wed 08/10/2025

tv

Stealing Shakespeare, BBC One

Jasper Rees Raymond Scott, antiquarian bookseller or purveyor of dodgy goods? Let the jury decide

“Well! It is now publique,...

Read more...

Californication, Fiver

Veronica Lee David Duchovny in 'Californication': full of sex, nudity and recreational drug-taking

This award-winning series, created by Tom Kapinos in 2007, is groundbreaking television even by Showtime’s daring standards. Californication is a dark - very dark - comedy drama about Hank Moody (David Duchovny), a bad-boy writer who has lost his literary mojo, but absolutely not his mojo mojo, as it were; it has nudity a-gogo, frequent sex scenes, recreational drug-taking and frank discussion of sexual matters.

Read more...

The Men Who Jump Off Buildings, Channel 4

Gerard Gilbert The ace of base: Dan Witchalls is one of 'The Men Who Jump off Buildings'

There may be many benefits to living at the top of the Erno Goldfinger-designed Trellick Tower in north Kensington – the extensive views across London, perhaps, or the knowledge that one is inhabiting an iconic example of Brutalist architecture. Less obvious is the chance to earn a quick 50 quid for allowing Dan Witchalls to jump off your balcony.

Read more...

Better Off Ted, FX

Adam Sweeting Ted (Jay Harrington) and Veronica (Portia De Rossi) locked in a power-meeting at Veridian Dynamics

And first the bad news. The ABC network in the States has already declared Better Off Ted dead, after a paltry two seasons. Which is a pity, since acerbic, mildly surreal satires about the workings of corporate America don’t come along very often.

Read more...

Who Do You Think You Are? - Rupert Everett, BBC One

Fisun Güner

Rupert Everett knows who he is: he is English, he’s a toff and he’s a poof, thank you very much. And that’s just about all you need to know to tell you that, as a breed, they’re pretty damned sure of themselves, these English toffs, poofs or not. But he’s also a pretty memorable actor. Yes, really. Let me try to convince you.

Read more...

Sherlock, BBC One

Adam Sweeting

There was a risk that this new take on the indestructible sleuth of Baker Street might be smothered at birth by a dust-storm of pre-publicity, with coverage stretching from the tabloids to Andrew Marr (who really seems to believe he's an arts correspondent, and not just Alfred E Neuman's long-lost twin brother).

Read more...

Amish: World's Squarest Teenagers, Channel 4

Jasper Rees

Where can or will television’s thirst for tabloid anthropology fetch up? In previous tribal exchanges, wives have been swapped, geeks have gone to babe school, thugs to boot camp, WAGs to townships, Papua New Guineans to the big smoke. Posh girls have lately been parachuted into Peckham.

Read more...

Would I Lie to You? BBC One

howard Male The crew of the Starship Deception about to lie as no one has lied before

The fact that we humans are, technically speaking, bad liars proves that we are instinctively moral creatures (rather than getting our morals from our god or our parents) and that lying is therefore, evolutionarily speaking, probably a bad idea. You can get away with saying you were caught in traffic, rather than admitting you were in the pub, but a polygraph will pick up on changes in blood pressure, pulse and respiration - those indicators of anxiety you’d rather not be feeling - and your...

Read more...

The Hotel Inspector, Five

Adam Sweeting Cruella di Polizzi resumes her quest to hunt down Britain's surviving Basil Fawltys

I stayed in a frightful hotel in Plymouth once. Decrepit rooms, filthy windows, potentially fatal cuisine, sinister staff… By contrast, that same city’s Astor Hotel looked quite pleasant, though not if you were viewing it through the gimlet eyes of Alex Polizzi. Nothing that met her gaze was adequate. The décor was too kitschy and flowery and old-fashioned. The carpets were disgusting, the walls stained and peeling, the lobby too gloomy to contemplate. The establishment’s habit of equipping...

Read more...

Britain by Bike/ Britain Goes Camping, BBC Four

Veronica Lee 'Britain by Bike': Part social history, part travelogue on two wheels with Clare Balding

Themed seasons are often the invention of programmers who have run out of ideas; they string together loosely related output under a cleverly non-specific season title when any old dross gathering dust in the cupboard is given an airing. So I read the notes of BBC’s The Call of the Wild season - with its mix of repeats and new material, and the dread phrases “the great British love affair with the countryside”, “nostalgic exploration” and “a light-hearted look at”- with a sinking...

Read more...

Pages

 

latest in today

'We are bowled over!' Thank you for your messages... ...
R:Evolution, English National Ballet, Sadler's Wells re...

As the new season opens, confidence is high at ENB, just as it...

Trio da Kali, Milton Court review - Mali masters make the an...

Trio da Kali are griots, and their traditional role in...

Giustino, Linbury Theatre review - a stylish account of a sl...

It’s a good year to be Handel-lover. No sooner have summer runs of Rodelinda (Garsington) and Saul (Glyndebourne) finished than...

Hollie Cook's 'Shy Girl' isn't heavyweig...

Hollie Cook was in the final line-up of post-punk groundbreakers The...

theartsdesk Q&A: musician Warren Ellis recalls how jungl...

Warren Ellis is Nick Cave’s wild-maned Bad Seeds right-hand man and The Dirty Three’s frenzied violinist. Justin Kurzel’s Australian film subjects...

theartsdesk Q&A: Idris Elba on playing a US President fa...

Idris Elba has only just appeared as the British Prime Minister in the action comedy Heads of State (2025) – now he's...

Echo Vocal Ensemble, Latto, Union Chapel review - eclectic c...

Echo Vocal Ensemble have their genesis in Genesis. Sarah Latto’s group were initially formed by a cohort of the Genesis Sixteen young artists’...

Susanna, Opera North review - hybrid staging of a Handel ora...

Turning Handel oratorio into opera can be a rewarding enterprise. Charles Edwards’ presentation of Joshua, over 15 years ago, for...