
TV tonight: Nathan Fielder's hilarious social experiment comedy returns
10pm, Sky ComedyEver wondered how many planes have crashed because the co-pilot was 'uncommunicative?' Nathan Fielder has – and it's the premise for series two of his mind-bending social experiment comedy, in which real people 'rehearse' in his simulated scenarios. He reconstructs a cockpit and an airport lounge, and even starts TV singing competition Wings of Voice. The blurred line between reality and construction creates something bizarre and uproariously funny. Strap in! Matthew Pearce
7pm, Channel 4In this one-off special, Jamie Oliver explores the cuisine of Georgia, soaking up inspiration from its colourful ingredients, techniques and traditions. He dives in to Tbilisi's herbaceous food markets and the rustic wine region, gets to know what the locals love, and understands how to well and truly eat like a Georgian. MP
9pm, BBC TwoJane Austen's sister burned their personal letters, meaning that history's most famous female writer is also the most enigmatic. But Helen Fielding, Candice Carty-Williams and other fans get inside Austen's mind in this docudrama series. It starts with Jane's first novel, Lady Susan, inspired by her cousin Eliza, and the observation that widowed women are free. Hollie Richardson
9pm, Sky Atlantic
It is the season finale and we last saw Ellie (Bella Ramsey) about to get her bloody revenge on Abby (Kaitlyn Dever). Will she go through with it? And if so, can she pull it off? This season has been slowed down by Joel's absence and Ellie's endless guitar renditions – but maybe it will end on a thrilling note. HR
9pm, Sky WitnessA former child star with sobriety issues wakes up with a love bite and zero memory of the night before. Then she is accused of murder. Luckily, sleuth Elsbeth (Carrie Preston) is on hand to tackle the mystery, dressed up as Holly Golightly because all this wackiness unfolds over Halloween. Graeme Virtue
10pm, Channel 4As this experimental intimacy course nears its climax, episode five sees the group of virgins take lessons on how to achieve an orgasm. Some have never masturbated before, others have never had a kiss. Can the experts help them understand what it means to have sex? MP
The Importance of Being Earnest (Anthony Asquith, 1952), 11.10pm, Talking Pictures TV
Oscar Wilde's scintillating dialogue transfers well from stage to screen in Anthony Asquith's definitive 1952 version of his drawing-room comedy. Michael Redgrave and Michael Denison are the two young men whose romantic designs on Joan Greenwood and Dorothy Tutin's English roses lead them into a pseudonymous tangle. But, despite the comic skills of Greenwood and Margaret Rutherford as governess Miss Prism, it's Edith Evans's intimidating Lady Bracknell who rules the roost. 'A handbag?' will never sound the same again. Simon Wardell
League One football, AFC Wimbledon v Walsall 2pm, Sky Sports Main Event. The play-off final at Wembley.
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Graziadaily
4 hours ago
- Graziadaily
Here's Where You've Seen The Cast Of Ginny And Georgia Before
Our favourite mother-daughter duo Ginny and Georgia have returned to our screens for a third season, and this time around it's as addictive as ever. As with previous seasons, we can expect plenty more mouther-daughter conflicts, flirting, sex, amazing houses and, of course, murder. 'Season 3 is our most ambitious and explosive season yet,' the show's creator Sarah Lampert old Netflix's Tudum. 'Going into it, we knew our core driving force isn't the plot twists and turns, but the emotional truth of these two women. We care about these characters, they are messy and complicated and real, and that's why we're invested in the wild season they're about to go through.' Season three picks up after Georgia was arrested over the killing of Tom Fuller, and deals with Georgia's murder trial. Everything is turned upside down in Georgia's world as the season wears on, and she begins to prepare for a life in prison. But the end of Episode nine throws all of that into question... Georgia in the present day is played by Brianne Howey. She is best known for her role as Georgia, but since the series launched in 2021 she's also starred as 'Molly Turner' in the Farrelly brothers holiday comedy Dear Santa and as Happy Madison in the Netflix film Kinda Pregnant. Speaking about her character in this season, Howey told Netflix's Tudum 'Georgia is definitely pushed to her limits this season, and she has to survive scenarios she's never had to survive before'' continuing 'Georgia now has to be a survivor with less masks because all of her secrets are out.' Troubled teenager Ginny is played by Antonia Gentry. She is also best known for her role in Ginny and Georgia, although in 2018, she played Jasmine in the romantic comedy feature film Candy Jar. She also has a starring role in the 2024 coming of age comedy Prom Dates. This season, Gentry told Tudum that 'We were able to see a new side of Ginny where she's really coming into her own, and accepting her decisions and standing by them, and making hard choices, but not being riddled with guilt or shame.' Matt Press, often referred to as just 'press' in the show, is played by Canadian born actor Damian Romeo. He started acting around the age of 9, and performed in theatre, cementing his lifelong desire to become an actor. He was described as a 'jerk' on the first two series, and it seems this time around is no different. According to Netflix, we can expect to see more 'taunting remarks' to Ginny about her mum's arrest, and mistreating Abby. PI Gabriel Cordova is a private investigator hired to surveil Georgia, who becomes Nick's boyfriend while undercover as 'Jesse.' He's played by Filipino-Canadian actor Alex Mallari Jr, who is best known for his roles in the TV series Dark Matter and the film The Adam Project alongside Ginny and Georgia. According to Netflix, this season will see Cordova shed his false identity, while his 'vendetta amps up' during Georgia's trial.


Telegraph
4 hours ago
- Telegraph
Dawn French ‘dismisses' Oct 7 Hamas attacks
Dawn French has been accused of dismissing the Oct 7 Hamas attacks in Israel in a new social media video. The British comedian and actress, 67, posted a video of herself to X in which she appears to mimic Israel's supporters amid the military campaign in Gaza. In the video, published by French on the social media platform on Thursday, she says about the conflict in the Middle East: 'Complicated, no, but nuanced. But [the] bottom line is no.' She then goes on to mimic apparent defences of Israel's military campaign in neighbouring Gaza since the Hamas-led massacre in 2023, saying: ''Yeah but you know they did a bad thing to us'... Yeah, but no. ''But we want that land and there's a lot of history…'. No. 'These people are not even people, are they really?' No.' In response to the viral tweet, which has been viewed more than half a million times in the 24 hours since it was published, Tracy-Ann Oberman, the West End star and playwright, branded French's tone as 'mocking'. I am so saddened by this post . This mocking voice 'bad thing' of October 7 that Dawn ( who I revere by the way) appears ro be mocking involved the most horrific terrorist attack involving rape sexual violence burning alive child mutilation and taking of civilian hostages .… — Tracy-Ann Oberman (@TracyAnnO) June 6, 2025 The Jewish actress, 58, reposted French's video and said: 'I am so saddened by this post. 'This mocking voice 'bad thing' of October 7 that Dawn (who I revere by the way) appears to be mocking involved the most horrific terrorist attack involving rape, sexual violence, burning alive child, mutilation and the taking of civilian hostages.' She added: 'Why would Dawn seem to deny that which has affected so many of us personally in the most painful way possible. 'I can mourn the horrors of the war in Gaza whilst also remembering the horrors of what started it. Is this how most of our industry feels now – Oct 7 was a 'little thing'? NO!' Israel launched a military campaign in Gaza in response to Hamas's massacre on Oct 7 2023, in which about 1,200 people were killed by the terror group and 251 others were taken hostage. There are now 56 hostages still held by Hamas in Gaza, at least 20 of whom are believed to be alive. Israel said its expanded offensive in the Strip, named Operation Gideon's Chariot, will increase the chances of returning the missing. 'Wow, this is really bad' The Hamas-run health ministry that operates in Gaza has said that at least 54,000 people have been killed in the territory during the war. Hamas has rejected proposed ceasefire and hostage release deals that do not guarantee a full Israel withdrawal from the Strip and an end to the war. Other responses to French's post include the financier Ben Goldsmith, who has been a strong defender of Israel's response to the Hamas terrorist attacks. He remarked: 'Wow, this is really bad. Who knew.' Elsewhere, comedy writer and self-described 'champion of Jewish rights' Lee Kern wrote: 'What you sneeringly mock as a 'bad thing' included the grieving children I met in hospital whose friends and family had been murdered, kidnapped and raped and who themselves were coming to terms with their own life-altering injuries. 'It also includes the 1,200 people murdered and tortured on October 7th… you proactively broadcast – with misplaced pride – a wicked glee in your mockery and dismissal of Jewish suffering, pain and death.' In a subsequent post following the criticism by Oberman, French clarified that she did not mean to 'support the atrocities of Oct 7th'. Writing on X, she said: 'I do not say 'a little thing'. In NO WAY do I support the atrocities of Oct 7th. Of course not. Appalling. Horrific. 'But starving innocent children is not the answer. NO is the answer to ALL of it, Tracy.'


Daily Mirror
5 hours ago
- Daily Mirror
Holly Willoughy on the secret struggle that made her school days 'so hard'
The TV star is throwing her support behind Jamie Oliver as he embarks on a campaign to overhaul the schooling system so dyslexic and neurodivergent kids can thrive Holly Willoughby has spoken out about her battle with dyslexia in support of Jamie Oliver' s new campaign to secure better teaching for the 1-in-10 kids who have it. The TV star, who quit This Morning last year, opens up on feeling 'different' to her classmates. She says she had to cope with feelings of failure after comparing herself with her friends and finding that despite working hard she was 'not getting the results'. "I definitely was terrible at spelling,' she says in the film. 'I knew that because in spelling tests I would always get poor results. I always knew that when I got my homework back, there would be red pen all over it where there would be 'silly mistakes'.' The mum-of-three, 44, also explained: 'I felt like I was working really, really hard with not getting much results. So I felt different.' Holly said it was hard not to lose confidence in herself. "The school system is made for a certain type of learning and it's so hard when you don't learn like that. When you then write yourself off at school as being 'non academic', that does shape your future somewhat.' Holly is joined in the Channel 4 documentary by former Made in Chelsea star Jamie Laing who also said he found it hard to make words work for him - and often found himself in trouble at school. Viewers will also hear heart-breaking testimony from 15-year-old Amira, who felt 'isolated' at school, where she failed to get a formal diagnosis and now expects to fail her GCSEs. 'It feels like I have no opportunities. I don't see any hope,' she tells Jamie, who says she's being badly let down. The film, Jamie's Dyslexia Revolution, uses statistics showing that one in ten kids is dyslexic - meaning there are three in the average class - but for every 10 dyslexic children, only two will be diagnosed. He finds that children with dyslexia are 3.5 times more likely to be expelled, and those who do lose their place at school are 200 times more likely to get involved in violent crime. This could explain why 50% of the UK's prison inmates show signs of dyslexia. 'I am starting to see the patterns of getting into trouble and ending up in prison are all massively amplified by dyslexia and neurodiversity…and I don't think it is because this is destiny for them, I think it's a reaction to a feeling that they never fit it,' he said at a launch event for the in London. 'Dyslexia is bigger than letters jumping around and a few kids struggling to read. It's about getting tens of thousands of kids a year to thrive, and not just survive, in school. An education system that only works for some kids, and not everyone, is broken.' He is putting his faith in education minister Bridget Phillipson, who is committed to improving school for all neurodivergent kids. 'I like her. She's doing things that others haven't done for a long time,' Jamie says. 'Out of the 17 or 18 [education ministers] that I've seen over the last 20 years, she sticks out as being one worth putting a bet on.' Since filming ended, the minister has agreed that 1 in 4 kids being left out of education is a sign the system needs an overhaul and has committed to improving teacher training around neurodiversity for all new teachers from this September. Mother-of-two Bridget said: 'I am determined to reform the system for children with SEND so that all children can achieve what they're capable of.' Discussing his new documentary, Oliver claimed Essex county council did not want to "spend the money' on young people having the learning difficulty. 'I'm disgusted by my county of Essex,' he declared. 'I come from Essex. I was born and bred in Essex and went to school in Essex … and they've decided to not recognise dyslexia. They don't recognise it, they don't see it." He argued: "My instinct is because once you recognise it and once you have a diagnosis on it, then because of the Equality Act you have to deploy resources as a human right. And I believe that Essex don't want to spend the money.' -Jamie's Dyslexia Revolution, Channel 4, 8pm, Monday