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SIXTY YEARS OF HURT (DEAR ENGLAND)

  DEAR ENGLAND Every two years, it's the same. An men's international football tournament kicks off. If a Celtic nation qualifies, they hope to make it beyond the first stage of the tournament and everything from there is a bonus. If England qualifies, well... England expects. Nothing but the last four will do and if England doesn't make it, the manager and the squad gets slaughtered by football pundits, tabloid writers and by some supporters on radio phone-ins and social media. When the World Cup kicks off in Mexico City this Thursday, expect pundits like Gary Neville, Ian Wright, Alan Shearer and Chris Sutton to wax lyrical about the attacking threat of the England team but also fret about whether their defence is strong enough. Expect Scotland fans and their pundits to simply hope their national squad can somehow manage make it through the initial group phase. The pressure on Thomas Tuchel's England team will be immense and if they put in some mediocre performances a...
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HIGH STAKES (THE CAGE & THE FOUR SEASONS, S2)

  THE CAGE Is there any actor working onscreen these days with sadder eyes than Michael Socha's? The ' This is England ' and ' Toxic Town ' actor is brilliantly deployed as a down on his luck, casino employee in Tony Schumacher's latest Liverpudlian drama 'The Cage' and he squeezes every bit of sympathy from us as his  character walks into one disastrous decision after another. Socha's Matty is a decent soul with some kind of magnetic pull towards trouble - a drug addict with a gambling addiction who is stealing from his employer who also happens to have links to organised crime. The thing is Matty's not the only employee who's robbing the casino. Sheridan Smith's struggling mother of two, Leanne is doing it too as she tries to keep her family together. And when she realises Matty's thieving too, they become co-conspirators. The problem, though, is Barry Sloane's thug Gary is laundering drugs money through the casino and is lookin...

PADAM MADAM (KYLIE)

  KYLIE Inevitably, a streaming service has a documentary about Kylie Minogue. Why wouldn't they? Celebrity documentaries are surefire hits, with oven ready audiences ready to lap them up. Over the years, we've seen docuseries on  The Beatles ,  David Beckham ,  Charlie Sheen ,  Arnold Schwarzenegger ,  Wham ,  Martin Scorsese ,  Steve Martin  and  Simone Biles . Some are tightly controlled affairs - especially if the subject is executive producing.  Others are bit more loose and revealing Irish filmmaker Michael Harte's three part documentary 'Kylie' has landed on Netflix after the Australian pop singer negotiated a deal with the streaming service on 2024. Like 'Beckham,' which Harte produced, it's never going to wield a cudgel as it pores over her life. You know from the off that in all likelihood, it will paint her in the best possible light. However it feels like a little less controlled, as its subject opens up her archive and ...

CUSTOMS MADE (LEGENDS)

  LEGENDS In recent years, Dundee writer Neil Forsyth has been making a name for himself as one of the best television dramatists working in the UK. The creator of the much loved Brian Cox led sitcom ' Bob Servant Independent ,' he caught a lot of critics' attention with the BBC4 television film ' Eric, Ernie and Me ' in which Stephen Tomkinson played the comedy Eddie Braben who worked for Morecambe and Wise. Fellow Scot Mark Bonnar, who played Eric Morecambe in that drama, teamed up with Forsyth again for three series of the dark BBC Scotland comedy drama ' Guilt ' with Jamie Sives, Emun Elliott and Ruth Bradley. A show about two brothers in Leith who get sucked into Edinburgh's underworld after being involved in a hit and run accident, it was both a critical and ratings success. Forsyth further cemented his place as one of British television's best contemporary dramatists with ' The Gold ' on BBC1 with Hugh Bonneville, Emun Elliott, Charlot...

QUESTION TIME (THE ASSEMBLY UK & THE ASSEMBLY IRELAND)

  THE ASSEMBLY UK, S2 Now that the novelty factor around 'The Assembly UK' has gone, does ITV's probing interview show still impress? For the uninitiated, 'The Assembly' sees celebrities facing a grilling from people with autism, other neurodivergent conditions and learning disabilities. After a BBC pilot with Michael Sheen, Series One saw actors Danny Dyer and David Tennant, singer Jade Thirwall and footballer turned broadcaster Gary Lineker take part in a show where no questions are too hard or out of bounds. It made for gripping viewing as some of the celebrities shifted uncomfortably in their seats and occasionally teared up. The show was critically acclaimed, winning a Royal Television Society award for Formatted Popular Factual Programme and earning a BAFTA nomination for Best Factual Entertainment Programme. However it was not without its critics, with some in the autistic community accusing it of being patronising and  treating its interviewers like "zo...

MEET THE FECKERS (BEEF, S2)

BEEF, S2 Can lightning strike twice on Netflix for Korean American screenwriter and director Lee Sung Jin? Two years ago, it did when he paired Steven Yuen and Ali Wong in ' Beef ' - a cautionary tale about an escalating feud between two strangers, arising from a road rage incident. Now he's back with a new story about people behaving abominably, turning 'Beef' ino an anthology series. But does the new version of 'Beef' hit the heights of its predecessor? This time, Oscar Isaac, Carey Mulligan, Cailee Spaeny,  Oscar winner  Youn Yuh-jung from ' Minari ' and ' Parasite ' star Song Kang-ho are there to add some acting heft to proceedings. Isaac and Mulligan play Josh and Lindsay Crane Martin, a power couple with a wobbly marriage who run a Californian country club. Returning home from a function at the club, the couple get into a fierce argument about Josh's debts and the state of their marriage. Josh has left his wallet behind at the club ...

TOO LATE FOR GOODBYES (THE LATE SHOW WITH STEPHEN COLBERT: FINALE)

  THE LATE SHOW WITH STEPHEN COLBERT: FINALE It was never going to be a normal episode. But that didn't deter the host, writers and producers of 'The Late Show with Stephen Colbert' from trying to stick to the formula the best they could. As usual, there was a monologue, a rather iffy sketch, a 'Meanwhile' slot, a big celebrity interview and even a Colbert Questionnaire. However no matter how hard Colbert and his team tried, it was hard to shake off the overwhelming sense of sadness that this wasn't just the end of his reign but the end of 'The Late Show'. As a result, the whole show felt flat. Hollywood stars from Bryan Cranston to Ryan Reynolds to Billy Crystal and Robert de Niro hadn't come to just praise Colbert but bury a talk show. Rather surprisingly, Colbert's monologue felt uncharacteristically timid with no mention of President Donald Trump. Interruptions from Cranston, Paul Rudd and Tim Meadows, all pretending to be expecting to be the...