For the next ten days Marches.TV will be reporting from the Hay Festival.
We will be out and about around Hay and the Festival Site so look out for us filming. Whether your local or a visitor we’d love to hear you. We will update the site with footage from Sunday onwards.

If you have anything you would like us to report on email info@marches.tv or Twitter @MarchesTV. And send us your reviews, written or on video.
Today’s Highlights
What the Dickens?
Quiz Show Filming
Sandi Toksvig hosts a new series of this irreverent cultural quiz show. Test your arts knowledge alongside two teams led by captains Chris Addison and Sue Perkins, who battle it out to prove they know their Marlowe from their Mills and Boon. Sold out
Airs Wednesdays at 8pm from 27 May on Sky Arts 1 channel 256 and Sky Arts 1 HD channel 258.
The 2009 Country Living Magazine Discussion: Thatcher, Farrier, Cooper…Call Centre Worker?
Emma Bridgewater, Hugh Peachey, Mike Moody and Daniel Butler
Friday 22 May, 4pm
Venue: Oxfam Studio Buy tickets £5.00
Rural skills are under threat, and without training for a new generation of craftspeople, the traditions we treasure will exist only in tales of days gone by. Chaired by countryside writer Daniel Butler, who talks to Hugh Peachey, gypsy wagon restorer and stonemason, Mike Moody, chair of the National Heritage Training Group, and entrepreneur Emma Bridgewater. Followed by a single malt whisky sampling by The Balvenie.

The Guardian Sessions: Blueprint for a Safer Planet
Nicholas Stern
Friday 22 May, 6.30pm
Venue:
Guardian Stage Buy Tickets £8.00
What is the problem? What are the dangers? What can be done to reduce emissions? At what cost? How can the world adapt? And, what does all this mean for corporations, governments and individuals? Chaired by Ian Katz.
The Rural Media Company presents: Still Life
Adrian Lambert
Friday 22 May, 6.30pm
Venue: Sony Screen Buy Tickets £5.00
Eleven-year-old Lauren has almost come to terms with her parents splitting up when a school history project rekindles some very painful memories and a violent and dangerous jealousy. Set in Herefordshire, the film wrestles with isolation and identity in a rural market town, where people quickly learn how to move on rather than move away. Still Life is the Rural Media Company’s latest ambitious community film production created over the course of a year with the people of Bromyard.
