Author:Steve Punt,David Tyler,Steve Punt
A quiz show hosted by Steve Punt where a team of three university students take on a team of three of their professors
The show is recorded on location at a different University each week, and it pits three Undergraduates against three of their Professors in a genuinely original and fresh take on an academic quiz
The rounds vary between Specialist Subjects and General Knowledge, quickfire bell-and-buzzer rounds and the 'Highbrow & Lowbrow' round cunningly devised to test not only the students' knowledge of current affairs, history, languages and science, but also their Professors' awareness of television, sport, and quite possibly Justin Bieber... In addition, the Head-to-Head rounds, in which students take on their Professors in their own subjects; offer plenty of scope for mild embarrassment on both sides...
In this series, the universities are UCL, Leeds Beckett, Gonville & Caius College Cambridge, Warwick, Bangor and Lancaster.
Production Credits
Devised & produced by David Tyler
Hosted by Steve Punt
Episode 1
This episode of The 3rd Degree is brought to you from University College London. The specialist subjects are Biochemical Engineering, Psychology and English Literature and the questions range from Virginia Woolf's Mrs Dalloway to Willy Wonka's Timothée Chalamet and the answers include the words yttrium, walla and quinquereme.
Episode 2
This episode of The 3rd Degree is brought to you from Leeds Beckett University, the specialist subjects are Journalism, English Literature and Sport and Exercise Science, and the questions range from whey powder and NIBs to Y2K and CQD. And, guaranteed, an interesting fact about Basildon.
Episode 3
This episode of The 3rd Degree is brought to you from Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, the specialist subjects are Physics, Economics and History, and the answers involve the isotropy of the universe, pre-war Poland's relation to the Gold Standard and a song about sausage rolls.
Episode 4
This episode of The 3rd Degree is brought to you from the University of Warwick, the specialist subjects are Maths and Statistics, Linguistics and Engineering, and the questions range from Kartvelian Languages and Prismatic Actuators to Yellow Submarines and Vanessa Shanessa Jenkin.
Episode 5
This episode of The 3rd Degree is brought to you from Bangor University, the specialist subjects are Education, Film Studies and Zoology with Herpetology, and the questions range from the Miracle at Cana to the sex life of Komodo Dragons. And you can play along to the well-known game, Name Five Famous Spaniards.
Episode 6
This episode of The 3rd Degree is brought to you from Lancaster University, where the specialist subjects are English Literature, Marketing and French, and the questions range from Les Immortels and Roland Barthes to shopping trolleys and Philip K Dick...
First broadcast on BBC Radio 4: 20th June - 25th July 2022
©2022 BBC Studios Distribution Ltd (P)2022 BBC Studios Distribution Ltd
'Thurman's novel presents some of the most layered portrayals of New York City life...from seedy employment agency waiting rooms to swank Harlem hot spots'
—— NPRA cavalcade of perfect joy
—— Caitlin MoranFairly close to perfection
—— Spectator , Books to get through lockdownThere are periods when I'm not up to the journey, when hope is too much to ask for and I am only fit for ... cowering under the covers with P.G. Wodehouse
—— Cathy RentzenbrinkThe prose . . . is so gloriously funny you can relish the book over and over again.
—— The TimesQuite possibly the funniest book the master of comedy ever wrote.
—— i paper (feel good books)A sheer joy to read.
—— Yahoo: 40 best books to read before you die'Anything by PG Wodehouse' was a common response when asking around for people's comfort reads. It's very hard to pick just one, but this - with Roderick Spode, Aunt Dahlia and plenty of sneering at cow creamers - is fairly close to perfection.
—— Books to get through lockdown , SpectatorIt's illegal to put together any list of the funniest books in English without including Wodehouse. [His] incredibly delicate descriptive touch (for example, of a particularly burly character: "as if Nature had intended to make a gorilla, and had changed its mind at the last moment") and sense of timing elevate a country house farce involving a policeman's hat, a cow-creamer and a would-be British fascist leader into something which glows with an effortless, sunny brilliance.
—— 32 of the funniest books ever , Esquire[Strout] has that rare ability to immerse readers in the world of her characters . . . moments of quiet revelation - infidelities, or glimpses into the indignities of incontinence and cancer - feel poignant and real, but also unsentimental. It is a compassionate, life-affirming read, and a much-needed balm for these trying times
—— Straits TimesStrout captures the minutiae of recent years with insight and compassion
—— iNews, 40 Best Books to Read This AutumnYou would be forgiven for avoiding any pandemic-set novels for the rest of the decade, but it's worth making an exception for Elizabeth Strout's Lucy By The Sea
—— Vogue, Best New Books for AutumnThere is an insistent generosity in Strout's books, and a restraint that obscures the complexity of their construction
—— Washington PostLucy By the Sea is another Barton installment that confronts the deep and familiar tangles of intimate relationships . . . Through this complex and isolating time, Lucy plumbs the nuances of human connection
—— TIMEPoised and moving . . . It is only in the steady hands of Strout, whose prose has an uncanny, plainspoken elegance, that you will want to relive those early months of wiping down groceries and social isolation . . . This is a slim, beautifully controlled book that bursts with emotion
—— VogueAfter giving a beloved secondary character from her 2016 bestseller I Am Lucy Barton his own standalone with last year's Oh William!, Strout returns to the source, packing her recently widowed heroine off to Maine from Manhattan during lockdown - and exploring, in her clean inimitable prose, no less than love, loneliness, and what it means to be alive
—— Entertainment WeeklyHeartwarming as well as somber . . . Strout's new novel manages, like her others, to encompass love and friendship, joy and anxiety, grief and grievances, loneliness and shame - and a troubling sense of growing unrest and division in America . . . Strout's understanding of the human condition is capacious
—— NPRStrout writes in a conversational voice, evoking those early weeks and months of the pandemic with immediacy and candor. These halting rhythms resonate . . . Rendered in Strout's graceful, deceptively light prose
—— New York Times Book ReviewIntense and disturbing
—— Mail on SundayA beautiful and thoughtfully written novel
—— Good HousekeepingImpressively precise in its scientific conjectures, Bewilderment is no less rich or wise in its emotionality.... channels both the cosmic sublime and that of the vast American outdoors, resting confidently in a lineage with Thoreau and Whitman, Dillard and Kerouac... Sorrowing awe is Bewilderment's primary tone, and its many remarkable scenes are controlled with high novelistic intelligence.
—— ObserverIt's deftly crafted, packs an emotional punch, and Powers's urgent environmental message, delivered by the Greta Thunberg-like Robin, comes through loud and clear
—— Daily MailPowers is extremely good at creating a very specific emotion in the reader: a potent mix of sadness and guilt. He's also a wizard when it comes to telling us about trees, rivers, insects and birds
—— SpectatorBewilderment is a compelling story about love in a dying world
—— Irish IndependentPowers succeeds in engaging both head and heart. And through its central story of bereavement, this novel of parenting and the environment becomes a multifaceted exploration of mortality
—— EconomistIt is a thoughtful exploration of individual grief, a study in empathy for the biosphere, a questioning of the medical profession's pathologising of children and a beginner's guide to eco-biology... Bewilderment is both cerebral and heartfelt, a rigorous and damning assessment of the state of the world today. A call to arms for empathy and action
—— Irish TimesUtterly absorbing
—— Daily MailOne of our most lavishly gifted writers
—— New YorkerNothing less than brilliant
—— John UpdikeIt's not possible for Powers to write an uninteresting book
—— Margaret AtwoodWith its first few pages, Powers' novel completely captivated us and with its last, it bowled us over. Powers creates a texture and specificity to our future that feels simultaneously sweepingly large and breathtakingly intimate, told through the most relatable point of view: the ferocious love of a parent for his child and his struggle to provide him a better tomorrow.
—— Leigh Kittay, Black Bear’s Head of FilmOn The Overstory: It changed how I thought about the Earth and our place in it . . . It changed how I see things and that's always, for me, a mark of a book worth reading.
—— Barack ObamaOn The Overstory: Really, just one of the best novels, period
—— Ann PatchettOn The Overstory: Monumental . . . breath-taking . . . a gigantic fable of genuine truths
—— Barbara KingsolverOn The Overstory: Exhilarating . . . on almost every page you will find sentences that combine precision and vision
—— The TimesOn The Overstory: The best book I've read in ten years. A remarkable piece of literature
—— Emma ThompsonOn The Overstory: An extraordinary novel . . . an astonishing performance . . . he is incredibly good at turning science into poetry
—— GuardianThe success of the story - and a success it is - comes not from the ingenious scientific speculations, nor the shrewd literary connections (on the "emotional telepathy" of a work of art, or Daniel Keyes's Flowers for Algernon), but the human story between father and son, as Theo finds out 'how my brain learns to resemble what it loves
—— The CriticRichard Powers's Booker Prize-shortlisted novel is both brutal and heartwarming, intimate and profound. A masterfully curated story of love, grief and loneliness, quietly building to an inevitable and devastating close
—— Press AssociationHe composes some of the most beautiful sentences I've ever read. I'm in awe of his talent
—— Oprah WinfreyIn Bewilderment, the Pulitzer Prize-winning American novelist has crafted a story of great beauty and power
—— Business Post