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Television

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Art & Culture  >  Film

What Netflix did next: corrupt cops & unsexy sex

Are you still watching?

Writer Megan Nolan bravely ventures into the latest Netflix releases, in an attempt to figure out if anything is even worth our time anymore.

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News & Politics  >  Opinion

Television has always hated working class people

Good riddance Jeremy Kyle

Jeremy Kyle may finally be gone, but what it stands for – the hateful demonisation of working-class communities – remains stronger than ever.

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News & Politics  >  Opinion

Right-wing nation: how the UK media became broken & biased

We deserve better

Racism, bigotry, and a slowly shifting centre – writer Micha Frazer-Carroll explores how the British press became partisan without anyone noticing.

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Art & Culture  >  Film

What Netflix did next: horrible, lying men & reformed ex-cons

Are you still watching?

Writer Megan Nolan bravely ventures into the latest Netflix Original releases, in an attempt to figure out if anything is worth our time anymore.

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Art & Culture  >  TV

The TV drama taking an honest look at the dark side of OCD

A pure cure

Pure, a new six-part comedy from Channel Four, shares the untold truth about a life-changing illness.

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Art & Culture  >  TV

Remembering The Day Today, Britain’s sharpest satire

An oral history

We speak to the show’s creators to find out how the revolutionary comedy came to be, and why it could never be made today.

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Art & Culture  >  TV

What Netflix did next: 80s ghosts & holocaust horror

Are you still watching?

In a new column, writer Megan Nolan bravely ventures into the latest Netflix releases, in an attempt to figure out if anything is even worth our time anymore.

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Art & Culture

Why punk keeps connecting people across space and time

Teenage kicks

Photographers GODLIS and Angela Boatwright capture two distinct scenes: 1970s New York and contemporary Los Angeles.

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Art & Culture  >  Film

The mind behind Flowers – the ‘comedy with a mental illness’

An interview with Will Sharpe

With the second season of Flowers almost here, we caught up with Will Sharpe – its writer, director and star – to discuss finding hope in life’s darker moments.

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Art & Culture

The punk series celebrating New York at its most twisted

Inside Corpus TV

Launched last year by punk-rap mob Show Me The Body, Corpus TV is the eclectic new web show that’s become a one-stop shop for New York’s creative underground.

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Art & Culture  >  TV

Why is our generation refusing to let go of The Simpsons?

Stuck in Springfield

Although the series might have lost its spark in recent years, we’re still struggling to stop watching – and in some corners of the Internet it's become an obsession that refuses to die.

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Art & Culture

How Celebrity Big Brother became the wokest show on TV

No, really

The conversations about gender and sexuality being shown on our CBB screens are more nuanced and mature than in the pages of our national papers.

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