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1-17 of 17
- Jeremy Vine returns with a fresh series of Points of View and comes back to face a deluge of complaints - including about his own new quiz show, "Revenge of the Egghead".
- Jeremy assembles what he calls his "Points of View All Stars" - a group of six viewers gathered for a frank talk on the BBC and its future. There's also time for some viewer videos on recent shows, including harrowing documentaries.
- With Peter Capaldi's first Doctor Who series having come to an end, executive producer Brian Minchin answers viewer questions about the show's direction. There's also time for other programmes, including praise for Detectorists.
- Jeremy is joined by Kim Shillinglaw, the Controller of BBC2 and BBC4, as she deals with viewers' questions - including why Banished was allowed to end on a cliffhanger if it wasn't going to be recommissioned.
- With complaints about scruffy presenters, would Jeremy ever grow a beard? If a newsreader tells viewers not to look at a result, but then says it aloud, does it count? Also featured are Danger Mouse and mixed responses for Doctor Who.
- Issues being discussed by viewers include the final of The Great British Bake Off, mixed reactions to a programme about racism, dismay over Jeremy Clarkson being hired for a BBC show, and disappointment over the cancellation of New Tricks.
- The big viewer complaint this week is the variable quality of documentary voiceovers: from overdramatic to childlike, sultry to almost inaudible. Among the programmes being discussed are River, The Big Fish and The Apprentice.
- After Jagmeet Singh disrupted the previous week's edition of Sunday Morning Live with an impromptu protest, he appears as a guest to talk to Jeremy about his reasoning behind his actions. Among the other topics is the future of the BBC.
- With a toned-down adaptation of Lady Chatterley's Lover on screens, Jeremy Vine asks if viewers want more sex on television. There's also another look at allegations of political bias on the BBC.
- Jeremy Vine looks into more viewers' issues, including "Chelsea without Titchmarsh, MasterChef music choices, and Paxman's awkward question."
- Jeremy is in Scotland to investigate whether the BBC's referendum reporting was impartial. Also attracting attention is the growing rise of innuendos in The Great British Bake Off, a debate that will continue in the following edition.
- Jeremy's now calling the ongoing row about innuendoes in Bake Off "Smutgate", while there's a new feature, "My Choice", where viewers praise favourite shows. Also featured is a question over gender imbalance in Mastermind.
- A viewer questions why Horizon's recent documentary on male/female brains didn't include a look at the transgender community, while there's much disparagement for the BBC's new primetime show "Your Home in Their Hands".
- Jeremy wonders if viewers are getting harsher after one describes the BBC's new offering Atlantis as "tripe". There's also a viewer's graph to illustrate how Waterloo Road is recycling plots, and objections to Will Self on Question Time.
- Jeremy Vine delves through reactions to the final of The Great British Bake Off, complaints about excessive programme trailers, and the question of if the BBC is forced to broadcast repeats - which shows should be repeated?
- One of the more intense editions of Points of View, as Jeremy interviews the BBC's creative director Alan Yentob, asking him to reflect on the damage done to the corporation's reputation by the recent Savile scandal and pay off crisis.
- There's lots of praise for the BBC's new "slow TV" experiment, and disappointment that Banished won't be returning. And after a viewer complains about Americanisation on the BBC, Gyles Brandreth gives a lesson in the Queen's English.