Formula E: Driver, Prime Video review - inside the world's first zero-carbon sport

F1's electric baby brother get its own documentary series

The success of Netflix’s Drive to Survive not only provoked a viewer-stampede towards the world’s most expensive sport, but also triggered a chain reaction of similar behind-the-scenes sports documentaries. Suddenly we had Break Point (tennis), Full Swing (golf) and Tour de France: Unchained (cycling, obviously), hotly pursued by series on rugby, soccer and American Indiecar racing.

Extract: TV by Susan Bordo

EXTRACT: TV BY SUSAN BORDO On 75 years of changing TV, changing habits and the relationship between TV and Trump

On 75 years of changing TV, changing habits and the relationship between TV and Trump

"Television and I grew up together." As a baby boomer born in 1947, Susan Bordo is roughly the same age as our beloved gogglebox, which began life as a broad box with a ten-inch screen, chunky and clunky and encased in wood. With the rapid changes in technology in the years since, "television", as Bordo points out, has become estranged from its material status.

theartsdesk Q&A: Sally Anne Gross and Dr George Musgrave, authors of 'Can Music Make You Sick?'

Q&A: SALLY ANNE GROSS, DR GEORGE MUSGRAVE The authors of incisive new study 'Can Music Make You Sick?'

On World Mental Health Day we meet the authors of an incisive new study of music and musicians

Today is World Mental Health Day and of course that means an awful lot of hugs and homilies, thoughts and prayers, deep-breathing exercises and it’s-good-to-talk platitudes from people speaking from positions of immense privilege – ranging from the well-meaning to outright grifters.

A Country Life for Half the Price, Channel 5 review - Essex couple Sam and Lucy become rural entrepreneurs

Swapping commuter misery for bees, birds and 'posh cats' in Suffolk

The “relocation in search of a new life” theme has become a dependable TV staple, from A New Life in the Sun to Relocation, Relocation and Ben Fogle’s New Lives in the Wild, but this Channel 5 series by Kate Humble has been more entertaining than most. Perhaps it’s because we captive, locked-down TV viewers are yearning to roam free in wide-open spaces.

The Trip to Greece, Series Finale, Sky 1 review - bittersweet swansong for the cantankerous comrades

★★★★ THE TRIP TO GREECE, SERIES FINALE, SKY 1 Bittersweet swansong for the cantankerous comrades

Farce, vanity and profound seriousness somehow hang together

Could this mock-mythic journey, emulating the trek homewards to Ithaca of Homer’s hero Odysseus, really be the final series of The Trip (Sky 1)? Or will Steve Coogan and Rob Brydon see sense, and realise that they’ll never have as many free lunches as this again?

Five Guys a Week, Channel 4 review - lemming-like contestants make spectacles of themselves

★★★ FIVE GUYS A WEEK, CHANNEL 4 Cattle market dating show is classic Channel 4

Cattle market dating show is classic Channel 4

Channel 4 loves to walk the line between the compulsive and the repulsive, and this new dating show, complete with fake-salacious title, is a peerless specimen. The set-up is simple – one woman asks five guys who are “looking for love” to move in with her for a week, during which she chucks them out one by one and ends up with a winner.

Denis and Katya, Music Theatre Wales / Uproar, Rafferty review - disturbing the untroubled monotony of South Wales music

New Venables and Huffman opera as reality TV and new music in a dry land

Once upon a time writing an opera was first and foremost a question of choosing a good story. But times move on, and today – as Nicholas Till reminds us in a fascinating programme note for Philip Venables’s and Ted Huffman’s new chamber opera – the medium is the message, and the how has become at least as important as the what

Ant Middleton and Liam Payne: Straight Talking, Sky 1 review - when the commando met the pop star

★★★ ANT MIDDLETON AND LIAM PAYNE: STRAIGHT TALKING, SKY 1 When the commando met the pop star

Manly true confessions under African skies

“What is wrong with us? What are we doing here?” Liam Payne asked the camera, as we neared the end of his jaunt round picturesque Namibia with his quizmaster Ant Middleton. The short answer would be “it’s for the publicity, you idiot,” but of course he knows that full well. He’d just leapt off a cliff face and swung in wide circles on a rope above the russet-coloured desert far below. It looked quite fun actually.

The Great British Bake Off, Series 10 finale, Channel 4 review - bittersweet end to a divisive series

Tenth anniversary marred by uneven judgements and unfeasible challenges

And that’s a wrap: last night concluded 10 years of The Great British Bake Off. This show is the nation’s TV equivalent of comfort food. In the past, it has stuck to a well-worn recipe — the result was fun to fight over but easy to love.