Wednesday 24 Sep 2014
Phil makes a significant decision regarding Louise; and Darren follows the path of true love in the latest visit to Walford.
Meanwhile, the Square gets together for a good old-fashioned game of rounders.
Phil is played by Steve McFadden, Louise by Brittany Papple and Darren by Charlie G Hawkins.
JM3
Matt Allwright and his team go undercover in hotels, reveal tourist scams and research potential safety hazards in popular holiday destinations around the world, in ´óÏó´«Ã½ One's new consumer holiday series, The Secret Tourist.
In the first episode, Matt sends a British family to an all-inclusive resort in the Dominican Republic to find out if bad reports from some tourists are really true. Kitted out with secret cameras, the family goes undercover to investigate the hotel's facilities. With help from the series' environmental health expert, Dr Lisa Ackerley, the secret tourists make some shocking revelations about the health, hygiene and safety of the resort. These include finding salmonella and E.coli in the food and the Legionella pathogen in the hot water, posing a risk of Legionnaires disease. Matt then visits the resort to put these findings directly to the hotel management.
Reporter Carole Machin investigates holiday doctors on the Spanish island of Tenerife, after reports of some of them over-treating and over-charging tourists. Trying them out for herself, will the healthy undercover reporter be given expensive and unnecessary treatment?
Con artists can strike in any holiday destination. This week, Matt reveals a trick they have been known to pull on unsuspecting tourists – a fake day-trip scam. With Matt's insider tips, travellers will be better prepared to avoid getting conned themselves.
The Secret Tourist team research the holidays from hell, so viewers don't have to.
KA
Charles Hazlewood continues ´óÏó´«Ã½ Four's coverage of the ´óÏó´«Ã½ Proms 2010 as the CBSO and Andris Nelsons perform Wagner's Rienzi Overture and Dvořák 's New World symphony, joining Paul Lewis to play Beethoven's 2nd piano concerto.
Tonight, pianist Paul Lewis continues his cycle of all five of Beethoven's piano concertos, with No. 2 in B flat major. Beethoven revised it many times before it was published. He was developing the form and there is still a youthful feel about this concerto, looking back in style to that of his forbearers such as Haydn and Mozart.
Lewis is joined by the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra under its Latvian music director, Andris Nelsons. The Beethoven concerto is sandwiched between Wagner's lively overture to Rienzi (which opened the very first prom in 1895) and the ever popular New World symphony by Dvorak.
SD4
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