Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
6Degrees [1] (or Six Degrees) is a Northern Irish dramatic television series about a group of university students living in Belfast. [2] It premiered on 21 February 2012 on BBC2 NI. In July 2013 it also began airing on the Irish channel RTÉ 2 and later on BBC1 NI. The show ran for a total of three series, between 2012 and 2015.
[38] The Guardian ranked it the tenth best television show of 2013. [39] The second and the third series earned 93% and 64% approval rating, respectively. The third series consensus reads, "The Fall stumbles somewhat in its third season, but still delivers enough to satisfy fans of the show—and slow-burning psychological thrillers in general."
Blue Lights is a Northern Irish police procedural television drama series set in the fictional Blackthorn police station in Belfast, Northern Ireland, where the series was filmed. Created and written by Declan Lawn and Adam Patterson, it began broadcasting on BBC One on 27 March 2023.
Once Upon a Time in Northern Ireland is a 2023 British documentary television miniseries covering the Northern Irish conflict, the Troubles.Directed by James Bluemel as a follow-up to his 2020 series Once Upon a Time in Iraq, it consists of five episodes that features interviews with members of Republican and Loyalist paramilitaries, members of the British Army who served in Northern Ireland ...
The show initially aired on BBC One Northern Ireland and RTÉ One in 2002. The show was filmed in Dublin , Republic of Ireland and Belfast , in Northern Ireland . Concept
Television shows set in Northern Ireland by city (2 C) Pages in category "Television shows set in Northern Ireland" The following 30 pages are in this category, out of 30 total.
Pages in category "Television shows set in Belfast" The following 11 pages are in this category, out of 11 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. B.
Hope Street was created by Paul Marquess and Susanne Farrell. Marquess stated that his aim whilst creating the series was to make a long-running local drama. Due to being born in Belfast, he wanted to avoid the stereotypes that come with Northern Irish media portrayals, instead focusing on the "humour and warmth" of the area. [2]