logo
It was unwise to think I could easily cross the Bridge of Lies

It was unwise to think I could easily cross the Bridge of Lies

STV News24-04-2025
It's all very well sitting on your sofa shouting quiz answers at the TV.
But it is quite a different beast being up there, testing your own general knowledge in front of telly hardman Ross Kemp.
I was lucky enough to be recently asked along to a behind-the-scenes visit to the set of quiz show Bridge of Lies.
As I routinely sit in disbelief watching contestants get simple answers wrong, I thought 'this is going to be a piece of cake'. How wrong I was…The set looked even more dramatic in person, with the iconic bridge looming under intense lighting. The intensity was real from the moment I walked into the studio. The buzzing cameras, the dramatic music, it was just like it looks on TV, but ten times more immersive in person. And at the centre of it all was host Ross Kemp – every bit as intense and focused as you would expect. His presence alone could make your pulse spike.
I was put in a team of five to complete the final bridge. When Ross called my name, I stepped forward. Then came the three statements I had to face: Miley Cyrus is older than Taylor Swift
Levi Strauss designed the small jean pocket to hold a watch
The River Exe flows through the Wye Valley
The format is simple but deceptive: three statements, one correct step forward at a time. But under pressure, with studio lights blazing and all the production staff's eyes on you, even the most confident answers can feel uncertain.
I chose the first statement, believing Miley Cyrus was older than Taylor Swift. I took a step forward and was met with a red light. Incorrect. The bridge had beaten me. Of course, I knew the correct answer, in hindsight, but the pressure got to me.
I'll be honest, it stung. I was gutted. But weirdly, I was also buzzing. The rush of stepping out there, the challenge, the drama – it was brilliant.
Kemp, best known for his acting and hard-hitting documentary work, brings an unmistakable energy to the show. In person, he's completely in command of the room.
But what really struck me was how genuinely warm and lovely he was off-camera.
Despite the intense atmosphere he helps create on-screen, he made time for us, and his support behind the scenes helped calm the nerves of many contestants, myself included, and made the entire experience more enjoyable.
He even welled up talking to me about a contestant who was now able to buy Christmas presents for her children after her success on the show.
Behind the scenes, the show runs like clockwork. Every camera movement, lighting change, and sound cue is timed to perfection. It gave me a whole new appreciation for the scale and effort involved in producing what viewers see at home.
Was being on Bridge of Lies scary? Absolutely. Nerve-wracking? Without question.
I may not have made it across the bridge.
But I walked away with a good story to tell, and I also have a lot more sympathy for those poor contestants that I used to shout at on my TV at home.
Bridge of Lies and Celebrity Bridge of Lies are both produced by STV Studios and commissioned by the BBC.
Celebrity Bridge of Lies returns to BBC One and iPlayer for a brand new series on Saturday, May 3.
Get all the latest news from around the country Follow STV News
Scan the QR code on your mobile device for all the latest news from around the country
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Elizabeth Hurley's romance with Billy Ray Cyrus hots up as he spends his first UK summer at her £6m country pile
Elizabeth Hurley's romance with Billy Ray Cyrus hots up as he spends his first UK summer at her £6m country pile

Daily Mail​

time4 days ago

  • Daily Mail​

Elizabeth Hurley's romance with Billy Ray Cyrus hots up as he spends his first UK summer at her £6m country pile

has revealed he is spending his first UK summer with his new beau Elizabeth Hurley in her £6million lavish country estate in Herefordshire. The Achy Breaky Heart singer, 63, went public with her romance to the British actress. 60, in April. And since their romance has grown from strength to strength as he has recently dubbed her the 'love of his life' and is now spending the summer with her after flying across the pond for her birthday. Taking to Instagram, the father of famed singer Miley Cyrus shared a snap of himself posing in a pair of reflective sunglasses while playing the guitar. He looked incredible relaxed in the photograph as he was surrounded by the sun-soaked English countryside. Alongside his post he penned: 'Happy Sunday y'all. Loving my first English summer'. Taking to Instagram, the father of famed singer Miley Cyrus shared a snap of himself posing in a pair of reflective sunglasses while playing the guitar at her home After tagging Elizabeth in the caption, she commented: 'Happy days' under the post. The pair's relationship began following his divorce from Firerose - and his third marriage. He had met Elizabeth on set of the 2022 movie Christmas In Paradise and as he was navigating through the split, he received a message from Liz. 'I felt like, "Wow, can life get any harder? Can it get any tougher?" For me, at a certain point it was like, you can't get knocked down any flatter than laying on your back when life is kicking you. And in this moment... a friend reached out.' Billy then tried to recall the contents of the message and explained she had said, 'Hey, it looks like life might be a little bit tough and just wanted you to know I'm in your corner; you've got a friend in your corner.' When he first received the text, the performer revealed that at first he didn't know who the message was from. 'So, I text back, I go, "Who is this?" And it's like, "Elizabeth Hurley." Of all the people to reach out to me in that second that maybe I needed most… this friend who made me laugh.' He later gushed that the actress is 'a great human being' and also 'impressively brilliant.' 'She reminds me a lot of Dolly Parton. She's a very smart businesswoman. If you can laugh together, you can make it through everything.' The star also reflected on how he has also gotten close to his girlfriend's son Damian as well. 'It's great that God brought them into my life when he did. It's just a good thing. It's been a long time since I've been this happy.' Miley's mum Tish Cyrus was previously married to Billy from 1993 until their divorce was finalized in 2023. Billy shares daughter Miley as well as Noah, 25, and Braison, 31, with Tish. He also became stepfather to her other two children from a previous relationship: Brandi, 38, and Trace, 36. He is also dad to son Christopher, 33, whom he welcomed with ex Kristen Luckey. Liz lives in her £6million 13-bedroom estate in Herefordshire with son Damian, who she welcomed with the late Steve Bing. The sprawling Georgian estate, which is Elizabeth's main home, also boasts five bathrooms and its own lake. She has owned Donnington Hall since 2012 that she bought with her then-fiance, Shane Warne who passed away in March 2022. While it is not clear when Elizabeth and Billy exactly started dating, they have known each other for a number of years, having both starred in 2022's Christmas in Paradise.

Lorraine is talk of the Steamie so I spent a week watching daytime TV
Lorraine is talk of the Steamie so I spent a week watching daytime TV

The Herald Scotland

time5 days ago

  • The Herald Scotland

Lorraine is talk of the Steamie so I spent a week watching daytime TV

A presenter bagging another gig is nothing new, but the queen of daytime leaving ITV? This was ravens exiting the tower stuff. It could only have caused more of a stir had Lorraine agreed to a direct swap with Channel 4 News' Krishnan Guru-Murthy (well, he did do Strictly …). Lorraine made no comment, ditto Channel 4. I suspect it won't be the last time she is matched to a new job between now and ITV shedding 220 staff - half its morning workforce. Under the new set-up, announced this month, Lorraine and Loose Women will run 30 weeks a year instead of 52, with Good Morning Britain, to be produced by ITN, extending to fill the gaps. Speaking on The Rest is Entertainment podcast Richard Osman called the changes a watershed moment for British television. The producer, author and presenter said it was 'another symbol of what's happening to our television and the terrestrial broadcasters having to cut their cloth according to the advertising revenues they're getting. We are at the stage now where we are cutting off healthy limbs in British television, which is a terrifying place to be.' Ross Kemp presents the quiz Bridge of Lies (Image: BBC) Daytime is no stranger to upheaval, with the first 'big bang' the shift of children's programmes from radio to television. It has been evolution with occasional revolution ever since. Now, after decades of having the field to themselves, the big four, BBC1, BBC2, ITV and Channel 4, are competing for viewers with hundreds of new channels and streaming services. And they are doing so with less ad revenue or licence fee cash. As the schedules have changed, so has the audience. Besides the over 55s, who still make up the majority of viewers, there are shift workers and people working from home, students, parents with young children, or anyone out and about with time to fill. Where there's a screen there's a potential daytime viewer. And if that viewer wants to watch daytime shows at nighttime instead, catch-up services will oblige. The audience numbers might be down for daytime but they remain impressive. 'Very little on British TV these days gets a million, even in the evening,' said Osman. 'BBC Breakfast gets over a million, we then dip under a million for Homes Under the Hammer, then rise to over a million for Bargain Hunt. The news gets one million then you dip down again till Pointless starts then you're back over a million. On BBC2/Channel 4 nothing's getting a million.' ITV, meanwhile, can pull in 600,000-700,000 viewers consistently up to the lunchtime news. Daytime television still matters - not least to its loyal audiences - but there are questions to be asked. Are viewers happy with a diet of repeats, reheats, endless quizzes and manufactured outrage? What does daytime television say about us as a country? And for the love of God, will anyone ever buy a place in the sun, or are they just time-wasters? To find out more I spent a week watching daytime television, something I haven't done since bouts of childhood tonsillitis. A lot had changed. For a start, no one brought me ice cream and jelly on demand. But I stuck with the mission to see what was out there, what works, what doesn't, and offer recommendations to readers of The Herald along the way. Hold my housecoat, I'm going in. Location, chateau, auction Daytime's obsession with property starts with buying wrecks at auction and ends with second homes in the sun. BBC1's Homes Under the Hammer was the gold standard but it now has competition from Channel 4's Bafta-winning The Great House Giveaway. Simon O'Brien (our Damon from Brookside) matches two strangers struggling to get on the property ladder and gives them a house he's bought at auction. They have six months to do the place up, keeping the profits. Maggie Hambling interviewed on Sky Arts (Image: Sky) The Never-ending Antiques Roadshow And what do we do with all those houses we acquire in reality or our imagination? We fill them with treasures/tat from the likes of Bargain Hunt. BH has been going for 25 years and notched up 71 series, making it a daytime legend that shows no signs of flagging. It's the chorus line kick at the end that makes all the difference. They don't do that on snooty old Antiques Roadshow. Who Doesn't Want to be a Millionaire? If Rachel Reeves wants to know why the UK economy is in the doldrums, she need only look at the number of people taking part in daytime quiz shows. Where do they all come from, these Countdowners, Lingo players, Impossible and Unbeatable contestants, and crossers of the Bridge of Lies? They can't all be shift workers and students. Quizzes are the sliced white bread of daytime, a staple that's cheap to make in batches and will keep for a long time. What separates the best from the rest is the host, with Anne Robinson's disastrous stint on Countdown the best example of what happens when you get the pick wrong. Mind How You Go The world is full of wrong 'uns keen to part us from our hard earned, or it is if you watch daytime. BBC1 has the market cornered with the 1-2-3 of Rip Off Britain, Fraud Squad and Crimewatch Caught. If those don't alarm you enough, stick around till evening to catch ex-daytime hit turned primetime hit Scam Interceptors, made at Pacific Quay in Glasgow. Lorraine She's been around a long time, and has a Bafta lifetime achievement award to show for it, but still no one can match her ability to blend serious with fluffy. When accepting her Bafta award from Brian Cox, Kelly made a point of saying there should be more working-class people in television. It can't hurt. Cillian Murphy in Peaky Blinders (Image: BBC) Politics Live Daytime television has played a big hand in making politics exciting again (that, and the general chaos of the past few years). The visits to the Commons for Prime Minister's Questions, plus extras such as First Minister's Questions at Holyrood and the party conferences, offer lively, informed coverage. MPs and MSPs like the programmes because it gets them on the telly, plus it gives the media at Millbank something to do. Public service broadcasting at its best (and cheap too). The Way we Were You can watch an old favourite online at any time, but nothing beats seeing it on television again. Talking Pictures TV should be your first call for classic films and dramas such as Bonanza and The Beverly Hillbillies, while for more recent fare have a wander through the various U& channels - U&Drama/ U&Dave/ U&Yesterday. Sky Arts Sky Arts starts at 6am and offers first rate programmes through to the next day. Best of all, it's free to view. This week, for example, you can see films about the Guggenheim in Bilbao, The Yardbirds, performances from the Grand Ole Opry, plus historian Kate Bryan playing tour guide at Tate Brtain. All that and a daily double bill of Tales of the Unexpected. Cue the music … DIY Not the hammer and nails stuff, but putting together your own daytime schedule. Maybe you can't bear another Loose Women or afternoon of quizzes. Why not choose a box set and watch an episode a day instead? On BBC iPlayer it's easiest to see what's there if you search under categories, eg drama and soaps. There are two series of the brilliant Northern Ireland police procedural Northern Lights, plus City drama Industry, Life on Mars, and Peaky Blinders - and all free (with a licence fee). On STV Player you can watch the first run of Karen Pirie and catch the new series. Also showing are the dramas Unforgotten and Joan, plus comedies including Parks and Recreation. Channel 4's streaming service is free and includes The West Wing, The Americans, and Hill Street Blues. The White Lotus, a travel show like no other (Image: Sky/Now) The Creme de la Creme The best of the streaming services. Subscriptions are expensive but look out for special offer trial periods, or 'with ads' options. Now is good value for all things Sky, including The White Lotus and The Wire. I'm currently flipping between Veep and Succession. Apple TV+ has Dennis Lehane's Smoke plus Emmy nominees Severance, The Studio and Slow Horses. On Disney+ I can highly recommend the end of the world as we know it drama Paradise. On Netflix, the word is spreading about Pernille, a Norwegian family drama about a single mother and social worker trying to keep all life's plates spinning (sounds awful but it's lovely), and Prime Video has the peerless Bosch. Losing friends and influencing family in Succession (Image: Sky/Now) If you have television recommendations to share, please email me at or leave a comment.

Miley Cyrus' favourite L.A. solo show RUGBURN set to ignite Edinburgh Fringe as a one-to-watch production
Miley Cyrus' favourite L.A. solo show RUGBURN set to ignite Edinburgh Fringe as a one-to-watch production

Scotsman

time23-07-2025

  • Scotsman

Miley Cyrus' favourite L.A. solo show RUGBURN set to ignite Edinburgh Fringe as a one-to-watch production

After a sold-out Hollywood Fringe run and two high-profile visits by superstar Miley Cyrus, Mat Sanders's acclaimed solo show RUGBURN is headed for a highly anticipated 24-performance run at the 2025 Edinburgh Festival Fringe. Sign up to our daily newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to Edinburgh News, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... Described by audiences as an 'unhinged performance of a lifetime,' 'wildly entertaining,' and a 'thrilling emotional rollercoaster with guts, heart, and humor,' RUGBURN blends dark comedy, physical storytelling, and raw vulnerability. Written and performed by Mat Sanders—an acclaimed LA-based interior designer whose clients include Miley Cyrus herself—this fast-paced, genre-bending production draws comparisons to the legendary solo work of greats like John Leguizamo and Bill Erwin for its dynamic shifts in character, pace, and physical narrative. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Developed at Los Angeles's esteemed Elysian Theatre—considered a hub for groundbreaking, innovative comedy and theatrical storytelling—RUGBURN embodies everything the LA underground theatre scene stands for. Elysian Artistic Director Jacquelyn Landgraf shares: Miley, Mat and director of Elysium Theatre Jacquelyn Landgraf 'The Elysian has quickly become L.A.'s foremost incubator for new work that is boundary-pushing, transgressive, and immersive. Rugburn had its beginnings in an Elysian class, and we were excited to champion Mat Sanders' as his ideas first began to crackle and this new show came to life. It's juicy, candid, unhinged, musical, barely-clad–he whips the highly personal and vulnerable into wild spectacle, and plunges audiences into an extended, gloriously theatrical and hilarious manic panic.' At its heart, RUGBURN explores queer millennial identity caught between two extremes—celebrity glamour and underground escapism. The show incorporates sex clubs, design TV references, Shakespearean interludes, vaudevillian musicality, and surreal imagery featuring Sanders wearing his signature panda kink mask and leather harness. Reviewers have called it 'raunchy, raw, touching and absolutely glorious', 'surprising, magnetic and brutally honest', and have noted Sanders's powerful presence, remarking that 'Mat carries the room with a single gesture or glance' in this 'one man, one hour tour de force confessional.' Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Miley Cyrus's repeat attendance further underscores the show's singular cultural cachet. RUGBURN is poised to stake its claim in a renaissance of American queer solo performance—surfing the wave of original stories like Cole Escola's Broadway sensation Oh Mary! and Jordan Tannahill's rising Off-Broadway hit Prince Faggot. Miley Cyrus backstage at RUGBURN With all eyes on Edinburgh Fringe as the launchpad for the next breakout solo triumph—à la Fleabag and Baby Reindeer—Sanders's storytelling, raw, riveting, and darkly funny, places RUGBURN squarely in the spotlight. 'Theatre was my sanctuary growing up,' Sanders shares. 'Leaving it to design celebrity homes led me down an unexpected path and now the stage has pulled me back—not just as a performer, but as someone with a story that could only be told here. Returning to the church of theatre to exorcise the madness I've lived through feels, somehow, perfectly divine.' Audiences and critics alike have praised RUGBURN as: 'Completely electric,' 'Brave and disarming,' and 'A dynamic hour of pure energy, emotion, and masterful performance.' 'An exponential showcase of vulnerability, hilarity, and true talent.' 'Perfectly executed, one of a kind, impeccable,' and 'Edgy, sexy, and left me wanting more.' Directed by Telly Kousakis (Glee, Scream Queens), RUGBURN's on-stage breakdown gets a sharp eye and comedic backbone. Choreography is by Nick Lanzisera (Sia, Taylor Swift, High School Musical), who turns emotional collapse into physical comedy. Together, the team transforms Sanders's deeply personal material into a full-throttle spectacle. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad This dynamic, unforgettable theatrical experience promises to be 'one of the most memorable shows of the Fringe season,' capturing hearts and sparking buzz as Sanders prepares to make his international Fringe debut. Show Details: RUGBURN Edinburgh Festival Fringe | C ARTS | C alto July 30 – August 24, 2025 | Nightly at 9:30 PM

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store