The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

POLICE IN THE DOCK

- With Paul Whitelaw

TOP Stephen – Monday, PICK STV, 9pm

On April 22 1993, teenager Stephen Lawrence was murdered during a racially motivated attack. That crime remained unsolved until 2012, when two members of a white gang were found guilty. Written by Frank Cottrell-Boyce and his brother Joe, this absorbing, angry, compassion­ate three-part drama is a damning indictment of the corrupt, incompeten­t and institutio­nally racist Metropolit­an Police. It also honours the determinat­ion

of DCI Clive Driscoll (a solid turn from Steve Coogan). Driscoll led a unit largely devoted to investigat­ing the police themselves, but his risk paid off. The story begins

in 2006, when the Lawrence family were still being denied

answers.

Ghosts – Monday, BBC One, 8.30pm

The arrival of corporeal Alison’s long-lost half-sister could potentiall­y place her co-ownership of Button House in jeopardy, so she puts the Captain on the covert case. Meanwhile, Lady Fanny is acting giddily out of character. Could she be in love? Ghosts is currently the best British sitcom. Warm, funny and occasional­ly quite touching, it’s written and performed by a talented troupe of comics with an innate understand­ing of how to appeal to a family audience. They could easily tailor their skills towards a post-watershed slot if they wanted to, but where’s the fun in that? The restrictio­ns they’ve placed upon themselves enhance the

comedy. Ghosts is possessed of the utmost wit and charm.

Surviving 9/11 – Monday, BBC Two, 9pm

There are two featurelen­gth BBC documentar­ies this week commemorat­ing the 20th anniversar­y of the 9/11 attacks. The first is a meditative study of grief and trauma. It features moving eye-witness accounts from some of the survivors, one of whom, Vanessa Lawrence, now lives and works as a painter in Ayrshire. Lawrence was the artist in residence at the Twin Towers in 2001; her studio was on the 91st floor of the North

Tower. We also hear from an Englishman, Matt Campbell, whose brother Geoff was killed that day. Campbell

has never trusted the official report, although he’s aware that his investment in 9/11

conspiracy theories could be a subconscio­us method of

channellin­g his pain.

9/11: Inside the President’s War Room – Tuesday, BBC One, 8.30pm

When the second hijacked plane hit the South Tower at 9.03am on 9/11, President George W. Bush was sitting in front of a classroom full of young children. We’ve all seen the footage of him gradually trying to process the news. This gripping moment-bymoment account of 9/11 is told from the perspectiv­e of Bush and colleagues such as Condoleeza Rice. By allowing them to explain their actions, the film tacitly asks us to make our own judgments. Bush comes across as someone preoccupie­d with justifying

his legacy. “I’m not much of a navel-gazer,” he smirks. “I guess you could say I’m a man of action… let’s just say I’m comfortabl­e with the

decisions I made.”

Back to Life – Tuesday, BBC One, 10.35pm

This dry-witted comedydram­a should, by rights, be as popular as Fleabag (it’s produced by the same team). Daisy Haggard, who writes the show alongside Laura Solon, stars as Miri, a woman struggling to readjust to life after spending 18 years in prison for murdering one of her best friends. Miri is a most unlikely murderer, but that’s the point. She’s likeable, sympatheti­c, someone deserving of a second chance. As series two begins, she’s still trapped at home with her dysfunctio­nal parents. But she’s got a job stacking shelves, and her sweetly tentative romance with Billy (Adeel Akhtar from Four Lions) is still trundling along. Then the mother of her victim arrives in town…

Our Lives: Lambing Life – Wednesday, BBC One, 7.30pm

Chloe is a 24-year-old

sheep farmer from the Peak District. This documentar­y follows her during lambing season, which for obvious reasons is a particular­ly busy time of the sheepfarmi­ng year. Chloe is great, she really gets stuck in. We witness her literally breathing life into recently birthed lambs, as well as various other specialist skills she hopes to pass on to the next generation of her family. She also writes poetry on the

side and runs an alternativ­e therapy business. Our Lives is a lovely series; it deserves a warm smattering of applause for shedding light upon the everyday activities of people from all walks of life. Positive by design, it’s a reassuring portrait of humankind.

Grantchest­er – Friday, STV, 9pm

Series six of this ecclesiast­ical sleuth caper kicks off with a hot priest case set in a holiday camp. For the uninitiate­d, Grantchest­er is set in the late 1950s/early 1960s (its exact time stamp is, a la Heartbeat, rather vague), so we’re talking full-on Hi-de-Hi! vibes here. In traditiona­l style, the regular cast all go on holiday together. But their fun doesn’t last: death stalks them where e’er they go. As always, this episode fulfils its duties without any fuss. Grantchest­er belongs to

British television’s very long line of cosy, undemandin­g

murder mysteries: it doesn’t seek to challenge or provoke, it exists purely as a piece of slick escapism. And sometimes, occasional­ly,

that’s all you require.

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 ??  ?? DRAMA: From left, Hugh Quarshie, Steve Coogan and Sharlene Whyte in Stephen.
DRAMA: From left, Hugh Quarshie, Steve Coogan and Sharlene Whyte in Stephen.
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 ??  ?? Clockwise from top, Surviving 9/11 artist Vanessa Lawrence; Chloe from Our Lives: Lambing Life; Daisy Haggard as Miri Matteson in Back to Life.
Clockwise from top, Surviving 9/11 artist Vanessa Lawrence; Chloe from Our Lives: Lambing Life; Daisy Haggard as Miri Matteson in Back to Life.

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