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DOUGLAS IS CANCELLED - thur 9pm ITV - TV PACED WEEKLY. NO SPOILERS

149 replies

Blondeshavemorefun · 24/06/2024 23:23

New 4 part drama on weekly. This thread is tv Based thread !!

Thur 9pm itv

Steven Moffat’s new series about a TV news anchor who’s cancelled for making a sexist joke at a wedding is bound to start some conversations.

Not least because the story bears a striking resemblance to several recent scandals. But also because it so thoroughly, and sensitively, interrogates all sides in the ‘culture wars’.

Douglas Bellowes is the greying anchor of the fictional news programme Live at Six.

He’s built an enviably successful life with his wife and newspaper editor Sheila, but it all comes tumbling down when he allegedly makes a sexist joke at his cousin’s wedding.

When a fellow guest Tweets about it and goes viral, the Bellowes and the Live at Six team must do their utmost to get ahead of the scandal.

That includes Douglas’ younger, sharper co-anchor and self-described “best friend” Madeline. Or does it?

Hugh Bonneville, who’s best known for starring in a couple of British institutions (Downton Abbey and Paddington), is perfectly cast as the titular news anchor and national treasure.

Lending Douglas his bumbling charm, he immediately gains your trust and sympathy. But does he really deserve it?

At one point, Douglas’ producer Toby reminds him that, in order to avoid scandal when out in public, he must be “balanced, boring and bland.” “And fortunately, in life,” said Bonneville, “I’ve always been balanced, boring and bland.”

Madeline has formed a ratings-winning partnership with Douglas, but there are signs the headstrong co-anchor is growing tired of the ‘co’ prefix.

She’s charming and seems to bend Douglas to her will, while remaining an enigma to the rest of her colleagues.

Madeline is “my favourite character I’ve ever played,” explained Gillan, but also “the hardest thing I’ve ever done. Because she’s quite removed from me as a person so it required a fair amount of acting! I don’t think I could ever wrap someone around my finger like her.”

In a karmic twist of fate, Sheila finds herself having to protect her husband from the kind of scandalous allegations she’d usually be amplifying, as the ruthless editor-in-chief of a tabloid newspaper.

Much to the amusement of the Q&A audience, Alex Kingston said she based the character of Sheila on Sue Vertue, the producer of the series who also happens to be Moffat’s wife. Only because she’s “incredibly loving and protective,” she hastened to clarify.

Douglas’ deeply self-interested producer who’s more interested in burying the scandal ­– and thus protecting his channel’s ratings – than doing what the news should be setting out to do: revealing the truth.
Praising Moffat’s ability to write great “arias” for his characters, Miles expounded on Toby’s in the opening scene. It set the tone for “his cynicism, his desire for self-preservation at any cost, the way he manipulates people, the way he regards the truth, what journalism is to him.”

OP posts:
iwouldgoouttonightbut · 19/07/2024 10:28

Rummikub · 18/07/2024 23:32

I was a bit shocked that Douglas saw that Madeline was terrified and walked away. Then the scene of him saying it's worth it all the stuff you have to wade through.

Up until that point I was not pro Madeline but then completely switched allegiance.

And this is what I think was the spark for her destroying him once she'd established herself as his co-host.

butterpuffed · 19/07/2024 10:37

I was on her side but she annoyed me so much with her cold voice . I wouldn't want to be interrogated by her , she'd tie me up in knots !!

duc748 · 19/07/2024 10:54

I think the initial judgement that she played Douglas like a fiddle is pretty much fair enough. She never seemed frightened or overawed by Toby. Because she was playing him too, of course. The Hay Festival finale was a neat touch, too. I said upthread in had a touch of All About Eve in it, and that's no bad compliment.

purpleme12 · 19/07/2024 11:06

I got what it was saying but I didn't enjoy watching the last two episodes really

eggandonion · 19/07/2024 14:15

I agree. Worth watching but Not enjoyable. I felt sorry for Claudia who was fabulously feisty.

Shellingbynight · 19/07/2024 16:17

Arghh this episode was disappointing. It was still cleverly written with some good lines but the plot didn’t hang together.

Madeline’s speech to Douglas ‘where were you, you were my idol’ and Douglas’s outburst ending with ‘you looked terrified’ didn’t work. Because in the next scene we saw she was a fully capable adult who could very easily get herself out of that situation and did not need help from Douglas or anyonelse. So those speeches made no sense and made her sound like a child. She idolised him, he turned out to be human and made an assumption which upset her. It just ended up seeming like a bit of a non-event.

It happens so often with tv dramas, well written and a good build up, then they don’t quite know where to go with the ending.

duc748 · 19/07/2024 16:26

The two speeches only don't make sense if you're assuming that both were said honestly.

purpleme12 · 19/07/2024 18:48

I very nearly switched off in the last 2 episodes but I thought to myself I've watched this far I should see how it ends 😂

Blondeshavemorefun · 19/07/2024 20:44

I think we all thought she did sleep with Toby

But obv didn't

OP posts:
Meem321 · 19/07/2024 20:52

I thought it was going to transpire that she was his daughter.

Blondeshavemorefun · 19/07/2024 21:26

Meem321 · 19/07/2024 20:52

I thought it was going to transpire that she was his daughter.

I never thought that 😂

OP posts:
Shellingbynight · 20/07/2024 08:08

Blondeshavemorefun · 19/07/2024 20:44

I think we all thought she did sleep with Toby

But obv didn't

I thought she didn't, which was why she was so furious with Douglas for assuming she did. But I couldn't see how she then got the job. Turns out it was easy, take a photo and stomp out. I like Steven Moffat's work (I loved Inside Man) but I did wonder how good a man would be at writing from a woman's point of view.

Iamiams · 20/07/2024 12:16

There was a hint in the previous episodes where she’d said about the phrase he said, and he couldn’t remember saying them. Those were the words as he walked away. So she knew and was constantly testing him. She always had the upper hand with the producer from the moment she had bath photos. But it was the double let down by her childhood hero that was the crushing blow.

Arconialiving · 21/07/2024 13:44

I think she just seemed so manipulative and all along was waiting for an opportunity to get the main job alone!

Shellingbynight · 21/07/2024 16:37

I think you are right, which is a bit disappointing. I thought there would be more to it, but seemingly not!

daffodilandtulip · 21/07/2024 20:44

Itisjustmyopinion · 29/06/2024 16:05

River Song and Amy Pond in the same programme. Mother and daughter reunited

This is all I kept thinking 🤣

justinhawkinsnavalfluff · 22/07/2024 00:52

Disappointed in the ending. Particularly the women is cross because man didn't rescue her angle. Yuk!

2Rebecca · 22/07/2024 02:00

So was the emotional affair with the endless texts all to try and destroy him and his marriage? I agree once he arrived at the hotel room she could have whispered for him to come in and then he could have confronted Toby. She had a choice then and chose to stay and blame the one person who gave her a way out. Everyone in it was awful especially Madeleine.

MrsLargeEmbodied · 22/07/2024 04:28

i think it was more the fact that he told the story of her getting the job for years afterwards, said good luck with wading through things

Blondeshavemorefun · 22/07/2024 06:19

Or the Wade was worth it

So yes sleep with him and get a good job

OP posts:
Shellingbynight · 22/07/2024 08:29

@2Rebecca yes I assume all the texting was to make Sheila think he was having an affair, when he wasn't. Madeline was certainly playing the long game. One of Sheila's lines was "she's playing you" and that seemed to be the entirety of the plot, both Sheila and Madeline were far smarter than Douglas.

justinhawkinsnavalfluff · 22/07/2024 10:47

But didn't he say it will be worth it after he thought she'd already decided to sleep with him? Again the issue comes back to the story being men need to rescue women.

2Rebecca · 22/07/2024 11:40

In all the years she was working with him she could have told him how that evening went and they could have looked at getting rid of old pervy but she chose to manipulate him instead. If she knew he thought she'd given sexual favours to help get the job then you think she'd put him right. It made no sense. Him needing to rescue her and her resenting him for not rescuing her doesn't go with her "I can look after myself" vibe.
I'd rather work with him than her.

Arconialiving · 22/07/2024 11:48

Me too @2Rebecca as at least you'd know what you were getting / where you stood!

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