This article was originally published in The Courier on 29th January 2022.
NEXT WEEK’S TV
Mary Beard’s Forbidden Art – Thursday, BBC Two, 9pm
The eminent art historian is on typically frank, thoughtful and engaging form in this new essay about the complicated nature of offence.
She examines various works of art which have, for various reasons, been deemed unacceptable throughout history. Beard isn’t interested in judging whether the controversial works in question are intrinsically good or bad, she’s more concerned with finding out just why they’re considered taboo.
Isn’t it the artist’s right to challenge and provoke? And who gets to decide whether they’ve crossed a line? There are no easy answers, but Beard does a good job of contextualising her nuanced multitude of ethical debates.
NB: episode one contains scenes of wanton bodily excretions. You have been warned.
The Responder – Monday to Wednesday, BBC One, 9pm
The best British drama of our fledgling year so far, The Responder makes most contemporary cop shows look facile by comparison. It’s ‘gritty’, yes, but not in a self-important way.
Writer Tony Schumacher has devised a compelling thriller which also happens to be a sensitive study of depression, anxiety, addiction and abuse. It’s an unvarnished depiction of a society that allows vulnerable people to sink into the shadows, with no hope or support in sight.
And when it makes you laugh – which it sometimes does – it’s never at the expense of a fundamentally serious and sympathetic message.
Schumacher ratchets up the tension in the final stages. A happy ending is far from guaranteed. Life is rarely so neat.
The Teacher – Monday to Thursday, Channel 5, 9pm
Stripped throughout the week, this stark four-part drama stars Sheridan Smith as a secondary school teacher whose chaotic personal life is in danger of unravelling completely.
Jenna is good at her job. She’s liked and respected by most of her pupils and colleagues. But she drinks too much and suffers from blackouts.
One drunken evening in a club, while celebrating a promotion, Jenna bumps into one of her favourite pupils. The next morning, she has no memory of what happened. But soon the police are knocking at her door.
The Teacher broaches uncomfortable territory. Jenna is sympathetic, and yet she may be guilty of a terrible crime. An intriguing piece, and Smith, as always, is entirely convincing.
Janet Jackson – Monday and Tuesday, Sky Showcase, 9pm
This four-part profile of the influential pop superstar is her attempt to set the record straight. Jackson doesn’t do many interviews; what do we really know about her? Not that it’s any of our business, but she endorsed this project so here we go.
I only had access to episode one, but I’m pleased to report that she comes across as a nice, well-adjusted person. Which is remarkable under the circumstances.
Jackson reflects upon her often tumultuous life and career in the company of various family members. And yes, she will comment on the controversy surrounding one of her brothers. Apologies in advance if this turns out to be a puff piece, but it does look quite interesting.
Race and Medical Experiments: What’s the Truth? – Monday, Channel 4, 10pm
Journalist Seyi Rhodes presents this incisive and angering report about the history of unethical medical tests on people of colour.
As we’ve seen during the COVID pandemic, some black and brown people have resisted vaccination. Their mistrust of medical science is understandably rooted in notorious historical cases such as the Tuskegee Syphilis Trial, in which doctors injected syphilitic African-American males with disguised placebos. They were used to study the effects of syphilis; there was never any intention of helping them.
But, as Rhodes explains, that atrocity has since been exploited by prominent anti-vaxx grifters who thrive on the lucrative conspiracy theory circuit. Prepare to be appalled by yet another example of institutional racism and culture war madness.
Wonders of the Border – Tuesday, STV, 7:30pm
The Offa’s Dyke Path is a national trail that winds its way along the Welsh/English border for 177 miles. In this cloudless series, Good Morning Britain’s Sean Fletcher explores its verdant contours from the Severn Estuary to the Irish Sea.
The latest leg of his scenic yomp involves an encounter with a farmer who feeds beer to his cows (don’t worry, it’s all above board apparently), and a visit to Powis Castle, which is full of treasures stolen by Britain during its conquest of India. According to the curator, they’re on display as a way of teaching visitors about the more insalubrious aspects of British history.
On a lighter note, Fletcher also enjoys a trip in a bespoke biplane. All bases covered.
Would I Lie to You? – Friday, BBC One, 8:30pm
Describing this warhorse as the only TV comedy panel show worth bothering with may sound like the very faintest of praise, but it’s a consistently cheerful distraction.
Smiles, chuckles and, on a good night, bona fide big laughs are guaranteed. All aboard the fluctuating mirth express!
Your guest panellists this week are poet Pam Ayers (who quietly steals the show), comedian Sarah Kendall, broadcaster Richard Osman, and Ghosts star Kiell Smith-Bynoe.
Questions include: Did Osman once break into his own house while dressed as Darth Vader? Did Smith-Bynoe pretend to be a member of 50 Cent’s support act to get into a nightclub? And did Mitchell once play a prank on his wife using a small plastic wind-up penguin?
LAST WEEK’S TV
Trigger Point – Sunday 23rd January, STV
This new thriller about a bomb disposal squad is curiously lacking in tension. Episode one tried every wire-cutting trick in the book – including a scene in which our hero rescued an innocent man with a bomb strapped to him – and that’s its fatal flaw. Trigger Point is hollow and contrived.
Despite the best efforts of Vicky McLure and Adrian Lester, good actors both, we were given no reason to care about these characters. They came across as ciphers being dutifully moved around towards the next supposedly nail-biting set-piece.
When Lester’s character was killed towards the end of the episode, it felt like nothing more than a cheap ‘gotcha’ stunt. Don’t believe the ITV hype, this isn’t their Line of Duty.
The Decade the Rich Won – Tuesday 25th January, BBC Two
Driven by a sense of urgency and despair, this sobering series traces the disastrous after-effects of the 2008 financial crash.
As everybody knows, the rich got richer and the poor got poorer. A dismal injustice triggered by panic-stricken governments pouring huge amounts of money into the system, it ensured that elites mired in private equity tap-danced all the way to the bank.
The poverty rate in Britain today is higher than it’s ever been this century. We’re all in this together! That was Cameron’s catchphrase at the time.
Episode one featured contributions from Nick Clegg, Alistair Darling and George Osborne, all of whom tried to deflect blame from themselves. And so it goes on.
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