Reading Festival: BBC Three, 7pm
Josh Homme and his Queens of the Stone Age round off the first day on Reading's Main Stage, playing the hits and tracks off their latest LP, '...Like Clockwork'.
Radio 1 DJs Greg James and Jen Long front BBC Three's coverage, which also takes in sets from Paramore and Vampire Weekend.
Celebrity Big Brother: Live Eviction: Channel 5, 9pm
Just four days after entering the Big Brotherhouse, one celeb is about to get the boot - but who will it be?
Gary? Frenchy? The bloke off of Gogglebox? Emma Willis will be on hand to console the first famous face to be evicted by the public.
The Kate Bush Story: Running Up That Hill: BBC Four, 9.10pm
Ahead of her much-anticipated live gigs later this month, BBC Four delves into the life and career of the iconic Kate Bush.
Peter Gabriel, Elton John, Stephen Fry,...
Josh Homme and his Queens of the Stone Age round off the first day on Reading's Main Stage, playing the hits and tracks off their latest LP, '...Like Clockwork'.
Radio 1 DJs Greg James and Jen Long front BBC Three's coverage, which also takes in sets from Paramore and Vampire Weekend.
Celebrity Big Brother: Live Eviction: Channel 5, 9pm
Just four days after entering the Big Brotherhouse, one celeb is about to get the boot - but who will it be?
Gary? Frenchy? The bloke off of Gogglebox? Emma Willis will be on hand to console the first famous face to be evicted by the public.
The Kate Bush Story: Running Up That Hill: BBC Four, 9.10pm
Ahead of her much-anticipated live gigs later this month, BBC Four delves into the life and career of the iconic Kate Bush.
Peter Gabriel, Elton John, Stephen Fry,...
- 8/22/2014
- Digital Spy
Match of the Day celebrates its 50th anniversary this week, after launching back in August 1964 with a game between Arsenal and Liverpool.
Half a century later, after five decades of triumph and tragedy for football fans across the country, the UK's flagship football programme is still going strong and remains as iconic as ever.
To celebrate this, Digital Spy has collated its own Premier League table of Motd icons from past and present. Using a (likely contentious) points system based around football knowledge, longevity on the show and a certain 'magic factor' that makes them a warm presence on our screens, this is our just-for-fun chart of the biggest names in its history.
Key: K=Knowledge L=Longevity M=Magic Factor (out of 10)
20. Robbie Savage – 14 points
K: 4, L: 4, M: 6
Love him or hate him, Robbie has grown to become one of Motd's most regular pundits over the past couple of...
Half a century later, after five decades of triumph and tragedy for football fans across the country, the UK's flagship football programme is still going strong and remains as iconic as ever.
To celebrate this, Digital Spy has collated its own Premier League table of Motd icons from past and present. Using a (likely contentious) points system based around football knowledge, longevity on the show and a certain 'magic factor' that makes them a warm presence on our screens, this is our just-for-fun chart of the biggest names in its history.
Key: K=Knowledge L=Longevity M=Magic Factor (out of 10)
20. Robbie Savage – 14 points
K: 4, L: 4, M: 6
Love him or hate him, Robbie has grown to become one of Motd's most regular pundits over the past couple of...
- 8/22/2014
- Digital Spy
“It’s payback season.”
As unbelievable as this sounds when said aloud, this is an actual line from Danny Donnelly’s woefully inadequate cinematic debut.
Kicking off with some rather obvious cutaways of a footballer who clearly isn’t Adam Deacon performing keepy uppy, Payback Season is the story of one young man’s rise from the gutter of inner city London to the glory and glamour of life as a pro footballer.
Jerome Davies (Deacon) has been anointed as the new wunderkind of English football, and as such he’s been rewarded with all of the superficial trappings that go hand in hand with this title. Davies is still keeping it real though, and regularly returns to the estate he grew up on to hang out with his family and friends. While his bona fide family want none of the excess his new life can afford, his blud brothers...
As unbelievable as this sounds when said aloud, this is an actual line from Danny Donnelly’s woefully inadequate cinematic debut.
Kicking off with some rather obvious cutaways of a footballer who clearly isn’t Adam Deacon performing keepy uppy, Payback Season is the story of one young man’s rise from the gutter of inner city London to the glory and glamour of life as a pro footballer.
Jerome Davies (Deacon) has been anointed as the new wunderkind of English football, and as such he’s been rewarded with all of the superficial trappings that go hand in hand with this title. Davies is still keeping it real though, and regularly returns to the estate he grew up on to hang out with his family and friends. While his bona fide family want none of the excess his new life can afford, his blud brothers...
- 3/10/2012
- by Jonathan Campbell
- Obsessed with Film
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