Unsure of where to seek legal or financial support? Here are top 10 tips to help you discover the advice you're looking for this spring Sexual abuse and bullying over her sexuality: A look at Ruby Rose's troubled childhood - after she vanished on 'traumatic' 37th birthdayįirst Dates' Cici Coleman showcases her incredible body transformation as she strips to bikini for before and after snaps Nick Lachey is ordered to attend anger management and AA meetings after 'drunkenly' accosting a female photographer Love Island's Molly Smith shows off her VERY ripped physique as she poses in a skimpy white bikini while on holiday in Mexico Who needs clothing? Jennifer Lopez, 53, appears to use only her long HAIR to cover her body as she plugs tie-up heels for Revolve collaborationįinally, spring has sprung! Make the most of it with one of these tempting last-minute getaways The Chase contestant dies after tragic 17-year cancer battle as heartbroken husband pays tribute 'I'm NOT a dumb blonde': Paris Hilton says she was just good at 'pretending to be one' as she credits herself with 'creating a new genre of celebrity' How the disease landed in Dorset on a ship carrying wine from Gascony, how the rats on the ship were infested with infected fleas, how people started having the dreaded symptoms, how it affected the economy and the king (Edward III, whose daughter Joan died of the disease), how people sought out remedies and pilgrimages, desperate to escape the horror… History is fascinating in its own right. It was a shame, because the presenter, historian Dan Snow, is great, and he could have told the story just as well without the silly props. I found the reconstructions of the symptoms of the disease – which rampaged through Europe in 1347, killing pretty much half the population, and landed in Britain the following year – gratuitous. I watched The Black Death (Wed-Thu, Ch5) because, like many people I think, I have a newly discovered interest in pandemics. Sarah praises The Black Death presenter Dan Snow (pictured) and said he didn't need 'silly props' to tell the story Now that's the sort of spooky detail I can't resist. Via the salt mines of Winsford and the archives of County Mayo and with the assistance of various somewhat self-important 'experts', they eventually discover that their ancestors worked four doors down from each other in Dublin. Having initially been drawn to each other by their mutual fame and love of beer, during the course of filming they discover that in fact they also share a similar ancestry, both having family connections to Ireland. On the surface of it they are chalk and cheese, but actually they're more yin and yang, Bonneville's self-deprecation the perfect foil to Bishop's outspoken, no-nonsense outlook on life. Turns out the two are the best of friends, having got to know each other during Covid when Bishop turned up at a vaccination station in Sussex where Bonneville was volunteering and where they both live. Not that it matters much, as these sorts of shows are not so much about the format as the personalities involved.Īnd here we have a right pair: Hugh Bonneville, the epitome of the understated upper-class English actor, and John Bishop, raucous Liverpudlian stand-up and former footballer. This is ITV's not-so-subtle rip-off of the BBC's hugely popular Who Do You Think You Are? series. Having initially been drawn to each other by their mutual fame and love of beer, during the course of filming Hugh Bonneville and John Bishop discover that in fact they also share a similar ancestry It's a similar story, only with rather less pleasing weather conditions, over in Morecambe Bay where family liaison officer DS Jenn Townsend (Marsha Thomason) is dealing with the aftermath of a terrible house fire in which four children have lost their mother. With the help of local police chief Inspector Castells (played by the rather dashing Andorran actor Isak Férriz), Laura starts to uncover a chain of connections that lead somewhere very dark indeed. In this case the 'accidental' death of a young British bartender in a jet-ski accident, which opens up a whole can of worms involving rather a lot of extremely good-looking gentlemen with an unnerving air of Catalan menace.Īmong them is Laura's new boss, Sam (Steven Cree), who is carrying on most inappropriately in hotel rooms with a hot lady lawyer who has some distinctly unsavoury business connections. Most of her work involves sorting out replacement passports for hungover stag parties, but now and again something serious happens that requires her attention. She works alongside her friend and Spanish colleague, the sassy Alba (Serena Manteghi), to assist and protect British citizens in Spain. This week TV fan Sarah Vine (pictured) has been watching criminal dramas, both of which she delighted in
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