NEW FACTUAL
James May & the Dull Men Tuesday, 9pm, Quest
After years travelling the world for Top Gear and The Grand Tour, James May could be forgiven for being a little less adventurous in his latest TV series.
In Quest’s eight-parter James May & the Dull Men, the 61-year-old invites innovators into his Wiltshire workshop to come up with practical answers to life’s mundane problems – from deterring deer from his garden to making a rainproof wooden bench.
Here, May tells us why making the series turned out to be anything but boring…
Denne historien er fra November 02, 2024-utgaven av TV & Satellite Week.
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Denne historien er fra November 02, 2024-utgaven av TV & Satellite Week.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
Busy being boring
James May tackles life's most tedious problems
Finding Lord Lucan
Has Britain's mostinfamous fugitive finally been discovered?
Hidden treasure
Searching for the Antarctic wreck of Ernest Shackleton's doomed ship
Single bells!
Christina Milian looks for love in a festive romcom
RESCUE MISSION
John Lithgow and Jeff Bridges join forces in Afghanistan as the hit thriller returns
Gone girl
Tosh searches for a missing friend as Shetland returns
Living in FEAR
Anna Maxwell Martin stars in the true story of a nurse's ordeal at the hands of her killer boyfriend
High treason
How the ringleaders of the Gunpowder Plot met their fate...
Moving target
Eddie Redmayne and Lashana Lynch star in an action-packed new take on the globetrotting hitman thriller
Amazing Asia
Sir David Attenborough's epic natural-history series showcases the spectacular wildlife of the world's biggest continent