The Michelin-starred chef Ramsay returns back for a series of weekly episodes of 'The F-Word'. The programme will also features consumer stories that tell viewers what they really should know about the food in their shopping baskets, bon vivants of the celebrity sphere daring Ramsay to improve their favourite dish, and Gordon's tireless campaign to revive the flagging tradition of Sunday lunch.
Shoring up the summer drama schedule is two-part thriller 'Low Winter Sun', portraying the underbelly of the police force, starring Mark Strong from BBC drama 'The Long Firm'.
Award-winning director Alison Jackson offers a satirical take on the incumbent England coach in 'Sven: The Coach, His Cash and His Lovers', uncovering the lives and loves of the current England manager. The film mixes documentary interviews and archive footage with satirical dramatic reconstructions.
The entertainment schedules will be bolstered with the arrival of Friday night programme 'Whatever', as 12 young people -- with no experience of TV production -- conjure up their own series with complete creative freedom.
This will be followed by sketch show 'Modern Toss', a contemporary, new sketch show featuring Mackenzie Crook from BBC Two's 'The Office', Paul Kaye from 'Two Thousand Acres of Sky', and Simon Greenall from 'I'm Alan Partridge'.
Former England forward Ian Wright will challenge the UK's lack of fitness in 'Ian Wright's Fitter Kids', which sees the football legend turn his passion on the pitch to a six-month project in which he tries to improve the health of eight unfit London teenagers.
'Admission Impossible' follows the struggles and sacrifices of a diverse group of parents trying to ensure their children get the very best education, while 'Gifted Kids', a landmark returning series, charts the lives of eight precociously talented children.
Channel 4's new summer season also includes the debut of a major new documentary series that trails the lives of immigrant children as they begin their new lives in the UK. 'My New Home' follows the youngsters over five years, chronicling their ups and downs as they attempt to integrate into new, unfamiliar communities.
Jamie Oliver, whose one-man crusade against unhealthy school dinners last year triggered a change in government thinking, will return to see if genuine improvements really have been made in 'Jamie's School Diners (Update)'.
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