TV
In 2019 we can defeat the online trolls
I challenged the controversial Canadian psychologist Jordan Peterson and received a torrent of online abuse
In Patrick Melrose, we finally have a nuanced portrait of addiction
The new Benedict Cumberbatch drama directly confronts the problem without glamorising it. This is sadly all too rare
Intriguing, smart and creepy: If you’re yet to watch it, House of Cards’ fifth season won’t disappoint
When Netflix announced it, even the most avid House of Cards binger struggled to muster enthusiasm. But it has turned out to be a sophisticated, riffing accompaniment to view alongside the Trump presidency
“Meet the Lords” episode one: The whole institution comes over as absurd
The new BBC series is “the first proper peer that television has taken at the peers”
HBO’s “Girls”: The laughs make it worth the discomfort
It is a programme for women disillusioned with the slick image sold to them by "Sex and the City"
Netflix’s “A Series of Unfortunate Events” succeeds where the film failed
The effect of the adaptation is that "we witness a brutal adult world from a child’s perspective." *Contains spoliers*
Why funny women are taking the lead on TV
The return of the wholesome Gilmore Girls rounds off a year of female-centred television
The BBC’s only weapon
The new Culture Secretary has radical plans but will he be allowed to see them through?
The battle for the BBC
As he prepares for charter renewal, Director General Tony Hall could learn a lot from two new histories of the national broadcaster
General election 2015: who would The Clangers vote for?
Four classic political broadcasts from the BFI National archive
#battlefornumber10: was this the moment Ed Miliband showed he could be Prime Minister?
The Labour leader put on a strong performance in last night's TV set piece