
TV tonight: the Sussex Squad's finances go under the microscope in Meghan & Harry - Where Did the Money Go?
8.30pm, Channel 5 The Sussex Squad may have largely disappeared from British public life, but they still seem to arouse tabloid fury. Hence, this unnecessary documentary on the exiled couple's financial affairs. The sources of their wealth don't seem too mysterious: inheritance, a massive Netflix deal and a payout from the publishers representing the Sun newspaper won't have hurt. But clearly it's time for another stir of the pot. Phil Harrison
6.30pm, ITV1What do dancer AJ Pritchard, athlete Hollie Arnold, actor Giovanna Fletcher and singer Russell Watson have in common? They all made it out of the I'm a Celebrity jungle with energy to spare, and are now raring to go up against the ruthless Chasers. Ellen E Jones
8.10pm, BBC One Kelly Holmes, Steph McGovern,Omid Djalili and Lucy Beaumont are among the panellists for the quiz that delights in its own naffness. The contestants include Sonny, a 'cow-obsessed' children's illustrator, and Nathanael, a rugby coach with a prosthetic leg. Bradley Walsh presents. Ali Catterall
8.10pm, BBC Two
It was the year of Live Aid, shoulder pads and power ballads. But even if 1985 feels like a fallow time – punk had fizzled out but the next wave (dance music and hip-hop) had yet to arrive – there was still plenty going on. Expect bangers from the thematically named likes of Queen, King, Prince and Princess. PH
8.35pm, Channel 4Operation Paperclip is not that well known, and there's probably a good reason for that. It involved more than 1,600 Nazi scientists receiving pardons before being brought to the US and enlisted into the service of Nasa, who were then engaged in the space race. This documentary explores a shameful episode for American science. PH
9.35pm, BBC OneIf not quite as addictive as Big Little Lies, this Aussie adaptation of another Liane Moriarty bestseller has still been an engrossing ride. The penultimate episode sees incomer Sophie continuing to chip away at the mystery that put Scribbly Gum Island on the map, while Margie learns that Ron has been hiding more than his Just for Men bottle. Graeme Virtue
Echo Valley (Michael Pearce, 2025), Apple TV+
Coming from the writer of Mare of Easttown, Brad Inglesby, it should be no surprise that this satisfying thriller has a strong middle-aged woman at its heart. Julianne Moore plays Kate, who runs a struggling horse-riding centre and is grieving her dead wife. Then her desperate junkie daughter Claire (Sydney Sweeney) turns up asking for money – again – and Kate is reluctantly drawn into a world of drug deals, double-crosses and death. Michael Pearce, director of the edgy Jessie Buckley mystery Beast, is great at withholding information for maximum dramatic effect while posing the moral question: how far would you go to protect your child? The fun here is working out your own answer. Simon Wardell
The Magnificent Seven (John Sturges, 1960), 1.55pm, BBC TwoThis sturdy, star-riddled 1960 John Sturges western is an adaptation of Akira Kurosawa's Seven Samurai – which was itself influenced by John Ford and other masters of the genre. Yul Brynner takes the lead role of the experienced gunslinger who cobbles together a ragtag band of mostly American shooters (Steve McQueen, Charles Bronson, James Coburn) to protect a Mexican village from bandits. Initially only in it for the money, the vigilantes end up befriending the locals and finding common cause. Nicely rounded characters give depth to the shoot-em-ups. SW
Kidnapped (Marco Bellocchio, 2023), 9pm, BBC FourIn 1858 in Bologna, a city state under papal rule, a young Jewish boy, Edgardo (Enea Sala), is taken away by priests. They claim he has been baptised and so must be raised a Christian in Rome. Marco Bellocchio's period drama is a tragic true story of religious intolerance and a family ripped apart, but it is also an origin story of the secular Italian nation. So we follow one father, Salomone (Fausto Russo Alesi), fearing his impressionable son is slipping away from him, while il pape, Pius IX (Paolo Pierobon), sees his God-given power over his flock collapsing. SW
Tennis: Queen's, 1.25pm, BBC OneThe singles semi-finals.
Premiership Rugby Union: Bath Rugby v Leicester Tigers, 1.30pm, TNT Sports 1; 2.30pm, ITV1Leicester and England greats Ben Youngs and Dan Cole (pictured above) play their last rugby match in the league final at Twickenham.
Golf: US Open, 4pm, Sky Sports Main EventDay three of the major at Oakmont.
Fifa Club World Cup Football: Al Ahly v Inter Miami, midnight, Channel 5The opening match in Miami.
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Top Gear
33 minutes ago
- Top Gear
Question of the Week: which movie car do you dream of owning the most?
Question of the Week A Fast and Furious legend came and went for sale all too quickly last week, and that got us thinking… Skip 4 photos in the image carousel and continue reading Lead movie cars are cool when they're done right, and Han's Veilside 'Fortune' Mazda RX-7 from Tokyo Drift is one of the finest examples of this. That it hogged most of the attention in a movie packed with characterful metal - from Sean's RB26-swapped '67 Stang to Takashi's menacing 350Z - is telling of just how right its builders got it. Advertisement - Page continues below So you can imagine our frustration that one of the three original cars used in filming appeared for sale last week… before the listing ended on a whim. Chances are, someone saw the £345k price as a worthwhile investment. Shame, that. We were just about to hit 'post' on a bound-to-be-successful crowdfunding pitch... sniff. You might like Just look at it. That body kit completely transforms the RX-7's looks with new light signatures and a spate of bumper attachments. Chromed and dished five-spoke alloys sit at each corner, and the gorgeous silhouette is finished up in a 'House of Kolor Orange' and black livery. It was left completely stock, too, so the sequential twin-turbo, twin-rotor '13B' engine still put out 276bhp, got to 62mph in 5.3s and topped out at 155mph. No devilishly over-complicated internals here; just brutal Nineties simplicity that probably could be driven with a pair of Uwabakis on. Advertisement - Page continues below Sure, the bucket seats are slightly worn, but you will find an aftermarket sound system, a DVD screen on the passenger's side, and lots of carbon fibre along the dashboard and centre console. That R34-humbling NOS bottle is still perched between the seats, albeit probably empty after all these years. Still, very desirable. Anyway, that got us thinking: if you could pick one, and only one, which movie car do you dream of owning more than any other? Any movie, any era. Let us know below, and we'll round up our favourite answers at the end of the week. Go. Thank you for subscribing to our newsletter. Look out for your regular round-up of news, reviews and offers in your inbox. Get all the latest news, reviews and exclusives, direct to your inbox.


BBC News
38 minutes ago
- BBC News
Town set for Rowell Fair with milk, rum and scuffles
A market town is set to come to a standstill for its annual fair which involves playful scuffles and early morning Rowell Fair in Rothwell, Northamptonshire, is believed to more than 800 years from all over the town take part in the ceremony, which attracts large is part of a week-long celebration that started on Saturday. What happens during the Rowell Fair? It officially begins on the first Monday after Trinity Sunday, and the first proclamation is at the Holy Trinity 06:00 BST, the bailiff to the Lord of the Manor arrives with a guard of halberdiers, and reads the proclamation, which then is followed by the National in the town open at 06:00 serving, among other things, the traditional Rowell Fair beverage of rum and milk, which is offered to the makes several stops around the town to read the charter and is offered a drink at each take part in the play-fights in an attempt to "disarm" those taking the roles of halberdiers - or guards of the fair takes over the town centre for five days with rides, street entertainment, live bands, food and a range of stands and exhibitors. What is its history? According to the Rowell Fair Society, the event can be traced as far back as 1154 and it was granted a charter by King John 50 years proclamation was read by the bailiff, at six locations, and dates back to the reign of King James I in was from the 17th Century that entertainment began to replace the livestock fair and in the 19th Century that steam-power funfair rides began to Rowell Fair Society was formed 1968 to keep up the tradition and prevent the fair from dying name "Rowell" comes from the local pronunciation of the town of Rothwell, as well local people being known as "Rowellians". Follow Northamptonshire news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
‘When I stopped racing I thought, who am I?': Pippa York on leaving her old life behind
Pippa York used to be Robert Millar, a stage winner and king of the mountains in the Tour de France and Giro d'Italia. Millar was also a podium finisher, in both the Vuelta a España and the Giro, a British national champion, and Tour of Britain winner. But Millar had also wanted to be a girl since the age of five, a secret that remained buried throughout childhood in Glasgow, the subsequent racing career, and beyond, into mid-life. In her new book, The Escape, written in collaboration with David Walsh, the 66-year-old unflinchingly documents the long and painful process towards transition and the isolation, fear and loneliness that went with it. 'There was no LGBTQ community in the Gorbals where I grew up,' she says. 'If I saw David Bowie on Top of the Pops, I thought: 'Oh, that's interesting,' but he wasn't a role model. It didn't make me think I could be whatever I wanted.' The book – part Tour de France travelogue, part memoir – is about 'escaping working in a factory, escaping the real world, and escaping being born male'. Cycling offered that escape and York went from 'messing about on bikes' to serious road cycling in mid-teens. 'I liked the freedom, the speed, the danger, the going fast.' She says that she had felt 'different' from the age of five and with that feeling came shame and isolation. 'You realise the others are going to beat you up. Then there's the fear of being outed and the shame of not fully fitting into the group that you're meant to be part of. Now, they have Pride marches, but I felt very little pride.' This was the early 1970s. She says that if she could have stalled her physical development, she would have been 'that young person, with no qualms, none at all.' 'If you look at puberty blockers, that's going to start around 12. Young girls are given the pill, so are we going to say that's not OK? The decisions being made now over puberty blockers are purely political.' The British government's Commission on Human Medicines (CHM) has advised that there is currently a safety risk in the continued prescription of puberty blockers to children. It recommends indefinite restrictions while work is done to ensure the safety of children and young people. York seems uncertain if her family were aware of her body dysphoria. 'I don't know. It was the 1970s. I can't ask my father because he's not here. Even now, you don't want your kid to be different, because you know there'll be a stigma attached.' Sitting calmly in the anonymity of a west London business hotel, she recalls the alienation and loneliness of her time in the European peloton, from 1980 to 1995. When she turned professional, was the cycling pack, however brutal, a safe haven? 'I learned to fit in. It wasn't always welcoming, but it wasn't hostile all of the time. I didn't ever feel bullied. Abused by the system, the workload and the management, yes – but not bullied. Racing takes all of your concentration. If you're in the race, you're not processing the outside world. You have no time to dwell on any other stuff.' Robert was still different enough to be picked on though. 'People would throw out homophobic slurs, that kind of verbal intimidation, but it just washed over me. I learned to deal with it. I gave it back. I could swear in most languages.' She says that, as Robert the bike racer, she kept an 'emotions box'. 'I didn't need emotions. They were just going to get in the way. I learned to do that quite well. The shield I put around me allowed me to function.' But that also fuelled a deepening depression that settled on her in the mid-1990s. 'It got worse when I stopped racing. I thought: 'Who am I?' The bike rider was gone. I had to deal with that. But I was also dealing with: 'Am I going to transition or not?'' It took her five years to seek out professional help. 'I was in a bad place, really, really depressed. I had no idea if I would fully transition or not. But I had to find out where on the transition journey I would end up. I never felt suicidal, but I understood why people did. 'You think: 'I might be OK with a little bit of therapy, with counselling, or hormone replacement.' But you don't know where you're going to stop. I just about got through the millennium, but it wasn't sustainable. I wasn't functioning and I couldn't continue as I was.' After major surgeries followed by long recoveries, there were further challenges. 'It became: 'What kind of woman am I going to be?' It was stuff I had to learn. I learned that as an adult, all the small social clues. I had to learn them very quickly so I didn't appear vulnerable.' York is now a respected voice in the cycling media and also an advocate for trans athletes. 'It's more understood now,' she says, 'but I don't think it's more accepted.' She states that the idea that 'somebody who's been through male puberty has this innate advantage is just ludicrous. People come in all sizes. Each of us has different levels of testosterone at which our body is healthy.' Sign up to The Recap The best of our sports journalism from the past seven days and a heads-up on the weekend's action after newsletter promotion Asked how she would feel if, competing as a woman, she was beaten by a trans athlete, York says: 'I would wonder if they did have an advantage, but I would look at their performances. 'Are they better than me because they were born male, or are they better because they're more talented? Or have more time to train, or better equipment?' 'People don't understand the physiological changes. Your testosterone basically drops to zero. Testosterone doesn't make you stronger, it's part of the system which repairs the damage done by exercise.' However this is not the position taken by UK Sport, Sport England and the other major sports councils in Britain. After conducting a review of the scientific literature it said that trans women retain physique, stamina and strength advantages when competing in female sport, even when they reduce their testosterone levels. As a result, it has told sports that there is no magic solution which balances the inclusion of trans women in female sport while guaranteeing competitive fairness and safety. York was invited initially to be part of British Cycling's advisory group on diversity and inclusion but the controversy over the trans athlete Emily Bridges soon ended her relationship with the national federation. 'There was a potential for Emily to be part of the track team but suddenly it all stopped,' says York. 'She was high performing, but it wasn't domination. She was 10 or 12 seconds off the world record, but it might have been enough to get on the squad.' She avoids labelling British Cycling as transphobic, but believes that the federation has a 'real problem with the whole LGBTQ+ spectrum. They say they don't, but they do.' She went on to claim that: 'They have had people, employees, who have signed a letter to the UCI, demanding that trans women be excluded … In any other organisation, those people would be fired.' In response, a British Cycling spokesperson said: 'We strongly believe that cycling is for everyone and are committed to welcoming as many people as possible into our sport. 'Our competition policies – in line with most other sports - intend to safeguard the fairness of competitive cycling … Anyone can compete in our 'Open' category, including transgender women, transgender men and non-binary individuals. 'British Cycling takes allegations of homophobic and transphobic behaviour extremely seriously and has a zero-tolerance approach. We are proactively working to ensure that cycling is as accessible and welcoming as possible.' During the 2023 world championships in her home city, the official programme and BBC coverage deadnamed York. 'I was Scotland's best road cyclist in history, but I didn't exist,' York said. 'How can you justify not having the correct name and my identity now?' She is hopeful, though, if not optimistic, that by the time 2027 comes around, her legacy to British cycling will be properly acknowledged. 'If you are going to mention my previous existence you're going to have to mention who I am now,' she said. 'I haven't disappeared, and I haven't died. I am not a refugee from who I was before.' The Escape by David Walsh & Pippa York (HarperCollins Publishers, £22). To support the Guardian, order your copy at Delivery charges may apply. In the UK and Ireland, Samaritans can be contacted on freephone 116 123, or email jo@ or jo@ In the US, you can call or text the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline on 988, chat on or text HOME to 741741 to connect with a crisis counselor. In Australia, the crisis support service Lifeline is 13 11 14. Other international helplines can be found at