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'Anne Rice's Talamasca' Review: AMC Drama Is Disappointing
TV & Streaming

‘Anne Rice’s Talamasca’ Review: AMC Drama Is Disappointing

by jummy84 October 26, 2025
written by jummy84

“Interview With the Vampire,” the opening salvo of AMC’s attempt to turn the oeuvre of fantasy author Anne Rice into a so-called Immortal Universe of television shows, is one of the best shows on air. Smart, sensual and frequently funny, “Interview” manages the balancing act of all great adaptations in both preserving and updating its source material; I ecstatically await a Season 3 styled as a rock documentary about the vampire Lestat (Sam Reid). 

This master plan’s sophomore effort, “Mayfair Witches,” has been a relative letdown. The  scattered drama lacks the passion and eccentricity that are the, well, lifeblood of “Interview With the Vampire.” Nor does the starring vehicle for Alexandra Daddario offer a concise, specific take to differentiate itself from Rice’s original — its own version of making Louis de Pointe du Lac (Jacob Anderson) a Black man who falls in love with his maker. A second season came and went earlier this year with minimal fanfare.

The third Immortal Universe show, “Anne Rice’s Talamasca: The Secret Order” — which we will refer to from here on out as “Talamasca,” because let’s not be ridiculous — sadly hews closer to “Mayfair” than “Interview” in quality. The six-episode season, which was provided to critics in its entirety, is a disjointed and muddled attempt to turn Rice’s centuries-old secret society into a vehicle for a half-hearted spy thriller. The premiere has a couple bright spots in the form of cameos from “Interview” star Eric Bogosian and, in a confusing but welcome appearance, Jason Schwartzman as a vampire who lives in the penthouse of the Dakota. (Maybe he’s a big Rice fan, if not enough of one to stick around past a single episode.) Once these training wheels come off, though, “Talamasca” never achieves the momentum to chart its own path.

What is the Talamasca, exactly, and what do its members do? Answering these questions would seem to be a basic prerequisite of a show named after the fictional group, but “Talamasca” will leave viewers mostly in the dark. Creator John Lee Hancock (“The Blind Side”) and co-showrunner Mark Lafferty (“Halt and Catch Fire”) position protagonist Guy (Nicholas Denton) as a classic audience surrogate, speed-running a chosen one narrative as the telepath is recruited by mysterious Brit Helen (Elizabeth McGovern, channeling her “Downton Abbey” co-stars) to join the Talamasca in lieu of starting a lucrative law job. Where Guy’s abilities come from and how they fit into this world’s cosmology are never fully explained. Supposedly, the Talamasca are a mortal-led counterweight to paranormal forces like vampires and witches, but they clearly have some supernatural tools of their own.

Guy himself proves as generic a hero as his name. Denton, an Australian who could be cousins with Eddie Redmayne, struggles with his American accent even after his character gets shipped off to London to check in on a Talamasca “mother house” when another operative turns up dead. His training is supposed to take a year, but gets crammed into a week because time is of the essence — a compression that reads like a metaphor for this overstuffed, rushed-feeling season. Guy gets little motivation or personality besides the search for his mother, a fellow telepath he grew up in foster care believing to be dead. It turns out the Talamasca was behind not just his placement with a Florida family, but the scholarships that afforded him an elite education.

As if the Talamasca’s deep pockets and connections weren’t shady enough, Guy keeps getting standard-issue warnings about how “they’re lying to you” and “they can’t be trusted.” These flags come from a slew of secondary characters who abruptly rise and fade in significance as Guy tries to figure out where his loyalties should lie. The constantly shifting allegiances are meant to form a twisty yarn in the aggregate, though the effect is largely just confusing — especially when Helen gets a subplot investigating her own past that distracts from her role as the chilly, withholding boss. 

The throughline here is a hunt for a MacGuffin known as the 752, named for the year of the Talamasca’s founding. It’s the backup of an archive that burned 50 years ago in a fire at the organization’s Amsterdam outpost, and Helen is hot on its trail at the same time as Jasper (William Fichtner), a vampire with an axe to grind against the Talamasca. Fichtner is alone in the cast in giving a performance with the flair Rice’s prose deserves, perhaps because only Jasper gets nonsensical-yet-hilarious lines like “You are a flea bouncing off the hard dick of our immortal history!” But Jasper is outnumbered by perfunctory elements like the 752, Guy’s mother and Helen’s own long-lost family, none of which successfully infuse a sense of urgency.

With “Talamasca,” the underwhelming entries in the Immortal Universe now outnumber the exciting ones. Though “Talamasca” ends with enough balls in the air that a Season 2 seems assured, no additional concepts have been ordered to series. Before that happens, some introspection might be in order as to why neither “Mayfair” nor “Talamasca” has measured up to the operatic thrills of “Interview.” Until then, fans will just have to wait for “The Vampire Lestat.”

“Anne Rice’s Talamasca: The Secret Order” will premiere with two episodes on AMC and AMC+ on Oct. 26 at 9 p.m. ET.

October 26, 2025 0 comments
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Sony Crunchyroll Anime Rules Box Office Again With ‘Chainsaw Man’ Powering To $17M+ Opening, ‘Springsteen’ Plays Low With $9M+ – Sunday AM
TV & Streaming

Sony Crunchyroll Anime Rules Box Office Again With ‘Chainsaw Man’ Powering To $17M+ Opening, ‘Springsteen’ Plays Low With $9M+ – Sunday AM

by jummy84 October 26, 2025
written by jummy84

SUNDAY AM: Sony/Crunchyroll’s Chainsaw Man: Reze Arc is landing at the high end of where we were seeing it yesterday with $17.2M after a $5.2M million Saturday in a weekend where the Toronto Blue Jays and LA Dodgers were a complete distraction in the World Series, now with 1-1 tied streak. Universal/Blumhouse’s second weekend of […]

October 26, 2025 0 comments
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June Lockhart
TV & Streaming

June Lockhart, Beloved Mom on ‘Lassie’ and ‘Lost in Space,’ Dies at 100

by jummy84 October 26, 2025
written by jummy84

A Tony Award winner and daughter of actor Gene Lockhart, she also starred in ‘Meet Me in St. Louis’ and ‘Petticoat Junction.’

October 26, 2025 0 comments
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Baller League Season 2 on TV | Live stream and Sky coverage
TV & Streaming

Baller League Season 2 on TV | Live stream and Sky coverage

by jummy84 October 26, 2025
written by jummy84

Baller League UK returns to the Copper Box Arena in London for its second season.

The six-a-side tournament pits 12 teams of ex-professionals, semi-pros, and more than a few wildcards, which are backed by former footballers, celebrities, and social media personalities, against each other over an 11-week campaign.

A place in the Final 4 and a shot at the title on the line but entertainment is the indoor futsal-style league’s priority and there are plenty of crazy rules thrown in to ensure that it sets itself apart from everything else available for UK football fans.

SDS FC, led by YouTuber Sharky, were crowned champions in March after beating MVPs United, backed by Maya Jama and Alisha Lehmann, 4-3 in the final of Season 1 at the O2 Arena.

Both teams are back for the new season, alongside some returning teams, backed by the likes of Ian Wright, John Terry, and Micah Richards, and some new additions – Chloe Kelly’s Clutch FC and Idris Elba’s Rukkas FC.

RadioTimes.com brings you all the details you need to know about Baller League Season 2, including dates, kick-off times and how to watch the games live on TV.

When is the Baller League Season 2?

Baller League Season 2 starts on Monday 27th October and runs for a further 10 weeks.

Matches start at 5:30pm every Monday, with the final fixture kicking off at 10pm.

How to watch Baller League Season 2 on TV and live stream

Unfortunately, Baller League Season 2 UK will not be broadcast on TV but you can watch live on YouTube.

Every match will be shown live on the Baller League UK channel from 5:15pm every Monday.

The inaugural season of the 6-a-side competition was broadcast on Sky Sports but it appears that agreement has not been extended.

YouTube can be streamed through a computer or apps found on most smart TVs, phones, and consoles.

Where is Baller League Season 2 held in the UK?

Baller League Season 2 will be played at Copper Box Arena in the Olympic Park, Stratford, London.

The Season 1 finals were held at the O2 Arena in Greenwich, London, but it has not yet been confirmed whether that will again be the case.

What is Baller League?

Baller League is a concept first hosted in Germany by former international stars Mats Hummels and Lukas Podolski.

A number of high-profile names from the world of sport will manage six-a-side football teams made up of former Premier League footballers, rising stars, those released by major clubs, futsal players, celebrities and social media sensations.

KSI is headlining the UK edition of the format. The 12 teams will battle one another throughout the season with the top four to go into a head-to-head knockout-style finale.

Check out more of our Sport coverage or visit our TV Guide and Streaming Guide to find out what’s on. For more from the biggest stars in TV, listen to The Radio Times Podcast.

October 26, 2025 0 comments
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LASSIE, from left: June Lockhart, Lassie, Jon Provost, (1963), 1954-1974.
TV & Streaming

‘Lost in Space’ & ‘Lassie’ Stars Pay Tribute to TV Legend June Lockhart

by jummy84 October 26, 2025
written by jummy84

June Lockhart, star of Lassie, Lost in Space, and much more, passed away on October 25, 2025, just a few months after her landmark 100th birthday. Lockhart wasn’t just a TV legend and a Golden Age Hollywood star; she was one of the most beloved TV mothers of all time, and her TV children all honored her passing on social media.

Read on for emotional tributes from Angela Cartwright and Bill Mumy (her children from Lost in Space) and Jon Provost (her son from Lassie) — those who knew Lockhart not just as a costar and friend, but a mentor and mother figure in her own right.

October 26, 2025 0 comments
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Little Amélie or the Character of Rain Review: A Small Animated Wonder
TV & Streaming

Animation Is Film Festival Winners Include Little Amelie, Arco

by jummy84 October 26, 2025
written by jummy84

Animation Is Film, the Los Angeles-based film festival dedicated to spotlighting animation as an art form, announced the winners of their 8th annual festival this week.

“Little Amélie or the Character of Rain,” a French animated film directed by Maïlys Vallade and Liane-Cho Han, took the Grand Jury Prize from the festival. Another French film that played at Cannes, “Arco” by Ugo Bienvenu, received the Audience Award. The Fumi Kitahara Special Jury Prize, renamed this year to honor late publicist Fumi Kitahara, went to Spanish Animated film “Decorado” from director Alberto Vázquez. Short films “Gigi” by Cynthia Calvi and “Éiru” by Giovanna Ferrari won the Shorts Jury Grand Prize and the Special Jury Prize for Shorts, respectively.

'Little Amélie or the Character of Rain'

In an interview with IndieWire, Festival director Matt Kaszanek spoke about how the festival was created in 2017 to challenge narratives about animation as a lesser form of art, as well as showcase the best of international animated cinema.

“I think it’s unique to other festivals in that it’s its name is also its mission, which is to celebrate animation, to push back on a narrative that some people have, even subconsciously, that animation is kind of some lesser form of cinema. That you can like animation, but those are not titles that should be considered among the best films of the year,” Kaszanek told IndieWire. “I hear the word animated used as a qualifier a lot. When people are talking about films, they’ll say ‘Oh, I really, really loved ‘Flow.’ That was the best animated film of the year.’ And I would counter that, I think ‘Flow’ was one of the best films of last year. Animation Is Film is very much about that, and that’s its mission.”

Reflecting on how the festival has grown, Kaszanek told IndieWire that the festival has grown in attendance every year since its inception. He also said that, as the festival has established a foothold in the industry, it has become a bellwether for the Animated Feature and Animated Shorts race, with it becoming common for the majority of the movies that make the categories to play at the festival.

“Most of the films that you’re seeing at the festival, these are the films that are getting nominated for Academy Awards,” Kaszanek said. “Four of the best animated shorts had played at Animation Is Film [last year]. And then on the feature side, if you look back over the last four years, it’s pretty common we’ll have typically four, sometimes five of the Best Animated Feature nominees.”

The 2025 festival opened with “Scarlet,” an anime film from director Mamoru Hosoda. “Arco” served as the centerpiece film for the festival, while “Little Amélie” was the official closing selection. Other movies that played at the festival included “Lesbian Space Princes,” “All You Need Is Kill,” “A Story About Fire,” and a remastering of “Paranorman.” Panels from the festival included talks with the directors behind “KPOP Demon Hunters” and a sneak preview of the upcoming “Zootopia 2.”

“We really try to position ourselves as, this is your opportunity to really see everything that’s played at the bigger festivals over the course of the year. So you’re looking at what was at Berlin? And so we got ‘A Story About Fire’ from there, and then what was playing in Cannes, and that’s ‘Arco’ and ‘Little Amélie,’” Kaszanek said. “Geographical diversity is great because we really do sell this festival as an international event, and you’re seeing films from all over the world.”

Reflecting on how the festival has made an impact and the state of animation has evolved, Kaszanek told IndieWire that he feels critical respect for animation has only grown in the years since the festival started. He brought up an increase in animated movies playing at other festivals as a sign of the medium’s evolution and a sign of a promising future for the industry.

“We’re not the only people that are kind of beating that drum that animation is film, and it should be taken seriously, and that these are films that should be celebrated alongside live action films. The progress that I’m seeing is that that’s more people are saying it. The call for that is getting louder,” Kaszanek told IndieWire. “The more film festivals that are showing animation in their lineup, in their competition, is a good thing for the entire industry, and we’re seeing that.”

The 2025 Animation is Film Festival ran from October 17 to 19th at the TCL Chinese Theaters. Read the complete list of winners below.

Grand Jury Prize: “Little Amélie Or the Character of Rain” (dir. Maïlys Vallade and Liane-Cho Han)

Audience Award: “Arco” (dir. Ugo Bienvenu)

Fumi Kitahara Special Jury Prize: “Decorado” (dir. Alberto Vázquez)

Grand Jury Prize — Shorts: “Gigi” (dir. Cynthia Calvi)

Special Jury Prize — Shorts: “Éiru (dir. Giovanni Ferrari)

October 26, 2025 0 comments
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A Sci-Fi Movie Searching for Truth in the Modern World
TV & Streaming

A Sci-Fi Movie Searching for Truth in the Modern World

by jummy84 October 26, 2025
written by jummy84

While “Orion” is an ambitious indie space saga, its examination of human nature is decidedly earthbound.

The film stars Andrew McCarthy as Jim, a NASA bigwig tasked with helping Apollo (Drew Van Acker), an astronaut with memory loss, figure out what happened to cause his ship to crash and leave the other crew dead. Their back-and-forth makes up the core of the film, as twists, turns and discoveries gradually unfold.

Director Jaco Bouwer found plenty of grounded elements in Anne Vithayathil’s script for “Orion.” Audiences will set sail on the film’s maiden voyage when it has its world premiere at FilmQuest in Provo, Utah, on Oct. 25.

“I don’t think we have an absolute truth anymore in this world,” he says. “This really touches on that without being super on the nose. Science fiction intrigues me a lot. I like the genre because it’s a little bit more of an expressionistic way of going about emotions.”

Bouwer credits his collaborators for helping walk the film’s tricky tightrope of making a largely two-hander feel expansive. He cites McCarthy’s curiosity about the script — which is miles from the Brat Pack roles that first made him famous — as one big benefit.

“He needs to know exactly what’s going on,” Bouwer says of McCarthy. “He really portrays Jim in a good way: There’s a cerebral aspect to him, he’s the master manipulator. In our film, there’s a moment towards the end where we do see some part of humanity behind it. I find him really professional, and I think his range is much bigger than we’ve seen before.”

Beyond the dialogue, Bouwer and his cinematographer David Kruta were eager to make the contained film feel taut and dynamic — no easy feat on an indie production.

“We actually used quite a few different lenses,” Bouwer says. “For the flashbacks, we used anamorphic, and we also changed the ratio. We sometimes went extreme wide-angle. Most of the effects were done in-camera. For me, it’s always performance first, so it’s important that the actors feel that. Because everything happens under one roof, the movement is motivated. So I would come in in the morning and we would block it in a way, and once we’ve done that, then I had a meeting with my DP to see how we can best choreograph the camera to suit them. Sometimes it’s purely for a visual, but mostly it was plotting their journey and letting the camera follow them or capture them in the best way.”

Also critical were the sparingly-used glimpses of the further regions of outer space, which helped to convey the scale of the story — including a stunner of a final scene.

“Especially that shot at the end, you pull back and just see the smallness and the scale of it,” Bouwer says. “There’s something really great for me, and emotional and sad as well, about that image. It’s kind of subliminal, but it was always in the back of my mind to make it feel that there is something bigger around. It makes the world bigger, although it’s a two-location film.”

And while the vastness of the universe is worth considering, Bouwer had the most fun conjuring all of the fun and thrills out of a small-scale story.

“I was really trying to mislead the audience in subtle ways,” he says. “I think it boils down to performances. If the performances weren’t believable, you’re in big trouble. So I was very happy to have Drew and Andrew as my main guides through this maze of twists and turns.”

Watch the first footage of “Orion” below.

October 26, 2025 0 comments
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Time Magazine Releases New Donald Trump Cover After His Criticism
TV & Streaming

Time Magazine Releases New Donald Trump Cover After His Criticism

by jummy84 October 26, 2025
written by jummy84

Time magazine has released a new cover of its upcoming Nov. 10 issue featuring President Donald Trump after the GOP leader heavily critiqued the original image used.

The legacy publication unveiled the second edition earlier this week, tied to its feature on Trump, who was interviewed about his role in brokering the ceasefire deal between Gaza and Israel. While the former image features the POTUS looking upward framed against the sky with the caption “His Triumph,” the latter depicts Trump with his hands clasped under his chin at the Hayes desk with the subtitle “Trump’s World.”

Unveiled Oct. 14, Trump took significant umbrage with the cover photo initially chosen, writing on Truth Social at 1:36 a.m. ET that night: “Time Magazine wrote a relatively good story about me, but the picture may be the Worst of All Time. They ‘disappeared’ my hair, and then had something floating on top of my head that looked like a floating crown, but an extremely small one. Really weird! I never liked taking pictures from underneath angles, but this is a super bad picture, and deserves to be called out. What are they doing, and why?”

Trump has a long established relationship with the newsweekly — both as subject and reader. According to the outlet, as of December 2024, Trump’s total cover count exceeds 40, coming behind only Presidents Ronald Reagan and record-holder Richard Nixon. Naturally, this doesn’t include the fake covers that had reportedly been hanging in “at least five of his golf clubs,” which featured a cover line exclaiming that “Trump is hitting it on all fronts … even TV!” The existence of the bogus covers, reported by the Washington Post, prompted the magazine to ask Trump to remove them. Since then, several real covers currently hang in various locations inside his Mar-a-Lago residence. Time also named him the Person of the Year in 2016 and 2024.

Prior to the release of the original cover, the owner of Time, Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff, made waves over the weekend for comments to The New York Times in which he said he thought Trump was doing a “great job” and “fully” supported the idea of sending federal troops into San Francisco.

According to a report by The Daily Beast, Washington, D.C.-based photographer Stephen Voss’s new photo of Trump drew inspiration from Arnold Newman’s 1963 photograph of German industrialist and convicted Nazi war criminal Alfried Krupp, which was published by Newsweek, though Time vehemently denied this. (The digital outlet also reported Voss liking comments on Instagram where followers asked about the connection, though he has since seemingly removed his likes.)

“There is no connection and claims suggesting otherwise are completely untrue,” a Time spokesperson said. “The references for this photoshoot were past presidential portraits in the Oval Office, including TIME’s own covers. Giving weight to speculation on social media is reckless and contributes to the spread of misinformation.”

October 26, 2025 0 comments
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Adam Brody and Seth Rogen
TV & Streaming

Adam Brody on Seth Rogen’s Scenes in Season 2

by jummy84 October 26, 2025
written by jummy84

Adam Brody is revealing what it was like to have Seth Rogen join Nobody Wants This.

In a new interview with People, he spoke about working alongside Rogen on a project for the first time and the energy The Studio boss brought to his scenes with fellow guest star Kate Berlant.

“He just let it rip. He and Kate Berlant, who I’m also a huge fan of, just went way off script,” Brody said. “I just got to buckle up and hang on.”

In season two of the hit Netflix show, The O.C. alum’s character, rabbi Noah and his agnostic girlfriend Joanne (Kristen Bell) are trying to navigate their differences. In Noah’s search for a temple more accepting of Joanne’s timeline and of when — or if — she’ll convert to Judaism, he finds a progressive temple run by Neil (Rogen) and Cami (Berlant). However, Noah has a hard time adjusting to their laid-back approach to religion.

Brody calls Rogen’s Neil a “rock ‘n’ roll rabbi to Noah’s more buttoned-up one.” He also praised Rogen as being “so funny and talented.”

“He’s incredibly gregarious, and he’s identifiably Jewish,” Brody continued to describe why Rogen was right for the role. “I think he’s just a great fit.”

Earlier this year, the actors were both up for best actor in a comedy series at the 2025 Emmys, for their respective shows. Rogen won the prize for playing Matt Remick in The Studio.

Another highly anticipated guest star this season is Gossip Girl star Leighton Meester, who is married to Brody in real life. Meester plays Abby, Joanne’s nemesis from middle school. At Nobody Wants This‘ season two premiere last week, the show’s creator, Erin Foster, told The Hollywood Reporter about rewriting Meester’s episode so she interacts with Brody.

“It’s because the character was already written into the script without being cast at all,” Foster said. “When [Meester] said yes, I went back into the script — they didn’t even have any scenes together, so I gave them their little scene together and I really wanted him to say, ‘She’s not my type.’ He says that in the episode and it just meant a lot to me to get to say something funny like that because I thought it could become a meme.”

October 26, 2025 0 comments
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Strictly Come Dancing's La Voix makes cheeky joke about Tess Daly exit
TV & Streaming

Strictly Come Dancing’s La Voix makes cheeky joke about Tess Daly exit

by jummy84 October 26, 2025
written by jummy84

After a brief message from Tess Daly and Claudia Winkleman at the beginning of the show, talk of the presenting duo’s recently announced departure from the beloved series was kept to a minimum during tonight’s episode. At least, until the very last dancer of the night.

La Voix and her professional partner Aljaž Škorjanec closed the show with a salsa to Cher’s 1998 hit Strong Enough, and following their routine the Drag Race star made a cheeky joke to Tess ahead of receiving the judges’ feedback.

“Oh Tess, you’re still here!” she said, to which the host replied: “I’m still here,” before laughing at the comment.

Tess and Claudia announced earlier in the week that “now feels like the right time” to depart the show, and they opened this week’s programme with a heartfelt thank you for the “beautiful messages” they had received from fans since breaking the news.

They also stressed that there were still another eight weeks to go and another Strictly champion to crown, before moving on to this week’s performances – as the remaining contestants took to the floor for the annual Icons Week.

La Voix & Aljaž Škorjanec on Strictly Come Dancing. BBC/Guy Levy

Across the night, the couples danced routines to hits from a range of musical superstars past and present, with Prince, Ariana Grande and the aforementioned Cher just some of the legends whose songs were heard throughout the broadcast.

La Voix and Aljaž’s performance saw them receive a score of 28 points from the judges – double their disappointing total of 14 from last week – with that score placing them just ahead of bottom placed George Clarke and Alexis Warr on the Strictly Come Dancing 2025 leaderboard.

Karen Carney, Ellie Goldstein and Balvinder Sopal were also all tied on 28 points, while at the other end of the leaderboard Lewis Cope sits on top with 34 points, followed by Vicky Pattinson and Amber Davies, both of whom scored 33.

Now it’s over to the viewers at home to have their say before those votes are added to the judges’ scores to determine which couples will have to face the dreaded dance-off in Sunday night’s results show.

Strictly Come Dancing continues on BBC One and iPlayer on Sunday 26th October at 7:15pm.

Add Strictly Come Dancing to your watchlist on the Radio Times: What to Watch app – download now for daily TV recommendations, features and more.

Check out more of our Entertainment coverage or visit our TV Guide and Streaming Guide to find out what’s on. For more TV recommendations and reviews, listen to The Radio Times Podcast.

October 26, 2025 0 comments
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