What to watch and review on Thursday. Tonight’s TV tips

Time to read
1 minute
Read so far

What to watch and review on Thursday. Tonight’s TV tips

July 28, 2016 - 12:34
2 reader reviews
No votes yet
Rate this programme

What to watch and review on Thursday, July 28.

Celebrity Big Brother: Christopher Biggins

Celebrity MasterChef (BBC1, 8pm) The penultimate episode as the four finalists battle it out to be crowned champion minor star cook. Tonight, one of the following will be sent home… Sid Owen, Jimmy Osmond, Alexis Conran and Louise Minchin. And tomorrow, gastro-hosts Gregg Wallace and John Torode pick the winner.

Read the reviews, write yours

Celebrity Big Brother (Channel 5, 9pm) After a two-day break following the end of civilian BB, here come the mildly famous housemates. Rumoured star contestants include Christopher Biggins, I’m A Celeb horror Lady C, former X Factor judge Tulisa, Sam Fox, Marnie Simpson, Grant Bovey, Stephen Bear, Katie Waisell, James Whale, Helen Lederer and – drum roll – Dog The Bounty Hunter’s wife. Wow. Hosted by Emma Willis.

Write your review

There are 2 Comments

PhilipStar's picture

My view is that the launch will get massive ratings because everyone will be curious of who is going in, Will there be actually any Celebs going in for a example? The challenge for Channel 5 would be holding on to the launch ratings. It is make it or break it really for them with the Olympics coming up.

But it may get viewers that are not a fan of sport, Even through the Olympics is probably one of the best sporting events around because of the variety to watch.

As for the lineup, I won't say now but I all ready know that someone from a ITV reailty TV show in the past may be going in. Not sure for certain but if he does. People may actually watch Celebrity Big Brother. Hell he could win the show.

Let's see what they done to the house tonight, See you then as I be tweeting the #CBB hashtag as @PhilipM1992

Cathy Forster's picture

I'm disappointed that "Kes" isn't being shown later after this documentary. Mainly for the folks who have never seen it. But even more for the ones who've never read the book it was based on. Barry Hines' A Kestrel For A Knave. I studied the book for my 0 Level because it was on the Syllabus.Having previously seen the film a time or three, but thankfully, as is often the case,that didn't diminish my impression of either.

I'll be watching but I obviously especially recommend this documentary to anyone unfamiliar with Loach and his work as a whole. The man is quality.