All the evidence shows voters want Labour to shift to the left — but initial signs from Andy Burnham are worrying on that front, cautions DIANE ABBOTT
AFTER a successful first run in 2022, when Rogue Heroes averaged 6.8 million viewers (making the show the sixth most-watched British drama series of 2022), it was inevitable the BBC would commission a second season.
Viewers lapped up the show’s tales of real-life WWII derring-do, in which Ampleforth College-educated aristocrat Archibald David Stirling (1915-90) leads his handpicked squad of commandos to take on the Axis in north Africa. With such success, it would appear the regular (majority non-Eton, I presume) British army were sitting on their backsides most of the time while the SAS did all the hard work.
Well, that’s the impression if one believes the hokum served up by the show, the opening credits of which state “based on a true story, the events depicted which seem most unbelievable … are mostly true.”
KEVIN DONNELLY accepts the invitation to think speculatively in contemplation of representations of people of African descent in our cultural heritage
With the recent release of Paul Thomas Anderson’s movie One Battle After Another, STEPHEN ARNELL gives the storied history of the British real-life left-wing urban guerillas
GORDON PARSONS is blown away by a superb production of Rostand’s comedy of verbal panache and swordmanship
While Spode quit politics after inheriting an earldom, Farage combines MP duties with selling columns, gin, and even video messages — proving reality produces more shameless characters than PG Wodehouse imagined, writes STEPHEN ARNELL


