CHANGING ENDS, S3 November was one hell of a month for Alan Carr. At the start of the month, the comedian won the first series of BBC1's 'The Celebrity Traitors' and £87,500 for his chosen charity, Neuroblastoma UK after duping his fellow contestants. Dismissed as an unlikely traitor, he deceived most of his fellow contestants into believing he couldn't be one and entertained the nation by initially sweating profusely as he struggled befire betraying several of them. If that wasn't enough, the third series of his semi-autobiographical sitcom 'Changing Ends' has hit our screens and the great news is that it's as delightful as ever. By far the funniest sitcom ITV has ever produced, the show ended its second season with Alan's football manager dad, Shaun Dooley's Graham steering his East Midlands side, Northampton Town to promotion and also defending his son's honour. Oliver Savell's Alan continued to awkwardly navigate his pre-teen ...
MR SCORSESE When asked which famous people, living or dead, I would invite to a fantast dinner party, Martin Scorsese's name always comes up first. For film buffs, Scorsese a fascinating interview. A natural storyteller and teacher, few directors can match his breadth of knowledge about cinema nor his unbridled enthusiasm for the artform. The New Yorker has such a huge reservoir of anecdotes from his experiences of the film industry, he's also incapable of giving a boring interview. As if to underscore that point, filmmaker Rebecca Miller has released a five part documentary for Apple TV that tells the director's story with the help of Scorsese, his family and long time friends. These include friends and collaborators such as Robert de Niro, Leonardo diCaprio, Thelma Schoonmaker, Robbie Robertson, Steven Spielberg, Brian de Palma, Jodie Foster, Isabella Rossellini, Spike Lee, Margot Robbie, Daniel Day Lewis, Sharon Stone, Paul Schrader, Cate Blanchett, Ari Aster, Mick Jag...