
Record 60 million watch hit Netflix show
The South Korean dystopian thriller ranked as the No. 1 show in 93 countries and accumulated 368.4 million hours of watch time since its 27 June release.
The series remains Netflix's most-watched original title of all time, with its first and second seasons holding the top two spots for non-English language TV shows.
Series creator Hwang Dong Hyuk said the third season's ending, which included a global recruitment scene and a Cate Blanchett cameo, was intended to make a broader point about the enduring nature of capitalism, not to set up future spin-offs.
However, rumours persist about a potential US-set adaptation or spin-off, with speculation linking director David Fincher to such a project.
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Channel 4
an hour ago
- Channel 4
‘I have new respect for world leaders', says star of new political thriller
What might happen if an international summit hosted at Downing Street went very, very wrong? A new thriller brings all the drama to the crisis, describing what happens when talks between a fictional British Prime Minister and French president are plunged into chaos, first by a kidnap and then blackmail. The new series on Netflix, called Hostage, stars Suranne Jones and Julie Delpy and Amelia Jenne sat down with them to find out more.


The Sun
an hour ago
- The Sun
‘Exciting' new Channel 4 adventure show with huge cash prize and VERY familiar format set to air later this year
IN an era obsessed with Baby Boomers, Millennials and Gen Z, Channel 4 is giving us a TV show that cuts through the generational divides. This week, at the Edinburgh TV Festival, it is announcing Worlds Apart, a contest where a young and old person are paired up to complete a challenge on the road. 7 7 With more than a whiff of Race Across The World to the format, the teams of two will be sent to Japan, where there is a stronger emphasis on care and respect for the elderly. And if that wasn't enough of a feat, many of the contestants vying for the £50,000 cash prize will be Brits who have never travelled abroad before. Channel 4 commissioning editor Genna Gibson said: 'I've seen how generations can feel miles apart, but bring them together and you realise they share more than you think. 'Japan, with its ancient traditions and cutting-edge modern life is the perfect backdrop for their journeys.' Unsurprisingly, Worlds Apart is being made by South Shore, which was behind Freddie Flintoff 's young cricketers show Field Of Dreams on BBC One, and The Real Marigold Hotel, about veterans going on adventures, for BBC Two. Both shows endeavoured to shatter stereotypes about young and old. RO CAN'T RESIST A REVAMP TOP Boy creator Ronan Bennett is giving World War Two drama Army Of Shadows a bold new twist. His Channel 4 show was inspired by Jean-Pierre Melville's 1969 film and Joseph Kessel's seminal book. Ronan's project was unveiled last night at the Edinburgh TV Festival. The movie and novel dramatised the emergence of the French Resistance to the Nazi occupation of France. Ronan has created a new story of how resistance takes shape in a near-future authoritarian Britain. Under de facto American occupation, a former British army officer builds a covert cell from scratch as young recruits fight to reclaim their country. Ronan said: 'Democracy is in clear and present danger. 'This is a story about commitment, resistance and defiance in the coming age.' MOFFAT IN No10 DRAMA SHERLOCK and Doctor Who writer Steven Moffat is making a drama about life inside the Prime Minister's Downing Street home. Simply called Number 10, it will delve into what it is like to live in one of the most powerful places on Earth – an old terrace with mice and a lift that never works. 7 Channel 4 confirmed it was making the programme as the four-day Edinburgh TV Festival got under way yesterday. Sue Vertue, executive producer for Hartswood Films, which is creating the show for C4, said: 'We are excited to be working with Channel 4 on Number 10, which is a passion project for Steven. 'He says there are three famous doors in the world; he's done 221B Baker Street and the Tardis – now he's going to do the real one.' C4 have yet to announce the lead stars, but given the pedigree of Steven and Hartswood, its sure to attract huge names. GLENN IS STILL KILLING IT GLENN CLOSE plays a cantankerous killer in new Channel 4 drama Maud next year – having won the part thanks to her bunny-boiler role in film Fatal Attraction. The 1987 thriller saw her character Alex Forrest terrorise married lawyer Dan (Michael Douglas) after a one-night stand. Even though almost 40 years have passed, I'm told the film helped her bag the lead in the upcoming six-parter. Gwawr Lloyd, acting head of drama, at C4 said: 'Maud is a deliciously dark and daring drama and the amazing Glenn Close will bring a thrilling complexity to the role.' Filming for Maud, which is based on the short stories by Swedish writer Helene Tursten, will take place in London later this year. GAME SHOW TO RIVAL ALL OTHERS ITV doesn't appear to be hiding the similarities to Disney+ show Rivals in its teaser image for new game show, Nobody's Fool. Revealed at the start of the Edinburgh TV Festival, it sees two stars of the Jilly Cooper drama – Emily Atack and Danny Dyer – pose up as hosts. 7 7 7 And the pair are inside a stately home, just like the one in Rivals where lead character, saucy MP Rupert Campbell-Black, lives. While Emily looks quite different to her character Sarah Stratton, Danny's moustache and smart attire make him virtually indistinguishable from businessman Freddie Jones. Commenting on the show, due to air next year, Danny said: 'This is a blinder of a game show. 'Emily and I had a brilliant time making it and, much like the audience at home will be, we were kept guessing right until the very end.' Emily added: 'It's so exciting to be part of something this fresh.' Hmm, not entirely fresh though, is it?


Daily Mail
3 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Rachel Frederickson's shock 155lb weight loss on The Biggest Loser is revisited in new Netflix series
Rachel Frederickson astounded television audiences when she won The Biggest Loser competition in 2014. The contestant had gone from 260lbs to a very slim 105lbs - that is an amazing 155lb weight loss. Now the show is being revisited in season one of the Netflix series Fit for TV: The Reality of The Biggest Loser which kicked off on August 15. It is a three-part documentary that is taking a closer look at how the series worked. Part of the series has focused on Frederickson's shocking weight loss. Fans went wild over her 'after' image because they thought she was 'underweight.' The Netflix show also explored how trainers Bob Harper and Jillian Michaels were put off by the drastic weight loss. 'Rachel came out, and she had lost so much weight, it was … shocking,' Harper said. 'Jillian and I were just in horror.' The television show, which ran from 2004-2016 on NBC, and had a one year reboot in 2020, came under fire for what some consider extreme methods used to help contestants shed weight. It was claimed that some behind-the-scenes people wanted contestants to consume only 800 calories a day while working out eight hours a day. Turns out Frederickson - who was a favorite on the series - is doing very well these days. She's currently a customer insights and analytics manager for Land O'Lakes. Before the gig, she earned a Bachelor's Degree in Logistics, Materials and Supply Chain Management from the University of Minnesota in 2020. Frederickson, 35, qualified for The Biggest Loser by tipping the scales at 260 lbs., but was soon showing a loss at each weekly weigh in. The former high school swimming champ shared in a 2014 Today essay after her victory that she had gained the weight after falling in love and moving to Germany with a foreign exchange student. 'Fast forward to a lonely, overweight girl,' Frederickson, who was working as a voice actor at the time wrote. The competition show has since come under controversy for what some consider extreme methods to help the contestants lose weight Frederickson said she lost the weight by sticking to a strict 1600 calorie diet 'I spent most days alone working from my home vocal studio. A job I loved, but loneliness I hated. I made a decision to start fighting for myself again.' Frederickson has shared she lost 155 pounds, 56-percent of her body weight, by following a strict 1600 calorie a day diet. Attending three to four exercise classes a day, including Zumba and spin, helped her win the $250,000 prize Frederickson told People at the time. Frederickson's big reveal created a lot of online controversy, with many viewers commenting she had become too thin. In an appearance on Thomas DeLauer's podcast in 2024, former The Biggest Loser trainer Jillian Michaels spoke out about her decision to leave the show. 'She was unhealthily thin, to say the least,' Michaels said. 'When Rachel Frederickson walked down that stage looking dangerously unhealthy, I quit permanently.' In her post-win essay for Today, Frederickson had a different take. 'When I stood on stage at the live finale, I had never felt stronger,' she explained. 'I had accomplished everything I wanted to do. I was extremely proud of myself.' However, those feelings soon disappeared due to the comments over her weight loss controversy. 'People tried to bring me down and (privately) succeeded,' she said. Comments that she had lost too much weight hurt her. 'People tried to bring me down and (privately) succeeded,' she said, adding, 'I found strength in this struggle and I am listening to my own voice again!'; Pictured in 2014 Frederickson concluded her 2014 essay with, 'There will always be other voices in life. The trouble comes when you stop listening to your own... I found strength in this struggle and I am listening to my own voice again!' In 2016 and 2017, The New York Times ran several articles reporting on how difficult it was for The Biggest Loser contestants to maintain their weigh loss after returning to their regular lives. According to Dr. Kevin Hall, who was a metabolism at the National Institute for Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases at the time, studied the after effects, and found the body's metabolism slows down a lot during weight loss as it fights to maintain the status quo. 'It is frightening and amazing,' he told the publication. 'I am just blown away.' In a paper published in 2017, Hall found that following a diet and 80 minutes a day of moderate exercise such as walking or 35 minutes of vigorous exercise such as running would keep the weight from creeping back on. It is unclear if Frederickson has maintained her weight loss. She is not on social media and her LinkedIn profile does not include a photo of herself. The voice actor left the business and started a T-shirt business in 2015, and went on to get a degree in logistics, materials and supply chain management from the University of Minnesota in 2020.