TV presenter Gok Wan is usually known for fashion and beauty shows, but he branches out into economics in this documentary.
This new play by Middlesbrough-based writer Ishy Din looks at the lives of four British Pakistani young men.
Next month sees a rare chance to see all four episodes of this classic 1972 TV documentary by Marxist art critic John Berger. BFI Southbank is showing Ways of Seeing alongside a question and answer session with director Michael Dibb.
Songwriter Alkinoos Ioannidis mixes traditional Cypriot and Greek music with classical and rock elements.
"Multicultural Britain needs help. Some people just aren’t mixing. Our communities are becoming increasingly divided. And nowhere is the problem clearer than in Bradford."
In the early 1840s a young German revolutionary called Frederick Engels spent three years in Manchester. He observed how rapid industrialisation had made working class lives a misery.
This new six-part drama series by Paula Milne charts the experiences of seven friends from 1965 to the present day.
The works of left wing German playwright and poet Bertolt Brecht are brought to life in a new theatre production.
This lecture by history professor David Nash is part of the Monarchy and Republicanism series running this year at the Bishopsgate Institute in London.
If an exhibition of landscape paintings may not sound like your cup of tea then think again.
The popular TV show Buffy the Vampire Slayer featured Buffy as the "Chosen One"—one girl chosen to fight vampires. Now the Chosen One is exercising her right to choose abortion.
"Why is being rich bad all of a sudden in today’s society? We’re teaching our kids class warfare. Where are we, Communist China?"