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The BBC is looking for girls who don't have a job or full-time work but are up for a challenge. If this sounds like you then they want to hear from you! Do your family and friends think you could be doing more with your life? Do you think that your dad or boyfriend should pay for everything? Are you one of those people who are always being fired from jobs? Do you work part-time but have never made the leap to full-time employment? Maybe you've just never had the confidence to put yourself forward for work? Working Girls is a show about girls who don't have a job but have bags of potential. If you'd like to appear on our show then please get in touch for an application form Applicants must be 18 years of age and over.
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Liz McClarnon presents the show which offers you the chance to give your mum or daughter a make-over? Daughters Are you sick of people mistaking your mum for your sister? Does your mum steal or copy your clothes? Do you wish your mum would act her age and be more like a 'proper' mum? Does your mum stand out for her own individual look? Do her outfits embarrass you? Would you like to give her a make-over? Mums Do you look and feel great for your age? Are you a head-turner? Do you think your daughter needs to lighten up? Do you wish your daughter was a bit more like you? Would you love your daughter to change her 'look'? Do you have very different opinions about style? Do you think you're hotter than your daughter? Hotter Than My Daughter is produced for the BBC by Endemol UK. Applicants must be 16 years of age and over. |
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Two teams, £300 and one hour to find the bargains. Let's go bargain hunting! Presented by Tim Wonnacott, Bargain Hunt is an antiques game show about buying and selling antiques for profit. Two teams of two contestants are each given £300 to spend at an antiques fair, but only one hour in which to spend it. They use their knowledge of the antiques world to try to buy things which they can sell for a profit at an antiques auction a few weeks later. If they make a profit, they get to keep the money. Helping each team in their hunt around hundreds of stalls is an expert - usually an auctioneer well versed in the trends of the market. Each team buys three objects and sends them off to the auction house where we meet everyone again for the nail-biting sale. Tim and the local auctioneer have their say about the objects the teams have bought and together they assess the chances of making a profit. The teams can choose to accept an item bought by their expert into their lots - but this of course could lose as well as make them money. Once the sale is under way, Tim and the teams wait for the local market to decide whether they will have any profit to take home. At the end of the programme Tim hands out the cash or the commiserations.
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