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TV tonight: gripping heist thriller The Gold returns as the hunt for the Brink's-Mat bullion heats up

TV tonight: gripping heist thriller The Gold returns as the hunt for the Brink's-Mat bullion heats up

The Guardiana day ago

9pm, BBC OneThe Bafta-nominated 80s crime drama based on the wild true story of the Brink's-Mat robbery returns. The police hunt for the other half of the stolen £26m gold bullion is the longest and most expensive investigation in the Met's history. This second series is inspired by theories of what happened to it, starting in Tenerife, where John Palmer (Tom Cullen) has started a timeshare business. The top cast is back, including Stephen Campbell Moore and Hugh Bonneville, and look out for Jack Lowden in a later episode. Hollie Richardson
7.30pm, BBC FourA fittingly opulent concert to mark the 150th birthday of the Palais Garnier opera house in Paris. Yannick Nézet-Séguin conducts classical greats including music from Carmen and La Traviata, featuring the big-name voices of bass-baritone Bryn Terfel and soprano Sonya Yoncheva. HR
8.20pm, BBC One
Kiell Smith-Bynoe guest stars as an unbearable groom who is using his wedding day as a 'digital marketing super event' (guests are from LinkedIn, not Lincoln). When his best man's body is found outside the church, real detective Janie (Gwyneth Keyworth) once again calls on TV detective John (Timothy Spall) for help. HR
9pm, Channel 4Grimsby's tea-loving speed demon wraps up his latest travelogue by heading south to the Mekong delta. There, he cheerfully mucks in selling mangoes from a floating stall and irrigating rice on a sustainable farm. This being Guy Martin, he also sniffs out a race, joining a 50-strong squad of Buddhist rowers on a dragon boat. Graeme Virtue
9pm, BBC ThreeThe penultimate episode of the Dannii Minogue-hosted dating show is when emotions hit their peak. In the wake of the Daisy Duke party the night before, and with the final Kiss-Off looming, there are big decisions to be made. Plus, the bubble of the Italian masseria is broken by the arrival of the contestants' loved ones. Jack Seale
10pm, Channel 4A pivotal episode in the hard-hitting dystopian drama's final season, as loyalties shift and characters face the show's central dilemma: keep working to defeat totalitarianism, or preserve whatever personal happiness you can salvage? June and Nick have choices to make about their future, but big secrets are about to spill. JS
Ocean With David Attenborough (Keith Scholey, Toby Nowlan, Colin Butfield, 2025), 8pm, National Geographic/Disney+
As David Attenborough passes his 99th birthday, here's another landmark documentary to add to his collection – and one that's more polemical than usual. His lucid message here is 'If we save the sea we save our world', as he talks us through what humanity has done to the Earth's oceans and how we can protect them. Awe and anger intermingle – there are glorious images of aquatic life, such as the remote submarine seamounts that are 'pitstops' for migrating fish or the kelp forests in coastal waters that capture carbon. But it's the underwater footage of indiscriminate dredging by trawlers that has the most emotional impact – a picture of devastation that's also a call to arms. Simon Wardell
Julius Caesar (Joseph L. Mankiewicz, 1953), 2pm, BBC Two There aren't many Shakespeare plays with more quotable lines than his Roman power play, from 'It was Greek to me' to 'Let slip the dogs of war'. And in Joseph L Mankiewicz's slick take it's Marlon Brando as Mark Antony who gets the best: his 'I came to bury Caesar not to praise him' speech is a masterclass in rhetorical rabble-rousing. And Brando has to raise his game, what with seasoned stage stars James Mason (Brutus), Louis Calhern (Caesar) and, particularly, John Gielgud (Cassius) immersing us eloquently in portents and plots, murder and mayhem. SW
Men's International T20 Cricket: England v West Indies, 2pm, Channel 5 The second match from Bristol.
Men's International Football: FA Nations League Final, 7.30pm, ITV1 Portugal take on Spain at Allianz Arena, Munich.

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Mute Meadow: Will the broken artwork's lights ever come back on?
Mute Meadow: Will the broken artwork's lights ever come back on?

BBC News

time13 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Mute Meadow: Will the broken artwork's lights ever come back on?

It was to be the near £1m piece of public art symbolising Londonderry's transition from a city of conflict to a capital of Meadow, a series of illuminated steel columns on the banks of the Foyle, was unveiled in since the lights went out more than a decade ago, its pillars have been left to gather its artists are calling for it to be repaired, restored and reinstated "for the people of the city". Vong Phaophanit, a Turner prize nominee and his co-creator, Claire Oboussier told BBC News NI it is "regrettable that no action has been taken" in the years since the lights went City and Strabane District Council, which manages the artwork, said design work for the repair has been is now underway to identify the required budget, the council cost has not been made Executive Office, owners of the Ebrington site on which it stands, "will consider a contribution" when it is made aware of the cost. What is Mute Meadow? Sitting at the Ebrington end of the city's Peace Bridge, Mute Meadow consists of 40 angled steel intention was that the steel pillars would be illuminated by LED projectors and lit up in the colours of the stain glass windows of the city's was designed to create a "vast field of light" across the River £800,000, and funded by Stormont, then Arts Minister Gregory Campbell said it would "place arts and culture at the centre of the city's regeneration".Maurice Devenney, Derry's then mayor, said then that it "reflects positively how the city is moving forward" as it prepared for its year as UK City of was at the time, the largest piece of public art on the island of Ireland. But right from the off it was dogged by problems. Within months of being switched on, the lights went out due to issues associated with the fabrication of the was fixed temporarily but by 2014, the lights had gone Meadow has by and large, remained in the dark ever since. 'Unfinished building site' It is now more like "an unfinished building site" than a million pound artwork, SDLP councillor Rory Farrell told BBC News NI."People don't know what it's meant to be, it is an eyesore," he a time when budgets are tight and a number of local groups have lost out on core funding, Farrell said he understands the repair work may not be everyone's priority."But I for one want to see this operational, it would add to out cultural offering and transform the landscape along the river," he said. What do people think of Mute meadow? The hundreds of people to cross the city's Peace bridge daily pass just yards from Mute Meadows' metal Froydenlund told BBC Radio Foyle he knows the nearby steel pillars are "some kind of sculpture".The cost seems "expensive" given it doesn't work, he said, adding "they should get it working". Maurice Hudson and Deirdre Watson from Belfast are staying in a hotel just a few hundred yards from Mute "had a clue" the artwork existed or what the steel columns are said there are other priorities "like the state of our national health service." Deirdre agreed, adding money could be spent "a better way, for things like housing".But Maurice added, when a lot of money has already been spent, the lights should be on."With the people of Derry/Londonderry not having to pay for the electric," Deirdre added. Billy Quigley tells the BBC he has "no idea" the steel beams at the end of the Peace bridge were intended to be a work of art."That is wasted money," he said, adding the money spent thus far could "have gone to better causes". 'Enduring contribution to the cityscape' In a statement, Phaophanit and Oboussier said there seemed to have been a lack of care around their artists hope that "proactive action" is taken to repair the piece and reinstate it for the city. Mute Meadow, the artists said, was "one of our most challenging and meaningful pieces of work to realise"."Our hope and intention was that it would make an enduring contribution to the Derry cityscape - a positive and peaceful space where people could gather, somewhere where Derry citizens could continue to develop a sense of collective belonging for years to come."The artists said they remain committed to help in any way they can. What next for Mute Meadow? The council said a concept design has been completed to restore the artwork's lighting."Council is currently working to identify adequate budget to deliver the works," a spokeswoman cost of those works is due to be presented to councillors in the coming months."Council will also continue to work with The Executive Office to find a lasting solution for the long-term future of the artwork."The Executive Office (TEO) said it is also supportive of the work needed to repair it."We understand a concept design exists for relighting the artwork and a cost estimate has been compiled. On receipt of costs from council we will consider a contribution," a TEO spokesperson said.

Licence granted for new Oxford local music venue
Licence granted for new Oxford local music venue

BBC News

time14 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Licence granted for new Oxford local music venue

A "grassroots alternative music venue" supporting "local bands, independent music communities and alternative subcultures" is to open in a city Bar will launch in Oxford in what used to be Cirkus city's music scene, which gave prominence to bands such as Ride, Radiohead, Supergrass, Foals, and Glass Animals, has had a number of venue closures in recent years, including The Cellar and The Kucel, who made the application, said she felt "passionately" that Oxford had "no offerings" for young people "experimenting with various genres or music and fashion". The new venue, below Gourmet Burger Kitchen, will include a main bar area with fixed seating, dance floor space, a DJ booth, and a cloakroom.A licence was granted by Oxford City Council at its latest licensing meeting, according to the Local Democracy Reporting Service. Ms Kucel said: "Underground Bar would ultimately offer a safe licensed space for people to enjoy music and social time as opposed to unregulated alternatives."Oxford is home to a diverse and vibrant late-night population including students, academics, local residents and visitors."She added that the bar would "provide and give the community a much-needed space where it is all about the music" and that it would "help diversify nightlife beyond traditional or chain venues". 'Amazing culture' City councillor Anna Railton welcomed the said: "Lots of people are dismayed at live music venues in our city being gradually lost."If you value things you've got to protect them and that is true for live music venues for all genres."It's part of this city's amazing culture and brings people together." The George Oxford Hotel, which has rooms on the upper floor, objected to the application over concerns about the impact it would have on Kucel co-ran Kiss Bar on Park End Street for 23 years, which closed last December, and hosted Goth night future of some other music venues is in doubt, with SJE Arts announcing its closure in June, and Oxford University's redevelopment plans potentially affecting Common Ground in Wellington Square. You can follow BBC Oxfordshire on Facebook, X, or Instagram.

Hastings comedy festival set to celebrate 10th anniversary
Hastings comedy festival set to celebrate 10th anniversary

BBC News

time18 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Hastings comedy festival set to celebrate 10th anniversary

A comedy festival in an East Sussex town is celebrating its 10th Comedy Festival kicks off on Monday with dozens of performances over seven days including Seann Walsh, Lucy Porter and Robin event "showcases a large variety of professional comedians and emerging comics from around the UK and the world", organisers Chris Young and Jake Alexander said. The two friends who founded the festival in 2015, said it "united their passion for live comedy and the community of Hastings". They added: "Finding, supporting and promoting new comedy talent is at the core of our ethos of running the festival."If you're looking for the future bright stars of stand up comedy then Hastings is the festival showcase you really shouldn't miss out on."It promises to be an explosion of laughter."Dozens of shows will be performed at 15 different venues in Hastings and St Leonards throughout the festival runs until 15 June.

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