You can get a (legally) chipped box, I think its legal anyway.
You'll find out when the cops come knocking with the Sky + people standing behind them & a Court order to take your TV away & drag your as to Court where you're fined £550
Maxalfie- Yeah mate I agree with you, another station I rate alot is Yesterday. In my view it has some of the best shows on TV. It was BHM a couple of years ago that got me addicted to the series World at War, I know we both have a love of that series & I learned so much from it about WW2. For me I've taken a huge respect of the Russian people & anything related to Leningrad is a massive interest of mine. I know other fights in WW2 were bad
but that one battle was so savage & just damn terrible it stands out in the whole history of the war. The news clips etc of that battle & the facts behind what actually went on has never left me & I am sure never will, I always knew the Russian people were tough but that just made me look at them in a whole new way.
Newspaper bread, raw horse meat, -20*c with no boots on, oil freezing in the tanks, what alot would call the first real urban warfare, every 4 seconds another German dies, it was one of the longest and most destructive sieges in history and overwhelmingly the most costly in terms of casualties. I learned so much just from that one show & all thanks to Yesterday on a tv station.
Wednesday 4th December on ITV from 10:35pm to 12:00am - 28 Up South Africa
Documentary in the traditions of Michael Apted's 7 Up, following the lives of a group of children in South Africa and offering an insight into life in a country that has gone through momentous change. In 1992, when they turned seven, Nelson Mandela had only been out of prison for two years. By the time they were 14, he had become their president and the regime of apartheid had been consigned to history. Chosen from separate communities, the six characters have had starkly differing life experiences. They are black, white, rich and poor and every seven years they have taken viewers into their lives. Luyanda and Andiswa are from a notorious township outside Cape Town, Katlego's life is among the white hipsters of Johannesburg, Lizette lives in a coal-mining town while Olwethu tries to makes the best of the rural area her husband has taken her to live in. Meanwhile, farm boy Willem Alberts has become a household name, playing rugby for his country.
Since I found Die Antwoord South Africia has been of HUGE interest to me, I was going to work over there as some of you know at Sun City, the place seems split in hlf with some parts being uber rich & others some poor, dangerous hell hole, should be a great show.