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Today's top TV and streaming choices: Gardeners' World, Persuasion and a new season of The Bear
Today's top TV and streaming choices: Gardeners' World, Persuasion and a new season of The Bear

Irish Independent

time26-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Irish Independent

Today's top TV and streaming choices: Gardeners' World, Persuasion and a new season of The Bear

Gardeners' World BBC Two, 8pm Due to the BBC's Glastonbury coverage on Friday, the horticultural series moves to Thursday this week. At Longmeadow, Monty Don plants some pretty perennials and gets set to harvest garlic and potatoes. Pushers The comedy continues with Emily and Ewen going out on a double date, which coincides with their biggest deal. Later, Ewen decides he no longer wants to be a dealer, but Emily is keen to continue. Fíorscéal TG4, 10.45pm The documentary series' latest run ends with an insight into how medical professionals are constantly working to improve their care, often putting patients before their own needs, leading to incredible breakthroughs in treatment. Persuasion BBC Four, 10.15pm This 1995 adaptation of Jane Austen's beloved novel stars Amanda Root as a young woman who is persuaded to turn down an impoverished man's (Ciarán Hinds) marriage proposal. He returns to her life years later, having made his fortune, but seems more interested in her sister-in-law than rekindling their romance. Fiona Shaw also appears. The Bear Disney+, streaming now Season four of The Bear is upon us. As ever, it follows Carmy (Jeremy Allen White), Sydney (Ayo Edebiri), and Richie (Ebon Moss-Bachrach) as they push to elevate the restaurant further amid the constant chaos of continuous camera shots. Facing new challenges, they must adapt while redefining what's worth holding onto. Ironheart Disney+, streaming now After Black Panther: Wakanda Forever, Marvel's Ironheart follows Riri Williams, a brilliant inventor, as she returns to Chicago. Her iron suit designs are groundbreaking, but her ambitions lead her into a clash with the enigmatic Parker Robbins, aka The Hood. Trainwreck: Poop Cruise Netflix, streaming now Giving a whole new twist to the interpretation of the term 'poop deck', this week's installment of Trainwreck looks at the 2013 cruise that turned into a literal shit show when a power outage left 4,000 passengers stranded on board. Murderer Behind The Mask Prime Video, streaming now True crime isn't just the purview of Netflix, you know, and this Prime Video offering about Elaine O'Hara and Graham Dwyer hits particularly close to home. It highlights how An Garda Síochana meticulously pieced together the truth, turning an overlooked case into one of Ireland's most haunting murder trials. Back in September 2013, the remains of childcare worker O'Hara were discovered in the Dublin mountains. Initially believed to be a suicide, her case took a twisted tangent when fishermen stumbled upon crucial evidence leading to Dwyer, a respected architect who lived in Foxrock with his wife and kids. Beneath his carefully crafted facade lurked a secret life fuelled by a dark stabbing obsession, revealed through his disturbing text exchanges with O'Hara. Over the course of two 45-minute installments, this Wag Entertainment-produced series purports to uncover how the investigation unfolded and the tragic story behind Elaine's murder. The Waterfront Netflix, streaming now From the makers of Dawson's Creek and Scream, we have this deliciously ridiculous number inspired by true events. It centres on the Buckley family, who have ruled Havenport, North Carolina, for decades. Now, with their patriarch, Harlan (Holt McCallany), recovering from multiple heart attacks (not helped by his predilection for impromptu punching sessions with his son), they resort to drug smuggling courtesy of a surprising face (belonging to Topher Grace). For more glossy, far-fetched US drama, season three of Manifest is now streaming. The Buccaneers AppleTV+, streaming now Apple's answer to Bridgerton (but with bonus Americans) is here with its second season. Exploring the events leading up to the 2017 Grenfell Tower fire, this heart-rendering documentary reveals decisions by businesses and government that contributed to the tragedy. Somebody Feed Phil Netflix, streaming now This time, Phil visits Amsterdam, Tbilisi, Sydney, Adelaide, Manila, Vegas, Guatemala, San Sebastián and Boston, while enjoying a spot of bone gnawing with Ray Romano and Brad Garrett along the way. The Many Deaths of Nora Dalmasso Netflix, streaming now She wasn't rich, famous, or part of the swinger set. Rather 'a symbol of what happens to those who stray from the patriarchal mould'. In other unsolved murder documentaries on Netflix, we have I'm Your Venus.

Tim Lovejoy replaced on Sunday Brunch by reality star as he takes a break from show
Tim Lovejoy replaced on Sunday Brunch by reality star as he takes a break from show

Scottish Sun

time20-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Scottish Sun

Tim Lovejoy replaced on Sunday Brunch by reality star as he takes a break from show

She has appeared as a guest many times over the years sunday shake-up Tim Lovejoy replaced on Sunday Brunch by reality star as he takes a break from show Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) TIM Lovejoy is to be replaced by a former Geordie Shore star after taking a break from Sunday Brunch. The TV host has hosted the programme alongside Simon Rimmer since 2012 but it has been revealed that he will be stepping down from hosting this week's edition of the programme. Sign up for the Entertainment newsletter Sign up 6 Tim Lovejoy is being replaced by a former Geordie Shore star as he takes a break from Sunday Brunch Credit: Rex 6 Vicky Pattison has confirmed that she is stepping in to replace him temporarily Credit: Instagram 6 The TV regular has been a guest on the show many times (pictured with Ella Henderson) Credit: Instagram It means that a rather unlikely face has been brought in to co-host alongside Simon and she is one of Britain's most prominent reality stars. Vicky Pattison has confirmed that she will be stepping into Tim's shoes as he takes some leave from the show and will step up to the plate to be Simon's co-host. The star confirmed the news on Instagram as she begged her millions of followers to "wish me luck" as she shared a collection of images from her times on the show as a guest in previous years. Vicky said: "I HAVE SOME EXCITING NEWS!!!! "As a long time friend of @sundaybrunchc4 it is an absolute HONOUR to be wearing a slightly different hat this week! "I will be joining my good pal @rimmersimon as his co-host while the lovely @timlovejoy_official has a very well deserved break!!! "I am buzzing like an old fridge to chat to all of our gorgeous guests, eat some delicious food and hopefully give anyone watching and nursing a hangover a bit of light comedy reprieve. "See you bright and early Sunday my loves... and wish me luck." The TV personality was soon inundated with a whole host of supportive comments from fans who shared their excitement at her major new role. One wrote: "Looking forward to this." Channel 4's Sunday Brunch host in very awkward blunder as he forgets star's name and hosting a show with her As another added: "Check you out Mrs! You're going to smash it!" It is Vicky's first venture back into daytime TV since her nine-month hosting stint on Loose Women in 2016. A synopsis for Vicky's debut episode as host, reads: "Simon Rimmer and guest presenter Vicky Pattison host the food and chat show. Rosie Jones tells us about her new Channel 4 sitcom, Pushers. "Bush frontman Gavin Rossdale gives us the lowdown on the band's new album. "Fleur East chats about the Hits Radio Breakfast Show." 6 Vicky will make her first hosting appearance this Sunday Credit: Instagram 6 She has appeared as a guest many times over the years Credit: Rex Features

Tim Lovejoy replaced on Sunday Brunch by reality star as he takes a break from show
Tim Lovejoy replaced on Sunday Brunch by reality star as he takes a break from show

The Irish Sun

time20-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Irish Sun

Tim Lovejoy replaced on Sunday Brunch by reality star as he takes a break from show

TIM Lovejoy is to be replaced by a former Geordie Shore star after taking a break from Sunday Brunch. The TV host has hosted the programme alongside 6 Tim Lovejoy is being replaced by a former Geordie Shore star as he takes a break from Sunday Brunch Credit: Rex 6 Vicky Pattison has confirmed that she is stepping in to replace him temporarily Credit: Instagram 6 The TV regular has been a guest on the show many times (pictured with Ella Henderson) Credit: Instagram It means that a rather unlikely face has been brought in to co-host alongside Simon and she is one of Britain's most prominent reality stars. Vicky Pattison has confirmed that she will be stepping into The star confirmed the news on Instagram as she begged her millions of followers to "wish me luck" as she shared a collection of images from her times on the show as a guest in previous years. Vicky said: "I HAVE SOME EXCITING NEWS!!!! Read More on Sunday Brunch "As a long time friend of @sundaybrunchc4 it is an absolute HONOUR to be wearing a slightly different hat this week! "I will be joining my good pal @rimmersimon as his co-host while the lovely @timlovejoy_official has a very well deserved break!!! "I am buzzing like an old fridge to chat to all of our gorgeous guests, eat some delicious food and hopefully give anyone watching and nursing a hangover a bit of light comedy reprieve. "See you bright and early Sunday my loves... and wish me luck." Most read in News TV The TV personality was soon inundated with a whole host of supportive comments from fans who shared their excitement at her major new role. One wrote: "Looking forward to this." Channel 4's Sunday Brunch host in very awkward blunder as he forgets star's name and hosting a show with her As another added: "Check you out Mrs! You're going to smash it!" It is Vicky's first venture back into daytime TV since her nine-month hosting stint on Loose Women in 2016. A synopsis for Vicky's debut episode as host, reads: "Simon Rimmer and guest presenter Vicky Pattison host the food and chat show. Rosie Jones tells us about her new Channel 4 sitcom, Pushers. "Bush frontman Gavin Rossdale gives us the lowdown on the band's new album. " Radio Breakfast Show." 6 Vicky will make her first hosting appearance this Sunday Credit: Instagram 6 She has appeared as a guest many times over the years Credit: Rex Features 6 Tim is having a well-deserved break from the show Credit: Rex Features

Pushers review – Rosie Jones's hilarious disability drug sitcom is pure silliness
Pushers review – Rosie Jones's hilarious disability drug sitcom is pure silliness

The Guardian

time19-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Guardian

Pushers review – Rosie Jones's hilarious disability drug sitcom is pure silliness

Disabled people are routinely ignored, underestimated, overlooked and patronised. The perfect drug dealers, in other words. This is the gratifyingly sardonic concept behind comedian Rosie Jones's new sitcom – co-written with Veep's Peter Fellows – in which she stars as Emily Dawkins, a woman with cerebral palsy whose benefits are senselessly cut by the DWP. After a humiliating work capability assessment, she runs into old school mate Ewen in the loos. Once he remembers who she is (no, not the woman he shagged in the Co-op store room), Ewen is delighted to see her again – 'I thought you died!' – and is soon offering Emily 50 quid to deliver a mysterious package for him. Initially Emily declines; too dodgy. But with the prospect of an actual paycheck from her charity work dwindling, she reluctantly gets on with the job – and is pleasantly surprised to find that her disability allows her to get away with murder. Well, distributing cocaine, at any rate. Such a premise – impoverished disabled woman cornered into dealing drugs to survive contemporary Britain – could have produced an incredibly bleak show; criminal gangs do regularly exploit disabled people for financial gain. Yet Pushers comprehensively swerves sincere social commentary. Rather than being used by Ewen, Emily quickly becomes the enterprise's driving force. While her childhood pal wants to shift the £500k worth of cocaine he has somehow acquired, then bow out of the game for good, his new employee opts to diversify into the heinous synthetic street drug spice behind his back. She also insists on recruiting a team to distribute the drugs faster. Two are sourced from Wee CU, the disabled-toilet-monitoring charity Emily volunteers for: Harry (Ruben Reuter), a dance lover with Down's syndrome, and the stern, ruthless and neurodiverse-coded Hope (a brilliant performance from Libby Mai), who is keen to get stuck in (her qualifications include being 'the treasurer of the official The Bill fanclub' and spending '42% of my spare time playing drug dealer simulations'). Emily also brings in local alcoholic Sean (Jon Furlong), who passes his days scaring the public by ranting to himself in the street. After Ewen insists his tough-as-old-boots mum be involved too, their crack team is complete. The other thing that prevents Pushers from straying into seriousness is Ewen himself (Ryan McParland), whose astonishing stupidity suffuses the entire series. Physically, McParland bears more than a passing resemblance to the American comedian Tim Robinson, whose unhinged performances in his Netflix series I Think You Should Leave breathed new life into the sketch genre. The actor seems to be channelling a similar comic vibe too: Ewen is loud, weird and unpredictably intense. The individual jokes designed to demonstrate his idiocy might seem hacky on paper – 'name me one person who has ever died from drugs?!' – but McParland's exaggerated gormlessness makes such lines giddily funny. As Emily, Jones tones down her natural exuberance slightly – she is the straight woman to Ewen and his bonkers malapropisms and misapprehensions. Yet she's still an agent of farce; in all the many, many TV shows about drug dealing I have watched over the years, I can safely say I have never seen so much spilt cocaine in my life. And as hinted by the flash forward at the start of episode one – in which Emily is pursued through a hospital by a glowering gangster, before running straight into a doctor holding an open blood bag – no matter how dark things get, silliness still dominates. The first couple of episodes of Pushers are absorbing and frequently hilarious. Jones's ability to joke about disability is unparalleled ('I didn't breathe for 17 minutes' is how she explains the origin of her cerebral palsy to her benefits assessor. 'I really wouldn't recommend it'). And she is careful to ensure Emily's responses to Ewen are priceless in themselves. Yet as the series progresses, the comedy is overshadowed by a narrative that becomes increasingly hard to make sense of. Alongside the antics of Emily's unwieldy criminal crew, both she and Ewen have romantic subplots, with the former developing a confusingly chaste entanglement with Jo, her Insta-glam boss at Wee CU, who dangles payment and sex in front of Emily like two ghostly carrots. What's more, our hero's sudden switch from reluctant dealer to gang mastermind is never fully explained: did her conscience just evaporate? Meanwhile, the slapstick and cartoonish inanity do start to wear thin after a while. Although its lack of sentimentality and commitment to hard comedy is admirable, Pushers still could have done with leaning a little further into the scathing satire promised by its setup. Instead, what we ultimately get is a gag-strewn, generally lighthearted portrayal of small-town turf wars. Jones's action-sitcom certainly has its moments, but it could have had slightly more bite. Pushers is on Channel 4 now

'I still get patronised on a daily basis...' Rosie Jones still feels 'underestimated in society due to her cerebral palsy
'I still get patronised on a daily basis...' Rosie Jones still feels 'underestimated in society due to her cerebral palsy

Yahoo

time19-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

'I still get patronised on a daily basis...' Rosie Jones still feels 'underestimated in society due to her cerebral palsy

Rosie Jones feels "underestimated" every day due to her having cerebral palsy. The 34-year-old comedian-and-writer also admits she still feels demeaned within society - all of which is reflected in her new Channel 4 sitcom Pushers, which highlights how society underestimates disabled people. The show sees Rosie play Emily Jones, a woman who builds an illegal drug empire after her state benefits are cut due after an assessment of her disability. Rosie admits her own real life experiences influenced her writing. Speaking in the new UK issue of Closer magazine, Rosie said: "I am underestimated every single day - but I've never dealt cocaine in my life! "As a 34-year-old woman, I am still infantilised by people who don't know me. I still get patronised on a daily basis, and it's annoying. "We wanted to see how far we could push the fact that society underestimates disabled people and don't think they're capable. "And from my experience, from the disabled people that I know and love, this isn't the case at all." Rosie has said creating Pushers is the "pinnacle" of her career. She admitted: "Getting my own sitcom is everything I've ever wanted - it is the pinnacle of my career. "I thought, 'If I have this opportunity I'm going to put everything into it,' and I have." Speaking about her pride in the project, Rosie added: "I'm so happy with it and I pride myself on never putting my name to something I don't wholeheartedly believe in. "Some people in this industry will show up on set, do their job, then never think about it ever again - that's not me. "Am I a control freak? Yes! I was a creator, co-writer, executive producer and actor so that meant I could have a say from early through the audition process, filming, then onto the editing." Rosie felt nervous about acting in the programme, but her castmates - who include Ryan McParland, Lynn Hunter and Jon Furlong, among others - helped her each day on set. She explained: "I have acted a little bit but I've never been to drama school - I don't know what I'm doing - so to be able to act with so many brilliant actors made me a better actor." And Rosie wanted a fully disabled cast to reflect the world we live in. "We were very passionate from the beginning that even though I was a main character, we cannot pick only one disabled character then surround them with non-disabled people because that isn't really realistic to the world we live in. "I think it's incredibly damaging when you have one disabled character because are they meant to represent 24 per cent of the country? No! And being disabled is not a personality type. "We really wanted a core group in Pushers who were predominantly disabled."

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