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Hugh Bonneville to reprise role as Ian Fletcher in BBC football comedy

Hugh Bonneville to reprise role as Ian Fletcher in BBC football comedy

The six-part show, Twenty Twenty Six, is a follow-up to comedy series W1A, which followed Ian as the head of values at the BBC.
Bonneville, 61, will reprise the character as he takes on a new title, the BBC's director of integrity for the 2026 World Cup.
Bonneville's character will join the Twenty Twenty Six Oversight Team in Miami, with a cast including The Day Of The Jackal's Nick Blood, Fresh Off The Boat star Chelsey Crisp and Designated Survivor's Paulo Costanzo.
Stephen Kunken, best known for playing Ari Spyros in Billions, also joins the cast alongside The Inbetweeners' Belinda Stewart-Wilson.
Director John Morton said: 'I wasn't sure what Ian Fletcher had been up to recently. The last I heard he was still recovering from a serious mindfulness course in Somerset. So, it's great to hear that he's made it back and has re-emerged in his natural habitat at the centre of a well-known institution, but now on the world stage and facing his biggest opportunity yet to get things right.
'I'm thrilled and hugely grateful to the BBC for giving me the chance to follow him again, this time all the way to Miami, and I literally can't wait to see what happens.'
The character was first introduced in 2011 series Twenty Twelve, which followed an organising committee for the London Olympic Games.
Bonneville was nominated for four TV Bafta awards and the original series took the Best Situation Comedy award in 2013.
The series also starred The Crown's Olivia Colman, who won the 2013 Bafta for Best Female Performance in a Comedy.
Bonneville is known for playing Robert Crawley, the Earl of Grantham, in period drama Downton Abbey, and has also starred in the Paddington films as Henry Brown.
Executive producer Paul Schlesinger said: 'It's 15 years since Ian Fletcher's journey started with the run-up to the London Olympics and we are delighted the BBC has given John another chance to capture the universal comedy of people trying to organise something really big in a room, but this time with an outstanding international cast.'
Twenty Twenty Six will consist of six 30-minute episodes and will be available to watch on BBC One and iPlayer.

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Glastonbury 2025 - How to watch on TV and BBC iPlayer and listen on Radio and BBC Sounds
Glastonbury 2025 - How to watch on TV and BBC iPlayer and listen on Radio and BBC Sounds

BBC News

time2 hours ago

  • BBC News

Glastonbury 2025 - How to watch on TV and BBC iPlayer and listen on Radio and BBC Sounds

The Glastonbury Festival kicks off on Wednesday 25 June with BBC Radio 6 Music broadcasting live from Worthy Farm as the gates open and festival-goers pour in. Excited already? We've got you. The Glastonbury Hits Channel is already live on iPlayer, streaming classic tracks from some of the biggest artists who've performed over the years. You can watch 24/7 until the festival's main stages open on Friday 27 June. And if you can't get to Glastonbury, we'll bring Worthy Farm to you. BBC iPlayer's offering up over 90 hours of performances with its live streams of the five main stages - Pyramid, Other, West Holts, Woodsies and The Park - allowing viewers to make their own list of must-see acts and plot their way through the weekend. Pyramid Stage sets will once again be available to stream live in Ultra High Definition and in British Sign Language. And you can listen to all the action across BBC Radio 6 Music, BBC Radio 1 and 1Xtra, BBC Radio 2, BBC Radio 4 and BBC Sounds. Watch Glastonbury on BBC iPlayer Listen to Glastonbury on BBC Sounds Here's how you can watch and listen to Glastonbury 2025 across TV, BBC iPlayer, Radio and BBC Sounds... Meet your Glastonbury presenters Clara Amfo and Lauren Laverne kick off the live coverage from this year's Glastonbury Festival on Thursday, 26 June from 10pm on iPlayer and BBC Two. From their studio overlooking The Park Stage and beyond to the rest of the festival, they'll bring you all the stories from the first 48 hours on site and look ahead at what's to come. They'll be joined by special guests, including a couple of unique performances from the BBC Park Studio, and also look forward to some of the anticipated sets from the likes of The 1975, Rod Stewart, Olivia Rodrigo, Raye, Charli xcx and many more. Glastonbury 2025 Friday TV and iPlayer Schedule The One Show helps kick off the Glastonbury weekend on BBC One and iPlayer with a live link to the festival from 7pm and Clara Amfo and Lauren Laverne are live from Worthy Farm as things really get going on the first full day of music, with all the big stories of the day so far from 7.30pm. English Teacher and Wet Leg BBC Four starts its Glastonbury coverage with a North and South mix from 7pm. From Leeds, it's the Mercury Award winning indie band, English Teacher, who take to The Park Stage before an expectant audience. Then, we head to the Other Stage for rock darlings Wet Leg, from the Isle of Wight, who performed a stellar gig at Glastonbury back in 2022. Alanis Morrissette and En Vogue Clara and Lauren are on BBC Two and iPlayer from 8pm, introducing performances from across the stages, including heading to the Pyramid Stage for what is sure to be one of the biggest moments of the weekend, when iconic Canadian singer-songwriter Alanis Morissette makes her debut on the farm. Then it's over to the West Holts Stage for another debut performance, this time 90s R&B group En Vogue, expect soulful harmonies and plenty of hits. Supergrass, Blossoms, Franz Ferdinand and Wunderhorse Charming Oxford rockers Supergrass head to the Pyramid Stage from 8pm on BBC Four and iPlayer, 30 years after their first appearance on the farm. Stockport band Blossoms follow, as they take to the Woodsies Stage. Watch out for glam rock style and ten years' worth of music in abundance from a band who continue to enjoy themselves on stage whilst winning more fans along the way. Glasgow's finest, Franz Ferdinand, the band with chiselled looks and guitar hooks that brought the sublime Take Me Out and Do You Want To to the masses back in the early noughties, hit the Other Stage to remind us what we've missed after 9pm. Following on from Franz Ferdinand is one of the newer kids on the block, step forward indie-rockers, Wunderhorse performing on The Park Stage. Biffy Clyro, Busta Rhymes and Self Esteem Jack Saunders and Jo Whiley are live from 10pm on iPlayer and BBC Two as they get ready for the first headliner of the weekend, The 1975. There's plenty to see before then, with the return of Scottish rockers Biffy Clyro to the Pyramid Stage, who have recently excited fans with the release of new song A Little Love. Legendary New York rapper Busta Rhymes takes over the Other Stage on his first visit to Worthy Farm. Meanwhile Rotherham singer, songwriter and now theatre star Self Esteem brings songs from her recent Top 5 album, A Complicated Woman, and an impressive show of the same name, to The Park Stage. The 1975 and Loyle Carner It's all happening from 10.30pm - on iPlayer and BBC One BRIT Award winning, chart topping band, The 1975 step out as the first Pyramid Stage headliners of Glastonbury 2025. And acclaimed UK hip-hop artist, Loyle Carner is closing the night's music fest on BBC Four with a live headline performance from the Other Stage. Then from midnight on iPlayer and BBC Two, Clara Amfo and Jack Saunders present highlights of the first full day of music at Glastonbury, as we head into the early hours. Glastonbury 2025 Saturday TV and iPlayer Schedule JADE, Brandi Carlile, Weezer and Madalisto Band, Good Neighbours Clara Amfo and Jack Saunders are live from day two at Glastonbury Festival, introducing performances from across the five main stages on iPlayer and BBC Two from 5pm. 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Intimacy by Ita O'Brien: How Normal People can have great sex
Intimacy by Ita O'Brien: How Normal People can have great sex

Daily Mail​

time3 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Intimacy by Ita O'Brien: How Normal People can have great sex

Intimacy: A Field Guide to Finding Connection and Feeling Your Deep Desires by Ita O'Brien (Ebury Press £16, 384pp) When Ita O'Brien was growing up in a strictly traditional Irish Catholic family where no one ever mentioned menstruation, let alone sex, she had no inkling her career would involve sitting with actors, offering them choreographic suggestions as to how they might simulate an orgasm. Yet as a sought-after intimacy coordinator for films and television, this is exactly what O'Brien does. Not just the orgasm, but the whole build-up – which she strongly believes should be given time and space. Her mission is to make sex scenes realistic as well as sexy, while respecting actors' boundaries. While there isn't enough time in an hour-long episode to film the full 20 minutes (on average) that it takes for a woman to be 'ready for penetration', the gradualness should be hinted at. In her thought-provoking 'field guide to intimacy', O'Brien becomes an intimacy coordinator for us all, drawing on her filming work to give us helpful tips on how we should make our real-life sex lives both realistic and sexy, while respecting each other's boundaries. People have asked her to visit their bedrooms to help coordinate their sex lives. She does not do that; but this book is the next best thing. Best known for her coordination of the mutually respectful but highly erotic sex scenes between Paul Mescal and Daisy Edgar-Jones 's characters in the BBC drama Normal People (2020), O'Brien is justifiably proud of her work (which also includes It's A Sin, Gentleman Jack, and I May Destroy You). Viewers of Normal People were 'profoundly affected', she writes, by the scene in which Connell (played by Mescal) and Marianne (Edgar-Jones) make love for the first time. 'Are you sure you want this?' Connell asks. When Marianne nods, he says: 'If it hurts, I'll stop.' A bit later, he asks: 'Does it hurt?' 'A bit.' And then she says: 'It's nice.' And they tenderly make love. I remember how captivated we all were by the eroticism as well as the charm of that series during the first lockdown. Those scenes 'helped viewers remember all the joy and gorgeousness of their first relationships as teenagers, and how unsure they felt'. 'The prospect of bringing something to the screen that I felt was representative of the reality of young people in love having sex was really exciting to me,' O'Brien writes. Sex is too often portrayed unrealistically. 'All that bumping and grinding, the thrusting and heads thrown back in simulated ecstasy, rarely bears much relationship to people's own experience of their sexual encounters. We see penetration after 30 seconds of kissing. Is that how it happens in your life? No!' The film world certainly needed someone like O'Brien. Before the arrival of intimacy coordinators, directors just used to tell actors to get on with it. Actress Gemma Whelan describes the multiple intimate sex scenes she had to do in Game Of Thrones as 'a frenzied mess'. 'Action! Just go for it!' the director would shout at the actors. 'Bit of boob biting, then slap her bum and go!' Of her role in the Scandi-noir series The Bridge, Swedish actress Sofia Helin said: 'It's tense every time you have to cross your own boundaries in order to satisfy a director's needs.' Dakota Johnson wishes intimacy coordinators had existed when she was filming Fifty Shades Of Grey. 'I was just kind of thrown to the wolves on that one,' she said. Things have moved on since then. O'Brien's four main tenets are: open communication, agreement and consent, clear choreography, and closure. Her sessions involve deep breathing exercises to make actors fully present in their own bodies and aware and respectful of their partner's physical presence. In one exercise, she advises them to put their right hand on each other's hearts, and their left hand over their partner's hand on their heart, and 'feel the movement of the energy and the dance between you'. That's just one of many build-up exercises, some of which verge on the woo-woo. There's a great deal about the seven chakras, and a lot of visualising of waterfalls, and your own lower body as 'the base of a tree putting roots deep into the earth'. When it comes to advising us on how to improve our own intimate lives, or at least how to avoid our sex lives from rusting up over a long marriage, O'Brien says self-love and self-esteem are most important. Look into a mirror and say: 'I choose to love myself. I am enough. I believe in myself.' She advises gazing into the eyes of your partner for 60 seconds at a time, and 'sharing your wonderings'. Gaze at the stars together, as she and her partner do; stand in bare feet on the grass in order to be fully rooted in your body. She advises us to be honest about what we do and don't want, and how that might change over time, and to dare to talk about it although it can be 'difficult and embarrassing'. She invites us to 'take a hand mirror and to explore and get to know your vulva'. I might give that one a miss. To remind us how unique every vulva is, O'Brien gives us a full page of drawings of different-shaped ones, from an art work by Jamie McCartney called The Great Wall of Vulva, which portrays 400 of them. Not a work to show to the older generation in Catholic Ireland, perhaps. Yet I liked the advice she quotes from the sex therapist Linsey Blair: we should regard intimacy as a kind of tapas menu. 'You order in bite-size chunks; you don't just think every sexual encounter has to be a three-course meal leading to penetration and orgasm.' Sometimes 'doing small things every day is more intimate than a three-course extravaganza once every three months'. 'Tuesday sex' is what she calls the ordinary stuff, which many of us might hope to keep up as a habit over a long lifetime. This is very different from 'Nine And A Half Weeks sex' (named after the film of the same name). Online porn has made too many young people think sex must be of the latter variety. Whereas, in reality, 'intimacy is rarely spontaneous' – and can be just as satisfying if you schedule it into the diary. Most importantly, O'Brien reminds us, 'it's possible to have intimacy without sex, and sex without intimacy'.

BBC Breakfast boss takes ‘extended leave' after bullying claims
BBC Breakfast boss takes ‘extended leave' after bullying claims

Metro

time4 hours ago

  • Metro

BBC Breakfast boss takes ‘extended leave' after bullying claims

The editor of BBC Breakfast, Richard Frediani, is taking an extended period of leave after allegations of bullying behaviour. It comes after the Sun and Deadline reported that an internal investigation is being carried out into allegations of bullying at the program. In March, Deadline reported that a minimum of two misconduct complaints had been made against Frediani. One complaint alleged that the editor physically shook a colleague during an interaction in the newsroom in 2024. More recently, Deadline also reported that BBC presenterNaga Munchetty had raised concerns with senior BBC figures regarding Frediani's conduct. In addition, some ITN employees were said to have described Frediani as a 'bully,' alleging that he had shouted at, sworn at, and intimidated colleagues. Sources told the outlet that multiple complaints had been submitted by staff members about his workplace conduct. The publication further reported that newsreader Tina Daheley had expressed reservations about working on News at One, a programme overseen by Frediani. She had originally been named as one of the bulletin's presenters before its relocation from London to Salford in May. Daheley has continued in her role as a newsreader on Radio 2 in London and was reportedly 'understandably very cross' when her photograph was omitted from a BBC press release about the scheduling changes. While the omission added to internal frustration, there is no suggestion that Frediani was responsible for the error. When contacted for comment, a BBC spokesperson told Metro: 'While we do not comment on individual cases, we take all complaints about conduct at work extremely seriously and will not tolerate behaviour that is not in line with our values. 'We have robust processes in place and would encourage any staff with concerns to raise them directly with us so they can be addressed.' It was also previously reported BBC presenters Naga Munchetty and Charlie Stayt had no relationship with Frediani due to the allegations. Frediani has been named in reports about bullying behaviour at ITN and BBC by Deadline, an industry website, and it was then claimed that he has a soured relationship with the BBC presenters. More Trending A senior BBC figure in Salford has said that he has 'no relationship with the stars'. 'Fredi has no relationship with Charlie and Naga, which is weird when they are half of his frontline presenting roster,' the source told The Times. Frediani has been the head of the program, which is broadcast daily from Salford, since 2019, and is also editor of the News at One. Last month, he accepted a Bafta Award when the show won best TV news coverage for an episode about the Post Office scandal. Got a story? If you've got a celebrity story, video or pictures get in touch with the entertainment team by emailing us celebtips@ calling 020 3615 2145 or by visiting our Submit Stuff page – we'd love to hear from you. View More » MORE: Naga Munchetty fires back after BBC viewers tell her what to wear

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