, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria gets an exclusive insight into life inside a British brothel and speaks to the women who say they choose to work there. She also speaks to a millennial as a new report says one in three young people face living in private rented accommodation all their lives. Plus with the Law Society warning of a decline in the number of defence lawyers, Victoria speaks to a man who couldn't access a duty solicitor when he was arrested - and later cleared.

  • S2018E71 18/04/2018

    • April 18, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire asks why thousands of kids in care are being split up from their brothers and sisters. The Windrush generation: Victoria meets a man who came to the UK as a baby in the '60s and has been fighting to prove his legal status. Plus more on the passenger who died after nearly being sucked out of a plane window mid flight.

  • S2018E72 19/04/2018

    • April 19, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire follows the Commonwealth summit, as it opens with speeches from the Queen and the prime minister. Plus a look at LGBT campaigners' call for a focus on anti-gay laws across the Commonwealth, the Windrush investigation, and Victoria welcomes medal-winning netballers on the sofa.

  • S2018E73 20/04/2018

    • April 20, 2018
    • BBC Two

    The BBC's daily news and current affairs programme. Tina Daheley speaks to Rotherham abuse whistleblower Sammy Woodhouse. The programme also gets the reactions to Arsene Wenger's decision to leave Arsenal. Plus a look at US gun violence protests.

  • S2018E74 23/04/2018

    • April 23, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria presents from inside a domestic violence refuge for women who have fled their abusive partners. It's the first time a programme has been allowed to broadcast live in such a centre. She hears from some of the women who're living there and from staff, police and politicians on how the issue is being tackled.

  • S2018E75 24/04/2018

    • April 24, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria looks at exclusive figures from the RSPCA that show how horses are being dumped, fly-tipped and left to die by irresponsible owners. She also has an exclusive report into claims that parents are being investigated for possible child abuse because of the misinterpretation of guidelines on bruising in babies. As the Windrush row continues, Victoria hears from three people with Canadian heritage who have also experienced difficulties proving their right to live in the UK.

  • S2018E76 25/04/2018

    • April 25, 2018
    • BBC Two

    An exclusive interview with Hollywood actor Rose McGowan - the first woman to go public with rape allegations against the film producer Harvey Weinstein. The parents of the critically ill toddler, Alfie Evans, are to challenge a High Court ruling, preventing them from taking him to Italy for further treatment. And Victoria hears how to get that elusive proper night's sleep.

  • S2018E77 26/04/2018

    • April 26, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria talks to a mother who wants to raise awareness of children sexually abusing other children after her son was raped by another boy from his primary school. Viewers may find the details of the story - which appears throughout the programme - shocking and upsetting. As the parents of terminally ill toddler Alfie Evans ask doctors to allow their son to come home, Victoria speaks to a mother who took the agonising decision to switch her 12-year-old daughter's life support off. Plus could earlier intervention in children's mental health boost the economy? Victoria speaks to a charity delivering counselling in primary schools, as well as some of the children who have benefited from the sessions.

  • S2018E78 27/04/2018

    • April 27, 2018
    • BBC Two

    With Chloe Tilley. Will new plans to regulate online porn laws protect children? The leaders of North and South Korea make a pledge for peace at a historic summit. And why the Bill Cosby case has shown how difficult it can be for women to come forward.

  • S2018E79 30/04/2018

    • April 30, 2018
    • BBC Two

    As work begins on a public inquiry into contaminated blood, Victoria speaks to some of those most affected, in what has been called the worst treatment disaster in the history of the NHS. Plus reaction to Amber Rudd's resignation as home secretary and what it means for the Windrush crisis. And the mother of a four-year-old boy with dementia speaks out to try and improve research into how the condition affects children.

  • S2018E80 01/05/2018

    • May 1, 2018
    • BBC Two

    An investigation by the Victoria Derbyshire programme and BBC Radio Four finds evidence that British far right activist Jim Dowson is behind a militant Christian organisation which is stirring tensions in Eastern Europe. Victoria speaks to Jim Dowson live in the studio. Plus a look at redesigning immigration policy. And Victoria talks live to the 25-year-old woman with Asperger's who was 'forcibly removed' from the BFI cinema in London for 'laughing too much'.

  • S2018E81 02/05/2018

    • May 2, 2018
    • BBC Two

    In an exclusive interview Victoria Derbyshire speaks to Charlie Gard's parents who tell her they were trolled online over his death on the day he died and about their foundation to help parents going through a similar experience. Plus how doctors are paying for their sons to have a cancer jab that girls get for free on NHS. And what will Brexiteers do if the PM doesn't drop plans for a 'customs partnership'?

  • S2018E82 03/05/2018

    • May 3, 2018
    • BBC Two

    With thousands of women in England waiting to hear if they've been affected by an NHS computer failure over breast cancer screening, Victoria speaks to one survivor about her journey which she says could have been avoided. The former head of the Army highlights his support for dozens of Afghan interpreters facing deportation from the UK. And Victoria meets the NHS nurse using funds from private work to help the Yazidi community in Iraq.

  • S2018E83 08/05/2018

    • May 8, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Exclusive: adults are now the fastest growing group of people diagnosed with ADHD - a condition usually associated with children. Victoria speaks to some of those affected. After a spate of shootings over the bank holiday, we bring together three mums, all of whom lost their sons to violent crime. And bridging the generational divide - how to help fix the wealth gap between the generations.

  • S2018E84 09/05/2018

    • May 9, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Includes a special report on Gibraltar, where the penalty for abortion is life imprisonment. Why innocent people are on the Metropolitan Police's gang database. Should young people's mental health services be extended until the age of 25? And the family and friends of an Italian couple who died in the Grenfell Tower fire turn their love story into a children's fairytale.

  • S2018E85 10/05/2018

    • May 10, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria speaks to adoptive parents who say they're desperate for more help for the children whose attachment issues mean they can't cope with everyday life. Victoria speaks to Judy Murray about her coaching career and being mum to two grand slam winners. And after the news that Barbara Windsor has Alzheimer's, Victoria finds out what to do if you're worried about a loved one.

  • S2018E86 11/05/2018

    • May 11, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Chloe Tilley meets the 30-year-old accountant with MS who faces living in a care home because her council can no longer find carers to help her live on her own. Tory MP Kevin Hollinrake promises to help people who have been badly affected by changes in bereavement support. Plus, will a ban on junk food adverts on public transport help tackle child obesity?

  • S2018E87 14/05/2018

    • May 14, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Many UK police forces are reporting victims of crime to the Home Office for immigration enforcement, the programme hears how one rape victim was then arrested herself. Chloe Tilley speaks to the heterosexual couple who want to have a civil partnership and are taking their case to the Supreme Court. Plus all the gossip on stage and off from the BAFTA TV awards.

  • S2018E88 15/05/2018

    • May 15, 2018
    • BBC Two

    O2 apologises after racist hate mail was sent out - a British Muslim family received letters addressed to 'Mr Isis Terroriste' and 'Mr Getout Ofengland' - we bring you the exclusive story. Victoria speaks to teenagers, parents and experts on how to cope with exam stress. Will Meghan Markle's dad walk her down the aisle on Saturday.

  • S2018E89 16/05/2018

    • May 16, 2018
    • BBC Two

    What kind of princess will Meghan be, and what do people expect from her? A scathing report on the collapse of the construction and services giant Carillion accuses the board of 'stuffing their mouths with gold' instead of looking after their workers. And the Matt Dillon and Uma Thurman film about a serial killer that prompted a mass walkout at Cannes.

  • S2018E90 17/05/2018

    • May 17, 2018
    • BBC Two

    The maximum stake on fixed odds betting terminals is to be cut from £100 to £2 under government plans. Victoria hears from one man who lost £1,000,000 and his home because of his gambling addiction. The programme also looks at the compassionate technology sector, which is using digital services to try to improve health and wellbeing. Plus all the latest from Windsor as rehearsals for the royal wedding get under way.

  • S2018E91 18/05/2018

    • May 18, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Royal wedding countdown. With one day to go, it is reported that Prince Charles will walk Meghan Markle down the aisle. We discuss whether working from home makes staff happier and more effective. And the first interview with Charlotte Hogg, former Bank of England deputy, after she was forced to resign for breaking bank rules.

  • S2018E92 21/05/2018

    • May 21, 2018
    • BBC Two

    With Chloe Tilley. We hear from two women whose sons were killed in very different circumstances. Now they have created an unlikely friendship A mother who wants GPs to be able to prescribe cannabis oil in the UK to help her epileptic son. And the public inquiry into the Grenfell Tower fire which killed 72 people opens.

  • S2018E93 22/05/2018

    • May 22, 2018
    • BBC Two

    The Manchester Arena attack, one year on. Survivors share their reflections. Should older drivers have stricter eye tests? We hear from the parents whose daughter was killed by an unfit driver. How being overly vigilant about bugs and germs with kids could trigger childhood leukaemia.

  • S2018E94 23/05/2018

    • May 23, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Matthew Price presents the daily news and current affairs programme, including discussion of a theory put forward by scientists that toddlers can help old people living with dementia. Plus, water shortages - should there be a target for how much we all use? As Marks and Spencer suffers a profit slump, what did you last buy in the store? And an exclusive interview with the former partner of singer R Kelly.

  • S2018E95 24/05/2018

    • May 24, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Chloe Tilley finds out why more and more young men are becoming victims of sextortion, and speaks to the mum taking a Cornish theme park to court for not providing adequate toilets for her severely disabled son. Plus, the Ed Sheeran fans left out of pocket by measures the singer has taken to combat ticket resale sites.

  • S2018E96 25/05/2018

    • May 25, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Director and actor Daisy Lewis gives her reaction to Harvey Weinstein surrendering to New York police over charges of sexual misconduct. Chloe hears from a man who lost six members of his family in the Grenfell fire. Plus all you need to know, and more, about the biggest shake-up to personal data rules since the birth of the internet.

  • S2018E97 29/05/2018

    • May 29, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Are you worried about your child's weight? One in 25 primary school leavers are obese. Locked in her body - the woman who had to teach herself to breathe, move, eat and speak again. Festival ecstasy deaths - should young people be taught more about drugs?

  • S2018E98 30/05/2018

    • May 30, 2018
    • BBC Two

    A rare and fresh insight into the everyday lives of people in North Korea. A showbiz reporter tells Victoria why the ABC TV network should not have been surprised at Roseanne Barr's racist tweet. Plus, why the local authorities' response to the Grenfell fire was slow and lacked direction.

  • S2018E99 31/05/2018

    • May 31, 2018
    • BBC Two
  • S2018E100 01/06/2018

    • June 1, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Chloe Tilley hears a warning that vulnerable children are at a risk because they are being shunted around the care system. Some rail services are in chaos. There is a shortage of ethnic minority blood and organ donors. A ban on bearded boxers has been lifted.

  • S2018E101 04/06/2018

    • June 4, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria speaks to Andy Tsege in his first television interview after spending four years on death row in Ethiopia, and there is coverage as the Grenfell Tower enquiry looks at the cause and spread of the fire. Plus, fisherman Scott Birtwistle is out of prison and determined to clear his name after being convicted of trying to smuggle £53m of cocaine into the UK as a teenager. And ahead of the return of Love Island, Victoria speaks to two of last year's contestants.

  • S2018E102 05/06/2018

    • June 5, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria speaks to an abortion survivor reunited with the mother who thought she was dead for over 30 years. Plus, doctors warn a lack of proper training is contributing to unnecessary baby deaths. And with an NHS physiotherapist having been deported to India due to tax discrepancies - under a controversial clause usually used for terrorism - Victoria hears how widespread this issue is.

  • S2018E103 06/06/2018

    • June 6, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria meets two women who wrote to say that seeing her on ITV's The Real Full Monty saved their lives. Plus, what to look for when checking your breasts and a look at a report which suggest more women and girls are getting involved in gangs. And the programme is live in Guatemala with the latest on the volcano eruption.

  • S2018E104 07/06/2018

    • June 7, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Chloe Tilley speaks to two of the women who downed tools for the famous Ford sewing machinist strikes in Liverpool and Dagenham, 50 years on. The programme hears from three people who are struggling to get by, as new research suggests that 1.5 million people in the UK were destitute last year. And the show finds out why a dead snake can still be a potentially deadly threat.

  • S2018E105 08/06/2018

    • June 8, 2018
    • BBC Two

    One in 12 children is thought to hear voices which are not there. The programme hears from young people who say the voices make them feel lonely and afraid. A new report claims that ageism is widespread. Chloe Tilley asks why people are ashamed of getting old. Plus comedian Michael McIntyre is back on stage after being mugged in London.

  • S2018E106 11/06/2018

    • June 11, 2018
    • BBC Two

    The deaf patients 'left behind' by the NHS because of a lack of face-to-face interpreters. Up to half of premature births 'could be prevented' if women were tested for harmful bacteria. Professor Winston explains the new research. PLus the programme hears from the woman challenging a piece of legislation that says you can't claim compensation for sexual abuse if you've lived in the same house as your abuser.

  • S2018E107 12/06/2018

    • June 12, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Chloe Tilley gets all the latest reaction to the historic meeting between Donald Trump and Kim Jong-un. How is all this being received by North Korea's closest neighbour, South Korea? Plus there's more trouble for Theresa May over Brexit, as her justice minister resigns.

  • S2018E108 13/06/2018

    • June 13, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire is at Grenfell Tower, approaching the first anniversary of the fire. She talks to those grieving, to survivors, to the fire service, to Conservatives and Labour, and establishes which promises have been kept and which have been broken.

  • S2018E109 14/06/2018

    • June 14, 2018
    • BBC Two

    An exclusive interview with the Bishop of Kensington marking one year since the Grenfell fire Immigration rules are to be relaxed for doctors and nurses And a victim of revenge porn tells us she is still dealing with anxiety and depression.

  • S2018E110 15/06/2018

    • June 15, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Chloe Tilley speaks to a prison officer who says life on the inside gave him PTSD. The two British driving instructors who are going to train Saudi women to drive. Plus the upskirting victim campaigning to change the law.

  • S2018E111 18/06/2018

    • June 18, 2018
    • BBC Two

    As gaming addiction is classified as a mental health condition, the programme reveals what happens to the brains of 13-year-old triplets when they play the video game Fortnite. Plus, Victoria is told exclusively that children are being held in what amounts to solitary confinement in prisons, something the government denies happens. And a look at more calls for cannabis to be legalised for medical purposes.

  • S2018E112 19/06/2018

    • June 19, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria talks to to Hannah Deacon, whose son Alfie has been treated with cannabis oil, and listens to Sadiq Khan speaking at a ceremony to mark the anniversary of the Finsbury Park mosque attack. Plus, the programme hears from England fans at the World Cup.

  • S2018E113 20/06/2018

    • June 20, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire presents an in-depth look at cannabis laws and brings together patients, recreational users of cannabis, politicians, experts and viewers. There is a look at the backlash against Donald Trump as he continues to defends separating immigrant families, and Victoria speaks to the photographer responsible for the image of a little Honduran girl crying at the border.

  • S2018E114 21/06/2018

    • June 21, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Whistleblowers tell Victoria Derbyshire exclusively that aid workers at charity Medecins Sans Frontieres used local prostitutes while working in Africa. One former employee says she was told by a senior colleague that it was possible to exchange medication for sex. Also on the programme, families of the some of the hundreds of patients who died at Gosport War Memorial Hospital call for those who oversaw the prescribing of powerful painkillers to face criminal charges. And the head of Ofsted supports banning mobiles in school - we discuss.

  • S2018E115 22/06/2018

    • June 22, 2018
    • BBC Two

    A teenager who suffered a brain injury at birth tells Chloe Tilley she is angry that it was not avoided. Concerns over so-called 'fast fashion' and its impact on the environment. And race relations in the UK on the 70th anniversary of Windrush.

  • S2018E116 25/06/2018

    • June 25, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria learns how the police supplied intelligence to a secret blacklist of construction workers - and that they know which workers were targeted but haven't told them. Victoria discusses whether Trump's visit be cancelled over his immigration policy. Plus, as the first ever detailed statistics on student suicides come out, how can universities help those with mental health issues? And the UK official singles chart enters a new era as video streaming figures are added, Victoria speaks to singer-songwriter Tom Walker.

  • S2018E117 26/06/2018

    • June 26, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Heavy periods, menopausal symptoms, infertility and avoiding unwanted pregnancy - Victoria hears how reproductive health can interfere with daily life. As Prince William becomes the first British royal to visit Israel and the Palestinian territories, Victoria looks at the significance of his Middle East tour. Plus the latest on the heatwave that's due to last until the weekend.

  • S2018E118 27/06/2018

    • June 27, 2018
    • BBC Two

    A look into the discovery that there has been a dramatic rise in prosecution for breaching the 'new Asbos', issued for crying, feeding birds and looking into neighbours' windows. The programme is live from Saddleworth Moor, as the fire is declaired a major incidend. And a chat with the heterosexual couple who have just won the right to a civil partnership.

  • S2018E119 28/06/2018

    • June 28, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria speaks to the sister of Milly Dowler, who would have turned 30 this week. She tells us that, after years of trauma and grief, her family 'have a chance to be happy'. Plus a look at the online game Doki Doki Literature Club ahead of the inquest into the death of a 15-year-old boy whose father said he was 'dragged into' the online game. After a warning from GMP about the risks to children, we talk to parents, gamers and the Samaritans. And a warning that some hotels' rankings may be influenced by the size of the commission they pay to hotel booking sites.

  • S2018E120 29/06/2018

    • June 29, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Tina Daheley hears from current and former members of the Mormon church calling for an end to interviews that ask children sexual questions. The programme also gets reactions from MEPs and charities as EU leaders reach an agreement on migration after fractious talks at a summit in Brussels. Plus Arthritis Research UK warns that those living with the condition are missing out on vital aids and assistance from their local councils.

  • S2018E121 02/07/2018

    • July 2, 2018
    • BBC Two

    More than 300 transgender children a year are delaying puberty by taking puberty-blocking injections. Victoria speaks to two transgender children the programme has been following for over three years, now living as girls, and talks live to a group of young transgender people aged between 12 and 17 about their experiences. Tougher penalties for pet theft are being debated by MPs after 100,000 signed a petition calling for it to be a specific crime. They say pet theft is currently treated no differently to having your bike stolen. Plus Cheryl and Liam Payne announce split.

  • S2018E122 03/07/2018

    • July 3, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria presents the latest on the attempts to rescue 12 Thai boys and their football coach who have been found alive in a flooded cave, speaking to colleagues of two British divers who found them. The dangers of slimming pills - the programme speaks to the mother of Eloise Parry who died aged 21 after buying them online. As gay conversion therapies are set to be banned, the programme speaks to two women who've undergone it and to a man who defends it and considers himself 'ex-gay'. Plus Lianne Sanderson rates England's chances ahead of tonight's match against Colombia.

  • S2018E123 04/07/2018

    • July 4, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria gets reaction from former players and fans to England's thrilling win over Colombia. After former football coach George Ormond was found guilty of abusing boys as young as eleven over a period of 25 years, one of his former victims can finally tell his story. And calls to ban prostitution websites - Victoria speaks to police and those working in the sex industry.

  • S2018E124 05/07/2018

    • July 5, 2018
    • BBC Two

    As the NHS turns 70, the programme hears from former patients who say they were saved by the health service. Victoria meets the woman who challenged the online retailer Asos to make fashion more accessible for wheelchair users, then modelled her own waterproof design on their website. And should reality programme makers have greater responsibility for the welfare of people who appear on screen? Victoria gets the views of former contestants of the hit show Love Island.

  • S2018E125 06/07/2018

    • July 6, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Many people have imagined designing their perfect home, but would they trust a printer to build their house? In an exclusive report, the programme travels to France to meet the first family to move into their own 3D-printed home. Chloe Tilley speaks to Charlotte Caldwell, who's demanding that health officials let her 12-year-old son Billy, who has a rare form of epilepsy, be treated at home with medicinal cannabis. And as England's footballers prepare to take on Sweden for a place in the quarter finals, Chloe hears from the man having to choose between his wedding and the World Cup.

  • S2018E126 09/07/2018

    • July 9, 2018
    • BBC Two

    New week, new Brexit secretary - as Theresa May faces a fresh crisis days after her ministers were supposed to have reached an agreement on leaving the EU, Victoria asks where the resignation of David Davis leaves the PM's Brexit vision. The mission to rescue the remaining boys trapped in a cave in Thailand continues, an expedition medic and a former cave diver explain how dangerous the operation is. And ahead of England's World Cup semi-final on Wednesday, Victoria hears from a former teacher of the man of the moment, manager Gareth Southgate.

  • S2018E127 10/07/2018

    • July 10, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Just over a year after an investigation by this programme revealed 800 women were suing the health service and manufacturers over mesh implants, there is going to be an immediate stop on such procedures in the NHS in England. After a day of political drama in Westminster, Victoria talks to an audience of voters from both sides of the Brexit debate to ask what they want to see happen next. And it's an all European affair in the first semi-final of the World Cup. Football journalists from France and Belgium discuss their team's chances in the high-stakes match.

  • S2018E128 11/07/2018

    • July 11, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria dons her waistcoat, brings out the band and chats all things football with pundits, celebrities and fans in Moscow & around the world as England prepare to play Croatia for a place in the World Cup final 'Just poking fun' or 'the biggest insult to a visiting US president ever'? Trump baby - a 20ft orange blimp - is dividing opinion. And former TOWIE star Danielle Armstrong speaks to us about the loss of her best friend of 20 years to breast cancer.

  • S2018E129 12/07/2018

    • July 12, 2018
    • BBC Two

    'This is the first time I have seen someone carrying an England flag ... and I've not wanted to walk in a different direction.' Victoria discusses with fans and pundits whether England's glorious World Cup campaign has changed the perception of English football 'He prefers dictators' - Alastair Campbell is among the guests as we discuss President Trump's imminent visit to the UK And as the Brexit White Paper is published in the Commons - we hear from MPs on whether they support it.

  • S2018E130 13/07/2018

    • July 13, 2018
    • BBC Two

    On day two of Donald Trump's UK visit, Chloe Tilley discusses his explosive comments about Theresa May and Brexit with politicians, pundits, supporters and protesters and finds out how this trip is going down in the US. She also hears from a former model who says Trump harassed her when she was younger. Plus the programme speaks to guests including John Barnes about whether the World Cup has changed people's perception of the England flag and what it means to be British.

  • S2018E131 16/07/2018

    • July 16, 2018
    • BBC Two

    'I had to make my kidnapper fall in love with me.' Victoria speaks to model and mum-of-one Chloe Ayling, who was kidnapped in Italy and held for six days as her captor tried to sell her as a sex slave on the dark web. Former education secretary Justine Greening tells Victoria why Britain needs a second referendum on Brexit. And in an exclusive interview the family of three-year-old Stuart Nelson, who was killed on a farm when his father accidentally ran him over with his fork lift truck, calls for more awareness about safety on farms.

  • S2018E132 17/07/2018

    • July 17, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria reports on millions facing a hosepipe ban in north-west England, and on the rape support services crisis as thousands are left on waiting lists. Plus a look at 'lessons in knife crime' being taught to secondary school pupils in an effort to stop them carrying knifes during the summer holidays. And Victoria hears from three victims, as proposals on dealing with sexual harassment in politics are published.

  • S2018E133 18/07/2018

    • July 18, 2018
    • BBC Two

    As Sir Cliff Richard wins his privacy case against the BBC, Joanna Gosling discusses the impact of the case for the media and celebrities. She also talks to the wife of a man stabbed to death just yards from his home by a stranger suffering from psychosis. And how family friendly is Westminster? Two backbench MPs discuss after the government is accused of breaking Westminster conventions for colleagues on maternity leave.

  • S2018E134 19/07/2018

    • July 19, 2018
    • BBC Two

    The 'shame' of period poverty - one in ten girls are unable to afford sanitary products, and thousands miss school because of it. Alesha Dixon speaks talks about her campaign. School exclusions are rising but excluded pupils are twice as likely to have unqualified teachers - the programme hears from teachers, pupils and campaigners. After Sir Cliff Richard wins his court case against the BBC, should there be a right to anonymity for those accused of sexual assault?

  • S2018E135 20/07/2018

    • July 20, 2018
    • BBC Two

    After an expert panel informed the government that some medicines derived from cannabis should be available on prescription, the programme hears from parents and campaigners and explores what the next steps are. Reports of stalking offences have trebled in England and Wales over four years, but convictions are down. The programme hears from people who have lived with being stalked and ask what more the police could do. Is it fair that women whose partners have children from a previous relationship are denied IVF? That's the policy across most areas in England and Wales. And what was your first Now album - the programme pays tribute to the compilation album as it releases its 100th edition.

  • S2018E136 23/07/2018

    • July 23, 2018
    • BBC Two

    One of the UK's biggest estate agents has told this programme that one in five houses are being down valued. It's making the struggle for first time buyers to own a home, even harder. Chloe Tilley hears from the 'working homeless' as new figures report that more than 33,000 families are holding down a job despite having nowhere stable to live. And a look at the latest in the anti-Semitism row engulfing Labour as Jewish Labour MPs want the party to adopt a tougher definition of anti-Semitism.

  • S2018E137 24/07/2018

    • July 24, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Chloe Tilley gets the latest on the devastating wildfires near Athens which have killed dozens of people. Why are more children are being prescribed antidepressants than three years ago? Chloe hears from one teenager who's been on them for two years and a GP. As the latest train overcrowding statistics are revealed - commuters tell the programme about their experiences and Chloe ask rail companies and campaigners what can be done. And are the futures of London and Manchester's Chinatowns under threat? Chinese businesses describe how unfair and heavy handed immigration raids are putting them at risk.

  • S2018E138 25/07/2018

    • July 25, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Chloe Tilley gets the latest news from Greece, as fears the number killed may rise above 100 in the wildfires. She also examines claims of a 'wild west' of schools excluding pupils to protect their place in league tables. Hundreds of thousands of people had their homes burgled last year - but this programme has found that an increasing number aren't getting any justice. And why the UK's first official red light district is said to be 'failing'.

  • S2018E139 26/07/2018

    • July 26, 2018
    • BBC Two

    As the UK braces itself for record-breaking temperatures, MPs warn that thousands more people will die due to higher temperatures, unless the government acts. The show discusses the impact of the heatwave on health and safety. Do you regret going to university? New research suggests that almost half of those who graduated in the last five years wish they hadn't bothered. Chloe Tilley speaks to a graduate and a university vice chancellor. Plus reality TV star Megan McKenna talks for the first time about how online trolls have impacted her life.

  • S2018E140 27/07/2018

    • July 27, 2018
    • BBC Two

    'No amount of apologies will bring her back' - the husband of a pregnant woman who died of sepsis speaks out to raise awareness of the disease which is the biggest cause of maternal death. Plus parents' delight that medicinal cannabis will become available on prescription, and why the extreme heat is causing misery for holidaymakers.

  • S2018E141 30/07/2018

    • July 30, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Young people hoping to break into the modelling industry tell the programme how they are being charged hundreds, sometimes thousands, of pounds by companies giving false promises of work with top brands. After Geraint Thomas's success at the Tour de France, Chloe Tilley speaks to some of his friends and fans back in Wales. And as Love Island comes to an end, three former contestants talk about the show.

  • S2018E142 31/07/2018

    • July 31, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Women in England are resorting to buying abortion pills online because they can't get to clinics. In an exclusive report, the programme hears from those who have taken the pills at clinics and started their abortion on the way home. Chloe Tilley speaks to a woman who went blind from a degenerative condition as a child and was inspired to write a fiction book based on her experience. And two headteachers tell the programme what should be done to narrow the gap in children's reading and writing skills when they start primary school.

  • S2018E143 01/08/2018

    • August 1, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Chloe Tilley takes a look at rogue modelling agencies that are under criminal investigation. And Northamptonshire council may cut services for vulnerable children because of a funding crisis - the programme hears from the council leader. Plus thousands of children in Britain do not have a bed of their own.

  • S2018E144 02/08/2018

    • August 2, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Chloe Tilley and guests discuss why people are addicted to their smartphones. There have been calls for better protection of victims of offenders whose mental illness contributed to their crime. Plus a new study claims that there is a link between abstaining from alcohol and dementia.

  • S2018E145 03/08/2018

    • August 3, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Reeta Chakrabarti looks at the effects of air pollution on the heart, the incredible temperatures in southern Europe, and the baby girl who has had a tooth removed at just 12 days old.

  • S2018E146 06/08/2018

    • August 6, 2018
    • BBC Two
  • S2018E147 07/08/2018

    • August 7, 2018
    • BBC Two
  • S2018E148 08/08/2018

    • August 8, 2018
    • BBC Two

    What price would you put on your fertility? Egg freezing is becoming more and more popular, but it's a costly procedure and there are no guarantees it will lead to a baby. Joanna Gosling speaks to women who have frozen their eggs, as well as doctors and the regulator for fertility treatment. The programme hears about the ruling by the Advertising Standards Authority, which has ordered KFC and Kellogg's to remove adverts promoting junk food to children. And as a charity tries to map the locations of defibrillators in England and Scotland, a paramedic explains how the machines can be used to treat people who have cardiac arrests.

  • S2018E149 09/08/2018

    • August 9, 2018
    • BBC Two

    A new law introduced in Denmark has banned the wearing of face veils in public. Joanna Gosling hears from a woman who says she's been fined for wearing a niqab there, as well as Muslim women in the UK about whether they choose to wear a veil. As the NHS publishes figures on treatment times for young people living with eating disorders, we hear from those affected. And the footballer Jermaine Pennant is in the studio to talk about his new book documenting his tough childhood and party lifestyle off the pitch.

  • S2018E150 10/08/2018

    • August 10, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Do you feel twitchy if you don't check your phone every few minutes? Matthew Price looks at some of the latest apps looking to curb overuse of our screens. As Mike Ashley's Sports Direct agrees to buy House of Fraser, the programme examines what the future looks like for the department store. And on the first day of the Premier League, Matthew hears from football fans about whether the increase in weekday games will make it harder for them to travel to support their clubs.

  • S2018E151 13/08/2018

    • August 13, 2018
    • BBC Two

  • S2018E152 14/08/2018

    • August 14, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria has live coverage of the incident outside the Houses of Parliament in Westminster, where a car swerved into cyclists and pedestrians, hurting three people. A man has been arrested on suspicion of terrorism offences.

  • S2018E153 15/08/2018

    • August 15, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria has the latest news on the bridge collapse in Genoa. Calls have been made for the class B drug 'monkey dust' to be reclassified as class A after a dangerous rise in its use. Plus an interview with a Jewish couple about why they are leaving the UK.

  • S2018E154 16/08/2018

    • August 16, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria meets a three-year-old girl with an IQ of 171 who is the second-youngest member of the high IQ society Mensa, plus the programme hears from students as they collect their A-level results. And as Madonna celebrates her 60th birthday, Victoria talks to a casting director who has worked with her about what makes her the best-selling female recording artist of all time.

  • S2018E155 17/08/2018

    • August 17, 2018
    • BBC Two

    As tributes are paid to the incredible life of the soul singer Aretha Franklin, Joanna Gosling speaks to the man who wrote her first biography and singer Rowetta from the band Happy Mondays. The government announces £10 million to improve security and conditions in England's worst prisons - we have exclusive access to a jail where prisoners get a say in how its run. And rules around e-cigarettes should be relaxed, according to a group of MPs. The programme discusses whether vaping should be more widely accepted in society.

  • S2018E156 20/08/2018

    • August 20, 2018
    • BBC Two
  • S2018E157 21/08/2018

    • August 21, 2018
    • BBC Two
  • S2018E158 22/08/2018

    • August 22, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria looks at an exclusive report from a tiny French port becoming known as the 'new Calais', where hundreds of migrants are desperately trying to get to England. She also speaks to a wheelchair user who is sleeping in his car because of what he says is a lack of suitable accommodation for people on benefits. And Victoria meets Downton Abbey actor Peter Egan, who has been campaigning for a new law to stop puppies being bred in cruel conditions.

  • S2018E159 23/08/2018

    • August 23, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Matt Barbet presents as the government prepares to reveal its no-deal Brexit advice. Plus teenagers receive their results for the new tougher GCSEs, and The Big Bang Theory prepares to end after 12 seasons.

  • S2018E160 24/08/2018

    • August 24, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling talks to people in Ireland as they prepare to welcome the Pope. Plus more on the unexplained death of a British couple on holiday in Egypt. And a new study says being teetotal is the only way to avoid any risk to your health from alcohol.

  • S2018E161 28/08/2018

    • August 28, 2018
    • BBC Two

    The programme reports from inside a refugee camp in Greece, which aid workers tell the programme is the 'worst refugee camp on earth', and where children are 'attempting suicide'. Nearly one in two maternity units in England had to turn away mums-to-be in 2017. Plus tackling violent crime. A report says 75% of Londoners support an increase in 'stop and search', but will it make a difference?

  • S2018E162 29/08/2018

    • August 29, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Exclusive: 'Your heart breaks every second' - in her first British interview, the US mother of 9-year-old Jamel Myles who took his own life, after she says he was bullied for being gay, speaks to Victoria about her pain and how she wants him to be remembered. The contraceptive app designed to stop you getting pregnant hasn't worked for some women. Today the advertising watchdog says the Natural Cycles app can no longer claim to be 'highly effective' after too many women conceived by mistake. And 'scallop wars' - as French and British boats clash in the Channel, we hear from both sides.

  • S2018E163 30/08/2018

    • August 30, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Just months after the government ban on vaginal mesh came into force, we have exclusive access as one woman undergoes her operation to have the mesh removed. Victoria Derbyshire speaks to an unmarried mother who is waiting to hear if she is entitled to a widowed parent's allowance in a landmark Supreme Court ruling. Plus-size model Tess Holliday talks about featuring as the cover model of Cosmopolitan and how she hopes it will make a difference for thousands of people like her.

  • S2018E164 31/08/2018

    • August 31, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling talks to the mother of nine-year-old Ella whose fatal asthma attack has been linked to high levels of air pollution. Plus, MP Stella Creasy says we should learn from Wonga and cap all forms of high-cost credit, and Joanna speaks to the mother whose video went viral after she filmed herself doing a baby shark dance.

  • S2018E165 03/09/2018

    • September 3, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria speaks exclusively to reality TV star Lucy Mecklenburgh, who has said Celebrity Big Brother bosses should have stepped in much sooner to deal with her boyfriend Ryan Thomas' treatment on the show. Doctors tell us why they believe they are facing a mental health crisis like never before, with the problem at tipping point. And after thirteen years, Chris Evans is stepping down from his BBC Radio 2 breakfast show. We hear from the man who gave him his first job.

  • S2018E166 04/09/2018

    • September 4, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire presents the news and current affairs programme. It is crunch time for Labour in the row over anti-Semitism as their ruling body meets to decide on whether to adopt the internationally recognised definition of anti-Semitism. Plus, Victoria has the first British interview with a US couple whose 'kiss' on their official first date was her giving him the kiss of life after he had a heart attack on a Californian beach. They've since fallen madly in love - and we show you how to give CPR. And sanctions are lifted against ticketing website Viagogo, but there is still no limit on the mark-up they can charge fans for tickets - Ed Sheeran reveals he thinks there should be.

  • S2018E167 05/09/2018

    • September 5, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria talks to the mothers of two children who have advanced leukaemia about a revolutionary new drug which will soon be available on the NHS. It has been called the most exciting treatment advance for decades. She also speaks to the Labour MP trying to make misogyny - hatred of, or prejudice against, women - a hate crime. If successful, the move would allow courts to consider it as an aggravating factor when handing out sentences. And what is in the meat people buy from supermarkets or order in restaurants? The BBC reveals that more than a fifth of meat sample tests done last year found DNA from animals that were not listed on the label. Victoria finds out why.

  • S2018E168 06/09/2018

    • September 6, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria hears from migraine sufferers who say the fear of a migraine is almost as bad as the migraine itself. The energy regulator Ofgem tells Victoria that a new energy price cap will give a fairer deal for customers. Plus the latest on the controversy over mesh implants.

  • S2018E169 07/09/2018

    • September 7, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling hears from a BA customer who has been affected by a data breach of the firm's security systems. The programme travels to a refugee camp in Jordan where a football programme aims to help some of the children there. And does the dating app Tinder have a dark side?

  • S2018E170 10/09/2018

    • September 10, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Men talk openly to Victoria about how their fertility problems are being overlooked. A Grenfell survivor says he feels he has had 'to beg' to get support since the disaster. And an exclusive undercover report on the people who rent out rooms in return for sexual favours.

  • S2018E171 11/09/2018

    • September 11, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria looks at government failure to stop thousands of British and non-UK children being trafficked. Ministers are 'unaware of police cuts impact' according to a damning report from the National Audit Office. Miss Michigan tells Victoria why she used the Miss America beauty pageant to bring attention to the state's deadly Flint water crisis. And she speaks to one woman who lived by the rules of a different self-help book every month for a year.

  • S2018E172 12/09/2018

    • September 12, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Six police and crime commissioners tell the programme that cannabis possession 'should not always be a criminal offence'. Conservative MPs openly discuss how to topple Theresa May over Brexit. Plus there has been a call to ban smacking children due to the psychological damage it causes.

  • S2018E173 13/09/2018

    • September 13, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria hears from a male victim of domestic abuse. Why new mums sharing their birthing experiences online could traumatise pregnant women. And the latest on the path of Hurricane Florence.

  • S2018E174 14/09/2018

    • September 14, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling talks to grime star Ghetts about issues of colourism and female black identity. There's an exclusive report on shoplifting. Plus the latest on hurricane Florence as it bears down on the US East Coast.

  • S2018E175 17/09/2018

    • September 17, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria hears from models with visible facial and bodily differences who are taking to the catwalk for London fashion week. Plus, a look at a new treatment for melanoma - the most aggressive form of skin cancer. And, after an exclusive investigation by the show, there have been calls for a ban on early blood tests in pregnancy being used to tell parents if they are having a boy or a girl.

  • S2018E176 18/09/2018

    • September 18, 2018
    • BBC Two

    An Extreme Dwarfanators wrestler comes face to face with a mum whose son has dwarfism. Plus, Victoria talks to a forensic pathologist who suffered post-traumatic stress disorder as a result of his career. And the programme hears that the bomb squad is regularly being called out to deal with items found in rivers and canals by magnet fishers.

  • S2018E177 19/09/2018

    • September 19, 2018
    • BBC Two

    There is a special debate on Brexit, plus Victoria discusses new measures to tackle violent crime in London based on a successful scheme in Glasgow.

  • S2018E178 20/09/2018

    • September 20, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria looks at the report that one in five people in a relationship never, or almost never have sex. Plus why 'nobody took charge' in the chaos of train timetable changes earlier in the year and the sweets that may help tackle dehydration in dementia patients.

  • S2018E179 21/09/2018

    • September 21, 2018
    • BBC Two

    EU leaders dismiss Theresa May's Brexit plans as 'unworkable' The people 'dying, not knowing they are infected' - the latest on the NHS contaminated blood scandal How to recycle your plastics - BBC research finds 39 different sets of council rules And Bodyguard actor Stuart Bowman is in the studio ahead of Sunday's finale.

  • S2018E180 24/09/2018

    • September 24, 2018
    • BBC Two

    The contaminated blood scandal was one of the biggest medical disasters in UK history. Three decades on, a public inquiry is due to start. We hear from six people whose lives have been devastated by the scandal. We are at Labour's party conference in Liverpool. And Boxer Callum Hancock speaks about being raped as a child aged 10, in the hope it might help others.

  • S2018E181 25/09/2018

    • September 25, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Exclusive: Katie Salmon speaks for the first time about the biphobia she was subjected to for being openly bi on Love Island. And, she says, the most hurtful criticism came from the LGBT community This programme has learned that pharmacists are 'rationing' life-saving EpiPens due to a global shortage And the father of British snowboarder Ellie Soutter, who took her own life on her 18th birthday, has set up a foundation to support young athletes.

  • S2018E182 26/09/2018

    • September 26, 2018
    • BBC Two

    The Victoria Derbyshire Programme exclusively reveals that 170,000 people in England could be experiencing serious complications following hernia mesh repairs. Some patients tell Victoria the pain is so severe they considered suicide after the procedure. Victoria speaks to a woman who alleges the US actor and comedian Bill Cosby drugged and raped her in 1969. And could a Mediterranean diet help lower the risk of developing depression? Victoria speaks to a woman who says her healthy lifestyle helped her recover.

  • S2018E183 27/09/2018

    • September 27, 2018
    • BBC Two

    A leading expert calls for the NHS to register everyone who has been fitted with hernia mesh and publish complication rates after the programme revealed that up to 170,000 patients in England could be affected by complications. For the first time since two Girl Guide leaders were expelled from the organisation after they criticised its policy on including children who were born as boys but identify as girls, the programme talks to a transgender girl and her mum about her experience in the Brownies. And the programme speaks to the online investigative group who says one of the men suspected of carrying out the Salisbury nerve agent attack is a highly decorated Russian military colonel.

  • S2018E184 28/09/2018

    • September 28, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Dramatic testimony of the woman who accuses a US Supreme Court nominee of sexual assault and Brett Kavanaugh's emotional denial. Head teachers march on Downing Street New advertising guide for social media influencers The facial reconstruction that changed my life: Jen Taylor's shoulder blade was use to rebuild her face after she lost 30% of it to cancer.

  • S2018E185 01/10/2018

    • October 1, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling speaks to the parents of 15-year-old Natasha who died after suffering an allergic reaction to a Pret A Manger sandwich which contained sesame seeds. They call for changes to food labelling laws and for the company to list allergens on their food immediately. The programme hears from aid workers in Indonesia, where rescuers are still digging through wreckage and mud in a desperate hunt for more survivors after Friday's earthquake and tsunami. All the latest from day two of the Conservative conference, Joanna is told some ministers now accept that there does need to be another referendum on the deal. And a look at the news that restaurants will be prevented from taking a share of the tips under new proposals from the prime minister after a two-year campaign by restaurant staff up and down the country.

  • S2018E186 02/10/2018

    • October 2, 2018
    • BBC Two

    The families of five children with special educational needs go to the High Court to try and stop their county council cutting 20 million pounds from the special needs budget. Victoria speaks to two boys - and their mums - about how they and others like them would be affected by the cuts. Plus are high street chains reacting quickly enough to the death of Natasha Ednan-Laperouse, who had an allergic reaction to a Pret A Manager baguette? And Victoria speaks to Professor Alessandro Strumia, a prominent scientist suspended by Cern after he gave a presentation saying 'physics was invented by men'.

  • S2018E187 03/10/2018

    • October 3, 2018
    • BBC Two

    The government takes the fight against HIV in the UK to South Asian gay men - as it emerges that HIV infection rates in this group have barely changed, despite new cases overall in Britain dropping by a third in the last three years Victoria looks ahead to Theresa May's speech at the Conservative Party conference, which could prove to be one of the most important speeches of her career. Plus how affordable is your rent? BBC research reveals that in two thirds of Britain people in their twenties who want to rent a place for themselves face having to pay an 'unaffordable' amount.

  • S2018E188 04/10/2018

    • October 4, 2018
    • BBC Two

    The Victoria Derbyshire exclusively reveals that a second British woman has died after having so-called 'Brazilian Butt Lift' surgery. It has the highest death rate of any cosmetic surgery and the programme speaks to women who have had it about what can go wrong. Victoria speaks to parents about how much screen time is too much for toddlers? New research suggests under fives are watching stuff online for an average of three hours a day, and more than half have their own smartphone or tablet. And it's the new reality show where participants can only communicate via an app. Victoria speaks to contestants from The Circle about whether the show is making a serious point about social media use and isolation.

  • S2018E189 05/10/2018

    • October 5, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling speaks to a woman who is frustrated by the volume of what she calls 'creepy messages' that she receives on professional networking site Linkedin. Why are young people not saving? Figures show that more than half of 22 to 29-year-olds don't have a single penny saved up. And Joanna catches up with a son who saved his father's life after he suffered a heart attack.

  • S2018E190 08/10/2018

    • October 8, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Joanna Gosling talks to those with autism and their families about the ways in which new autism-friendly shopping hours could make the experience easier. Could tax breaks for landlords be a solution to the housing crisis? And the verdict on Jodie Whittaker, the new Doctor Who.

  • S2018E191 09/10/2018

    • October 9, 2018
    • BBC Two

    The programme hears the story of a woman who, last year, became the youngest person in America to receive a full face transplant. Victoria speaks to the mum who has resorted to wearing a sandwich board to try to help track down her son's killer. And is the curse of Strictly striking again?

  • S2018E192 10/10/2018

    • October 10, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Conservative MPs have exclusively told the Victoria Derbyshire programme that it's time for Westminster to 'wake up' and legislate to decriminalise abortion in Northern Ireland. One woman who was forced to carry her dead baby to term because she couldn't have a termination and was too ill to travel to England for treatment tells her story. Victoria hears from single mums about the reality of living in temporary accommodation, as research shows they are eight times more likely to be made homeless. Plus the children's commissioner says the time children spend segregated in young offenders institutions in England and Wales has doubled in the last four years. Victoria speaks to a mum whose son has repeatedly been subjected to the practice.

  • S2018E193 11/10/2018

    • October 11, 2018
    • BBC Two

    The third strongest storm in recorded history to hit the US mainland has swept through north-west Florida. Discrimination against people who are obese is now the most common form of discrimination in Britain, according to new research by the World Obesity Federation. Former Conservative PM John Major criticises Universal Credit, warning it could be as damaging to the government as the poll tax.

  • S2018E194 12/10/2018

    • October 12, 2018
    • BBC Two

    The programme reveals that an immigration enforcement hotline received 68 calls from MPs and their staff in 2017, and now a group of charities is calling on all MPs to pledge not to inform on their constituents. Joanna Gosling hears from MPs on both sides. US media reports say the Turkish government has audio and video recordings that they say prove that the missing Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi was killed inside the Saudi consulate in Istanbul ten days ago. And we're live in Windsor for the Royal wedding of Princess Eugenie and Jack Brooksbank.

  • S2018E195 15/10/2018

    • October 15, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Hampshire Police become the first force in the UK to hand out leaflets to suspected child sex offenders warning them to 'change' their behaviour. The programme hears from 'Miss M' - the first woman to win damages in a private civil action from a man who was cleared in a criminal court of raping her. Harry and Meghan announce that they are expecting a baby next spring. Plus, a look at the big week ahead for Brexit negotiations.

  • S2018E196 16/10/2018

    • October 16, 2018
    • BBC Two

    The rollout of the goverment's Universal Credit policy is to be delayed yet again and may not be up and running until the end of 2023. Opelo Kgari is a 28-year-old woman from Botswana and has lived in the UK since the age of 13. Now, 15 years later, her appeal to stay in the UK has been rejected and she speaks to us exlusively. The RSPCA says one in four schoolchildren have seen images of animals being exposed to cruelty on social media. Its new CEO tells Victoria that animal welfare should be taught in schools. Reports suggest Saudi Arabia is preparing to admit Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi died during interrogation.

  • S2018E197 17/10/2018

    • October 17, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria speaks to the mum of four-year-old Zac Oliver who has a rare form of Leukaemia, who has raised hundreds of thousands of pounds to get Zac treatment since she last appeared on the show. The programme hears why campaigners with MS are calling for an end to what they call 'the 20 metre test' for benefits. And should children be taught how to behave around dogs to avoid being attacked? Vicctoria hears from the mums of two children who were bitten by dogs.

  • S2018E198 18/10/2018

    • October 18, 2018
    • BBC Two

    At a summit of EU leaders, Theresa May confirms that extending the transition period after Brexit for a few months 'is one idea'. Facebook says it is 'truly sorry' to a mum whose baby was stillborn, but kept receiving parent-related adverts even though she used the settings to hide them. Victoria speaks to Anna England-Kerr who tells her it felt like the ads were unintentionally taunting her. Social media star Natalee Harris tells Victoria that she regrets promoting brazilian butt lifts after she went through the procedure - and that she is terrified at the thought of something going wrong for one of her followers. And Ellen MacArthur speaks to the programme about her efforts to stop plastic pollution.

  • S2018E199 19/10/2018

    • October 19, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Should you be allowed to legally decide what gender you are without having to pass any tests or consult a doctor? For the past four months the government has been gathering public opinion on a shake-up of the law governing how people change their gender. Parents whose children were killed fighting the Islamic State terror group travel to Syria to see for themselves where their loved ones died - and how they've been honoured by those they fought alongside. And what would it take for you to part with petrol and embrace electric? Politicians are calling for a ban on sales of petrol and diesel cars to be brought forward by eight years to 2032.

  • S2018E200 22/10/2018

    • October 22, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Journalist Jamal Khashoggi was murdered when he visited the Saudi embassy in Turkey. Saudi Arabia has blamed a 'rogue operation' and apologised to his family. The programme hears from security expert Frank Gardner and from the Labour Party regarding what the government should do now. The programme has learned that victims of the NHS contaminated blood scandal have written to the health secretary asking for an immediate increase in support payments. The public inquiry into the scandal is not due to look at financial support until 2020 - campaigners say that is too late. And - will banning plastic straws in favour of metal ones really make any difference to the planet? The government says plastic straws and stirrers could be banned by this time next year.

  • S2018E201 23/10/2018

    • October 23, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Three million common surgeries and cancer treatments could become life-threatening because antibiotics are becoming less effective, warn health officials. They say people who take antibiotics when they do not need them could be putting themselves and their families at risk. The programme also includes all the key points from President Erdogan's statement to Turkey's parliament on the murder of Jamal Khashoggi. And the number of takeaways on UK high streets has risen by a third in eight years. Joanna Gosling asks what is fuelling this love for junk food and hears from a man who weighs 30 stone and has been banned from all his local takeaways in an attempt to save his life.

  • S2018E202 24/10/2018

    • October 24, 2018
    • BBC Two

    The National Audit Office says new border controls - that will be needed if the UK leaves the EU without a deal - might not be ready in time and warns that criminal gangs could take advantage of the situation. A charity has warned that people who survive cancer as children face a financial 'life sentence', having to always declare their past illness on things like travel insurance and mortgage applications even if they have been cancer free for many years. Is it time to follow the example of France and grant them the right to be 'forgotten' - meaning that they do not have to declare their illness after a certain number of years has elapsed? Plus, could watching videos of hand-washing or even touching fake faeces help people who suffer from contamination-related Obsessive Compulsive Disorder? The programme speaks to the developers of a new app which aims to do just that, and hears from people with the condition.

  • S2018E203 25/10/2018

    • October 25, 2018
    • BBC Two

    The wife of a British PhD student who is being detained in the United Arab Emirates after being accused of spying says the Foreign Office is not doing enough to help. Joanna Gosling looks at whether the UK is in danger of becoming a 'two-speed society'. Plus, why mums' voices could make better smoke alarms.

  • S2018E204 26/10/2018

    • October 26, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Chloe Tilley hears why women in lower paid jobs are less likely to take up exercising than those in managerial roles. Plus scientists say they have created a new 'Trojan horse' antibiotic and the man who has set up home in a car-park.

  • S2018E205 29/10/2018

    • October 29, 2018
    • BBC Two

    This programme has learned that 12 areas of England have banned IVF for women over the age of 34. That's despite government guidelines saying it should be offered to women aged up to 42. The government says a blanket ban is 'unacceptable. A plane carrying 188 people has crashed into the sea, just after it took off from the Indonesian capital Jakarta - so far no survivors have been found. Tributes are being paid to the owner of Leicester City football club who died in a helicopter crash at the stadium along with two of his staff, the pilot and his partner. Plus a look ahead to the Budget.

  • S2018E206 30/10/2018

    • October 30, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Louis Theroux tells Victoria about his latest documentary series. Could the mystery of the death of estate agent Suzy Lamplugh finally be solved? And Victoria hears from 11-year-old Ella Chadwick who was born with a rare kidney disease and who has won a Pride of Britain award.

  • S2018E207 31/10/2018

    • October 31, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Punched in the face, headbutted, held hostage - just some of the violent assaults suffered by thousands of NHS staff at work each year. Now the government says it's promising a zero-tolerance approach. From butt lifts to lip fillers, the popularity of cosmetic surgery has exploded in recent years. And it seems nothing is off limits. Leading clinics have told the programme about a jump in the number of men undergoing a procedure to alter the look of their penis. Plus the home secretary's speech to police chiefs outlining his priorities for forces across England and Wales.

  • S2018E208 01/11/2018

    • November 1, 2018
    • BBC Two

    The programme has seen new research which shows the extent of Russian attempts to sow division in British society in the wake of 2017's terror attacks in Manchester and London. Should people who make sexual assault accusations be forced to hand over mobile phone data to police and the CPS? Medicinal cannabis can now be legally prescribed to some patients across the UK for the first time. And climate catastrophe - the world has seriously underestimated the amount of heat soaked up by oceans over the past 25 years, according to new research. This means it will be even harder to stop global temperatures rising above safe levels.

  • S2018E209 02/11/2018

    • November 2, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Former Home Secretary Amber Rudd was 'let down' by her officials according to an inquiry into her resignation over the Windrush scandal. Joanna Gosling hears from two high-profile former advisers in Westminster How unhealthy is the high street? A new league table claims that the state of a high street can affect a person's health, with people in areas with the best ones living on average two and a half years longer. And Kweku Adoboli, the rogue trader convicted of a 1.2 billion pounds banking fraud in 2012, is facing deportation to Ghana on Monday. He joins Joanna in the studio.

  • S2018E210 05/11/2018

    • November 5, 2018
    • BBC Two

    As MPs prepare to debate bullying and sexual harassment in Parliament, one junior House of Commons member of staff tells us exclusively that dealing with abuse is 'just part of the job'. The head of the NHS's gender identity clinic answers claims that it is 'fast tracking' young people into making life-changing decisions about transitioning. And the UN special investigator into poverty is visiting the UK after being sent hundreds of stories of people who say they are suffering from hardship here.

  • S2018E211 06/11/2018

    • November 6, 2018
    • BBC Two

    This programme has learned that 500 people in England have been hospitalised in the past five years after an acid attack. We have been given exclusive access to the biggest burns unit in Europe - in Essex - which treats victims of acid attacks. Five have been arrested after images of a cardboard model of Grenfell Tower being burned on a bonfire were shared on social media. Britain's biggest foodbank charity says it has given out 658,000 food parcels in the last six months, a 13% rise year on year. Foodbank workers say the rise is attributed to problems with Universal Credit. And we talk to one of the stars of Kidulthood about why he backs a plan to use tax breaks to try to get more people from a minority ethnic background working behind the scenes in the British film industry.

  • S2018E212 07/11/2018

    • November 7, 2018
    • BBC Two

    A special programme on knife crime. After over a 100 violent deaths in the capital so far this year, more than the whole of 2017, Victoria brings together the Met Police, parents who have lost teenage sons, stabbing victims and former gang members to talk about what is behind the surge in violent crime and how it can be tackled.

  • S2018E213 08/11/2018

    • November 8, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria has the latest on the mass shooting at a country music bar in California. England's Children's commissioner has warned that children are being 'datafied' from birth as by the time a child is 13, parents will have posted on average 1,300 photos and videos of them on social media. Victoria hears from the dad who created a cot with a built-in ipad to help his daughter get to sleep by playing 'white noise'. And MPs from around the world are meeting in London to discuss how to help women get into politics.

  • S2018E214 09/11/2018

    • November 9, 2018
    • BBC Two

    The only female Afghan barrister practising in Britain tells Chloe Tilley she's been sacked by clients several times because of her race. Plus new hope for women who've had a heart attack and risk their lives to have a baby. And a new equal pay advice service for women in low paid jobs.

  • S2018E215 12/11/2018

    • November 12, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Jailed for killing her husband with a hammer, Sally Challen is preparing to argue she did it because of decades of psychological abuse. Victoria talks to one of the couple's sons, who's supporting his mother's bid to be released from prison. The United Nations has been to the most deprived part of England to investigate the impact of poverty and austerity and we went with them. 'Brexit can be stopped', Labour's Brexit spokesman tells this programme, despite his boss Jeremy Corbyn saying at the weekend it couldn't be. And Victoria speaks to a Dutch man who's legally trying to change his age to boost his online dating prospects.

  • S2018E216 13/11/2018

    • November 13, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Parents of children with a rare form of autism have exclusively told the programme they are getting no support to help deal with violent outbursts from their children -who can't control their emotions. Do you know how much sugar just one milkshake can contain? The worst offender has a whopping 39 teaspoons of sugar and more than 1200 calories. Victoria speaks to a campaigner who wants milkshakes with more than 300 calories banned. And, Victoria exclusively speaks to a woman who was deceived into having a relationship with an undercover police officer. She's challenging the CPS decision not to prosecute the man.

  • S2018E217 14/11/2018

    • November 14, 2018
    • BBC Two

    The last details of a draft Brexit agreement have been finalised. But can it win approval from Theresa May's cabinet, Parliament and the country? MPs, experts and people around the UK give their verdict. How do you get yourself up to your neck in debt before looking for help? Victoria talks to one man who owed a whopping £50,000 - he blames easy credit. And the programme is at a school to find out if the kids there know how to spot 'fake news' from the real deal.

  • S2018E218 15/11/2018

    • November 15, 2018
    • BBC Two

    The BBC's daily news and current affairs programme. As the first ministers resign over the Brexit deal, Victoria gets the views of an audience of voters from around the UK.

  • S2018E219 16/11/2018

    • November 16, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria examines the latest Brexit news and asks - what is going on? Plus women's rights campaigner Jasvinder Sanghera, who says she was groped by a member of the House of Lords and promised a peerage in return for sex, tells Victoria that she feels 'revictimised' after hearing that Lord Lester will not be suspended from Parliament. He denies the allegations. And Jeff Kinney, author of Diary of a Wimpy Kid who has sold 200 million books, is in the studio.

  • S2018E220 19/11/2018

    • November 19, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria discusses the current Brexit situation - can Conservative MPs opposed to Theresa May's Brexit deal muster enough votes to topple her? Janika Cartwright, who was stabbed through the heart when she was pregnant, explains why she wanted to confront her attacker face to face. And in the first of a Brexit Blind Date series, the Labour lord mayor of Sheffield meets Love Island's Zara McDermott, who quit her job as a civil servant to speak out on Brexit.

  • S2018E221 20/11/2018

    • November 20, 2018
    • BBC Two

    As footage of two police officers being attacked on a busy street in south London emerges, Victoria asks what you would do if you were walking by - intervene, stay out of it or film it. Plus, with two thirds of the public thinking sending unsolicited explicit selfies should be a crime, should the law change? And things get heated in the second part of the Brexit Blind Dates series as Big Brother's Aisleyne Horgan-Wallace meets fertility scientist and TV presenter Professor Robert Winston.

  • S2018E222 21/11/2018

    • November 21, 2018
    • BBC Two

    The number of teenage children who are 'problem gamblers' has doubled in the past year. Victoria asks campaigners and the mother of a teenage gambling addict who took his own life what can be done about it. Survivors of terror attacks say they are not getting enough support from the British government. A man badly injured in the Mumbai attack in 2008 and the widow of one of the victims of the attacks in Brussels in 2016 are in the studio to speak about their experience. And in the latest of the programme's Brexit Blind Dates series, TV presenter June Sarpong meets up with former Top Gear Stig, racing driver Perry McCarthy.

  • S2018E223 22/11/2018

    • November 22, 2018
    • BBC Two

    The programme has the latest news on student Matthew Hedges's life sentence for alleged spying - Victoria talks to his MP and one of the British academic's friends. Plus a look at why one in nine children of school age in England had a mental disorder in 2017.

  • S2018E224 23/11/2018

    • November 23, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria talks to 22-year-old Jack Jacobs whose anorexia led to him being admitted to hospital as a teenager. And are Black Friday deals all they're cracked up to be?

  • S2018E225 26/11/2018

    • November 26, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Student Matthew Hedges who was jailed for spying in the UAE is released - Joanna Gosling gets reaction. And Brexit blind date: TV presenter Ulrika Jonsson meets filmmaker Dustin Lance Black who is married to the diver Tom Daley.

  • S2018E226 27/11/2018

    • November 27, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Women are selling explicit images of themselves on a social media app used by children as young as 13. Victoria Derbyshire talks exclusively with former Team GB Athletics captain Dai Greene, who missed out on five years of his professional career after having hernia mesh surgery. A new report says police officers are facing an 'intolerable burden' in responding to mental-health-related emergencies. Victoria speaks to the sister of a man who died in police custody.

  • S2018E227 28/11/2018

    • November 28, 2018
    • BBC Two

  • S2018E228 29/11/2018

    • November 29, 2018
    • BBC Two

    An exclusive report on the house letting agency that has been demanding £300 non-refundable deposits from prospective tenants before they have even viewed a property. And Theresa May is grilled on Brexit by senior MPs.

  • S2018E229 30/11/2018

    • November 30, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Chloe Tilley speaks to Labour's Lloyd Russell-Moyle about telling the House of Commons that he is HIV positive. After the programme's investigation into people being charged to view properties, one woman says she was charged £200 by a letting agent. And an Australian teenager explains why she skipped school alongside thousands of others to call for action on climate change.

  • S2018E230 Birmingham Brexit Debate

    • December 3, 2018
    • BBC Two

    As MPs prepare to debate the PM's Brexit deal, Victoria Derbyshire is in Birmingham for an extended audience debate, bringing together politicians and members of the public to gauge their views on the deal and the 'meaningful vote'.The BBC's daily news and current affairs programme with original stories, exclusive interviews, audience debate and breaking news.

  • S2018E231 04/12/2018

    • December 4, 2018
    • BBC Two

    This programme has been exclusively told that hundreds of children and young people - many of whom were born and have grown up in the UK - are being denied British citizenship because they are supposedly not of 'good character'. Reasons for failing the test include petty theft, cautions and fights at school. The chief inspector of education tells Victoria Derbyshire that the failure of schools to help thousands of pupils with special educational needs is a 'national scandal'. From 3D printed bionic arms to an MOT for the bacteria in your gut, Victoria looks at the tech which could transform our lives in 2019.

  • S2018E232 05/12/2018

    • December 5, 2018
    • BBC Two

    A group of so-called 'biohackers', who have inserted magnets and microchips under their skin, tell the programme why they have undergone the unusual procedures. Victoria Derbyshire speaks to a mother and daughter living in temporary accommodation - as a charity claims the number of children now homeless is at its highest in more than a decade. As the crucial Brexit debate continues, three Tory MP share their very different views about what should happen.

  • S2018E233 06/12/2018

    • December 6, 2018
    • BBC Two

    In an exclusive investigation the programme finds new homes are 'crumbling' due to weak mortar. Victoria also looks into claims the construction industry is sometimes gagging home owners attempting to get a serious problem with their new house fixed. A landmark review of the mental health act finds that black people are four times more likely to be sectioned than white people. Plus all the latest on Brexit and the 3G problems affecting millions of O2 customers.

  • S2018E234 07/12/2018

    • December 7, 2018
    • BBC Two

    The rise in online porn blackmail scams and how to prevent them. 'Brexit exposed divisions and put people into tribes', we discuss the divisions in the UK - and how to heal them - with Reverend Richard Coles. Improving air travel for disabled people. And Pride of Sport awards - the schoolboy who's raised thousands running for charity and a former gang member in East London who's got an award for his work in the community.

  • S2018E235 10/12/2018

    • December 10, 2018
    • BBC Two

    The prime minister has 24 hours to save her Brexit deal and her job ahead of Tuesday's vote. Seventy three people have died in knife attacks on London's streets so far this year. Behind that statistic are mums, dads, brothers, sisters, and friends who are facing Christmas without a loved one for the first time. We talk exclusively to two families who are speaking out for the first time. And after Raheem Sterling's comment that newspapers fuel racism in the way they portray young black footballers, Victoria discusses racism in the game.

  • S2018E236 11/12/2018

    • December 11, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Theresa May looks to Europe to throw her a lifeline over her Brexit deal - right now she's doing a whistlestop tour of European leaders. But the EU says it will not renegotiate - so what's the point? Politicians and voters tell us what they think. Around 1,500 people under the age of 25 die suddenly in the UK every year from inherited heart conditions - we hear from Lora who collapsed out of the blue when she was 24 and was dead for five minutes before the emergency services saved her life. And we find out about the Church of England's new guidelines on welcoming transgender people into the church.

  • S2018E237 12/12/2018

    • December 12, 2018
    • BBC Two

    As Theresa May faces a no confidence vote from her own party, Victoria presents a special programme from Westminster with all the latest reaction and analysis.

  • S2018E238 13/12/2018

    • December 13, 2018
    • BBC Two

    As Theresa May travels to Brussels after surviving that vote last night, Victoria hears from Conservative MPs and party officials about what they want to happen next.

  • S2018E239 14/12/2018

    • December 14, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria hears from the sister of a man with learning disabilities who went into surgery expecting a few extractions and had all of his teeth removed. Chelsea questions the 'brainpower' of some of their supporters after a group of fans were heard singing anti-semitic chants.

  • S2018E240 17/12/2018

    • December 17, 2018
    • BBC Two

    First broadcast interview with nine of the 'Stansted 15', who face life sentences after trying to stop a plane flying people from UK detention centres to Africa. Among them is Emma Hughes, who is eight months pregnant. The hotel in Hull that has cancelled a Christmas booking for homeless people. Company bosses will face personal fines in a crackdown on nuisance calls, after new powers are given to the UK data protection watchdog. Will it make any difference?

  • S2018E241 18/12/2018

    • December 18, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Victoria Derbyshire gets reaction to the news that Manchester United have sacked their manager Jose Mourinho. And she speaks to the mums of two teenage autistic sons who were held in mental health units and had 'deeply traumatic' experiences.

  • S2018E242 19/12/2018

    • December 19, 2018
    • BBC Two

    BBC Asian Network's Shabnam Mahmood speaks to mums in Bradford being trained to spot the signs of far right and Islamist radicalisation in their children. Victoria talks to women who were forced out of their job due to pregnancy or maternity prejudice, as they prepare to give evidence before MPs. And a politician, a reality star and an entertainment journalist discuss role models for school children, after a leading head teacher suggested kids should look up to reality stars rather than MPs.

  • S2018E243 20/12/2018

    • December 20, 2018
    • BBC Two

  • S2018E244 21/12/2018

    • December 21, 2018
    • BBC Two

Season 2019

  • S2019E01 07/01/2019

    • January 7, 2019
    • BBC Two

    Victoria speaks to two people who lost treasured belongings in a huge fire at a self-storage warehouse in Croydon. And the show revisits the first 'legal' red-light zone in the UK to see if it has worked.

  • S2019E02 08/01/2019

    • January 8, 2019
    • BBC Two

    Victoria talks to the family of a woman who died of cervical cancer. She was campaigning to lower the cervical screening age to 18. Plus, should police improve their response to MP abuse?

  • S2019E03 09/01/2019

    • January 9, 2019
    • BBC Two

  • S2019E04 10/01/2019

    • January 10, 2019
    • BBC Two

    With 78 days to go until Britain is due to leave the EU, Victoria looks at what happens if we leave without a deal at all. What will a no-deal Brexit mean for the economy, for immigration, for our services, for travelling abroad? And is it what the country voted for? Victoria speaks to people from around the country - do they actively want a no-deal Brexit, or are they dreading the possibility?

  • S2019E05 11/01/2019

    • January 11, 2019
    • BBC Two

    Chloe Tilley hears from rapper Octavian, winner of BBC Music's Sound of 2019. And the man who found out that his adult sons weren't his after being diagnosed as infertile.

  • S2019E06 14/01/2019

    • January 14, 2019
    • BBC Two

  • S2019E07 15/01/2019

    • January 15, 2019
    • BBC Two

  • S2019E08 16/01/2019

    • January 16, 2019
    • BBC Two

  • S2019E09 17/01/2019

    • January 17, 2019
    • BBC Two

  • S2019E10 18/01/2019

    • January 18, 2019
    • BBC Two

  • S2019E11 21/01/2019

    • January 21, 2019
    • BBC Two

  • S2019E12 22/01/2019

    • January 22, 2019
    • BBC Two

  • S2019E13 23/01/2019

    • January 23, 2019
    • BBC Two

  • S2019E14 24/01/2019

    • January 24, 2019
    • BBC Two

  • S2019E15 25/01/2019

    • January 25, 2019
    • BBC Two

Additional Specials