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The Bear: Aiming to put the fun into dysfunctional

The Bear: Aiming to put the fun into dysfunctional

Storer opened with the make-or-break review from the Chicago Tribune we spent series three waiting for (yes, it was that exciting). As expected, it was a mixed bag, at once praising the restaurant's ambition while slating it for chaos and inconsistency. Sounds familiar.
Storer had a choice here: to double down on the unhappiness of his characters, or strike out for pastures new. A major clue was the scene involving culinary wonderboy Carm (Jeremy Allen White) and fellow chef Sydney (Ayo Edebiri), the sensible one. After he is told it is okay to cut back on the chaos, Carm breaks into a smile, and something approaching a chuckle. The Bear gets happy - I kid you not.
That's the good news. The bad is that the restaurant is bleeding money and will be forced to close in months if they can't land that star. Finally, a cause that everyone can rally around. Richie (Ebon Moss-Bachrach), still the show's secret sauce, can forget his ex is getting married. Sydney can seize the day and sign the partnership agreement. Carm can start helping people again instead of screaming at them.
There was so much motivation in the air I half expected the theme tune from Rocky to strike up. Everybody loves a comeback tale, right? Whether the hard core fans of The Bear will feel the same I'm not sure. Can a show built on the unhappiness of its characters change so much and have the same appeal?
Something weird is going on in TV quiz land. Tradition had it that celebrities only popped up to do a turn at Christmas. Now they are everywhere, all the time, elbowing the civilians out. And they're not even doing it for the sake of charidee.
Celebrity Puzzling (C5, Monday) seemed to have done away with prizes altogether. There was presumably a fee in it for those taking part, but otherwise, what do they gain? A place to rest their weary bones as they go up or down the snakes and ladders of celebrity, perhaps.
Host Jeremy Vine knows that game well, having once presented Eggheads. There was more quiz royalty with Carol Vorderman as a team leader, and taking her on was writer/producer/actor and 5 regular, Sally Lindsay.
It was Vorderman and Lindsay's job to lead different 'celebrities' into battle each day, and yes, I'm afraid the quote marks were necessary in some cases.
The games were a couple of notches up from Bridge of Lies, but nowhere near as ridiculously complex as David Tennant's Genius Game. Vine took no one to task for getting an answer wrong because it wasn't that sort of show and he's not that kind of guy. That style went out the window after the disastrous (and short lived) reign of Anne Robinson on Countdown. Just as crime turned cosy, so minor league quiz shows have become nicer, sillier, and just for fun.
'It is going to a closing date.' The words no househunter in Scotland wants to hear, even if they were spoken by Phil Spencer, the planet's nicest estate agent and co-host with Kirstie Allsopp of Channel 4's Location, Location, Location (Wednesday).
The reaction from Miriam, looking for a family home in Glasgow, was swift and familiar to anyone who has been in the same choppy waters.
'I actually feel sick,' she said. Such is the terror of the closing date.
The personal trainer and her husband David, a health and safety consultant, had sold their first home and moved in with his parents. Miriam had packed for four weeks. Eight months on, they were still there.
Miriam knew what she wanted, and that it was not going to be easy.
'My ideal house would be sandstone on the outside and new build on the inside. I don't even know if that exists.'
First filmed in May 2021, this was that staple of property shows, a 'revisit' episode. Catch-ups serve two purposes: viewers like to see how stories turn out, and Location gets a return on its investment. Find or don't find a property, the production company gets a programme either way.
Back in 2021 the first stop in the search was a house in Bellahouston. Kirstie had come along for a nosey. 'It's a bit of a project,' Phil warned.
Having said they were open to a project, Miriam and David realised a doer-upper was not for them after all.
On to King's Park and a terraced house with parking. 'It doesn't wow me,' said Miriam. Inside was a different matter. A modern home in walk-in condition, this was a contender, even if David, 6ft 5in, had to do some ducking.
House number three was in East Kilbride, detached, lots of space. Miriam was keen on this one, while David was sticking with King's Park. They eventually decided on the latter, only for Phil to drop his bombshell about a closing date.
Fast forward two years to 2023 and all was revealed. Now a one-baby, two-dog household, the couple didn't offer on King's Park. Instead, they found a home in Cambuslang, one that Phil had considered showing them but rejected because it was outside their top spots. So it's not always about location, after all.
Soaps can make a name for themselves in all sorts of ways: with a shocking crime (the first episode of EastEnders); a disaster (Emmerdale, EastEnders, Coronation Street); scandal (Brookside, first lesbian kiss); or revelation ('YOU AIN'T MY MUVVA!').
Yet it's the quieter moments that are more likely to stay with viewers. In my mind's eye I can see Hilda Ogden opening her late husband Stan's glasses case. It seems like last month rather than 1984. I recall, too, the credits rolling in silence, save for Hilda crying.
Soaps need a delicate touch at times, and if you can put a dash of humour in the mix, so much the better. The Hilda scene, for instance, was preceded by Vera and Ivy conceding that Hilda, for all her faults, was a decent sort.
The lightest of touches was on display this week in River City (BBC1, Tuesday). Yes, that River City, the Glesga-set soap that's wall to wall gangsters if you listen to its detractors,and the drama that will be no more after autumn next year.
The scene involved Angus and Bob sitting on a couch, about to watch some daft movie or other. Just two old pals shooting the breeze.
It has been a rotten year for Bob. Last summer, his fiancée Kim died. It was possibly the least showy death in soap history. She sat on a bench, she closed her eyes, and she passed away. She did get engaged minutes before, mind you, and she had recently been in a horrific car accident. Viewers were genuinely upset. Bob was left a single dad.
Now here he was, reassuring a nervy Angus about the joys of being a dad. It's the most exciting thing you will ever do, he said.
'As exciting as watching people trying to stop a shark from causing nuclear Armageddon?'
'Is it a great white?'
'A massive white.'
'I'd say it's on a par.'
Written by Emma Lennox, produced by Deb Charles and directed by Meg Campbell, it was a small scene that said so much about what makes River City tick. There's a shared history here, a sense of humour that's in with the bricks. It takes years to build this kind of atmosphere, yet it can disappear in the flourish of a BBC executive's pen.
Miriam, David and son in their new home (Image: Channel 4)
River City has to go because it is not passing the value for money test, says BBC Scotland management. Compared to big hitters such as Shetland - average audience 700,000 in Scotland - River City isn't cutting it with just 200,000 viewers. Tell that to the viewers, many elderly, who have stuck with it through months of crazy scheduling. Tell that to the cast and crew who will be out of a job. What a shame.
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Hoist the popcorn and batten down the sofa, Below Deck hits Channel 4 with ocean-deep drama – here are 5 top moments
Hoist the popcorn and batten down the sofa, Below Deck hits Channel 4 with ocean-deep drama – here are 5 top moments

Scottish Sun

time38 minutes ago

  • Scottish Sun

Hoist the popcorn and batten down the sofa, Below Deck hits Channel 4 with ocean-deep drama – here are 5 top moments

RUDDER CHAOS Hoist the popcorn and batten down the sofa, Below Deck hits Channel 4 with ocean-deep drama – here are 5 top moments Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) IT'S THE reality series that's got us all wondering – should we just ditch the day job and set sail on a luxury charter yacht? Below Deck takes us behind the scenes of the glamorous yet chaotic world of yacht charters, where outrageous guests with extravagant demands meet an even more unpredictable crew. Sign up for the Entertainment newsletter Sign up 3 Below Deck rules the TV waves with boozy guests, crew tantrums and love triangles From the sparkling waters of the Caribbean to the stunning landscapes of Australia, this franchise (including Below Deck, Below Deck Mediterranean and Below Deck Down Under and Below Deck Sailing Yacht) truly sails across the globe in style. Over the years, this series has delivered countless jaw-dropping dramas and unforgettable moments. To celebrate the new season of Below Deck streaming on E4, we're taking a look back at some all-time favourite moments from the Below Deck family. 1. Drunk dive disaster If there's one thing Below Deck has taught us over the years, it's that you don't mess with the legendary captain Lee. So when notorious charter guest Delores Flora decided to ignore his orders and take a drunken dive into the sea during Season 8, Episode 11, it's safe to say things didn't go smoothly. Concerned for her safety, the enraged captain demanded she return to the yacht immediately. By morning, with a sore head and no sympathy, Delores' antics led to the charter being cut short as she was swiftly sent packing back to shore. 2. Taco-gate Trained chef or convenience connoisseur? Enter chef Mila Kolomeitseva, who found herself in water hotter than the Med during Season 4 of Below Deck Mediterranean. Mila shocked everyone when she served tacos made from a boxed Old El Paso kit to her high-paying charter guests. From soggy nachos to undercooked steaks, it didn't take long for the crew to realise Mila wasn't exactly Michelin material. Things hit rock bottom when captain Sandy Yawn confronted her about her sloppy standards and Mila bizarrely responded by licking a raw steak. Needless to say, she was swiftly fired, paving the way for the return of fan favourite chef Ben Robinson. 3 Captain Sandy forked out punishment to chef Mila after bizarre steak licking stunt 3. Cake kick-off After tirelessly crafting a stunning birthday cake for a friend of primary guest Charley Walters, chef Kevin Dobson was expecting some appreciation. But during the final group dinner in Season 7, Episode 17, chief steward Kate Chastain left Kevin out of her thank-you toast and he was fuming. Feeling completely disrespected, Kevin snapped and dramatically kicked the cake across the deck before storming off in a huff, leaving the crew stunned. As for the guests? Totally unbothered – they even tucked into the smashed cake without a second thought and the altercation didn't affect their tip. 4. Love triangle ahoy What do you get when you mix a yacht full of young, attractive crew? A juicy love triangle, of course! Enter Malia White on Below Deck Mediterranean Season 2, the green deckhand with a secret fling – chef Adam Glick. But she quickly fell for bosun Wes Walton. Cue drama! As the season unfolded, the triangle fuelled a season of jealousy, squabbling and petty sabotage. In the finale (spoiler alert!), Malia chose the ever-calm Wes, and the pair even holidayed together after the season wrapped, proving it was worth the aggro. 5. Foam party fiasco The aim of the game in the yachting world is to please the guests to get a bigger tip at the end of the charter – but sometimes guest demands are a little crazy. For example, on Below Deck Mediterranean, a guest demanded a foam party, which led to a slippery deck and an injured crew member. Meanwhile on Below Deck Down Under, Season 1, one guest demanded a 24/7 buffet despite it being a meals only table service. The crew improvised to create a snack station, but the guests were horrified it wasn't up to Las Vegas standards. 3 Discover more drunken guests, galley meltdowns and captain one-liners from the Below Deck universe, available to stream free on Channel 4 – and Season 11 is dropping right now. Climb aboard!

Hollyoaks alum Steph Waring reveals co-stars stopped talking to her after brutal axing from the soap - and slams lack of support for cast after exit
Hollyoaks alum Steph Waring reveals co-stars stopped talking to her after brutal axing from the soap - and slams lack of support for cast after exit

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Hollyoaks alum Steph Waring reveals co-stars stopped talking to her after brutal axing from the soap - and slams lack of support for cast after exit

Former Hollyoaks star Steph Waring has revealed her former cast members no longer speak to her following her brutal axing from the Channel 4 soap last year - and admits she's been devastated by the sudden loss of both her career and decades-long friendships. The actress, 47, who played Cindy Cunningham on and off since 1996, says since being culled she has struggled with crippling insecurity, financial pressures and a lack of 'duty of care' from the industry for long-serving cast members 'I did feel the quiet from the family that I once knew on the show,' she said. 'No one's picking up the phone. No one's checking in. 'Everyone's just getting on with their life. When you're in that Hollyoaks bubble and they call it a family - I feel you're only family when you're in it.' Speaking candidly on the latest episode of the Secure The Insecure podcast, Steph - who didn't specify anyone in particular - added: 'You pour your heart out to these people and then you go and it's like it never happened. Where did that friendship go? There's only a couple of people I'm in contact with.' The actress was one of several casualties in the soap's dramatic 2024 cast shake-up and now claims there was a lack of 'duty of care' to help them navigate the aftermath. 'When this whole cull happened, it was across the whole family. There were people from the costume department to sound and makeup that were losing their jobs. What happens next?' Reflecting on the sudden end to her regular income, Steph admitted the short notice left her financially anxious. 'I got told that I was leaving within twelve weeks... that was no time for me to go: 'What the f*** do I do now? Where's my next paycheck going to come from?' she said. 'Because it's all very well saying, go and get another acting job. But unless you're on a soap or a Netflix series, you ain't getting paid big money. So you have to do something else. You have to wear many hats, so to speak.' It was revealed in May last year that Hollyoaks had become the latest soap to be hit by stringent budget cuts, with show bosses planning to reduce the workforce by 40 per cent. Budget cuts forced Channel 4 bosses to carry out a mass axing of cast and crew, as well as scale back episodes to three a week. Script writers came up with a bizarre plan to 'time jump' the programme by a year, which fast-forwarded 20 characters out of the soap permanently. As well as Steph, other cast members to be axed amid the mass cull included Ellis Hollins (Tom Cunningham), Suzanne Hall (Suzanne Ashworth), Gregory Finnegan (James Nightingale) and Annie Wallace (Sally St Clair). The actress was one of several casualties in the soap's dramatic 2024 cast shake-up and now claims there was a lack of 'duty of care' to help them navigate the aftermath Steph is now retraining as a life coach, studying under celebrity guru Jay Shetty. She said the transition helped her get through a tough period where she stopped going to the gym, drank too much, and struggled with her self-worth. 'I have my bad days,' she admitted. 'I'll stay off social media for a while because I think I look like s***, people don't like my content, I don't know what I'm doing. I'm not Cindy anymore… so what am I doing?' Her candid admission of crippling insecurity comes as she reflected on her decades-long battle with body image and bulimia, which began when she was a teenager. And while the mother-of-two now chooses to step away from overtly sexual content, she admits she once loved being objectified. 'When I first started on the show in the nineties, it was all about the lads' mags,' she said. 'That's how you propelled yourself to some sort of status. When I got picked to do Maxim along with all the other [Hollyoaks] girls, I was so excited. I was like, 'Oh my God. I'm going to be a Hollyoaks girl!' But the high didn't last as Steph was told she had been dropped from the Maxim cover. 'I got a phone call saying I wasn't going to be included on the front cover. They said it was because I had different coloured underwear to everyone else, which wasn't true… I knew deep down it was because I didn't look like everyone else,' she said. 'It still upsets me thinking about it.' She also claimed she and her co-stars were never paid for magazine shoots or the Hollyoaks calendars. 'Even back in the day, we didn't get paid for any of the lads' mags. I don't know who was pocketing the money but we should have been. That's my only issue with it - pay me,' she said. Steph, however, wouldn't dream of using her body to make money now - unlike her former Hollyoaks star Sarah Jayne Dunn, who is on OnlyFans. 'I don't think I could ever sexualise myself in that way,' she said. 'I'm nearly 50 and I just don't think that's my angle… Never say never though. People change all the time.' Still, she admits the transition from soap stardom to normal life has been painful. 'People say a job's a job, but at the same time it is your life,' she said. 'Cindy Cunningham is you. Cindy is the village. It's more than just a little role. It's everything.' She added: 'It's been a while since someone's asked how I feel. I think I'm definitely a work in progress… But on the good days, I feel unstoppable.'

Aussie model Erin Holland sports bizarre oversized jacket as she mingles with A-listers at Fantastic Four premiere in Sydney
Aussie model Erin Holland sports bizarre oversized jacket as she mingles with A-listers at Fantastic Four premiere in Sydney

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Aussie model Erin Holland sports bizarre oversized jacket as she mingles with A-listers at Fantastic Four premiere in Sydney

turned heads on Tuesday night, but perhaps not for the reasons she'd hoped. The Aussie model, who won Miss World Australia in 2013, attended the Fantastic Four: First Steps premiere in Sydney, which saw Hollywood heavyweights Pedro Pascal, Vanessa Kirby and Joseph Quinn take to the blue carpet. However, the 36-year-old's outfit of choice sent tongues wagging at the glitzy event. A lady in red, Erin put on a leggy display in a tiny cherry-coloured frock, designed by Aussie brand Khirzad Femme. Over the dress, she bizarrely layered a cropped blazer, which boasted large shoulder pads and sleeves that were so long, they hid her hands completely. From A-list scandals and red carpet mishaps to exclusive pictures and viral moments, subscribe to the DailyMail's new showbiz newsletter to stay in the loop. She matched the eye-catching ensemble with a red purse and a metallic pair of sky-high heels. Erin wore her signature brunette locks in waves across one shoulder and opted for rosy cheeks and a matching pink lip for the occasion. Beloved A-lister Pedro wowed as he arrived for the Sydney premiere of his new film while looking dapper in a sheer shirt. The 50-year-old American actor, also known for his roles in The Last of Us and The Mandalorian, posed alongside his co-stars while promoting their new Marvel movie. Turning heads in a chic but classic ensemble, Pedro chose a well-tailored white shirt in a semi-sheer fabric, with panels at the front, worn partially unbuttoned. The star added a pair of black trousers with flared hems and leather dress shoes, as well as reading glasses. Pedro laughed and larked about with his co-stars as the foursome hammed it up in front of the media wall. Vanessa, 37, was showing off her baby bump in a sheer black dress that had exaggerated, textured bell sleeves. The heavily pregnant Crown actress added a crop top under her see-through gown, which also featured solid black skirting. She completed the look with see-through black high heels, as well as adding a number of chunky rings and earrings for accessories. Vanessa chose a clean and peachy make-up look with a pale coral lipstick and slicked her blonde hair off her face into a low ponytail. Joseph, 31, who rose to international fame playing Eddie Munson in Stranger Things, was on trend in a navy blue ensemble. The British actor wore a royal blue satin shirt underneath his well-fitted suit, to which he added patent dress shoes. Ebon Moss-Bachrach, who plays The Thing in the upcoming film, opted for slate tones for his suit. The American actor, 48, added a dark shirt under his fashionable blazer, and was seen giggling with his co-stars as they posed on the blue carpet at the event. The four stars of the hotly-anticipated comic book adaptation were seen arriving in Australia this weekend ahead of the premiere. Beloved A-lister Pedro wowed as he arrived for the Sydney premiere of his new film while looking dapper in a sheer shirt The film marks the latest reboot of Marvel's iconic superhero team and is one of the studio's most anticipated releases in years. In February, Marvel fans were delighted to see the first-look trailer for The Fantastic Four: First Steps. They took to social media to give their opinions on the latest instalment of the superhero franchise, with one person writing on X: 'Okay the Fantastic Four trailer wasn't bad. I'm pleasantly surprised.' Another added: 'I'm not even a Fantastic Four fan, but this looks really sleek. It's nailing the period setting in the same way that First Avenger did.' Someone else weighed in: 'Watched the Fantastic Four trailer and I actually am excited for a Marvel movie again.' And another social media user described the Fantastic Four comic series as 'the only ones I've been able to stomach,' adding, 'The trailer looks so great. I need this.' 'I've felt a little burnt out on superheroes but Fantastic Four are my ride or die,' one fan revealed. 'I'm so happy the movie looks good.' Others praised the teaser for its 'nostalgic' feel and for looking 'very cinematic.'

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