The nine junior crafters are each invited to design a piece of work to be incorporated into a specially commissioned oaken arbour for the King’s garden – with royally lovely results.īritain’s Dirty Water: What Went Wrong? Tonight In Manchester, though, tough conditions mean Kerridge has to bring an end to his own restaurant partnership with Gary Neville at the Stock Exchange Hotel.īill Bailey’s Master Crafters: The Next GenerationĪ gentle finale brings this charming series to a close in the gardens of Highgrove House. Tom Kerridge’s insider view of the post-Covid health of the UK’s hospitality sector continues with a focus on the Hereford-based Beefy Boys burger chain, a rare case of expansion in hard times. Now it’s back for the second half of season two, which picks up the story after Mickey (Manuel Garcia-Rulfo)was brutally beaten in a parking garage. This legal drama, which follows a criminal defence attorney called Mickey who operates out of his Lincoln Town Car, has been quite the sleeper hit. ITVX also have a documentary account launching today, in The Real Vanishing Act – The Missing Millionairess. CGīased on the real-life story of Melissa Caddick (played by Wentworth’s Kate Atkinson), a Ponzi-scheme fraudster who conned family, friends and wealthy folk in Sydney out of $40 million, this Aussie drama is terrific. Look out, too, for Call My Agent star Thibault de Montalembert as Nick’s absent father – and a welcome return from Olivia Colman as his supportive mother. But this growing gang of pals is one of the most joyful and supportive seen on screen – which makes it a rarity in a cluttered field of emotionally traumatising, sex-and-drugs fuelled teenage stories. School bullies still threaten to ruin their high-school idyll – with the threat of public humiliation ever present. Best friends Elle (Yasmin Finney) and Tao (William Gao), meanwhile, are growing ever closer – but Elle has her heart set on going to art school. There is, however, a school trip to Paris to look forward to – where parental demands and Nick’s particularly antagonistic older brother David (Jack Barton) can’t reach them. Truham Grammar School pupils Nick (Kit Connor) and Charlie (Joe Locke) are still together, but the pressure of GCSE exams, coursework deadlines and Nick’s still-hidden bisexuality are contriving to keep the lovesick pair apart. Steady yourselves for more saccharine moments and coy glances, as this smash hit coming-of-age drama is back for a second series.
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