Whatâs on TV tonight and this week: Angela Ripponâs River Cruises, Monsieur Spade, and more
Whatâs on TV tonight and this week: Angela Ripponâs River Cruises, Monsieur Spade, and more
Stephen KellySat, May 9, 2026 at 5:00 AM UTC
0
Angela Rippon explores the Danube River - Channel 5Whatâs on TV tonight?
Angela Ripponâs River CruisesChannel 5, 8pmYes, this is yet another celebrity travelogue. You could also reasonably argue that Angela Ripponâs River Cruises spends curiously little time on the actual river, but what rapidly becomes clear as she begins her two-part trip along the âiconic waterwayâ that is the Danube (later episodes will follow her along the Mekong from Cambodia to Vietnam) is that it is almost impossible to make a dull film featuring cities as ravishing as Budapest, where she begins her voyage, and Vienna.
This, inevitably, means we watch Rippon receiving a masterclass in waltzing (and this octogenarian Strictly star has definitely still got it) and meeting some of the equine and human stars of the Spanish Riding School, as well as being deeply moved by the memorial to Jewish victims of Hungaryâs Arrow Cross fascist movement. Away from the two capitals, she cycles through a region where Richard the Lionheart was imprisoned (and lucratively ransomed) and visits an abbey which supports itself thanks to imaginative uses for the humble apricot. Boundaries remain stubbornly unpushed, but the unsinkable Rippon is a voluble and unquenchably enthusiastic â bordering on exhausting â guide with twice the energy of people half her age.
Song of the SamuraiHBO MaxSet some 250 years after the events so memorably documented in Shogun, this less epic but still enjoyable new eight-part series explores the bond between the warriors who defended Kyoto in the dying days of the Shogunate, when the return of imperial rule loomed ever larger.
Womenâs Six Nations: Italy v England & Scotland v FranceBBC Two/iPlayer, 1.30pm & 4pmEngland will be firm favourites for this afternoonâs clash at Stadio Sergio Lanfranchi, before France will anticipate victory at Hive stadium, potentially setting up a title decider against the English next Sunday.
Live Boxing: Fabio Wardley v Daniel DuboisDazn, 6pmWhile Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua continue their own soap opera and Oleksandr Usyk remains far ahead of the heavyweight pack, the WBO belt vacated by the latter will be contested in an all-British affair: champion Fabio Wardley faces Daniel Dubois, who humbled Joshua in September 2024.
Simply Red at the BBCBBC Two/iPlayer, 8.45pmThree whole hours of Mick Hucknall and the gang, beginning with some selections from the archives spanning their career from their debut Moneyâs Too Tight (to Mention) through the Stars years to more recent songs. Itâs followed at 10.15pm by 40 Years of Simply Red: Holding Back the Years,last yearâs concert in Chile, showcasing Hucknallâs enduring vocal prowess.
Monsieur SpadeU&Drama, 9pmThis is Spade as in Sam, Dashiell Hammettâs indelible gumshoe made famous by Humphrey Bogart in The Maltese Falcon, portrayed here by Clive Owen, who seems to be enjoying himself onscreen more than he has in years. Boxsetted tonight, this iconoclastic treat sends the retired Spade to the south of France in 1963, where a murder at a nunnery brings the return of unwelcome figures from his past. GT
Whatâs on TV this week? -
Sunday
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Sunday 10 May
Aimée-Ffion Edwards stars in this true-crime drama - Simon Ridgway/ITV
Believe MeITV1, 9pm; all episodes will be available today on ITVXThis shocking, inevitably creepy drama tells the story of how the many victims of one of Britainâs most prolific sex attackers â the so-called âblack cab rapistâ John Worboys â were repeatedly failed and betrayed by the system supposed to protect them. AimĂ©e-Ffion Edwards â who has impressed in shows from Slow Horses and Peaky Blinders to Detectorists â digs deep here to play single-mother Sarah, who wakes up in hospital after a rare night out with friends, convinced that she was drugged and raped by the taxi driver paid to take her home. But despite what seems like plentiful evidence, the police assigned to her case raise barely an eyebrowâs worth of interest. Even her ex, the father of her child, while initially sympathetic, appears to believe that she somehow imagined the attack.
A pitch-perfect script by true-crime specialist Jeff Pope goes on, across four parts, to explore why, over the next six years, despite 14 women coming forward to police to report assaults or harassment in similar circumstances, no link was made to Worboys (Daniel Mays). A failure that enabled him to continue assaulting many more victims before being eventually arrested and charged in 2008.
Film of the Day The Iron Claw (2023)
Badminton Horse Trials 2026BBC Two/iPlayer, 1.45pmFollowing three days of dressage and cross-country, and the morningâs final horse inspection, showjumping takes centre stage on the final day of competition at the Badminton estate in Gloucestershire. Competitors jump in reverse order, so a nail-biting finish is all but guaranteed.
Bafta Television Awards 2026BBC One/iPlayer, 7pmLive from the Royal Festival Hall, Greg Davies hosts British televisionâs biggest awards bash, celebrating the best in small-screen entertainment in 2025. With gongs going in 27 categories ranging across drama, comedy, documentary, current affairs and reality, plus acting, thereâs something for everyone here. Adolescence and Amandalandare expected to do particularly well with seven and five nominations, respectively.
Hudson & RexU&Alibi, 8pm Never take your audience for granted. The eighth season of this cosy, dog-centred Canadian cop show outraged fans by replacing long-serving lead actor John Reardon (who had been in treatment for cancer) with Luke Roberts in controversial circumstances. It also emerged that the canine lead had died and been quietly substituted mid-way through the previous season. The showâs future remains uncertain.
The CageBBC One, 9pm; all episodes are already on iPlayer The edgy Liverpool crime drama continues. As hapless casino manager Matty (Michael Socha) comes under renewed pressure from the police, Leanne (Sheridan Smith) has to make a difficult choice when her sonâs troubles force her into an even more compromised position.
Trading PlacesChannel 5, 9pmThe first of four shows in which digital-era youngsters come face-to-face with rules-based alternative lifestyles. First up, four brand-obsessed shopaholics experience culture shock spending time in an anti-money, technology-free, eco-commune in the wilds of Cornwall. GO
Monday 11 May
BBC Twoâs documentary meets the last remaining eyewitnesses of the Blitz - BBC
Children of the BlitzBBC Two, 9pmLondoner Dorothea Barron, 101, does not like to talk about the Blitz. Dwelling on the Nazi bombing campaign of 1940, in which the UK was bombarded with eight months of air raids, âopens up far too many horrorsâ, she says. During the worst of it, 800,000 children were evacuated from major towns and cities for their safety. Yet over two million children, like Dorothea, stayed with their families to endure the terror and the grief of more than 35,000 tonnes of explosives. This extraordinary feature-length documentary tells the story of the Blitz through those children â now the last generation of people able to recall the Second World War.
What is striking about these stories is how often they jar against the romanticised idea of âBlitz spiritâ. There is resilience, of course. There is keeping calm and carrying on. But there are also memories of mothers blown to pieces. Of a child so traumatised that it took her years to speak again. Of the day a little boyâs father died, as told in gut-wrenching detail by a sobbing 89-year-old man. Above all, however, there is a determination that no one should ever have to live through such a war again.
Film of the Day A Bigger Splash (2015)
Pop Culture Jeopardy!NetflixThe irreverent Jeopardy! spin-off â themed around pop culture and online trends â has moved from Amazon to Netflix for its second series. If this doesnât work, quips host Colin Jost, it will return on OnlyFans. New episodes will air weekly on Netflix.
Great Central Asian Railway JourneysBBC Two/iPlayer, 6.30pmFluorescent traveller Michael Portillo is on the rails again â this time across the former Soviet stronghold of Central Asia. Tonight, he traces the Silk Road through Uzbekistan, where he marvels at capital Tashkentâs lavish Soviet-era metro system. It has only been filmable since 2018, when a ban on photographing it was lifted.
Major Crimes UnitChannel 5, 9pmThis dramatic three-part documentary chronicles the work of West Midlands Policeâs Major Crime Unit, which handles only the most serious of cases. Tonightâs shocking opening episode explores the aftermath of a coordinated gun-toting ambush on a quiet residential street â gang violence with roots in County Lines organised crime.
Jean-Michel Jarre Live in SevillaSky Arts/NOW, 9pm Electronic music pioneer Jean-Michel Jarre specialises in the kind of shimmering, atmospheric synths that wouldnât be out of place on a spaceship. Filmed in Sevilleâs Plaza de España, this 2025 concert sees him perform classics including Oxygene, Equinoxe, Robots Donât Cry and Stardust.
The Sky at NightBBC Four/iPlayer, 10pmThe Jodrell Bank Observatory in Cheshire has allowed scientists to listen to the cosmos for almost 70 years. Tonight, Maggie Aderin meets the team behind the radio telescope to find out what radio waves can tell us about the universe. Plus, Chris Lintott learns about its Cold War history. SK
Tuesday 12 May
Channel 4âs documentary explores the connection between Donald Trump and wrestling - WireImage
Wrestling with TrumpChannel 4, 10pmComedian Munya Chawawa travels to the United States to marry his lifelong obsession with wrestling to the rise of Donald Trump in this one-off film. This is not as far-fetched a goal as it might seem, given that Trumpâs connection with the WWE goes back four decades and his scripted âBattle of the Billionairesâ clash with former WWE mogul Vince McMahon was arguably as important to broadening his appeal as The Apprentice; he has duly acquired endorsements from squared-circle superstars including The Undertaker, Kane and the late Hulk Hogan.
Chawawa meets current and retired grapplers to explore Trumpâs pointed, potent use of wrestling psychology and, while his encounters with Maga converts go nowhere, his meetings with one former pro and another branding himself âthe Progressive Liberalâ (and attracting vitriol everywhere he goes) provide bleak insights into the seemingly unbridgeable divides that have now opened up in Trumpâs America. While Chawawa doesnât quite put it all together and it isnât always clear whether his priority is to fulfil a childhood fantasy and get in the ring, Louis Theroux-style, or to conduct a semi-serious political investigation, this is an always entertaining and frequently eyebrow-raising journey.
Tucci in ItalyDisney+/National Geographic, 8pmAs smooth as one of his famous negronis, Stanley Tucci is back for another culinary travelogue around his homeland. He begins in Naples and Campania, meeting those who are reviving a neglected grape â and, naturalmente, sampling their wares.
Untold: Jamie VardyNetflixKicking off the British version of Netflixâs sports documentary series is a genuine underdog story, well told: how Jamie Vardy went from non-league journeyman to England striker and Premier League champion in just four years. As a sporting story, there is less of his wife Rebekah (and even less of Wagatha Christie), but their forthcoming ITV reality show, The Vardys, will doubtless compensate for that.
Advertisement
Eurovision Song Contest Semi-Final 2026BBC One/iPlayer, 8pmWhile politics now looms larger over Eurovision than ever before, Viennaâs organisers will hope the semi-finals tonight and on Thursday can deliver the musical goods. Watch out for Boy George performing with Senhit for San Marino and Estoniaâs ambitiously titled Too Epic to be True, as performed by Vanilla Ninja.
Ian Fleming and the Curse of James BondSky Arts/NOW, 8pmMarlon James, Ralph Fiennes and William Boyd are among the contributors to another thoughtful Sky Arts profile, this one examining Ian Flemingâs colourful career in intelligence and the extent to which James Bond became an albatross around the neck of an author as enigmatic as his famous creation.
The Way OutU&Dave, 9pm; all episodes will be available to stream todayThe latest Taskmaster-inflected comedy challenge series plonks teams headed by Nish Kumar and Ed Gamble as they take on a quartet of bespoke escape rooms for nothing but glory. Tonightâs theme sees them don oilskins and waders to find their way off a fishing boat. Absurd, infectious fun. GT
Wednesday 13 May
Michael Sheen and David Tennant return to Good Omens for the final time - Sanne Gault/Amazon
Good OmensAmazon Prime VideoTeasingly referred to as season three, really this is a one-off 90-minute wrap-up episode to bring closure to fans of the comedy fantasy based on Terry Pratchettâs 1990 novel (showrunner Neil Gaiman stepped down when multiple allegations of sexual assault and misconduct were made against him, which he denies).
Michael Sheen and David Tennant again team up as the unlikely duo Aziraphale and Crowley â the former a prim angel, the other a devil-may-care demon â brought together originally for an epoch-spanning struggle to avert the apocalypse. Now, though, their friendship is in tatters following Aziraphaleâs decision to return to heaven to take up the position of Supreme Archangel, leaving Crowley behind. And while Aziraphale takes on the onerous task of organising the Second Coming (a monumental responsibility that weighs heavily on him, especially when his ideas donât entirely accord with those of his fellow angels), a heartbroken, drink-addled Crowley is left wandering the streets of Soho. Not for long, though, as sinister goings-on up above â mostly involving Jesus (Bilal Hasna) taking the lift down to Earth ahead of plan â soon have Aziraphale seeking out his old pal, and attempting to save the world all over again.
State Opening of Parliament 2026BBC One/iPlayer, 10.30amLive coverage from Westminster as King Charles proceeds from Buckingham Palace to the House of Lords to outline in the Kingâs Speech the governmentâs legislative plans for the coming parliamentary session.
The Future with Hannah FryBBC Two, 7.30pm; all episodes will be available today on iPlayerThe mathematician (one of the more tantalising names in the recently announced Celebrity Traitors line-up) returns with another run of the series in which she looks at the big changes science will unleash on the world in the coming years. In this opener, she travels to California and Japan to look at new developments in the eternal quest to extend human lifespan.
Kevin McCloudâs Listed BritainMore4, 9pmAs proved over decades on Grand Designs, few people make TV architecture as entertaining as Kevin McCloud. In this five-parter, he brings enthusiasm and insight to Britainâs great architectural heritage, looking at Grade I listed buildings â beginning with Tower Bridge and the Bristol Old Vic â and outlining what makes them so special.
FROMSky One/NOW, 9pmOne of the more eccentric psychological horror franchises, about an impossible-to-escape rural town terrorised by nocturnal creatures (Hotel California meets Stranger Things, you might say). Season four kicks off with the fallout from last timeâs killer cliffhanger, and the dramatic arrival of a new family in town brings a spiritual element to the story arc.
Do You Know This Man?Channel 4, 10pmThis grimly eye-opening documentary tells the story of two women whose court case against the sexual predator who groomed and abused them as teenagers collapsed due to a technicality. When all hope seemed lost, in 2018 a social media appeal brought another victim to light, giving the case fresh momentum. GO
Thursday 14 May
Ernie Wise and Eric Morecambe strip off for a nudist sketch - BBC
Morecambe & Wise: The Lost TapeBBC Four/iPlayer, 8pmDuring the early decades of television, it was routine for the BBC to erase their archive of recorded programmes in order to recycle expensive videotape. This tragic practice has led to thousands of episodes â in some cases, entire series â being lost to time. Now and then, however, treasure is found. Just like this marvellous lost episode from The Morecambe & Wise Show, recovered from a private collection by the charity Film is Fabulous! â a fitting present for what would have been Eric Morecambeâs 100th birthday.
Originally airing in 1968, the episode is taken from the double actâs first series after returning to the BBC, following a seven-year stint in commercial television. Yet to reach their 1970s zenith, this is a rougher, looser Morecambe and Wise, although no less exhilarating in their chemistry. A particularly snappy routine follows Eric as he gives Ernie a series of nonsensical directions to his house, including stopping at a pub and making a detour to Birmingham. A risquĂ© sketch set in a nudist camp, featuring Ann Hamilton as naked guest Pauline, is less polished but delightfully silly. âPaulineâs got a lovely face, hasnât she?â asks Ernie. âI donât know,â says Eric, âI havenât looked to be honest.â
On the RoamHBO MaxHollywood star Jason Momoa returns for another outing of this tenuous six-part travelogue, loosely themed around the actorâs creative passions. Todayâs opener, for instance, follows Momoa as he tries to rescue the fortunes of a band he likes. Self-indulgent? Undoubtedly. But Momoa is charismatic enough to sell it.
The A List: 15 Stories From Asia and Pacific DiasporasHBO MaxThe term âAsian Americanâ hangs heavy over a multitude of disparate identities. This earnest documentary gives prominent Asian Americans such as actor Sandra Oh and senator Tammy Duckworth a chance to get specific â with stories that involve racism, resilience and a complex relationship with America.
Paul Merton: Driving Amazing TrainsChannel 4, 8pmThe next stop in Paul Mertonâs charming train odyssey is Germany, where this series will terminate. Tonight, the comedian takes control of a 40-ton tram in Dresden and pays a visit to the prisoner of war camp, Colditz, which was served by a railway during the Second World War.
The HardacresChannel 5, 9pmTimes are a-changing at Hardacre Hall â tonightâs return of the cosy period drama sees the arrival of electricity. Prospects are not quite as bright in 1895 Britain, however, which is in recession. The no-nonsense Hardacres must diversify their business to survive, while dealing with a potentially hazardous garden party. This series also sees the arrival of acid-tongued matriarch Lady Imelda Hansen (Some Mothers DoâAve âEmâs Michele Dotrice).
BergeracU&Drama, 9pmFresh from falling off the wagon, troubled detective Jim Bergerac (Damien Molony) finds himself rocked this week by the arrest of his lover Nicola (Camilla Beeput) for murder. The evidence against her is overwhelming, but that does not mean the case is closed. SK
Friday 15 May
Danny Dyer, Luca Pasqualino, Brendan Patricks and Alex Hassell in Rivals - Disney
RivalsDisney+After picking up an international Emmy, the rollicking adaptation of Jilly Cooperâs Rutshire Chronicles gallops back for a second series of boardroom and bedroom shenanigans among Britainâs upper classes. But Rivals is not just a bonkfest (although thereâs nudity less than 10 minutes into the first episode); it also has much to say about the British obsession with class and money, and it captures the hedonism and excess of the 1980s.
Weâre back in the cutthroat world of that decadeâs television industry; Rupert Campbell-Black (Alex Hassell) and Lord Tony Baddingham (David Tennant) are the dashing and dastardly rivals of the title, still battling for the regional franchise in the affluent Rutshire (for which read the Cotswolds). Baddingham has survived the nasty bump on the head that came courtesy of Cameron (Nafessa Williams), the mistress he had only just learnt he shared with Campbell-Black, and now heâs determined to take revenge â but will that cloud his judgement?
Hayley Atwell (replacing Anastasia Griffith) joins the ensemble cast as Helen Gordon, Campbell-Blackâs ex-wife, and Rupert Everett as her husband Malise, his former show-jumping coach and mentor, as the rivalries heat up. Six episodes drop today; another six arrive later in the year.
Berlin and the Lady with an ErmineNetflixIn this new eight-part spin-off from the hit Spanish thriller Money Heist, anti-hero Berlin (Pedro Alonso) and his daring gang return for some more high-octane crime. Itâs set in Seville, where they make plans to steal Leonardo da Vinciâs masterpiece, Lady with an Ermine â but revenge is also on Berlinâs mind.
The CrashNetflixThis true-crime documentary tells the barely believable story of Ohio teenager Mackenzie Shirilla, who survived a 100mph car crash in which her on-off boyfriend and his friend died in 2022. It looked like an accident, but her behaviour afterwards raised suspicions from both the victimsâ families and police.
Dutton RanchParamount+The Yellowstone universe expands ever further with this nine-part sequel, in which Kelly Reilly and Cole Hauser reprise their roles as Beth Dutton and Rip Wheeler, along with their ward, Carter (Finn Little). After the sale of Yellowstone, they have relocated to south Texas, and soon butt heads with the owner of a rival ranch, Beulah Jackson (Annette Bening). Ed Harris also joins the cast as local vet Everett McKinney. Two episodes drop today, then weekly.
Hidden Treasures of the National TrustBBC Two/iPlayer, 9pmA welcome return for this series taking us behind the scenes of historic buildings and meeting those who work in them. It starts with two houses associated with writers, Agatha Christieâs Greenway in Devon and Thomas Hardyâs Max Gate in Dorset.
Smoggie QueensBBC Three, 10pm & 10.30pm; all episodes will be available today on iPlayerThe easygoing (ie, light on laughs) sitcom about a group of LGBTQ friends in Middlesbrough returns for a second series, starting with a surprise coming-out party for Stewart (Elijah Young) at Keithâs World of Carpets. VL
Source: âAOL Entertainmentâ