CHRISTOPHER STEVENS reviews last night's TV
CHRISTOPHER STEVENS: This sort of common sense ought to be taught in schools. When someone you don’t know asks for your money and promises ‘guaranteed profits’, decline politely.
CHRISTOPHER STEVENS: This sort of common sense ought to be taught in schools. When someone you don’t know asks for your money and promises ‘guaranteed profits’, decline politely.
CHRISTOPHER STEVENS: This sort of common sense ought to be taught in schools. When someone you don’t know asks for your money and promises ‘guaranteed profits’, decline politely.
CHRISTOPHER STEVENS: Cheers, Stacey Dooley. The red-headed Strictly queen’s deliriously silly new show gives us the chance to say what some people have been longing to for weeks.
CHRISTOPHER STEVENS: Cheers, Stacey Dooley. The red-headed Strictly queen’s deliriously silly new show gives us the chance to say what some people have been longing to for weeks.
CHRISTOPHER STEVENS: What an appropriate day to choose to air a drama about a man who walks out on his family and leaves them to clear up his mess.
CHRISTOPHER STEVENS: What an appropriate day to choose to air a drama about a man who walks out on his family and leaves them to clear up his mess.
CHRISTOPHER STEVENS: Anyone can have too much of a good thing, as our poodle-cross Fizzy found out on Boxing Day.
CHRISTOPHER STEVENS: Anyone can have too much of a good thing, as our poodle-cross Fizzy found out on Boxing Day.
CHRISTOPHER STEVENS: Like Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde, there are two sides to Bertie Carvel. One is the coldly respectable, unpleasantly pleasant, family man of Doctor Foster.
By imagining the future life of a much-loved lad from Liverpool, Anthony Walker, who was murdered in a racist assault aged 18, it gave expression to the appalling grief suffered by his mother, Gee.