Monday, February 16, 2009

Week Eight: Eliza Do Lots

Hello lovely blog reader. It's another week in the wild, wacky and windswept world of Keith Telly Topping And His Top Telly Tips.
So, this blogger sat down to watch a review tape of Joss Whedon’s new show, Dollhouse, last night fully expecting to be hugely disappointed (as many critics in America have been it would seem). Actually, I wasn't - much to my surprise. Well, to be fair, this is a new show from the man who made two of what yer actual Keith telly Topping considers to be the best dozen-or-so television series in the world over the last decade so, perhaps, one should cut the chap a bit of slack. There was certainly a lot to admire in the Dollhouse pilot - some classy dialogue, a lot of very good actors, an impressive design to the thing. The direction was a touch flat, I thought, which is not something you normally associate with Joss. Maybe he had other things on his mind whilst he was making it. But, overall I enjoyed it a lot. In fact, the main problem with Dollhouse is there was a hell of a lot going on in it - too much, possibly. I can't even begin to give you a 'twenty-words-of-less' explanation of what it's about, it's far too complex for that. And the 'twenty-words-or-less' thing is usually a pre-requisite for a TV show making any sort of impact in the US. Think about it. Your favourite TV show - describe it to somebody who's never seen an episode in twenty words or less. If you can't do it then, chances are, they'll never watch it because they will have to spend so much time working out what it's all about that they'll be unable to surrender themselves to the story itself. Dollhouse seems to be about three different shows in one - Echo's story, the agent played by the lad out of Battlestar Galactica's story and the 'undercover-plot-of-the-week' story - any one of which, on their own, might have been a better bet than chucking all three of them into the mix in the hope that somehow they'd mesh. It's also very 'high concept' and somewhat morally ambiguous (who, exactly, is one supposed to regard as the 'good guys' in this scenario of what appears to be a world full of shades of grey?) Both of which can be regarded as 'brave and challenging' (if you're a Joss sycophant) or 'wilfully anti-populist' (if you're very definitely not) or just simply 'confusing as hell' (and, unfortunately, I've a feeling that's going to include a lot of people who don't fall into either of the other two camps). I like the show from the evidence so far, I think it has a lot of potential and I hope it's a big hit (it's about time Joss had another one). But I do worry what kind of audience they're expecting. If they're going for 'everybody who watched Buffy, Angel and Firefly (adjusted for inflation and demographic changes)' then they're not going to get enough viewers to satisfy FOX or anything even remotely like it. If they (and FOX) have their expectations set lower then they might, just get away with a second season and then we'll see what longevity - if any - Dollhouse has. But, I have to be honest, I'm not holding my breath. It’s clearly a clever idea - very clever - but will that cleverness be turned against it by viewers who believe that it’s 'too clever for its own good'? That’s happened before, several times (Studio Sixty On The Sunset Strip, The Lone Gunmen, Whedon's own Firefly and, most recently, Pushing Daisies just to highlight four relatively recent examples). Opening night ratings of 4.7 million were hardly Earth-shattering, albeit they're nowhere near disastrous. But still, bright side - Eliza Dushku in leather pants and Amy Acker in a lab coat, what's not to love? I shall await future developments with interest and more than a little hope.

Right, let’s have some of them there Top Telly Tips in the area.

Friday 20 February
It’s been quite a while since we’ve given Eggheads - 6:30 BBC2 – the thoroughly good shoeing that it deserves on a near-weekly basis from Top Telly Tips. You remember, this as the early evening quiz show featuring a bunch of the smuggest people you’re ever likely to meet outside of a smug emporium selling smugness by the barrel. Jeremy Vine – not a little smug himself when he puts his mind to it - hosts the show where each day a new team of (relatively normal) challengers take on probably the greatest smug team … sorry quiz team in Britain. The regulars include some of the country's top quizzers, like Barry Simmons, Who Wants to be a Millionaire? winner Judith Keppel and two Mastermind champions, Chris Hughes and Kevin Ashman. Not to mention that CJ fellah, a man so smug he’s in danger of dying from a smug overdose. I’m not a big fan of this one, I must admit. It’s a bit smug for my liking.

Saturday 21 February
The lead-up to Red Nose Day begins with Let's Dance for Comic Relief - 6:35 BBC1. Hosted by Claudia Winkleman and, making his BBC1 debut, Steve Jones, the show sees some of the nation's "favourite celebrities" (i.e. a lot of people you can't stand) paying homage to iconic dance routines in a bid to wow the viewers as they battle to be crowned "champion of the dance floor" as judged by the lovely Anton Du Beke. Each week, a series of graceless, clodhopping celebrity acts (a mixture of solos, duos and groups) will attempt to recreate famous dances from movie like Saturday Night Fever and High School Musical and classics pop videos such as Baby, One More Time and Thriller. Oawwww! The series runs over four weeks, comprising three heats and culminating in a final dance-off on Comic Relief weekend in March. Celebrities who will be donning their dancing shoes including Jo Brand, some of the Dragon's Den nasties (Peter Jones, Duncan Bannatyne and Deborah Meaden), former Blue Peter presenters Tim Vincent, Anthea Turner, Mark Curry, Peter Duncan, Peter Purves, Janet Ellis and the current incumbent Helen Skelton, Dick & Dom, Paddy McGuinness and Robert Webb.

Chris Tarrant hosts a new gameshow, The Colour of Money - 6:35 ITV – which has been rushed into the slot that Primeval was supposed to be filling right now but isn’t because ITV want you all to forget about Demons before they allow another SF show anywhere near Saturday tea time. Contestants can win a life-changing amount of money by attempting to withdraw cash from a number of different coloured machines. Each machine contains a different amount ranging from £1,000 to £20,000, but the contestants do not know where the money is hidden. If they can withdraw the cash before the machines run out of money and reach the target they have been assigned, they win. Big. If not, they don’t and leave with nothing. So, this is various bits from Deal Or No Deal, Goldenballs and (for older viewers) Take Your Pick thrown together to make a "new" format. Yeah, that’s original. Mind you, there’s nothing in the Big Book Of TV Rules that says quiz shows have to be original, of course. But, come on this is The Quiz Show - The Greatest Hits, isn’t it? And it’s Tarrant as well, so that virtually guarantees a plethora of smugness smeared all over your screen thus ruining the rest of your evening as you try to forget his queasy nastiness. Something of a running theme this weekend, isn’t it?

Sunday 22 February
The Victorians - 9:00 BBC1 – is Jeremy Paxman’s new series about his favourite era. In tonight’s episode, he enters the typical Victorian home as he continues his series revealing the reality of the era and its influences. I loved Paxman’s appearance on The ONE Show to promote this a couple of weeks back where he used his time to indulge in a bit of that great old popular Victorian sport Giles Brandreth baiting. (I will say, mind, Brandreth gave as good as he got back – it was one of the most entertaining five minutes I’ve seen on TV in months. Chiles and Christine just sat back with a bag of popcorn and let them get on with it!)

And, a quick mention for one of my favourite American series, Lost on Sky One (9:00) – which is currently enjoying its best run of episodes in a couple of years (and, after some of the triumphs of last season, that really is saying something). Ben's mission to reunite the Oceanic Six and return to the island begins to unravel when he learns that not everyone wants to go back. Ben's repidly becoming the most interesting character in a show full of them, I really enjoy the way Michael Emerson plays him with a Sylvester Sneakly-style manipulation of everybody and everything to his own advantage. And, I thought it was really nice that in the three years since they finally got together, Desmond and Penny had, as I'd hoped, seemingly spent all of their time on a boat having The Sex and making babies. It's certainly a decent alternative to Sayid's joyless existence as a lone assassin, Kate living her lie or Jack's boring our tits off with his beardy depression. Lighten up, guys, fer Christ's sake there's only a season and a half left and you've still got a hell of a lot of story to tell.

Monday 23 February
Battlestar Galactica's Jamie Bamber and Bradley Walsh heads the cast as the premiere US crime franchise opens its UK office for business in Law & Order: UK - 9:00 ITV. I was talking to James Moran, who’s writing for the show, last year and he was telling me this is something like the sixth spin-off of the Law & Order franchise from around the world (apparently there’s a Law & Order: Moscow and a Law & Order: Paris). An ITV press release promises (in the solemn vocal style of the original US series’ opening narration) "In the criminal justice system, the people are represented by two separate yet equally important groups. The police who investigate crime and the Crown Prosecution Service who prosecute the offenders." Often incompetently in real-life, but that's beside the point. The UK show is co-produced by Kudos films (who, of course, make several glossy and stylish series like [Spooks] and Hustle) and lots of the writing team come from very slick American-style UK drama shows like Torchwood and Life and Mars. Harriet Walter, one of my favourite actresses is also in it as is Freema Agyeman from Doctor Who. So, you know, this all sounds rather good and likely to find (and keep) an audience, something ITV dramas have had notorious difficulty in managing of late (Whitechapel being a noble exception). Watch, now this has got us dead intrigued with its premise, it’ll turn out to be Bonekickers: The Sequel!

Speaking of classy US crime drama, one of my regular correspondents, Roy, has demanded that I highlight the return of The Shield - albeit on a very obscure freeview channel, Five US (that’s Channel 35 if you’re looking for it, he said, checking in his Radio Times) at 10:00. This is, if you’ve never seen it, a hard-hitting, "graphic" police drama series about corrupt officers in Los Angeles starring the magnetic Michael Chiklis. It’s very hard, very violent and features very strong language so, if you don’t like any of those, probably best to avoid it. Think The Sweeney: LA Style and you're in the right sort of neighbourhood. Except, South Central rather than Elephant and Castle, nes pas?! With a Mexican-Armenian gang war looming, Pezuela orders a hit on the Armenian mob boss Rezian, who tells Shane that both his and Vic Mackey's families will be killed if anything happens to him. Meanwhile, the Strike Team looks into a series of murders believed to be linked to a list of dangerous gangs published by the mayor's office. This is the seventh - and last - series of what was, quite frankly, one of the best things US TV has produced this decade. Right up there with The West Wing, The Sopranos, Buffy et al. Might be a bit difficult to climb on board if you've missed it so far but, if you like gripping quality drama, you could do a lot worse than to give it a shot.

Dispatches: The Problem Princes - 8:00 C4 – is a documentary examining what the future holds for William, second-in-line to the throne and, quite literally, "the lad that’s born to be king." What's so good about that job, anyway? The hours must be dreadful. Alex Thomson, who is rapidly turning into Channel 4’s answer to Paxman (the grumpy middle-aged cynic that nobody invites to the cool parties), investigates the roles currently adopted by both royal princes and looks at how their activities are shaping the modern monarchy. Thomson also casts his jaundiced eye over the handling of stories such as William's commandeering of an RAF helicopter to visit a stag party on the Isle of Wight. Well, he had a ticket to Ryde and he didn’t care. Ticket to Ryde, see it’s a … oh, never mind. Wasted on you guys, this stuff. Anyway it could be worse, of course, William could be a thoughtless casually-racist cretin like this brother. And his grandfather. And most of the rest of his family for that matter. Not a big fan of the Windsor-Mountbattens, I have to be honest.

Tuesday 24 February
So, for tonight here’s three alternatives to the Inter Milan verses The Scum game on ITV. Normally under these circumstances, one would suggest supporting the English team in such a clash but, it is Man United after all so, Forza Italia!

In Holby City - 8:00 BBC1 - Joseph fears he must come clean with Faye as the day of Jac's big announcement arrives. Is he about to jump the gun and shoot himself in the foot? Quite the contortionist is he if he can manage that without snapping something. The father of Ric's patient makes a formal complaint when asked to pay for his son's gastric band, but when the boy crashes and Ric saves his life, Connie is left with a tough decision. Meanwhile, Rachel admits her true concerns for Daisha, but finds that she may be better off minding her own business. Holby’s been really good of late. Lots of a decent actors and some surprisingly hard-hitting storylines. It’s nice to see that both Casualty – which we talked about a couple of weeks back – and Holby, even after many years production, can still get it right more often than they get it wrong. Restores your faith in British drama, so it does.

Why are you more likely to have a heart attack at eight o'clock in the morning or to crash your car on the motorway at two o'clock in the afternoon? Can taking your medication at the right time of day really save your life? And have you ever wondered why teenagers will not get out of bed in the morning? You mean, apart from the rfact that they're lazy sods who could do with a damn good spell in the army?! Sorry, I was having a Daily Mail moment there ... The answers to these questions lie in the the human biological clock as told in Horizon: The Secret Life of Your Bodyclock - 9:00 BBC2. Well, I never get out of bed until well after eight o’clock in the morning. So, hopefully, I’ll be safe from the heart-attack thing, anyway. Good, that's a big weight off my mind I must say.

Boys and Girls Alone - 8:00 C4 – has been much in the news since it started a fortnight ago. I mentioned when previewing the first episode that it had been controversial before it even started. After the opening episode that controversy turned into a genuine cause célèbre when Cornwall Children's Services Authority said that it would have stopped the series being filmed in its area had it known what they were doing, described it a "child abuse", complained to Ofcom and said it was considering seeking an injunction to stop any more episodes being shown. To be honest, having watched a bit of both episodes so far, I reckon it’s a load of fuss over nothing. But I am rather annoyed at that "child abuse" description. It isn't. Not even remotely close and using a loaded and emotive term like that for something so utterly trivial does huge damage to very real cases of cruelty. I hope you're proud of youselves, Cornwall. Anyway, tonight, the boys and girls move in together and a budding romance between Maddie and William has village tongues wagging. Good grief they're only, what, eleven or something? Shouldn't they be doing their homework?

Wednesday 25 February
Since we gave Eggheads a right good kicking, as we're an equal-opportunity abuser on this slot if nothing else, it's only fair we also have a go at its BBC2 stablemate, Battle of the Brains - 6:00 – hosted by Nicky Campbell, a man who can certainly give Jeremy Vine a run for his money in the smugly smug stakes. I love his "Concerned Little Englander" persona (or "Little Scotlander" in his case) on Watchdog, he so desperately wants to be "the Jeremy Paxman of consumer affairs" and nail some poor hapless painter and decorator to the wall for charging two quid more than he should. But, instead, he comes over as nothing more than Esther Rantzen’s heir apparent in the Uppity Interfering Busybody stakes. Only, you know, without the teeth. Anyway, in Battle of the Brains two teams featuring some of the brightest brains in Britain go head-to-head in a game of nerve, strategy and skill. Yeah, this one's all right, actually - and Nicky presents it very well. It's certainly preferable to the show that's on immediate after it.

Delia, Jamie, Gordon, Nigella, Rick - their names and faces are everywhere, they are all over the TV schedules, their brand products dominate the supermarkets and their cookery books fill up the bestseller lists. We think we know them well (though, not in the biblical sense), but for the first time this is the story of how they took British cuisine "out of the joke books and into the record books" in The Rise of the Superchef - 9:00 BBC2. With behind-the-scenes access to the chefs and the teams of experts who helped build their empires, this is the untold story of how they turned their cooking skills into vast multi-million-pound businesses and international brands. So, this is yet another excuse for that oily twonk Jamie Oliver to get his boat-race on TV for no adequately explained reason, isn’t it? Mark me absent, please. I've developed sudden food poisoning.

Ice Road Truckers - 8:00 Five – is a show we mentioned about eighteen months back and, to be honest, it never seems to be off the telly. Every time I switch on Five, there it is. Anyway, if you’ve never seen it before this is a documentary series examining the dangerous job of driving trucks on Canada's notorious ice highways. In tonight’s episode, the rig move – which took up most of last week’s screen time - is finally completed. Hugh continues to ply the highways while Rick carries on complaining about his poor health. Go and see a doctor, Rick, for goodness sake, you’re not going to get any better by moaning to a camera about those tingling pains in your chest and down your arm.

Thursday 26 February
Documentary director Sue Bourne has made several excellent films for Dispatches and Cutting Edge that we’ve featured on Top Telly Tips over the last couple of years (including The Falling Man, My Street and Alzheimer’s, Mum and Me). In her latest piece, Love, Life, Death in the Day - 9:00 C4 – Sue takes an alternative look at a day in the life of 21st century Britain through the births, deaths and marriages that occur in Bristol over one twenty four hours period. After thirteen years together, Shell and Mel are getting married. Meanwhile, the family of twenty-year-old Martin Cripps prepare to bury him and teen parents Anthony and Emma welcome baby Brooklyn into the world. What a great idea. Like all of the films that this talented lady makes this is thought-provoking, intelligent, witty, sad, reflective and brilliant.

Margaret - 9:00 BBC2 – concerns Margaret Thatcher's rapid fall from power and the way in which politics can be truly ruthless. On 12 November 1990, the Prime Minister was preparing for her speech at the Lord Mayor's banquet at the Guildhall, whilst Sir Geoffrey Howe, her quietly-spoken former foreign secretary and chancellor, was busy penning his resignation speech that would stun the country and, ultimately, seal her fate. The next day Howe made his lethal speech in the Houses of Parliament, Michael Hesaltine (and his lovely hair) saw his chance for a bid for power and the final ten days of Margaret Thatcher's reign began. Now, this looks to have a lot going for it – including a remarkable central performance by Lindsay Duncan. But, inevitable comparisons will be drawn with another drama-doc Granada’s Thatcher: The Final Days (starring Sylvia Sim) which was made in 1991 just months after the real life events it depicted. Stunning cast, though. I can’t wait to see John Sessions playing Geoffrey Howe!

Snowstorm: Britain's Big Freeze - 10:00 C4 – is a very topical documentary chronicling the extraordinary week endured by Britain in early February, as the country suffered its worst snow falls in eighteen years. Examining the possible reasons behind the freak weather, the film looks at previous winter storms and asks if the recent inclement weather was particularly unusual. And whether it was all the government’s fault. Because, you know, everything else is it would seem.

Finally this week a couple of further bits of TV news. Doctor Who is currently doing location filming for the forthcoming Easter special, Planet of the Dead, in Dubai (not, as you might have read in some of the more rubbish tabloid newspapers the first occasion that Doctor Who has filmed abroad – you actually have to go back to 1979 for that). In this picture we can see David, his co-star Michelle Ryan and … Mick the lighting man, seemingly. Great job you're doing there, Mick.

Lastly, there was rumoured to be a right old kafuffle on Antiques Roadshow last week when somebody supposedly told Fiona Bruce that the Top Gear boys were thinking of replacing her as the arbitor of what should go where on “The Cool Wall” with a younger newsreader. You know, somebody in the Sophie Raworth/Kirsty Young/Katie Silverton sort of age-bracket. I trust Jezza and the boys are now hiding in a secure nuclear bunker from the whirlwind of wrath that an enraged Fiona Bruce can unleash. Because, that's a sight to see, trust me. I mean, it's in the same league as that stupid Emily Maitlis woman informing the Director General of the BBC that she is so old her "pussy is haunted" on Newsnight and then being all surprised when the clip turned up on You Tube. That sort of "sight to see." Please don't cane me, Fiona. I was led astray by older boys... Honest.

Sunday, February 15, 2009

The Credit Crunch Comes to Weatherfield

Some potentially world-shattering telly news here; ITV are alleged to have been affected by the current financial crisis to such an extent that they are now struggling to make their own programmes and, so, may give them over to independent companies to produce for them. Rumours suggest that discussions are already taking place over the future of Coronation Street due to severe cutbacks at ITV. That ever reliable bastion of truth and quality reporting, the Sunday Express has a story which alleges the long-running soap opera may no longer be produced by Granada Television - as it has been since 1960 - because ITV (persumably as an entity in and of itself) is struggling to cope with the impact of the recession. It is also suggests that, as an 'interim measure', Emmerdale may soon be made in Manchester rather than by Yorkshire Television in Leeds. That oft-qutoed spokesperson "an insider" told the newspaper: 'It's fairly certain that Leeds will be closed and Emmerdale will be run from Manchester, which is, effectively, the end of Yorkshire TV.' Just last week, ITV's executive chairman Michael Grade admitted that the financial state of commercial television had been 'severely challenged' (that would be 'cattle trucked' to you and me, pal) by the economic downturn. 'I've seen the cycle come and go over the years,' he noted. 'I have never seen anything quite as dramatic or profound as this in terms of the effect on advertising revenues.' Well, you know, having some decent programmes on your schedule might just help, Michael. I'm guessing here, mind but I thought I'd thrown that suggestion into your in-box to see if it warrents an acknowledgement. An ITV spokesman, meanwhile, confirmed to the Express that the broadcaster is currently holding talks over its future, but dismissed claims that its production wing would be closed completely. 'Operational reviews are taking place to ensure that ITV is in the best shape to meet the unprecedented challenges facing the economy,' he said. 'But there are no plans to drastically scale back, or shut, ITV Studios.'

Elsewhere, I am as delighted as a big fluffy delighted thing to report some very welcome news concerning the greatest TV show in the world, ever (well ... that doesn't have the words "Doctor", "Buffy", "Likely" or "West" in the title, anyway). Parker Lewis Can't Lose looks set to finally be coming to DVD in 2009. Keith Telly Topping will post more details when they've announced a release date (and, I'm speculating this is likely to be Region 1-only, at least to begin with, since the show never really had anything more than a tiny - albeit very dedicated - cult-following in the UK). But, seriously, that is - as Mikey Randall would doubtless note - "primo-rad, baby!" If you never saw it back in the day, Parker Lewis Can't Lose was just ... indescribably (and quite surreally) brilliant ... albeit, it's probably fair to say it did lose something significant during its third season. I'd completely forgotten what a great episode Radio Free Flamingo was!

Also, in the "about bloody time" column, the last week has seen a lot of industry rumours concerning the oft-speculated Sopranos movie. After the success of the film adaptation of another HBO series, Sex and the City, in an interview with New York Magazine two weeks ago, James Gandolfini for the first time since the show ended didn't flat-out deny that plans for a movie had been discussed, noting: 'Obviously it's the writing of the script and if David [Chase] comes up with something, then that would do it for me. It would be great to bring everyone back together.'

In the mean-time, whilst we wait developments, if you fancy a right good laugh, have about half an hour to kill and are - and this is very important - not easily offended by a surfeit of viciously profane language then you could do a lot worse than check this m*tha*u*k* out.

And, lastly (cos I've got 'stuff to do' frankly), this week's "Did You Know?" Did you know that Life on Mars and Ashes to Ashes hard-man actor Dean Andrews, owner (as Ray Carling) of the hardest working moustache in the CID went to Oakwood Comprehensive School in Rotherham with Top Gear's James May. "While all the rest of us had sports bags, James walked around with a briefcase," noted Dean. Yeah, that sounds about right!

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Top Telly News

Here are a few odds and ends of top quality industry gossip to drop into your toaster, dear blog reader, and see if they pop up brown.

God bless Peter Fincham! ITV have recommissioned Poirot and Doc Martin (neither of which I'm all that a big fan of but I'd sooner they made stuff like those than some of the wretched nonsense their drama department have been forcing on us of late). And, most importantly from this blogger's point of view, also they've also recommissioned the excellent Foyle's War. Keith Telly Topping was always rather baffled by Fincham's predecessor Simon Shaps' decision to ditch Foyle in the first place - it was one of the few ITV dramas that was both widely popular - and with quite a diverse audience too - and had a certain critical standing. Yet, for at least a couple of years prior to the actual decision to scrap it they seemed to be constantly sending out signals that the current series 'could be the last.' So, it'll be nice to have that one back.

In more or less the same breath, however, ITV have cancelled the excellent Wire in the Blood. Innit marvellous? As if the North East isn't having it hard enough at the moment, now Wor geet canny Robson's on the Nat King Cole.
Oh, and Heartbeat and The Royal are not being cancelled, as you may have read, they are, instead, being "rested". Yeah ... I've heard that one before. Unlike Doctor Who fans, however, I don't think most of Heartbeat's audience can afford to wait around for sixteen years for a revival.

Meanwhile, the BBC Trust have issued a report saying that the decision to move The Weakest Link to BBC1 and into the 5:30 slot has harmed ratings for Newsround and Blue Peter. Expect further extracts from this to reveal that the Pope is, indeed, Catholic and that bears do, as you may have suspected, shit in the woods. Do you ever feel like yelling "I TOLD YOU SO" very loudly? You too, eh?

Who Do You Think You Are? has been excellent so far this season but has seen its audience somewhat squeezed by being placed in the same slot as Moses Jones and, especially, Whitechapel (which has been a big hit with viewers - seven million plus for episode two). It'll be interesting to see what the BBC show does for the last two episodes of the series - Zoë Wanamaker and Kevin Whately, two very popular actors anyway - which unlike the last three episodes, won't have two cracking crime dramas on opposite them. It will, however, be facing the debut (quite highly anticipated by me, at any rate) of Law & Order: UK.

And, poor old Ant and Dec have said they may not sign a new golden handcuffs deal with ITV so that they can work for other broadcasters again. Of course, they've done this at the very time when their most likely next port of call, the Beeb, are suffering more financial cutbacks than the average HBoS customer.

Richard and Judy, too, are having their woes.

Hustle has, as I suspected last week, been recommissioned.

John Nettles is leaving Midsomer Murders.

And, there are some very dark rumours doing the rounds in the industry that, almost entirely due to Demons truly disastrous performance, ITV have suddenly gone rather cold on Primeval and, despite its impressive performance last year, if the ratings show even the slightest sign of dipping, the forthcoming third season (which has already been pushed back, seemingly to put some distance between it and Demons in the viewers' minds) could be the show's last. Which would be criminal, frankly.

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Great Placenames of the World

Number one and number two, in a potentially ongoing series:

First up, of course -

And then, who could possibly fail to include -

Week Seven: Crime, Corrie, Cookery, Canada and Macaroongate

Here's a jolly good question to tax the best and brightest of minds out there. If you, dear blog reader, were to be captured whilst in the act of perpetrating some naughty-badness - banged to rights, as it were, "it's a fair cop, guv" and all that - and you were to, as requested, "come quietly" and be taken dahn the station in the old Black Maria and thence to be interrogated, harshly-but-fairly of course, by a selected member of law enforcement and your choices of nemesis were a) CTU agent and certified psychopathic nutter Jack Bauer or, b) unreconstituted 1970s knuckle-scraping throwback DCI Gene Hunt, which one would you sooner have the safety of your 'nads in the hands of? Possibly, quite literally. It's a toughie, isn't it...? An equally difficult question, of course, is "Who's the hardest a'tween the pair"? I think Jack could (probably) take Gene in a tasty barney-rubble-style scenario but not before he'd've suffered some considerable shellacking, and more than a drop of raspberry, to his pretty-boy dish. That's what I think, anyway. Others may have a differing opinion.

Y'see these, ladies and gentlemen of this blog, are the kind of questions that more than occasionally keep yer Lord Keith Telly Topping, Guv'nor of the Gogglebox, awake at night and turning (not to mention tossing, of course) in his pit. It's a dirty, thankless task but, you know what they say, someone's got to do it.

Friday 13 February:
It’s Friday the thirteenth and we haven’t mentioned Corrie for a few weeks. Is this significant, you ask? You decide. In that time, Big Eyed-Tony has cracked-up with guilt over his having done a bit of murdering to love-rival Liam, Ken Barlow’s got himself a shoulder-padded girlfriend straight out of Dracula AD 1972 and that sultry little minx Becky’s stirred up a right load of testosterone in among the Weatherfield hard-lads. And, much more seriously, we’ve also had the serious discombobulations of what shall, hereafter, always be known as Macaroongate which, seemingly, had the whole country talking. Or, at least, the entire listenership of Radio Newcastle's Afternoon Show, anyway. For anyone who missed it, what happened was that Lloyd bet Steve five pounds on whether a macaroon is a biscuit or a cake, thus sparking a major debate between several other characters. Mary, rightly, pointed out that cakes go hard when they go stale, whereas biscuits go soft - she referenced the VAT exemption case that McVitie's successfully fought concerning Jaffa Cakes a few years ago as mentioned recently in an episode of Qi. However, nobody present could determine what state macaroons reach when they go stale. Later on, however, Lloyd apparently got confirmation from ex-baker Eddie that cakes rise when baked, unlike biscuits, or apparently macaroons, thereby winning his bet. The jury, however, remains out on whether this is remotely true or not. Personally, I think they're cakes myself. Anyway, after all that excitement, in tonight's episode, both Jason and Steve make proposals to Becky, but which one of them will, perhaps quite literally, sweep her off her feet? Will Steve lose the girl as well as his bet? Tune-in at 7:30 to find out.

Saturday 14 February:
This next one is specifically for Wor Alfie Joey, a huge fan of the legendary crooner Tony Bennett. Tony reflects on his life in music with his old friend and jazz enthusiast Clint Eastwood in an Arena documentary at 8:00 on BBC2. Bennett proves that he didn't, in fact, leave his heart in San Francisco - or anywhere else for that matter - as it is still, quite clearly, in perfect working order as he traces his musical lineage through a wealth of jazz archive footage and some much-loved favourite musicals, highlighted with footage on Tony's memorable 2005 performance at the Montreal Jazz Festival. Niiiiiiice.

Also on Saturday, I have to report that Total Wipeout is now a genuine hit for the BBC (over seven million viewers last week) which, fun as it is, I never expected for what is, basically, it's a Knockout: The Next Generation. Also, Ant & Dec’s Saturday Night Takeaway is back at 8:00 on ITV with "extra special guest" (it says here) Paris Hilton. I wonder if the lads are planning on taking Paris doon the Bigg Market after the show. It might be right up her street, you know.

Sunday 15 February:
Tonight sees the return of Damages (10:20 BBC1), the classy US legal drama starring Glenn Close and Ted Danson. The series received critical acclaim and won numerous awards, including three Emmy's, during its first year. It become highly regarded for a complex non-linear narrative, frequent use of clever and unexpected plot-twists, season-long storylines and the superb acting of its cast. As Ellen Parsons (Rose Byrne) struggles to deal with her fiance's murder, an old acquaintance (William Hurt) reappears seeking Patty Hewes's protection.

Monday 16 February:
With two European countries having already banned mercury amalgam fillings for teeth and America's health regulator recently issuing new advice about how they may harm pregnant women and developing children, why do British officials seem so unconcerned? Morland Sanders investigates in What’s in Your Mouth? ITV at 8:00. Good title!

Another good title is The Gangster And The Pervert Peer, 9:00 on Channel 4. This is the second in a series of documentaries exploring the relationships between the upper echelons of society and the criminal underclass – the excellently named "Toffs and Crims season." It looks at how political influence was at the very heart of the notorious Kray twins' extortion empire. They rose from small-time racketeers in their native East End, doling out the odd punishment spankin' to anyone that got a bit previous with the firm to become the most powerful criminal organisation that London had ever seen. Though, in their favour it should be noted that they really did love their mum. While fear, violence and more than a couple of murders in The Blind Beggar played a major part in their power base, another secret behind their rapid rise was the relationship that Reggie shared with a prominent Tory peer with an - alleged - passion for kinky gay sex, Lord Boothby. Sadly, this excellent-looking documentary is on opposite the final parts of the dramas Whitechapel and Moses Jones - both of which I've been raving about for the last couple of weeks (not to mention another episode of Who Do You Think You Are? on the beeb - this one featuring the celebrity chef Rick Stein). So I reckon that’s likely to limit the potential audience a bit. Therefore, if you miss this, keep an eye open for any repeat showing because it looks fascinating.

Lastly at 10:35 on BBC1 we’ve got Bobsleigh Challenge. This follows the thrilling, white-knuckle journey as amateur apline sportists Dean Macey, Dan Luger, Jason Gardener and Craig MacLean attempt to enter the British Bobsleigh Championships in the Italian Alps, with only ten days' training to get it right. Rather them than me. I tried the luge once, I can't tell you how much fun sliding down the side of a mountain on nothing more than a tea-tray was.

Tuesday 17 February:
Nine o’clock sees the return for a second season of the BBC’s Sex and the City knock-off Mistresses which was generally considered to have gotten itself filed under the "brave attempt but, ultimately, bit of a failure" category last time around. Over a year has passed since the troubled love lives of Katie, Trudi, Siobhan and Jessica left them heartbroken, but they have all successfully moved on. Katie has started a new job, having sworn off men, but trouble looms when her new boss turns out to be an old flame. Meanwhile, Trudi tries to earn some extra cash baking cakes, Siobhan keeps up appearances while hiding a dark secret, and Jessica is swept off her feet by playboy Mark. Stars, of course, the excellent Sarah Parish ... and some other people you won’t have heard of. Not bad, it has its moments, but still nothing like the essential viewing that its US counterpart was.

Or, you may prefer In the Line of Fire (9:00 ITV). Ken Stott narrates the conclusion of this two-part documentary which follows CO19, the firearms division of the Metropolitan Police charged with tackling London's gun criminals. Offering a rare and compelling insight into one of the most dangerous jobs in Britain, where split second decisions can mean the difference between life and death, the film asks officers how they approach a task which increasingly pits them against armed teenagers from communities which resent the police.

Mr and Mrs Wolf – 8:00, on Five – is another two-part documentary this one following the work of 'wolfman' Shaun Ellis as he continues his unique experiment with a pack of captive wolves in Devon. Shaun has been living with the pack for over seven years (although not in the biblical sense, obviously), but his work is about to enter its most dangerous phase as he attempts to introduce his girlfriend, Helen, into the wolf society. It seems to be something of a running theme with TV documentaries this week - sitting there and muttering “rather her than me!”

Wednesday 18 February:
Trouble in Amish Paradise – 9:00 BBC2 – features an extraordinary insight into the secretive - and rather misunderstood - world of the Old Order Amish of Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. When two radical brothers, Ephraim and Jesse Stoltzfus, start to question some of the most fundamental aspects of their culture, they face excommunication from their church and total rejection by their friends and family.

Nature’s Great Events (9:00 BBc1) got off to a dazzling start last week and, even if you missed that, you can't possibly have missed the trailers for it ("Edge of your seat drama on the BBC"). Every year, the survival of grizzly bears in North America depends on a spectacular natural event - the return of hundreds of millions of salmon from the Pacific Ocean to the mountain streams where they were born. This great return provides food not only for bears, but also for whales, wolves and eagles. Will the salmon return in time this year to keep the hungry bears alive?

The property series Grand Designs (9:00 Channel 4) follows householders as they build their own homes whilst the doomy-voiced host Kevin McCloud provides a suitably ominous running commentary to their plights. In tonight's episode, architect Richard and his wife, Sophie, attempt to build a sustainable house with its own fruit and vegetable garden in the Kent countryside. Again, I'm sorry to keep on banging on about this but can someone at Channel 4 please explain to me why it’s never a terraced house in Gateshead owned by sheet-metal worker Kev and his wife, Tracey? Life does exist North of Watford, guys. Honest.

Thursday 19 February:
Billy Connolly goes on what looks to be an entertaining journey through some of the more remote regions of Canada, travelling from Atlantic to Pacific via the fabled North West Passage in Billy Connolly: Journey to the Edge of the World (9:00 ITV). Oh, they should have called it Billy Connolly's North West Passage, there'd be so much comedy potential. You know the kind of thing I mean: "Stephen Fry does it in a taxi, Billy does it the hard way." On the first leg of his voyage, Bill discovers some surprising Old World traditions in the New Worlds of Nova Scotia and Newfoundland. It’s odd, isn’t it – like Michael Palin, there's now a whole generation out there who only know Bill through these travel shows he makes (and, the odd wretched Hollywood film he gets involved in, admitted) rather than his - still World Class - stand-up.

It’s the final episode of Media Revolution (7:30 on BBC2), which looks at something very important to this particular slot, the British TV industry. Max Flint charts the extraordinary rise of the UK's global tele-industry but also learns that, like print, British TV's existence is threatened by plummeting advertising revenues and the Internet. What will it take to keep one of Britain's chief creative industries alive? Good programmes might help. Or is that too radical a suggestion?

I must admit, one of my shameful little indulgencies for the last couple of weeks has been Masterchief (8:00 on BBC2) which I’ve been really enjoying, almost in spite of myself. We’re at the smei-final stage now and the last four contestants are each sent to different restaurants to fine-tune their newly learned skills. Then, they have to cook a meal for three of the country's harshest restaurant critics. There's everything to play for because at the end one contestant will be sent packing. I never thought I’d say this but I’ve really quite warmed to Gregg and John the hosts – last year they seemed like rejects from The Dragon’s Den, needlessly spiteful about people’s abilities but now, they’re actually quite likeable in a sort of strict Victorian dad way.

Tuesday, February 03, 2009

Week Six: Britain As A Third-World Country. Discuss!

Friday 6 February
Last week saw the return of the Lee Mack flat-share sitcom, Not Going Out at 9:30 on BBC1. This one is a bit of a curate's egg to be honest. It has good days and bad days and, on a bad days it's, essentially, Game On: The Next Generation. But, when it's having a good day, the series can be really funny. Mack and his co-writers - who include former NME staffer and current media darling Andrew Collins - sometimes miss the mark quite horribly and get into areas of overt crudeness seemingly for the sheer hell of it. But, more often than not, as modern sitcoms go, Not Going Out is really quite fun. Tonight, Lee is being insufferably smug (so, what else is new?) when he wins a thousand quid in a writing competition with an essay entitled Disability in the Workplace. Lucy, almost despite herself, is very proud of him but Tim, perhaps inevitably, smells a rat. A quality cast helps.

Saturday 7 February
Casualty - 8:50 BBC1 – is one show that we haven't mentioned in a while so, this is just to highlight for anyone who may have missed the fact that it IS still going. And - I'll use that phrase again - on a good day that it's still yer actual proper classy cutting-edge medical drama. In tonight's episode Adam (Tristan Gemmill), devastated over his brother’s overdose in the last episode, searches for someone to blame. And he has his sights set firmly on the slimy Jordan (Michael French, in fine nostril-flaring form and seemingly having finally come to terms with the dreadful damage that Crime Traveller did to his ongoing career). Meanwhile, Zoe prepares for Sharice's homecoming, and a nasty accident reveals the pressures of caring for a brain-damaged relative.

Just a few weeks after the last series ended, and a bunch of repeats to tide us over the Christmas period, Harry Hill's TV Burp returns at 7:20 on ITV with Harry and his team of researchers scouring the box for more hidden comedy gems and presenting them in various surreal and yet, in many ways blindly obvious, ways. For the purposes of merriment and japery. Plus, you know, FIGHT! The great thing about this show is that once you become a target of Hazza, it's become virtually an industry byword for having made it into The Big League. "I see you had the Mickey taken out of you on Harry Hill last week." "Yeah, good, wasn’t it? The ratings went up by a million after that!" There was a really good interview with Harry recently where he was talking about how nowadays all of the soaps, for instance, will allow TV Burp to film exteriors at their locations (where once, EastEnders, in particular, wouldn't let them anywhere near the Albert Square set). A testament, perhaps, to just how much a part of the TV furniture the show has now become.

Sunday 8 February
The British Academy Film Awards - 8:00 BBC2 – is actually split over two hours and two different channels (it switches to BBC1 at 9 o'clock - what's all that about?). Jonathan Ross hosts - which is sure to put the audience up by a couple of million at least as every disgraceful scum tabloid journalist wretch in the land tunes-in eagerly to listen to Jonathan's every word in the hope of being provided with enough rope to hang him with. Come on, Wossy, say something outrageous tonight, I dare ya. I double dare ya. The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, Slumdog Millionaire, Frost/Nixon and The Reader are all up for lots of awards. Will Wor Katey win this time? Will she blub like a girl if she does? Will she forget somebody's name this time? Will it be her own? Perhaps we’ll never care.

Monday 9 February
Dispatches launches an investigation into the subject of ageism which is alleged to be rife among employers and recruitment agencies in Too Old to Work at 8:00 on Channel 4. Looking at the challenges that older job seekers face, the documentary carries out an very interesting experiment by pitching two accountants from different generations - a 57-year-old father with thirty five years experience and his recently qualified 25-year-old daughter - into a contest to see which of them can secure the most offers of work. Clever. I do like Dispatches – far more than Panorama which, these days, seems to have turned into a Grumpy Old Men-style excuse for a bunch of malicious malcontents to grumble to the masses about the manifest unfairness of, you know, stuff. Dispatches at least does, genuinely, seem to be interested in solutions just as much as it is in the problems.

Botswana's elephants are doing very well, apparently. Good, you're probably saying. It's nice to know that in this day and age of numerous endangered species, something is getting on okay. Ah, but there's a sting - they may be doing too well, it seems. People (I'm not sure who these people are exactly but, I daresay, if we watch the show we might find out) are worried that too many elephants will damage their fragile desert home and have suggested that up to 60,000 should be culled. Harshsly. With hammers. No, not really, I just made that last bit up because I was a big fan of The Day Today and it was the kind of thing Chris Morris used to say. Anyway, in Natural World: Elephants Without Borders - 7:00 at BBC2 (and repeated from last Friday) - researcher Mike Chase studies ancient elephant migration routes - tracked across vast deserts, desolate salt-pans and Angolan minefields - and asks is such a cull really necessary or is it just an example of ludicrous over-reaction by bloodthirsty maniacs who like killing heffelumps. With hammers. They should get them two mad chefs off Could You Eat An Elephant? a few weeks back to come up with an elegant braised-elephant-style solution (involving them being served in a light drizzled sauce on a bed of rice, perhaps). What is it about elephants? They’re never off the bleedin' TV at the moment. Have we all got sick of polar bears and big cats all of a sudden?

Last week, I highlighted two excellent new crime dramas on opposite sides at the same time and suggested it was a case of watch one and record the other. Well, actually, I managed to record both, thanks to the wonders of modern technology. I watched ITV’s Whitechapel first which was, as I expected, very dark and nasty, rather nefarious and beautifully made (albeit a little hammy in places ... and not especially well-acted by some of the cast. Including such reliable old hands as Steve Pemberton and Claire Rushbrooke). It reminded me, somewhat, of a few of those edge-of-the-memory 1980s dramas like Dead Head and Brond which dealt with the curious juxtaposition between the very top of society and scum floating at the bottom. Good stuff, though, with a nice sense of impending dread all the way through it. Moses Jones on BBC2 was just as dark, just as well-made and, if anything, even more labyrinthine in its dense, foggy plot and multi-character story-arc. And, actually, better acted too. If you missed them both and want to pick up one then Whitechapel will probably be the easier of the two to jump on board at a late stage. If you watched one to the exclusion of the other then my advice is, stick with the one you're with and then try and catch the other one on repeat. Because they’re both worthwhile and are both superior examples of the classier end of British crime drama at its best.

Tuesday 10 February
Tonight sees the welcome return, at 10:00 on BBC4, of Mad Men the US drama that takes an unflinching look at the superficially-glossy-yet-really-rather-sordid world of the men and women who worked on Madison Avenue in New York’s advertising industry during its early sixties heyday. It's 1961 and the young, glamorous John Kennedy is in the White House. On Valentine's Day, the staff of the Sterling Cooper advertising agency is hustling and checking out the latest thing in office equipment - a photocopier. Don (the splendid, if rather enigmatic, Jon Hamm) and Duck clash over an account and Don discovers that his two-packs-a-day lifestyle is going to catch up with him sooner rather than later. Meanwhile Don's wife, the pill-popping Betty (January Jones) runs into an old friend. Will Christina Hendricks' pouty vision of minxy bad-naughtiness, Joan, actually get all of her kit off this year rather than just bits and pieces of it as in various episodes in the first season? I don't know but I'm sure gonna be watching to find out.

Horizon: Why Do We Dream? - 9:00 BBC2 – is an investigation into the science behind something all of us enter five or six times a night, the dream state, with the findings based upon anecdotal evidence and a series of cutting-edge experiments. Why we all dream and what meanings we should attach to these very personal visions (if any) are two of the enduring mysteries of life to which the latest scientific research is attempting to suggest some answers. The programme reveals that much of what was held to be established fact in relation to the twilight zone of the human psyche no longer stands up to any sort of scrutiny and that dreams are now regarded as a significant element in maintaining our mental health. As for nightmares, could they be the key to our success as a species? Might explain a lot, actually.

It's Time to Go Nationwide - 11:20 BBC2 – is a documentary looking at Nationwide, Britain's first truly regional TV programme, which ran on BBC in the early evenings from 1969 to 1983. If you don't remember it, it was a sort of amateurish forerunner of The ONE Show, essentially (only, you know, without the crass examples of pre-war bigotry from a former Prime Minister's daughter) and was mercilessly - albeit, very funnily - parodied in its day. And, indeed, well beyond - anyone remember the Not the 9 O'Clock News sketch with Pam Stephenson doing a quite brilliant Sue Lawley impression talking about a coming interview with "a man who sits in trees and shits on passers-by"? Anyway, this documentary features contributions from many of those involved, including the lovely Sue herself, Michael Barratt, Richard Stilgoe, Bob Wellings, Hugh Scully, Frank Bough, Esther Rantzen and John Stapleton. Previously shown on BBC4.

Wednesday 11 February
It's England versus Spain tonight, live from Seville and taking up most of ITV’s schedules for the rest of the evening. As usual, I'll be providing three - hopefully decent - alternatives although, to be honest, I'll probably be watching the footie myself! What can I say, blog readers? I'm a chap and I have my needs.

Nature's Great Events - 9:00 BBC1 – is the first in a new series about the most dramatic wildlife spectacles on our planet. This one is called The Great Melt. The summer melting of Arctic ice, opening up nearly three million square miles of ocean and land, provides opportunities for millions of animals, including beluga whales, families of Arctic foxes, vast colonies of seabirds, and the fabled Arctic unicorn, the narwhal. But for polar bears it is the toughest time of year. How will they survive? Narrated, as usual, by the lovely David Attenborough. Who, seemingly, hasn’t been shot yet by an outraged zealotty Jesus Freak after his perfectly harmless little Darwin documentary got them out in force the other week. That's good to know. Love thine enemy as thy self, sayeth the Lord. Unless you don't agree with him in which case, you can shoot him or bomb his abortion clinic. I must have missed that bit in Sunday school.

Kirstie, Kirstie Allsopp and Phil, Phil Spencer go down down to the west west in Relocation, Relocation - 8:00 C4 – in their bid to help people change their accommodation (and their lives) in today's turbulent property market. Bristol-based couple Louise Buckles and Peter Melrose want a home in London whilst keeping a little place in the Wiltshire countryside. The greedy sods. Most of us can't afford one home, yet this pair of jokers want two. It's people like them, right, who are symptomatic of the reasons why this country is in the mess it is. It's like living in the bloody third world in Britain at the minute. We have a couple of inches of snow and the whole country grinds to a halt. All the xenophobic Little Englander Communist part-time workers in the refineries are having a walk-out because they fancy a couple of days in bed and they don't like them there foreigners and meanwhile … sorry, it's just been one of them weeks. Where were we? Oh yes, Peter and Louise Two Homes. I’ll just bet they're "interior designers." Or, you know, "financial consultants." One of those "that's not a REAL job"-type jobs, anyway. Where the hell do Channel 4 find these people? Is there an agency out there that provides them on demand? "I'd like a waste-of-space middle-class couple who have loads of money and would like to flaunt it on national television for the plebs, please." "Certainly sir, will you be requiring that they knit their own yoghurt and run their toaster off solar power too?" "Perfect. And if you can make sure they have nothing but total respect for Annie Lennox. That's a deal-breaker I'm afraid..."

In The World's Biggest Family and Me - 10:00 C4 - Mark Dolan sets off on a global quest to learn the truth about families with ten or more children. What governs the need to breed? Mark learns how these parents survive what appears to many to be a logistical and financial nightmare. They probably do what that woman who's just given birth to Octuplets is doing in the US, obviously. Sell their story to the tabloids for wads of moolah. I mean, owt to avoid doing anything remotely close to an honest day's work, that's fairly obvious. It's all wrong, blog readers. Wrong. The whole world's got its priorities up the Khyber. Still … Ashes to Ashes is back in a couple of weeks. I mean, there's priorities and then there's yer actual priorities.

Thursday 12 February
It's been a very good week for documentaries (in fact, it's been a very good year for documentaries so far) and that is something which is set to continue tonight with what looks to be a fascinating glimpse into a very misunderstood hobby. A Very British Storm Junkie - 9:00 C4 – follows Stuart Robinson's secret life. By day, Stuart is an IT consultant from Leicester who lives with his wife, Alison, in comfortable domesticity. But, in his spare time he's a thrill-seeker of quite obscene proportions, travelling the globe as a "storm chaser", witnessing the awesome power of nature at first hand. Last year, with his American buddy, Roger, Stuart set himself the ultimate goal of experiencing the eye of a monster hurricane. Cutting Edge follow him to see if he survived! It's a rather amiable little travelogue that takes in visits to Taiwan, Tornado Alley in Kansas and Louisiana just as Hurricane Gustav, the so -called "storm of the century" was hitting. A fascination with all the nature can throw at you is one thing, but driving straight into an oncoming hurricane just for the buzz of it is something else another. I think, perosnally, I’ll stay at home with a plate of chips butties and a cup of tea and watch Stuart. For entertainment, of course. Go on, Stu, get in there mate and tame that wind.

Media Revolution - 7:30 BBC2 – is the second of a three-part series from The Money Programme that looks at the revolution in newspapers, TV and book publishing. Like all other areas of the media, the book business is in a process of extraordinary change (and, as a author myself, I'm as acutely aware of this fact as most). The UK currently buys and reads more books than ever before. Libby Potter investigates how technology, market forces and trends in reading have changed the way that books are written, published and indeed sold. With contributions from some of the most influential people in the British publishing industry, the film asks what will happen as the medium continues to evolve with the digital age. And, with today's best-seller lists dominated by celebrity titles and biographies of (mostly) non-entities, what exactly is the future for the novel?

It's the last episode of the current series of Hustle tonight - 9:00 BBC1. Which has been really rather good, of late - one duff episode but, mostly, highly watchable. This year we've been introduced to a couple of new regulars (Kelley Adams, in particular, is quietly impressive) whilst still maintaining the wit and interplay between Robert Vaughn, Robert Glennister and Adrian Lester that made it such a hit in the first place. The team hope to con upper-class berk Alfie Baron (Tom Goodman-Hill who seems to be on TV more often than The News at the moment, a situation not entirely unconnected with his performance as Felicity Kendal's ginger-bastard-love-wasp in Doctor Who last year), but - as ever in Hustle - all is not as it seems. Alfie has been planted by an aggrieved former mark, Carlton Wood, who is determined to get his own back on Mickey and the boys. Seeing a straightforward con, Ash convinces Mickey that Sean (Matt Di Angelo) is ready to play the inside and the team set about gathering all their savings as they plan to take Alfie for his - non-existent - millions. As Sean lays down a one million pound convincer, could this be the end for the team? I'm betting probably not as a sixth series is, I understand, in the process of being commissioned and that a film adaptation is also in the - distant - pipeline.