Advertisement
Dublin: 2 °C Tuesday 26 November, 2024

What to watch on TV tonight: Saturday

Here are the shows that will be on your Twitter timeline later.

Every lunchtime, DailyEdge.ie rounds up the TV shows that you’ll be tweeting about tonight and talking about tomorrow.

The Saturday Night Show (RTÉ One, 9.40pm)

We’ve had an interesting run with Brendan O’Connor. After all, he’s overseen some of the most talked about moments in Irish television of recent years — Pantigate, Pussy Riot, Pingate. Tonight, The Saturday Night Show’s run draws to a close as O’Connor chats to Blur’s Alex James, Oliver Callan, Dylan McGrath and John Lyons. Will Brendan shed a tear as he bids farewell? Only one way to find out. #satnightshow 

The John Bishop Show (BBC One, 9.45pm)

Comedian John Bishop launches his brand new variety show tonight. The show is set to feature a host of international comics and musical acts every week. This week, Bishop presents Trevor Noah, James Acaster and Felicity Ward. Paul Weller and Beardyman, menawhile, will provide the tunes.

The Woman in Black (Channel 4, 9pm)

Avoiding going out until tomorrow night, but looking for a bit of a thrill? The Woman in Black stars Daniel Radcliffe as a young doctor who moves to a new village and discovers that the town is being haunted by a ghost known as The Woman in Black. Properly spooky.

de-bar-42-630x35-2

Everyone’s talking about… George Hook and The Late Late Show

hook

The Newstalk broadcaster appeared on The Late Late Show and grabbed his crotch several times during a hip-hop dance routine.

It was… something. (DailyEdge.ie)

de-bar-42-630x35-2

Or flick over for…

  • Miller’s Crossing (RTÉ One, 12.35am) One of the Coen Brothers’ first and finest films.
  • The Irish Open – Highlights (BBC One, 10.50pm) All the best from day 3 of the tournament.
  • Hansel and Gretel: Witch Hunters (RTÉ Two, 9.10pm) A modern twist on the fairytale in which Hansel and Gretel are all grown up, and work as witch exterminators.
  • Quartet (BBC Two, 9pm) Maggie Smith? Billy Connolly? What more could you possibly want from this lovely musical comedy?
Close