Afleveringen
-
The streak is over but the chaos is just beginning.
Mark Roberts has danced naked at the centre of the Super Bowl, been tackled by an NFL linebacker, and carried off the field. What he doesnât realise is that minutes earlier, a âwardrobe malfunctionâ at halftime has triggered a media storm that might well dwarf his moment.
While Mark sits in a crowded Houston holding cell â still in his Velcro referee uniform â halftime producer Salli Frattini is hauled up to the NFL commissionerâs box to explain what just happened live to 100 million viewers. Janet Jackson has vanished. Justin Timberlake is apologising. And the NFL is in crisis mode.
Hours later, Mark is charged with criminal trespass and released on bail â buzzing from the streak, but now facing a very real Texas trial.
What follows is a courtroom drama broadcast on Court TV and the very real threat of six months in a Texas prison for Mark. Hard to see how he can blag his way out of this one.
As Markâs legal fate unfolds, the fallout from halftime spirals: complaints flood in, careers are damaged, and senior figures begin to question their roles.
Back in Liverpool, Mark rides the wave of fame â then slowly steps back as nothing can ever top the Super Bowl. Twenty years later, a diagnosis forces him to confront a harder question: not can he streak again, but should he?
After three decades of running naked toward the spotlight, is the Streaker King finally ready to stop⊠or will there be another temptation he just canât resist.
Presented by Rich HallProduced and written by Elle ScottProduction co-ordinator: Juliette Harvey. Production manager: Debbie Waddell. Development Executive: Emma Shaw.Production Executive: Ian TaittExecutive Producer: Georgia CattSound Design and Composition: Julian CorrieAssistant Commissioner: Rob GreenCommissioning Executive: Stevie Middleton
A BBC Studios Production for BBC Radio 5 Live and BBC Sounds.
-
Houston, 2004. Super Bowl XXXVIII. The biggest television event of the year â and everyone involved is chasing perfection.
Inside the NFL machine, Jim Steeg is orchestrating a military-grade operation where every second is worth millions. In the production truck, Salli Frattini is holding together a halftime show so complex it feels like a controlled explosion: Janet Jackson, Justin Timberlake, pyro, thousands of performers, and cameras everywhere. On the field, Patriots linebacker Matt Chatham is inches away from the game of his life.
And somewhere in the middle of all this sits Mark Roberts â disguised, tattooed, layered in Velcro, and nervously taping a tiny deflated American football over his âchicken McNuggetâ because Texas has him rattled.
As the game kicks off, the tension builds â not just for the players, but for everyone who knows whatâs riding on halftime. When it arrives, the stadium turns into a full-blown 2004 MTV spectacle: lights, dancers, smoke, sweat, and pop royalty at its most electric.
It looks flawless. It sounds flawless. Everyone thinks it is flawless.
But in a blink-and-youâll-miss-it moment, something happens that almost nobody inside the stadium fully registers â yet will be replayed, analysed, and argued about for decades.
And while everyone is distracted by that half-second⊠Mark sees his chance.
Presented by Rich HallProduced and written by Elle ScottProduction co-ordinator: Juliette Harvey. Production manager: Debbie Waddell. Development Executive: Emma Shaw.Production Executive: Ian TaittExecutive Producer: Georgia CattSound Design and Composition: Julian CorrieAssistant Commissioner: Rob GreenCommissioning Executive: Stevie MiddletonA BBC Studios Production for BBC Radio 5 Live and BBC Sounds.
-
Zijn er afleveringen die ontbreken?
-
After failing in San Diego, Mark swore heâd never try the Super Bowl again. Then one unexpected email changes everything.
Comedian Rich Hall presents the story of an eight-month mission to infiltrate Super Bowl XXXVIII in Houston - rehearsals, disguises, sponsor tattoos, and a growing belief that this time, he really might pull it off.
At the same time, the NFLâs Jim Steeg and MTVâs Salli Frattini are juggling post-9/11 security, a wildly complicated half-time show, and the pressure of a live global broadcast.
Patriots linebacker Matt Chatham is locked in for the biggest game of his life. Mark is locked in for the biggest streak of his.
Everyone's converging on Houston with their own plans. Mark's ready. The NFL's ready. The players are ready. But is anyone really ready for what is about to happen?
Presented by Rich HallProduced and written by Elle ScottProduction co-ordinator: Juliette Harvey. Production manager: Debbie Waddell. Development Executive: Emma Shaw.Production Executive: Ian TaittExecutive Producer: Georgia CattSound Design and Composition: Julian CorrieAssistant Commissioner: Rob GreenCommissioning Executive: Stevie Middleton
A BBC Studios Production for BBC Radio 5 Live and BBC Sounds.
-
Before Mark could streak the Super Bowl, both streaking and the Super Bowl had to become what they are.
Streaking has a history. The Super Bowl has a history. And host Rich Hall? Well he has a history too, which might explain a few things.
Rich Hall pulls apart the rise and fall of streaking in 1970s America - a cultural flash in the pan that somehow never quite died. Then, the evolution of the Super Bowl from a simple championship game into a global spectacle of music, money, and over-the-top showmanship.
Jim Steeg, the man who ran the event for 26 years, explains how half-time transformed from a small-time, marching-band interval into a billion-dollar pop extravaganza.
Meanwhile, Mark brings his act home. A charity streak at the Merseyside Derby is just a warm-up for the moment that truly makes him famous: crashing Fredâs floating weather map live on national television. Overnight, Britain knows exactly who he is.
Archive: Famous for Fifteen Minutes, BBC Radio 4.
Presented by Rich HallProduced and written by Elle ScottProduction co-ordinator: Juliette Harvey. Production manager: Debbie Waddell. Development Executive: Emma Shaw.Production Executive: Ian TaittSound Design and Composition: Julian CorrieExecutive Producer: Georgia CattAssistant Commissioner: Rob GreenCommissioning Executive: Stevie Middleton
A BBC Studios Production for BBC Radio 5 Live and BBC Sounds.
-
Every superhero has an origin story. For Captain Cock, it begins in Hong Kong, 1993.
Comedian Rich Hall takes us back to when Mark is a young bartender in the cityâs chaotic nightlife district -far from Velcro trousers, tutus, or a global streaking career. Then comes a drunken dare at the Rugby Sevens, the kind most people laugh off and forget by morning.
What happens next will set the course of his life for the next three decades.
But hang on. Someone else remembers that event very differently. So what are the actual origins of this so-called origin story?
Presented by Rich HallProduced and written by Elle ScottProduction co-ordinator: Juliette Harvey. Production manager: Debbie Waddell. Development Executive: Emma Shaw.Production Executive: Ian TaittExecutive Producer: Georgia CattSound Design and Composition: Julian CorrieAssistant Commissioner: Rob GreenCommissioning Executive: Stevie Middleton
A BBC Studios Production for BBC Radio 5 Live and BBC Sounds.
-
Comedian Rich Hall presents the story of Mark Roberts - who isn't your average bloke. By day, he's a painter from Liverpool. By night? He's Captain Cock - the world's most prolific streaker, a man who's dropped his kit at over 500 major sporting events across 23 countries.
By 2002, Mark's conquered almost everything. Wimbledon. The Champions League Final. The Olympics. But there's one event left. The biggest stage on Earth. The Holy Grail of streaking: the Super Bowl.
So in 2003, Mark jets off to San Diego. No ticket. No plan. What could possibly go wrong?
Presented by Rich HallProduced and written by Elle ScottProduction co-ordinator: Juliette Harvey. Production manager: Debbie Waddell. Development Executive: Emma ShawProduction Executive: Ian TaittExecutive Producer: Georgia CattSound Design and Composition: Julian CorrieAssistant Commissioner: Rob GreenCommissioning Executive: Stevie MiddletonA BBC Studios Production for BBC Radio 5 Live and BBC Sounds.
-
Rich Hall presents the story of one man's mission to conquer the Holy Grail of streaking. The Super Bowl.
-
Was Hansie Cronje a villain? A victim? Or something in between? In this final episode, we unpack the legacy Hansie left behind â the loyalties, the doubts, and the stories that still divide opinion. Some say he was trapped by powerful people and trying to find a way out. Others say he knew exactly what he was doing. From emotional moments with close friends to sharp takes from those who saw a darker side, this episode digs into the heart of the scandal and what it says about cricket today.
-
June 2002. Hansie Cronje dies in a plane crash. The reaction is immediate - shock, disbelief, grief. But not everyone buys the official story. In Episode 5, Mark Butcher traces Hansieâs final hours - a missed flight, a last-minute ride on a cargo plane, and a descent through mountain cloud with broken instruments and almost no visibility. Was it pilot error, as the report claimed? Or something more? From talk of missing money and dropped investigations to strange phone calls and long-held theories, this episode explores where the facts end and the doubts begin.
-
Hansieâs admitted guilt but the real drama is only just getting started. Episode 4 takes us to the King Commission, a library turned media circus, where cricketâs clean image takes hit after hit. More names come out. More matches are mentioned. And as the pressure builds, the emotion gets raw. And one big question hovers over it all: was this about getting to the truth or just controlling the damage?
-
The Centurion Test is over. Hansieâs praised for âsavingâ the match. But rewind 24 hours and the real story starts to unfold. In Episode 3, we go behind the scenes of a game that never shouldâve happened - cryptic calls, hotel whispers, and a captain running his own playbook. Then, by pure chance, someoneâs listening. And suddenly, Hansieâs house of cards starts to wobble.
-
Itâs the final Test of a five-match series, and everyoneâs already packed their bags. Three days of rain, no result, nothing to play for. Then out of nowhere, Hansie Cronje makes an offer, and the game is back on. In Episode 2, Mark Butcher takes us inside one of the weirdest days heâs ever seen on a cricket field. At the time, it looked like a stroke of sportsmanship. But in hindsight? Letâs just say not everything is as it seems.
-
In the mid-90s, Hansie Cronje was South Africaâs golden boy, the God-fearing captain backed by Nelson Mandela and worshipped by a nation. More than just a cricketer, he was a symbol of hope. But were the cracks there all along?
In the first episode of Sportâs Strangest Crimes - Hansie Cronje: Fall From Grace, former England cricketer, Mark Butcher revisits the rise of a man who seemed too good to be true and maybe was. Teammates, journalists and friends paint a picture of a leader everyone trusted⊠until they didnât. Because before you fall from grace, youâve got to be on a pedestal.
-
Hansie Cronje had it all â captain of South Africa, adored by a nation, trusted by Nelson Mandela. A symbol of hope in the post-apartheid era.
Then came the Centurion Test: a rain-ruined match is suddenly back on, thanks to a strange decision by Hansie. At first, it looks like good sportsmanship â until a wiretap in India catches something shocking. What unfolds next will change cricket forever.
In Sportâs Strangest Crimes - Hansie Cronje: Fall From Grace, former England cricketer Mark Butcher traces the rise and collapse of a national hero â from quiet warning signs and secret phone calls to a dramatic confession and a televised inquiry. But even as Hansie admits to more than just Centurion, many believe the investigation didnât go far enough.
Sixty-three offshore bank accounts are discovered. Links to other players emerge. And just as pressure builds for a deeper probe â Hansie dies in a plane crash.
Some say pilot error. Others arenât so sure.
Was Hansie manipulated by a powerful network of fixers? Or was he the one pulling the strings?
With testimony from teammates, journalists, investigators and those who knew him best, Mark unpacks a story of power, money, and the dark side of sport.
More than two decades on, people are still asking: who was the real Hansie Cronje?
-
New coach Conor OâShea sets about transforming Harlequinsâ fortunes and restoring their reputation.
Tom Williams rediscovers his form and helps the club to the Premiership final - the ultimate opportunity for redemption.
Dean Richards returns to rugby with Newcastle and reflects on the Bloodgate episode, while some of the key figures in the series offer opinions on the legacy of the scandal.
Narrator: Ross KempReporter/Interviewer: Chris JonesWriter/Producer: Sam SheringhamStory editor: Tom FullerSound design/production: Jesse HowardAssistant producers: Metin Yilmaz, Jack Wood, Mujtaba Ali and Victoria TurnerBBC 5 Live Sport podcast editor: Matt SmithCommissioner: Stevie Middleton
-
With the full Bloodgate scandal now exposed, rugby enters a period of soul-searching.
Fallen Harlequins coach Dean Richards makes allegations that blood cheating goes to the very top of the game, while Ugo Monye adds his weight to the argument that other teams are culpable.
And when Tom Williams returns to the rugby pitch, heâs given a less than warm welcome by opponent Chris Ashton.
Narrator: Ross KempReporter/Interviewer: Chris JonesWriter/Producer: Sam SheringhamStory editor: Tom FullerSound design/production: Jesse HowardDigital Producers: Sam Huxley and Stephen TrenchardAssistant producers: Metin Yilmaz, Jack Wood, Mujtaba Ali and Victoria TurnerBBC 5 Live Sport podcast editor: Matt SmithCommissioner: Stevie Middleton
-
Bloodgate is big news - and itâs about to get even biggerâŠ
Dean Richardsâ resignation has thrust Bloodgate onto the front and back pages - but details of the cover-ups remain outside the public domain.
Thatâs until Paul Kelso, sports news correspondent for the Daily Telegraph, arrives on the scene.
While Kelso, now a Sky news correspondent, starts to release details of the murky aftermath to the cheating plot, Tom Williams prepares to reveal all.
Everything comes to a head at a hearing in Glasgow, with life-changing consequences for some of the key figures in the Bloodgate plot.
Narrator: Ross KempReporter/Interviewer: Chris JonesWriter/Producer: Sam SheringhamStory editor: Tom FullerSound design/production: Jesse HowardDigital Producers: Sam Huxley and Stephen TrenchardAssistant producers: Metin Yilmaz, Jack Wood, Mujtaba Ali and Victoria TurnerBBC 5 Live Sport podcast editor: Matt SmithCommissioner: Stevie Middleton
-
After receiving his 12-month ban, Tom Williams faces pressure from the club and his team-mates as he considers blowing the whistle on the Bloodgate plot.
We hear about secret meetings between Tom and the clubâs board and horse-trading over what level of financial incentive might persuade him not to reveal the truth.
It leads to a showdown at a board memberâs house in Cobham, a decisive intervention from Tomâs girlfriend Alex and a shock resignation.
Narrator: Ross KempReporter/Interviewer: Chris JonesWriter/Producer: Sam SheringhamStory editor: Tom FullerSound design/production: Jesse HowardDigital Producers: Sam Huxley and Stephen TrenchardAssistant producers: Metin Yilmaz, Jack Wood, Mujtaba Ali and Victoria TurnerBBC 5 Live Sport podcast editor: Matt SmithCommissioner: Stevie Middleton
-
Gripping testimony from the Harlequins dressing-room as Tom Williams persuades club doctor Wendy Chapman to help cover up his act of cheating.
But when new footage emerges of Tom appearing to chew on a fake blood capsule, European Rugby prosecutors decide to press charges against the player, his coach and the club.
Quins agree a cover story - but will it hold water when matters come to a head at a Bloodgate hearing in central London?
Narrator: Ross KempReporter/Interviewer: Chris JonesWriter/Producer: Sam SheringhamStory editor: Tom FullerSound design/production: Jesse HowardDigital Producers: Sam Huxley and Stephen TrenchardAssistant producers: Metin Yilmaz, Jack Wood, Mujtaba Ali and Victoria TurnerBBC 5 Live Sport podcast editor: Matt SmithCommissioner: Stevie Middleton
-
The story of one rugby's most notorious matches, told by those who were there.
A European Cup quarter-final between Harlequins and Leinster was always going to be big - but nobody knew how big.
Players from both sides including Ugo Monye and Brian OâDriscoll, commentators, coaches and referee Nigel Owens recall how events unfolded before, during and after the moment that Tom Williams staggered from the field with fake blood dripping from his mouth.
The Leinster officials see through the plot straight away - but can they expose the wrongdoing?
Narrator: Ross KempReporter/Interviewer: Chris JonesWriter/Producer: Sam SheringhamStory editor: Tom FullerSound design/production: Jesse HowardDigital Producers: Sam Huxley and Stephen TrenchardAssistant producers: Metin Yilmaz, Jack Wood, Mujtaba Ali and Victoria TurnerBBC 5 Live Sport podcast editor: Matt SmithCommissioner: Stevie Middleton
- Laat meer zien