Privatising Electricity - The End of Nuclear Power?
Episode 7
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Third Term Thatcherism - A Permanent Revolution?
Episode 8
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The Future of ITV - Never Mind the Quality?
Episode 9
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Britain's New Party - Can It Replace Labour?
Episode 10
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The Tax Cut Budget - How Far Should Lawson Go?
Episode 11
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Families in Poverty - Ripping Up the Safety Net
Episode 12
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After Reagan - A Democrat in the White House?
Episode 13
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Neil Kinnock's Leadership - A New Vision for Labour?
Episode 14
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Government and Unions - Where Next?
Episode 15
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Eastern Europe's Perestroika - Will It End in Tears?
Episode 16
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The Tories in Scotland - Thatcherism in a Cold Climate?
Episode 17
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The Speaker of the House - Protector of Parliament?
Episode 18
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Ulster's Long War - A Window for Peace?
Episode 19
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Britain Into the Nineties - Richer, Rougher and Tougher?
Episode 20
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Gorbachev's Next Battle - Taking on the System
Episode 21
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Reaganism in Retreat - What Chance for Bush?
Episode 22
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Thatcher's Britain - The Unfinished Revolution
Weekend World
Overview
Weekend World was a British television political series, made by London Weekend Television and broadcast from 1972 to 1988.
Created by John Birt not long after he moved to LWT, the series was broadcast on the ITV network at lunchtimes on Sundays. Produced by Nick Elliott and David Elstein, it began by mirroring CBS's "60 Minutes" featuring several stories each week but gradually devolved into a show that featured a forensic interview with a major political figure each week.
It was presented by Peter Jay initially when first broadcast in 1972, but was best-remembered for being anchored by former Labour MP Brian Walden between 1977 and 1986. Conservative MP Matthew Parris took over in 1986, resigning his seat, and presented the programme until the series ended in 1988.