Shadow Force - Kerry Washington Exclusive Interview
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Squid Game: Season 3 - Final Round Teaser Clip
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Superman - Official Teaser Trailer
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My Life with the Walter Boys Season 2 - Ashby Gentry as Alex
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Lilo & Stitch - Car Ride Scene
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She Rides Shotgun - Official Teaser Poster
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Lilo and Stitch - Spaceship Escape Clip
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The Long Walk - Cooper Hoffman Character Poster
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In The Lost Lands - Dave Bautista Exclusive Interview
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Dexter: Resurrection Season 1 - Peter Dinklage Character Poster
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Thunderbolts* - Official Behind the Scenes Clip
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Murderbot Season 1 - Alexander Skarsgård with a Weapon
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Elio - Freeze Frame Clip
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Elio - Teaser Clip 2
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Relay - Riz Ahmed as Tom
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Royal Institution Christmas Lectures

Royal Institution Christmas Lectures 2013: Life Fantastic: Episode Guide & Ratings

2013: Life Fantastic Episodes

1. Where Do I Come From?

December 28th, 201359 min

One of the greatest conundrums of life is how we emerge from a single cell into a walking, talking, multi-trillion-celled organism that we call the human body. In the first of this year's Christmas Lectures, Dr Alison Woollard from the University of Oxford reveals just how this incredible transformation takes place. Using dramatic live experiments she shows how each of those trillions of cells knows what to do, when to do it and how to organise themselves to carry out vital specialist roles in our body.

2. Am I a Mutant?

December 29th, 201359 min

In the second of this year's Christmas Lectures, Dr Alison Woollard from the University of Oxford unravels this mystery of life. She reveals that the extraordinary diversity has all come about by genetic mutation. Life revolves around the survival of the fittest mutant.

3. Could I Live Forever?

December 30th, 201359 min

In this year's final Christmas Lecture, Dr Alison Woollard from the University of Oxford, tackles a question that has intrigued scientists and natural philosophers for centuries. The cycle of life and death affects all cells, but Alison reveals a shocking truth - that 'cell death' plays an important part in life. It enables the development and survival of most multi-celled organisms from hedgehogs to humans.