Here are final comics of 2025, produced with kids in my Comic Art Masterclasses, at Heron Hall in Potters Bar. The celebrities these two classes chose to appear in my demonstration strip were Beyonce and Mr Beast. Leaving us with just one question: across all the schools I've visited and the classes I've done, of all the celebrities they've named, who is 2025's Most Popular Celebrity?
Sunday, 14 December 2025
2025’s Most Popular Celebrity With Schoolkids is...
Here are final comics of 2025, produced with kids in my Comic Art Masterclasses, at Heron Hall in Potters Bar. The celebrities these two classes chose to appear in my demonstration strip were Beyonce and Mr Beast. Leaving us with just one question: across all the schools I've visited and the classes I've done, of all the celebrities they've named, who is 2025's Most Popular Celebrity?
Saturday, 13 December 2025
TV Of The Year 2025 - Part 5: The Top Ten
TV Of The Year 2025 - Part 5: The Top Ten
10 - Cassandra. (Netflix) - This year’s surprise foreign language find came from Germany. Zapping between 1972 and the present day, it’s about a family and a house operated by a killer robot. If you haven’t discovered it yet, you’re in for a treat.
9 - How are You? It’s Alan Partridge (BBC) - Steve Coogan’s comic creation at his agonising best. Some of the comedy set pieces in this series, especially when Alan regresses to childhood, are the pinnacle of physical comedy. Preparing these pieces on film made the end result more satisfying than his previous in-studio as-live excursion. Merits several rewatches. A comedy masterclass.
8 - Riot Women (BBC) - Sally Wainwright’s comedy drama is a delight. Admittedly it might chime more with the over 60s, and people who’ve ever been in bands, but I’m hoping it reached more than just that. I have but one quibble: that signature tune. It’s really hard to do original pop music convincingly in a drama, and “Riot riot, we won’t be quiet” was pretty cringeworthy.
7 - The Paper (Now/HBO) - The idea of a follow up to The Office didn’t bode well, especially after last year’s dreadful Australian version, but this show by US Office creator Greg Daniels truly delivered. Turns out Domnhall Gleeson can do comedy, and so can the rest of this marvellous ensemble cast, including the Italian woman from season two of White Lotus. Who saw that coming?
6 - This City is Ours (BBC) - The first thing I’ve seen from a writer called Stephen Butchard, excellently taking the family crime drama seriously and putting some twists on it. An impressively strong cast, splendidly directed.
5 - The Rehearsal (Now/HBO) - Every review you’ll see of Nathan Fielder’s bizarre documentary comedy series will tell you it’s impossible to explain and you really have to see it. That’s because it’s impossible to explain and you really have to see it. We were lucky enough to see seasons one and two in a row this year. I’d tell you more but, well, see the sentence before last.
4 - The Gold 2 (BBC) - The first season of Neil Forsyth’s The Gold was my Number One in 2023, and the follow up maintained that quality and originality. His Shakespearian style of breaking up the drama with soliloquies elevates the drama without ever disturbing the pace. This storyline, deviating a lot from the known facts, enabled some enjoyable flights of fancy.
3 - Pluribus (Apple TV) - Apple his one good show every 6 months, but when it’s this good you can almost convince yourself it’s worth keeping up the subscription. One of the most innovative science fiction concepts in years, from Breaking Bad and Better Call Saul’s Vince Gilligan, it has you “what-iffing” along with it throughout. At time of writing I have no idea how it ends, but it’s going so well it’s made the top three already.
2 - Blue Lights 3 (BBC) - This show won the tear-jerking award hands down. I’m welling up at every turn, and it’s never through sentimentality. It’s the tension of following characters you really care about being put through excruciating drama. It has what the early series of Line Of Duty used to have, with the extra spin of being set in Belfast and really getting inside the situation there. I have no idea what else authors Declan Lawn and Adam Patterson have written, but they are talents to look out for.
1 - The Studio (Apple TV) - Did I say something about Apple having one good show every 6 months? I realise there are five of their shows on my chart, so I may have exaggerated. I have watched every episode of The Studio at least twice, and will no doubt watch them again. It is quite simply perfectly made film comedy. And anyone who thought the one-take shots in Adolescence were an achievement, you ain’t seen nothing till you’ve seen The Studio. The comedy makes you cringe and laugh out loud, the film-making had me applauding at one point, and the Emmy Awards episode may be 30 of the best minutes of television comedy made this century.
And there we have it. I'm sure you'll disagree, how couldn't you? Here's to another great year of TV. See you in twelve months time with my verdict.
Part 1: The Podcasts
Part 3: The Sequel Zone, and Jury’s Out
Part 4: 25 to 11
Part 5: My Top Ten TV of 2025
*****
My Top TV of... 2021 • 2020 • 2019 • 2018 • 2017 • 2016 • 2015 • 2014 • 2013 • 2011 • 2009
Wednesday, 10 December 2025
TV Of The Year 2025 - Part 4: 25 to 11
TV Of The Year 2025 - Part 4: 25 to 11
24 - Toxic Town (Netflix) - oh hello, another true story. Also another Not The Post Office Scandal contender, but better than The Hack.
23 - The Chair Company (Now/HBO) - genius. This is brilliant comedy, by Tim Robinson who, I confess, had passed me by before. Hard to describe, you really have to watch it.
22 - Sirens (Netflix) - adapted from a stage play, which had a much better title (Elemeno Pea), this had a great attitude and a very original world. I mean it’s millionaires in big mansions, and maybe some people die, so perhaps it has components we see a lot of, but this has outstanding qualities.
21 - IT Welcome to Derry (Now/HBO) - most gruesome telly of the year, and a lovely wit. The Stephen Kingiest load of Stephen King you’ll see, full of easter eggs and self parody.
20 - Stick (AppleTV) - Wins the prize for Most Formulaic Writing of the year, and that’s a good thing. Every beat is a masterclass in comedy script story structure. And even though you can see the moments coming, realise the tropes as they’re happening, and hear the cogs going round as a watch it, it delivers a brand of old fashioned ensemble character the like of which I’ve not seen since MASH.
19 - White Lotus 1 2 and 3 (Now/HBO)- Somehow we’ve crammed all three seasons into one year, which is a joy and a mixed blessing. The third isn’t as good as the first two, but it is some of the best writing on TV at the moment, so enjoys the highs with the lows.
18 - Adolescence (Netflix) - Much higher in many TV Of The Year charts, I know, but on reflection I’m not sure the while is greater than the sum of its parts. The “oners” , those single camera long-takes that made it special, are outshone by another show that comes higher up my chart and puts them to, I feel, better use. This show certainly was a moment, entered the national conversation, and won the Post Office Scandal award. But I like seventeen other show more, so there.
17 - Upper Middle Bogan (ABC/Netflix) - Okay, this is higher up than it might have been had I discovered it when it was new, a dozen years ago. But it’s an Australian sitcom, and a damn good one, that’s coothie and we love it. Recommended, however light you might find it.
16 - Amandaland (BBC) - Sitcoms are thin on the ground these days, so thank heavens this, one of the few BBC1 had on this year, was a quality bit of work. Maybe not as strong as Motherland, but close, and smashing. And genuinely funny too,
15- SOS Rogue Heroes 2 (BBC) - The first series was a guilty pleasure, this time you clean forgot to even feel guilty. It’s dark, emotional, heart rending, and surprising at every turn. I dare say it’s based very loosely on the true stories, but if ever there was an excuse for printing the legend, this is it.
14 - What It Feels Like For A Girl (BBC) - A splendid find. I’m guilty of overlooking a lot of drama on BBC Three, especially when it’s teen oriented, so this semi-autobiographical story of a trans teenager, who’s not afraid to portray themselves as an absolute git so much of the time, was one I was glad I found a stuck with. For tears and feels it ranks as number three.
13 - Hacks (Now/HBO and also Amazon Prime) - Seeing all 4 seasons of this in one year has been a comedy treat. One of three industry insider comedies in my top twenty, for what it’s worth, and after last year’s abysmal The Franchise, it’s good to be reminded it’s not that area that was off-putting , it was how it was done. And our second top queer drama of the chart. The characters are so real in Hacks that it hurts.
12 - Bookish (U&Alibi) - You wait all chart for an iconic LGBT telly show, and three come along in a row. On the most ludicrously named and impossibly hard to find cannel, "U&Alibi", I'm amazed anyne has even managed to see it. Mark Gattis gave us a smashing cozy comedy crime series with a closeted gay hero just after the war. In a bookshop. I can’t be the only person who loved it.
11 - Traitors UK & US 3, NZ 2, & Celebrity 1 (BBC + various) - Bracketed by SAS Rogue Heroes, I’m realising this five-in-a-row section of my chart is camp as Christmas. Celebrity Traitors was the icing on the cake for a year of a format that saw Alan Cumming improve on his first year, with his alleged celebrity competitors being joyously awful throughout; Claudia presiding over a third civilian season that was in danger of derailing itself with some of its contrivances; and a New Zealand series that screamed low budget but was the second most enjoyable of them all. Celebrity was pure dead brilliant, and gave us a moment of feeling live TV was about to survive the decade. Don’t worry, the feeling passed.
Which leaves only The Top Ten...
Part 3: The Sequel Zone, and Jury’s Out
Part 4: 25 to 11
Part 5: My Top Ten TV of 2025
*****
My Top TV of... 2021 • 2020 • 2019 • 2018 • 2017 • 2016 • 2015 • 2014 • 2013 • 2011 • 2009












































