³ÉÈËÂÛ̳ THREE Autumn 2006
Entertainment
³ÉÈËÂÛ̳ THREE
Children In Need Event
(working title)
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A brand-new reality event, stripped over two weeks and
culminating on ³ÉÈËÂÛ̳ Children In Need
night, sees a
battle of the blow-dry as a group of celebrities go head
to head to see who can crimp their way to the top.
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For this year's ³ÉÈËÂÛ̳ Children In Need night, the backstage
hair, make-up and wardrobe department will be in the hands of our unqualified celebs.
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Under the tutelage of a top-name hairdresser, the celebs will train in all elements of
hair, beauty and fashion.
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In the two weeks before the big night they'll be working
flat out practising on members of the public (and any passing ³ÉÈËÂÛ̳ stars) in the
specially designed hair and beauty "green room", plonked in the heart of ³ÉÈËÂÛ̳
Television Centre.
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They'll have a crash course in cutting and styling hair, wardrobe,
make-up and even a bit of bikini-line waxing.
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On the night itself, our beauty boot-camp event culminates with behind-the-scenes
updates from backstage, as viewers watch the stars taking part in ³ÉÈËÂÛ̳ Children In
Need bravely being made up by our novices.
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Can our apprentice celebrites cut it? Or will they get the snip?
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A Brighter Pictures production (part of Endemol UK)
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Jonathan Ross's
Japanorama
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Jonathan Ross pursues his passion for all things
Nipponese in this series focusing on six aspects of
modern Japanese
culture -
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Nerds: long scorned worldwide, the nerd has become the toast of Japan, with
women queuing up for his geeky charms.
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Tribes: the Japanese may not be divided by race or religion but, thanks to some
amazing uniforms, they neatly divide themselves into tribes: girl bikers, Lolita Goths
and Yakuza.
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Comedy: from the original Jackass to a comedy robot and a reigning king called
Hard Gay Man, something funny is going on over there.
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Cool: the cool looks and sounds of tomorrow are in Japan today – robots, pop
videos, phones, tunes and even shoes.
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Cute: Hello Kitty is only the pink tip of Japan's cute iceberg. The country that
bottled cute now has an incredibly popular (and vicious) new character called
Gloomy Bear.
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That Samurai Spirit: swords and shoguns are out, but the spirit can still be found
in battling beetles, lethal schoolgirls and a goalkeeping crustacean that can stop nine
out of 10 penalty kicks.
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A Hot Sauce production
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MOBO Awards 2006
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³ÉÈËÂÛ̳ THREE broadcasts live, for the first
time ever, from the world-famous MOBO
(Music Of Black Origin) Awards 2006. The
³ÉÈËÂÛ̳ broadcasts the awards exclusively for
the third consecutive year.
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The MOBOs is an iconic awards ceremony, a key event in
the British music calendar, which celebrates the very best
in urban music at home and abroad, past and present.
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Appearing for exclusive performances at London's Royal
Albert Hall are some of the cream of the world's urban
music talent alongside some huge surprise international
celebrities.
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Over the years, the MOBO Awards has
featured stars such as P Diddy, Usher, Justin Timberlake,
Janet Jackson, Beyoncé, Jay-Z, LL Cool J, Lemar, Craig
David and Jamelia, plus some true greats including Tina
Turner, Luther Vandross, BB King and Chaka Khan.
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Presenters for this year's show will be confirmed closer
to transmission but will include a mystery superstar guest.
Highlights can be seen at a later date on ³ÉÈËÂÛ̳ ONE.
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A Celador production
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IV
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The Electric Proms
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This autumn, the ³ÉÈËÂÛ̳ stages a brand-new
festival celebrating all that is new and
innovative in the worlds of rock and pop.
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The event (from 25 to 29 October) is held at
Camden's newly refurbished Roundhouse
and surrounding venues.
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A mixture of established acts headline each evening's main
stage performances. The music will consist of unusual
collaborations and brand-new compositions.
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Alongside
these headliners there are sets from up-and-coming
artists who also perform at the event.
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The ³ÉÈËÂÛ̳ Electric Proms will be broadcast across a number
of ³ÉÈËÂÛ̳ television and radio networks with ³ÉÈËÂÛ̳ THREE
showing a selection of the headline acts across the week.
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A ³ÉÈËÂÛ̳ production
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