What's Up?
The Media can no longer be trusted. I'm aware this is a statement that could be applied to the media at any time over the last 15 years or so, but in 2026 it has finally crossed a line and has become a problem not a reporting medium.
The easy ride the Tories got for 15 years, the demonization of the Labour Party over the last two years, the lack of scrutiny regarding Reform UK, the general ignorance of the Greens or the LibDems - the media wears its political affiliations on its sleeves.
However, it's the overreactions to certain events, not just by the media but by politicians and interested parties that has destroyed any credibility the media, in 2026, might have hoped for.
I have a staggering figure to share with you. In 2025 there were 14,577 knife attacks in the capital, that equates to more than 40 per day. How many of these knife crimes made the national news? However, at the end of April, a mentally ill young British Somalian, with a history of violence - to any and all nationalities and races - stabbed two Jewish men in Golders Green (an hour after stabbing his Muslim best friend) and we've had wall-to-wall coverage about anti-Semitism, Jewish people frightened to leave their houses and the PM - whose wife is Jewish - denouncing this 'epidemic of anti-Semitic violence'...
You might remember when famous communist anti-Semite Jeremy Corbyn was castigated for everything from not wearing a tie properly to not bowing enough at the Cenotaph. The media has a bug up its arse about conflating everything with anti-Semitism. It's like they have an agenda...
Do me a favour. Not only is this over-inflated hyperbole, it selectively ignores a huge elephant in the room. What it also does, in a strange, off-handed way, is accept that the attacks on British Jews - whether that's physical or in the form of pro-Palestinian marches - has been caused by the actions of Israel in the Middle East. In a strange way, this reminds me of the fly tipping problems the country has at the moment - lots of handwringing and questions asked about who and what is being dumped in fields across the UK, but never asking WHY it's happening.
Fly tipping happens because councils no longer supply easy access council refuse sites. If you want to get rid of rubbish, you have to jump through so many hoops and over hurdles - and pay extortionate fees - so unscrupulous people dump their rubbish illegally. With British Jews, there's much discussion about who and what is being targeted, but no discussion about why it is happening. Oddly enough, the why is exactly the same as why followers of Islam are targeted.
Except... in this Golders Green case, there's a very good chance that the perpetrator could have attempted to stab anyone that got in his way. If he'd stabbed two hipsters in Shoreditch would we have had the kind of coverage we've been subjected to?
I do not class myself as anti-Semitic; my paternal grandmother was Jewish (alienated by her community because she married a gentile) and the closest I've ever got to being racist is having a very poor opinion of many white British people, occasionally calling them fascists or Nazis. So this isn't me jumping on the Hate Jews bandwagon; this is me looking at all the available information and how it has been conflated to suit a narrative that supporters of Israel and its Zionist government want you to be thinking.
I condemn any violence against any race or religion, but I never see the media giving a voice to Muslims when they face abuse on a daily basis. I don't see the police force issuing warnings about future problems when it involves Muslims being racially targeted. Fewer than 4% of the UK population is Jewish - yet given the coverage they get you'd think that was 40%. 13% of the population is Muslim, how often do we see Muslim hatred make the news, let alone be the lead story?
What I will say to people who are targeting Jews is many of them do not support Israel. Rational people don't blame the Asian guy running the local Indian restaurant for Jihadist activities, so why target a Jewish person for the crimes of Benjamin Netanyahu? That's like blaming the cow when your milkman doesn't deliver your daily pint.
Unfortunately there is genuinely another agenda at work here. One that gets people like me being accused of unpleasant things. This agenda is simple, there are many friends of Israel all over the world and they have a lot of money and influence and this is often reflected in what we see on the TV, hear on the radio or scroll through on our social media feeds. These people dictate the narrative and anyone challenging that is an extremist...
Adventures in Babysitting
Surely the frontrunner for film of the week - maybe even the month - has to be the 2014 Bill Murray vehicle St Vincent. The story of a misanthropic Viet Nam war veteran and the friendship he forms with a 10 year old kid whose parents have just divorced. This really was a gem of a movie and one I'm surprised I'd never heard about. It also stars Melissa McCarthy as the mother, Naomi Watts as Murray's pregnant lap dancing Russian hooker friend and a lad who is now known as Jaeden Martell as the boy - Oliver.Murray's Vincent is up to his eyeballs in debt, his wife is in a care home suffering from dementia, he lives like a pig and the only thing he seems to care about is his cat, but scratch the surface, enough, and this grumpy old bastard has a heart of gold and teaches Oliver more about life than his bickering parents have managed and gradually as the film unfolds, the people who think of Vinnie as this waste of space old git start realising that he might be the saint Oliver thinks he is. Bill Murray has always been a favourite of mine but his output in the 21st century has been... different, and this certainly was. 8/10
Back in the USSR
In For All Mankind, the Soviet Union still exists in 2013 and while it is still essentially an authoritarian communist state, it is also capitalist through and through. The first of this week's double bill looks at Margot's former boss, the second in command of the KGB back at the turn of the century. It also expands on the mysterious first murder on Mars, the revelation that Dev was one of the people behind the automation of Mars and the civil unrest on the planet comes to a head, as we're left with a cliffhanger ending.The wife has found this latest season a bit underwhelming and I know what she means, but this is probably down to the fact that most of the original cast have been reduced to bit parts, cameos, flashbacks and deaths - it has been over 50 years of time passed since the series started.
However, as we caught up with the series, something dawned on me. Where the first four series were all about - BAM - in your face events, this one has been far more subdued and close knit, almost claustrophobic. The latest episode showed how the people who have made lives on Mars are desperate to stay there and how they have everyone against them. We've seen brief mentions of the International Space Network - the rival faction to the M6 nations (the countries who have invested in Mars' infrastructure) and I believe they will play a big part in the concluding episodes. Slow burner is how I'd describe this series; yes, it hasn't been as good as the seasons which made this one of the best shows on TV, but it's still better than much of the rest.
In Too Deep?
The now extended episodes of Your Friends & Neighbours spent half of the episode at a Passover party for some of Coop's Jewish friends, which also acted as Sam's (Olivia Munn) return to being accepted by the snobs of the neighbourhood. Coop's ex wife, Mel (Amanda Peet) is the only person who has a problem with this and she's been told to 'get over it.' Owen Ash continues to give Coop grief, this time about not investing $400million in a super hedge fund fast enough, while simultaneously dangling his blackmail video in front of Coop as leverage. Torrey, Coop and Mel's daughter continues to confound her parents (and the viewers, tbh) as she seems to want to give up everything they want for her.The latest episode is essentially all about fucking, or at least it is for some of the cast, for others it's about being fucked and for Coop it's a bit of both. This was all about excess - a look into the lives of people who made Your Friends & Neighbours look poor in comparison. It was also about Mel's struggle with the menopause and her feelings of being betrayed by Sam - who was her best friend until she fucked her ex-husband and then tried to frame him for the murder of her oafish husband. All of this pales into insignificance because the ending is a real kick in the crotch.
Extinction Event
You might remember a month or so ago, I was talking about starting to watch the Netflix four-part series The Dinosaurs, narrated by Morgan Freeman and containing some questionable special effects? Well, we finished it and while it was entertaining it was also quite facile and superficial. I appreciate it was about dinosaurs, but it skirted evolutionary processes, other life on earth and huge swathes of time to try and make a 'natural history' documentary and I think it only just succeeded in creating entertainment.I said to the wife halfway through the third part that I felt like we were getting fleeting highlights of a world that existed and we claim to know more about every year, but is still an interpretation - not that I would expect anything different. I just didn't think this one felt... plausible. I don't think even dedicated palaeontologists can comprehend what it was like 200 million years ago. It would have been interesting if we'd been given an insight into what dinosaurs evolved from and why and how long between [object A] becoming [object B] and why this happened. If mammals and dinosaurs existed at the same time. We know evolution exists, but to our feeble minds and the timeframe they sit in; 'evolution' is just a catch all description for something that changes over HUUUUUUUGE periods of time and sometimes it might be nice if they filled in the gaps, even if it's just more theories.
Absurd Nonsense
Sometimes, I see a film, look at the IMDB rating and think, "It's a 6.5, with 8.5K reviews, it can't be that bad" and I watch it and then almost immediately regret that decision, but I don't just turn it off and start with something else - like I should. They Will Kill You falls into that category completely. Zazie Beetz plays a woman who goes to a building, faking herself as a new employee, but to save her sister from what she thinks is something nefarious. It turns out that she's trapped in a building with people who cannot die and are protected by Satan. There is enormous amounts of blood and guts, but it's quite preposterous, stupid and stylised and quite ridiculous. It was another poor choice of movie entertainment. 4/10Improbable Bollocks
I don't know. I seem to wander into watching some shite films at the moment. I suppose the good thing about that is, if you believe me, it saves you watching them. In this case, it's another film where a prized and excellent actor is no longer the star he once was and has been reduced to playing hard men and psychopaths. Jake Gyllenhaal used to be in some great movies, but his star waned and he's been in some stinkers in the 2020s, none more so than Ambulance, which he co-stars with Yahya Abdul-Mateen II (or Wonder Man as we've recently seen him) and Eiza Gonzalez, about two brothers who rob a bank and then hijack an ambulance to try and make their getaway. This film is over two hours long when it should have been 90 minutes max, but they - actually director Michael Bay - somehow manages to spin it out for almost an extra hour. It is faintly ridiculous and Gyllenhaal is shit as a psychopath. 4/10Sacrifices
In a surprisingly revelatory penultimate episode, Daredevil: Born Again wasn't one of those scene setters but a part full of surprises and dangerous confrontations and not everyone gets out alive. Matt gives Bullseye a job to do, which will see the downfall of Fisk, while he comes out from his undercover to defend Karen at her trial for essentially unAmerican activities. There's some more of Heather Glen, a character that seemed to be vitally important to this show in the first half, but has become a peripheral character and something of a fifth wheel - will she have a moment in the finale, or was she just a red herring?Psycho Messiah
Homelander is God is now a thing and it's starting to get difficult for Firecracker and her own religious beliefs. This dedicated follower of Homelander must forsake Jesus for her new master and that bothers her. The Boys this week was all about supporting characters and what is happening through their eyes. It was cleverly done and yet felt as though it was treading water. I've been here before, but Daredevil is so much better at this kind of thing and never feels like it's going through motions to eke out eight or nine episodes. This needs some... oomph injecting back into it, because after last week's interesting episode this felt like the same old same old - that is until the end, which surprised even me.Spooky Island
I don't really know if I can even hazard a guess as to what Widow's Bay is going to be about. The new Apple TV+ show is billed as a comedy horror, but could probably be called a lot of other things. Matthew Rhys plays the mayor of Widow's Bay, who seems to hold the town and its people in some disdain, but is also trying desperately to put the place on the map. There are secrets about the island and stories about the people. Old newspaper headlines are surreal and often hilarious, but... we didn't get much of an idea what the show is going to be about other than it's going to be quirky. We have another episode to watch, so hopefully that might shed some light onto what we need to know.The second part is really all about a challenge Matthew Rhys has to accept, when he dismisses the stories about the local hotel being haunted, so he spends the night there to prove he knows best. What happens might be able to be explained away by fungus or it might be something more... spooky. All I can say is this is a show that channels both Stephen King and Scarfolk County Council, it's weird but very funny.
The Ginger Wig
If you've never seen Samuel L Jackson in a tight ginger wig, then you get your chance in The Negotiator, a 1998 film that was so far-fetched and overwrought that it could have been a pantomime about hostage taking. The opening ten minutes seemed okay, but as soon as Jackson started to be framed for something he clearly wasn't responsible for, you had to start wondering whether the writer of this film was ignorant or just thought that the viewing public was. Jackson is a 20 year plus veteran of the Chicago PD; he's a hostage negotiator, great at his job and loved by all his colleagues. For some reason (and trust me, there are loads of 'for some reason' moments in this) he is able to be railroaded from hero to zero in about 30 seconds and the real question is 'how many crooked cops are there?'So Jackson, in a tight ginger wig, does what any sane person would do, he takes a bunch of people hostage, asks for Kevin Spacey to negotiate and there's loads of shouting, hard stares and things that made no sense at all. JT Walsh - in his final film - gets killed, like he seemed to in almost every movie he made and David Morse is so strange you don't know if he's crooked or just a gung-ho nutter with a fixation for killing first and maybe asking a question later. This was rubbish and I feel like I'm on a roll with shit films. 3/10
What's Up Next?
And what a week that was - some shit, but some sweetcorn poking out of the shit... I was looking at the huge list of films we have to possibly watch and I'm not too hopeful that there's going to be much I'm going to get excited about. I suppose, the crappier the film the more chance of a funny review, but it doesn't always work like that...
In other news... Oh yeah, I promised myself I'd avoid that subject for the time being, so there is no other news. Next week will be the first full week of May and summer's over already. Take nothing for granted.



















































