News about Chris Carson

Too much football on TV? Watch these 50 unmissable...

www.dailymail.co.uk, June 19, 2024
With the Euros kicking off, fans up and down the UK will be glued to their screens. But what if you don't like football? Sometimes it can seem like there's just too much of the beautiful game on our screens. But if you find penalty shootouts and the intricacies of the off side rule a turn-off there are plenty of shows to watch instead.

The 20 hottest shows to watch On Demand this weekend -...

www.dailymail.co.uk, May 17, 2024
If you're looking for something to keep you entertained on TV this weekend, look no further as our critics have picked out the 20 must-watch shows on demand you won't want to miss.

KATHRYN FLETT's My TV Week: Best TV you'll see all year

www.dailymail.co.uk, May 10, 2024
This week, UK TV writer Kathryn Flett reviews The Responder on BBC 1, Double The Money on Channel 4, Inside No 9 and Suits.

The Responder review: Final performance that shows Bernard Hill's powerful presence was undimmed, writes CHRISTOPHER STEVENS

www.dailymail.co.uk, May 6, 2024
What a way to take his final curtain. Bernard Hill (pictured), an actor of unmatched power, and celebrated by two generations for vastly different roles, died yesterday - hours before his final performance aired. As fraught copper Chris Carson answered a call to a burgled house in The Responder, those who (like me) have been fans of Hill since the 1980s took one look at the geezer in the battered armchair with the walking frame and chorused: 'Gissa job!' He might have been better known to the under-50s as the heroic King Theoden in The Lord Of The Rings. But at the start of the Thatcher years, Hill was Britain's best-known actor - the face of the recession - playing Yosser Hughes, a Scouse tarmac-layer who loses his job, in Boys From The Blackstuff.

EPHRAIM HARDCASTLE: French magazine uses AI photographs to predict the Royal Family's future

www.dailymail.co.uk, April 30, 2024
EPHRAIM HARDCASTLE: French magazine Paris Match elevates the art of doctored Royal photographs to a new level with a portrait of 72-year-old Kate as Queen Mother in 2054. In a 200-page 75th birthday edition, it uses AI to generate photographs and text in a tongue-in-cheek prediction of the Royal Family's future, chronicling the abdication of King William in 2049, followed by the crowning of George VII.