
What to watch on TV and streaming today: Super Garden, Oblivion and Fountain of Youth
Super Garden RTÉ One, 7pm
The judges give their final decision on who should be crowned the winner. Will it be Jorge's 'fáilte fiesta' theme, Eileen's 'new beginnings' design, Debbie's 'bee happy' garden, Chris's culinary canopy design or Rosie's WB Yeats-themed garden?
Bake Off: The Professionals Channel 4, 8pm
Ellie Taylor and Liam Charles welcome a fresh batch of pastry chefs to compete for the title. The series begins with a secret challenge, which sees them working without a recipe to create one of Cherish Finden's own creations, the Apple Tin.
The One That Got Away RTÉ One, 11.15pm
Elen Rhys and Richard Harrington star in this six-part crime drama. The shocking murder of a nurse in the Welsh seaside town of Pembroke Dock throws a historic conviction into doubt.
Oblivion Film4, 9pm
In the aftermath of a decades-long interplanetary war, Jack Harper (Tom Cruise) works as a drone repairman on an abandoned Earth. With only a few weeks before his mission is due to end, Jack rescues a stranger from a downed spacecraft (Olga Kurylenko) and makes a disturbing discovery.
Cold Case: The Tylenol Murders Netflix, streaming now
Chicago, 1982. Several cyanide-laced Tylenol capsules randomly resulted in at least seven deaths. Understandably, it ignited a countrywide panic in the United States, leading to one of the biggest criminal investigations in the nation's history. This striking documentary, from executive producer Joe Berlinger (Cold Case: Who Killed JonBenét Ramsey, Conversations with a Killer: The Ted Bundy Tapes) and directors Yotam Guendelman and Ari Pines (Shadow of Truth, Buried), revisits the terrifying crime that destroyed the country's faith in the safety of commonplace brands. Were these horrifying fatalities the work of a single psychopath, or was it just a convenient scapegoat in a larger conspiracy and possible cover-up? The case that transformed the bestselling medication in the world into a terrible symbol and permanently altered public perception of the items in people's medicine cabinets is revisited through this three-part series.
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Surviving The Tunisia Beach Attack Prime Video, streaming now
In 2015, a single shooter killed 38 people in less than 40 minutes. Ten years later, survivors talk about their struggle for survival and the tragedy's lingering effects.
Clarkson's Farm Prime Video, streaming now
Be it for inheritance tax purposes or just a pure latent love of land, Clarkson is back. After wrapping up series three, the Diddly Squat crew return to find Kaleb touring the country and Lisa launching a new product line. This means Clarkson is left to 'manage it all'. Poor lamb.
Air Force Elite: Thunderbirds Netflix, streaming now
Experience the thrill (albeit second-hand) of flying with the US Air Force's Thunderbirds, witnessing the intense training, risks and dedication required to be part of this elite American institution who, essentially, do doughnuts in the sky and make Mother Nature cry. That's my two cents, anyway.
Fountain of Youth AppleTV+, streaming now
Estranged siblings John Krasinski and Natalie Portman go on a high-stakes global heist to find the legendary fountain, unlocking secrets that could grant immortality. Yep, you read that correctly. It also stars Domhnall Gleeson, Eiza González and Stanley Tucci. Also on Apple, we have Deaf President Now, which explores a pivotal but often overlooked civil rights movement.
Fear Street: Prom Queen Netflix, streaming now
Bit of an arbitrary time of year for slasher fare, but here we are. The 1988 prom at Shadyside High is a battleground as the dominant It Girls plot to win the title. However, the competition becomes lethal as candidates begin to die.
As a stand-up comedian and part-time convenience store employee, Cheng Le-le (Hsieh Ying-xuan) is finding that work/life balance tricky. If you throw her marital woes and her father's memory lapses into the mix, she's a woman on the brink.
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Irish Daily Mirror
8 hours ago
- Irish Daily Mirror
Vogue Williams' brutal one-word assessment of Spencer Matthews before they met
Vogue Williams had a blunt one-word assessment of husband Spencer Matthews before the pair met. Irish TV presenter Vogue, 39, met former Made in Chelsea man Spencer, 36, while filming Channel 4's The Jump in 2017. Their relationship blossomed while on set and they soon began dating, eventually trying to knot in 2018 at the Glen Affric estate in Scotland. They now share children Theodore, Gigi, and Otto together. Vogue, however, confessed to having a "preconceived idea" of Spencer. While he has since tackled extreme endurance challenges, like his astonishing 30 marathons over 30 days in Jordan's deserts, Spencer's life was much different during his early days. He first rose to fame as a heavy-drinking party boy in Made in Chelsea. It prompted Vogue to decide she wouldn't be a fan of the reality star. Speaking to The Sun, Vogue said: "I kind of met him with a preconceived idea, and I was like, 'I'm not going to like him' because I thought he was a sociopath." "But after I met him, I loved his personality straight away ... he was so sound, but I was being really good at being single and I wanted to stay single, so I thought, 'He's going to be a really good friend'? That's the first thing I thought." Even though it's all smooth sailing now, Vogue once shared that she would have given Spencer the digital cold shoulder on a dating app. On their podcast Vogue & Amber, alongside her sister Amber Wilson, Vogue chimed in advice for a fan navigating the tricky waters of online dating for true romance. Vogue Williams shared her thoughts on dating apps, saying: "I totally get that, and I've got single friends and they feel the same. Although dating apps are obviously a great place to start, I've personally never used them, but I've had a go on other peoples." She continued, "But you're just judging someone completely on the way they look. And I always say this, Spencer is obviously gorgeous, but he wouldn't have been my type when we met. And I would have swiped past him on a dating app." The love story between Vogue and Spencer Matthews has blossomed over the years, with the couple recently marking their seventh wedding anniversary. While they kept celebrations low-key this year, Vogue has grand plans for their tenth anniversary. On her podcast 'My Therapist Ghosted Me', Vogue revealed to her friend Joanne McNally that she's planning a third wedding in 2028. This follows their second wedding, which was part of their reality TV series 'Vogue, Spencer and Wedding Two'. She explained: "I have bad news. Spen and I, when we're 10 years married, in three years time, we are going to do a wedding. I know that we got married, but when we got married in Scotland and that wasn't meant to be our wedding, there were like 20 people there. "Then we did the TV wedding, which wasn't a real wedding, because it just wasn't a real wedding, it was for TV. We actually want to do a wedding in three years' time when we're married for 10 years. No one will bloody believe it, imagine being married to someone for 10 years."


Extra.ie
11 hours ago
- Extra.ie
Ian Bailey's partner reveals his ashes 'weren't even scattered where he wanted'
The former partner of Ian Bailey has revealed the late murder suspect's ashes 'weren't even scattered where he wanted' during a much-publicised memorial ceremony on Friday. Bailey's ashes were spread on the waters off west Cork during a memorial event organised by his sister, Kay Reynolds, at Skeaghanore pier near Ballydehob, overlooking Roaringwater Bay. But Jules Thomas – the Welsh-born artist who was in a relationship with Bailey for decades before ordering him to move out of her house two and a half years before he died – told 'Ian always said that after his death he wanted his ashes scattered into Dunmanus Bay, but I heard they put them into Roaringwater [Bay] – that's on the other side instead. Jules Thomas and Ian Bailey. Pic: Collins Courts 'He always said he wanted them to be scattered into Dunmanus – that's between Mizen and Sheep's Head with Durrus in the corner. He was very specific. Instead, he apparently ended up someplace different.' She added: 'Poor b***er; he wasn't even scattered where he wanted to be in the end.' Ms Thomas was not invited to the private final farewell for her former partner, which was attended by around 30 family members, friends and supporters on Friday, which included filmmaker Jim Sheridan and Bailey's long-time solicitor Frank Buttimer. Jules Thomas. Pic: Collins Courts But she said she probably would not have attended the ceremony even if she had been invited. Ms Thomas explained: 'I was in Dublin seeing my legal team about my High Court case against Netflix and on other business and only got back to Cork late on Thursday night. I was exhausted and probably couldn't have made it even if I had planned to be there.' She described her non-invitation as a way of 'airbrushing me out'. The artist said: 'I supported him through thick and thin for 27 years of emotional hell for both of us. The worst thing that can happen to anyone is to be accused of something like murder, and that is what happened. 'I wasn't going to go anyway; when I threw him out, I finished with Ian and that was that.' Ian Bailey. Pic: Ian Bailey's sister said she did not invite Ms Thomas to Friday's ceremony because she didn't think she would want to attend the event. Ms Reynolds told 'She [Ms Thomas] said he just wasn't in her thoughts, that's what she said, so I didn't think she'd want to come'. However, she paid a warm tribute to her brother's former partner, adding: 'She stuck by him… he wasn't easy, was he? She had been incredible; we know he wasn't easy. And to stand by him all that time was incredible. She certainly had it tough with him.' Meanwhile, Ms Thomas has also revealed she was diagnosed with leukaemia around the time that the controversial Netflix three-part documentary series, Sophie: A Murder in West Cork, came out in 2021. Sophie Toscan du Plantier. Pic: REX/Shutterstock In her ongoing action against the streaming giant, she said the widely seen series turned her into a 'social pariah' and included 'glaring inaccuracies, fabrications and falsehoods'. She also alleges filming was carried out on her property without her permission. Ms Thomas is suing Netflix and its production company, Lightbox Media, for injurious falsehood, infliction of emotional suffering and negligence. The artist also revealed she had known she had leukaemia for more than two years before she told her daughters. Jules Thomas. Pic: Hell's Kitchen/Barbara McCarthy via Sky Studios She said: 'I knew they would be devastated, so I wrote each of them letters I posted at the same time to tell them. I waited over two years because I couldn't bring myself to tell them. I knew they would be so upset. 'I just couldn't give my three beautiful girls that worry and upset, I kept it to myself for as long as I could. Eventually, I decided they should know, so I wrote letters at the same time to each of my daughters to tell them.' Around 250 people in Ireland are diagnosed with the same form of incurable, slow-growing blood cancer affecting the blood and bone marrow, chronic lymphocytic leukaemia, every year. Earlier this week, Ms Thomas travelled to Dublin to discuss the next phase of her High Court case with her legal team, which includes the high-profile solicitor Gerald Kean and leading senior counsel Michael O'Higgins. Ms Thomas said: 'I went utterly downhill watching the Netflix documentary., my brain was in total turmoil, I couldn't sleep, all my energy sapped away. What it showed, watched by millions of viewers around the world, was a shoddy home, nothing like mine, a rundown, shabby place, not clean.' She said this followed 'all the worry and isolation' following the murder of French film producer Sophie Toscan du Plantier, and the emergence of her former partner as the chief suspect in the unsolved killing. Ms Thomas said that, on top of 'the court cases with constant media attention for decades', she also had to endure 'the emotional burnout of living with a man like Ian Bailey. No wonder I was getting shingles due to exhaustion with all my defences constantly down.' She went to her GP in the summer of 2021, who prescribed anti-viral medication for shingles. Ms Thomas added: 'I was utterly exhausted all the time. My doctor referred me to a consultant in Cork who carried out tests, and the results came back confirming I had chronic lymphocytic leukaemia. 'It took a while for that to register the news. The specialist asked if I had been under a lot of stress, and I said: 'Oh yes, unbelievable stress and for years and years.' To be honest, it didn't surprise me that my body was caving in from it all.' Ms Thomas said she has not had blood transfusions and is treating her illness mainly with homoeopathy, which stimulates healing responses in affected parts of her body. 'It's slowly creeping up, but I am feeling okay at the moment,' she added. 'There's no place for stop in my character; I have to keep cracking on, and I hardly ever sit down. But when my immune system is down and I get the signal I am doing too much, I try to take it easy.' She also believes the stress of the unsolved murder contributed to her former partner's death. Ian Bailey died in January 2024 at the age of 66 after suffering several heart attacks that Ms Thomas says were brought on by his 'chronically unhealthy lifestyle'. She told 'He drank himself to death and took drugs to block out the hell he was living after denying all those years that he committed the murder and was not believed.' Ms Thomas has always protested that her partner of 30 years was innocent of the country's most notorious unsolved murder. This is despite the fact that Bailey had been violent to her on several occasions; Ms Thomas was hospitalised on two occasions after drink-fuelled beatings, which she described as 'lashing out, which he deeply regretted afterwards'. She said Bailey was consumed by the need to prove his innocence in the unsolved murder, which she says she knew 'he had nothing to do with'. Ms Thomas said: 'They had not a shred of evidence that we had anything to do with that terrible murder.' Whilst the private get-together to say goodbye to Ian Bailey 18 months after his death, involving poetry, music and some prayers, took place on Friday, Ms Thomas returned to her remote cottage and extensive gardens outside Schull here she busily potted plants to sell along with her evocative west Cork oils and prints at Schull market today. Despite her leukaemia diagnosis, the artist says she feels well and is full of hope her name will eventually be cleared 'once and for all'. She added: 'I just want the truth, and nothing more, after so many falsehoods to come out at last. I want that above all. 'I am not thinking much about my illness; something has to get you in the end. Our luck runs out at some time, and our bodies give up, and I think it's best not to dwell on that and keep going.'


Irish Independent
16 hours ago
- Irish Independent
Today's top TV and streaming picks: From that Small Island, Saltburn and The Waterfront
The Sunday Game Live RTÉ2, 1.30pm Joanne Cantwell is at Croke Park to present all the action from this afternoon's Tailteann Cup semi-finals. Highlights can be seen later in the day at 9.30pm. From that Small Island RTÉ One, 6.30pm Attention turns to the first Irish diaspora, which ran from 1600 to 1700, a time when thousands of emigrants left the country in search of new lives in continental Europe. The final episode follows John Gallagher's exploration of his surname. He begins by hearing about the family's mention in the Guinness Book of Records before meeting Dr Pádraig Ó Liatháin, who introduces him to The Gallagher Family Commonplace Book, a collection of Irish legends, prayers, poems and recipes. The Gold BBC One, 9pm The drama's final two episodes air this week. Boyce comes face-to-face with an old enemy, just as the police think they're about to make a breakthrough. Later, a Spanish manhunt gets under way, just as a trial begins in London. Skyfall RTÉ One, 9.30pm Arguably the best of Daniel Craig's James Bond outings sees 007 on the trail of a mysterious criminal mastermind, a hunt that becomes very close to home indeed. Javier Bardem plays the villain, with Judi Dench making her last appearance as M. ADVERTISEMENT Saltburn BBC One, 10.30pm Superb black comedy-thriller from writer and director Emerald Fennell. Barry Keoghan plays a working-class student who develops an unhealthy obsession with an aristocratic classmate (Jacob Elordi). Rosamund Pike and Carey Mulligan co-star. Murderer Behind The Mask Prime Video, streaming now True crime isn't just the purview of Netflix, you know, and this Prime Video offering about Elaine O'Hara and Graham Dwyer hits particularly close to home. It highlights how An Garda Síochana meticulously pieced together the truth, turning an overlooked case into one of Ireland's most haunting murder trials. Back in September 2013, the remains of childcare worker O'Hara were discovered in the Dublin mountains. Initially believed to be a suicide, her case took a twisted tangent when fishermen stumbled upon crucial evidence leading to Dwyer, a respected architect who lived in Foxrock with his wife and kids. Beneath his carefully crafted facade lurked a secret life fuelled by a dark stabbing obsession, revealed through his disturbing text exchanges with O'Hara. Over the course of two 45-minute instalments, this Wag Entertainment-produced series purports to uncover how the investigation unfolded and the tragic story behind Elaine's murder. The Waterfront Netflix, streaming now From the makers of Dawson's Creek and Scream, we have this deliciously ridiculous number inspired by true events. It centres on the Buckley family, who have ruled Havenport, North Carolina, for decades. Now, with their patriarch, Harlan (Holt McCallany), recovering from multiple heart attacks (not helped by his predilection for impromptu punching sessions with his son), they resort to drug smuggling courtesy of a surprising face (belonging to Topher Grace). For more glossy, far-fetched US drama, season three of Manifest is available from Monday. The Buccaneers AppleTV+, streaming now Apple's answer to Bridgerton (but with bonus Americans) is here with its second season. Grenfell: Uncovered Netflix, streaming now Exploring the events leading up to the 2017 Grenfell Tower fire, this heart-rendering documentary reveals decisions by businesses and government that contributed to the tragedy. Somebody Feed Phil Netflix, streaming now This time, Phil visits Amsterdam, Tbilisi, Sydney, Adelaide, Manila, Vegas, Guatemala, San Sebastián and Boston, while enjoying a spot of bone gnawing with Ray Romano and Brad Garrett along the way. The Many Deaths of Nora Dalmasso Netflix, streaming now She wasn't rich, famous, or part of the swinger set. Rather 'a symbol of what happens to those who stray from the patriarchal mould'. In other unsolved murder documentaries on Netflix, we have I'm Your Venus, landing on Monday.