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The annual gathering of the people behind the shows that we see on TV has been taking place in Scotland this week.

The Edinburgh TV Festival has seen commissioners, press and some famous faces heading to Edinburgh to discuss the current television landscape and promote some of the new shows they have coming out in the next 12 months.

The team from Backstage – the film and TV podcast from Sky News – was there, and these were their five biggest takeaways from the event.

Louis Theroux attending the Red carpet gala event, #TheMikeGala, hosted by Stormzy, at The Biltmore Mayfair, London, to mark the British rapper's 30th birthday. Picture date: Friday July 28, 2023.
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Louis Theroux

Louis Theroux played it safe while discussing… not playing it safe

In previous years the MacTaggart lecture has seen Michaela Coel talking about the racism and sexual assault she’d experienced working in the industry and writer Jack Thorne using his time at the podium to criticise the business for how it’s treated disabled people – both behind and in front of the camera.

Last year journalist Emily Maitlis talked about the challenges journalists face reporting on Donald Trump, Brexit and populism.

Theroux though was less disparaging in his speech, titled The Risk Of Not Taking Risks, he urged TV bosses to continue to avoid playing it safe, in an era when it might sometimes be easier for them to do so.

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A fair point, but perhaps not the ground-breaking speech we’ve come to expect from the festival’s keynote lecture.

Coleen Rooney The Real Wagatha Story. Coleen Rooney as herself in Coleen Rooney The Real Wagatha Story. Cr. Ben Blackall/Disney+ 2023.
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Coleen Rooney The Real Wagatha Story. Pic: Ben Blackall/Disney+ 2023

Wagatha Christie continues to compel

We’ve known that a documentary about Coleen Rooney and the Instagram post in which she accused her former friend Rebekah Vardy of leaking stories about her to The Sun was coming to Disney+ for a while.

But now the first sneak peek of the pre-credits scene for Coleen Rooney: The Real Wagatha Story have been shared in an Edinburgh session.

The three-part series promises to tell Coleen’s story through interviews with her, and her inner circle.

The woman behind it, Julia Nottingham, said her jaw was “on the floor” after speaking to Coleen for the first time and we suspect viewers will be the same way when the doc drops this autumn.

Claudia Winkleman with the award for Entertainment Performance, The Traitors, at the Bafta Television Awards 2023 at the Royal Festival Hall, London. Picture date: Sunday May 14, 2023.
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Claudia Winkleman clutching her BAFTA for Traitors

ITV’s new offering for fans of Traitors

Among the announcements from ITV at the festival was new show Fortune Hotel.

Filmed in the Caribbean with Stephen Mangan on hosting duties, it will see 10 pairs of contestants each given a briefcase which either contains the cash prize, an early checkout or nothing at all.

The series will see contestants deceiving one another and swapping cases – when commissioners used the word “subterfuge” while describing it, we immediately knew this would be one for fans of The Traitors (which incidentally won the best entertainment prize at the festival).

Pic: BBC
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Sarah Lancashire in Happy Valley. Pic: BBC

Happy Valley writer Sally Wainwright’s new shows

The third and final series of Happy Valley was a monster of a hit when it aired at the start of the year.

At the TV festival a brief update on writer Sally Wainwright’s historical show The Ballad Of Renegade Nell for Disney Plus, about a highway woman with superpowers, was simply that it’s still in production.

While the BBC announced they too have a new show coming from Wainwright, Hot Flush is described as “a celebration of women of a certain age” who come together to form a punk band.

Like Happy Valley the six-part drama will be set in West Yorkshire.

The Kardashians - Kris Jenner, Kylie Jenner, Kim Kardashian West, Kourtney Kardashian, Robert Kardashian, Kendall Jenner and Khloe Kardashian. Pic: eter Brooker/Shutterstock
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The Kardashians in their early days. Pic: Peter Brooker/Shutterstock


Sky dig deep on the Kardashians

During their panel at Edinburgh Sky announced a few new shows, including a nature documentary focusing on sound with Sir David Attenborough and the second series of Gemma Arterton’s Funny Woman.

But the one that really piqued our interest was House Of Kardashian, a documentary series looking at the reality star dynasty and their influence and impact.

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Using interviews – including one with Caitlyn Jenner – and previously unseen archive footage, this promises to be a considered look at one of the most divisive families in popular culture.

Hear more from the festival on the latest episode of Backstage – the film and TV podcast from Sky News.

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The Magic Circle’s first female member fooled them into believing she was a man – how did she do it?

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The Magic Circle's first female member fooled them into believing she was a man - how did she do it?

How did one woman fool the most famous magic society on the planet?

Back in 1991, Sophie Lloyd pulled off the ultimate illusion, tricking the Magic Circle into thinking she was a man.

But over 30 years after being unceremoniously kicked out, the Circle has tracked down the former actress to apologise and reinstate her membership.

She told Sky News how returning feels like the society has “made good on something that was wrong”.

Sophie Lloyd, who tricked the Magic Circle into believing she was a man
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Sophie Lloyd, who tricked the Magic Circle into believing she was a man

How did she infiltrate that exclusive group that nowadays counts the likes of David Copperfield and Dynamo as members?

In March of that year, she took her entry exam posing as a teenage boy, creating an alter-ego called Raymond Lloyd.

“I’d played a boy before,” she explained, but “it took months of preparation” to secretly infiltrate the Circle’s ranks half a year before it would officially vote to let women in.

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“Really, going back 30 years, men’s clubs were like, you know, just something you accepted.”

The men-only rule had been in place since the Circle was formed in 1905. The thinking behind it being that women just couldn’t keep secrets.

Aware of the frustration of female magicians at the time, Lloyd felt she was up for the challenge of proving women could be as good at magic as the men.

The idea was, in fact, born out of a double act, thought up by a successful magician called Jenny Winstanley who’d wanted to join herself but wasn’t allowed.

She recognised the hoax would probably only work with a much younger woman posing as a teenage boy, and met Lloyd through an acting class.

Sophie Lloyd as teenage magician Raymond Lloyd. Pic: Sophie Lloyd
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Sophie Lloyd as teenage magician Raymond Lloyd. Pic: Sophie Lloyd

Lloyd said: “We had to have a wig made… the main thing was my face, I had plumpers made on a brace to bring his jawline down.”

To hide her feminine hands, she did the magic in gloves, which she says “was so hard to do, especially sleight of hand.”

The biggest test came when she was invited for a drink with her examiner, where she had to fake having laryngitis.

“After the exam, which was 20 minutes, he invited Jenny and I – she played my manager – and I sat there for one hour and three quarters and had to say ‘sorry, I’ve got a bad voice’.”

Raymond Lloyd passed the test, and his membership certificate was sent through to Sophie.

Then, in October of the same year, when whispers started circulating that the society was going to open its membership to both sexes, she and Jenny decided to reveal all. It didn’t go down well.

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Rather than praise her performance, members were incandescent about the deception and, somewhat ironically, Raymond Lloyd was kicked out just before women members were let in.

Lloyd said: “We got a letter… Jenny was hurt… she was snubbed by people she actually knew, that was hurtful. However, things have really changed now…”

Three decades later the Magic Circle put out a nationwide appeal stating they wanted to apologise and Lloyd was recently tracked down in Spain.

While Jenny Winstanley died 20 years ago in a car crash, as well as Sophie receiving her certificate on Thursday, her mentor’s contribution to magic is being recognised at the special show that’s being held in both their honour at the Magic Circle.

Lloyd says: “Jenny was a wonderful, passionate person. She would have loved to be here. It’s for her really.”

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Counter terror police assessing Kneecap concert video

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Counter terror police assessing Kneecap concert video

Counter terror police are assessing a video reported to be from a concert by Irish rappers Kneecap.

A social media clip of the hip hop trio on stage appeared to show one member of the group shout “up Hamas, up Hezbollah”.

The footage was posted online by Danny Morris from the Jewish security charity, the Community Security Trust.

He said it was from a gig last November at London’s Kentish Town Forum.

A Metropolitan Police spokesperson said: “We have been made aware of the video and it has been referred to the counter terrorism internet referral unit for assessment and to determine whether any further police investigation may be required.”

Hamas and Hezbollah are both proscribed as terrorist groups in the UK. Under Section 12 of the Terrorism Act 2000, it is an offence to express “an opinion or belief that is supportive of a proscribed organisation”.

Sky News has contacted Kneecap’s management for comment.

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It comes after TV personality Sharon Osbourne called for Kneecap’s US work visas to be revoked after accusing them of making “aggressive political statements” including “projections of anti-Israel messages and hate speech” at Coachella Music and Arts Festival.

In November last year, Kneecap won a discrimination case against the UK government after former business secretary Kemi Badenoch refused them funding.

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Harvey Weinstein retrial: ‘He had all the power,’ prosecutor tells court as opening statements begin

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Harvey Weinstein retrial: 'He had all the power,' prosecutor tells court as opening statements begin

The retrial of Harvey Weinstein has begun in New York – with a prosecutor telling the court the former Hollywood mogul used “dream opportunities as weapons” to prey on the three women accusing him of sexual abuse.

The case is being retried five years after the landmark #MeToo case against the producer, who was once one of the industry’s most powerful figures, after the appeals court last year overturned his conviction.

Weinstein, who is now 73, is charged with raping one woman and forcing oral sex on two others. He has strenuously denied the allegations.

Following a lengthy jury selection process due to the high-profile nature of the retrial, the prosecution has now opened its case at the same courthouse in Manhattan.

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Why is Weinstein getting a retrial?

Attorney Shannon Lucey told the court the Oscar-winning producer and studio boss used “dream opportunities as weapons” against the female accusers.

“The defendant wanted their bodies, and the more they resisted, the more forceful he got,” she said.

Weinstein had “enormous control over those working in TV and film because he decided who was in and who was out,” the court heard. “He had all the power. They had none.”

Dressed in a dark suit and navy tie, Weinstein listened to the prosecution’s statement after arriving in court in a wheelchair, as he has done for his recent appearances.

His lawyers are expected to outline their case later on Wednesday.

Harvey Weinstein appears in state court in Manhattan in his retrial on Wednesday, April 23, 2025 in New York. (Steven Hirsch /New York Post via AP, Pool)
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Steven Hirsch/ New York Post via AP/ pool

The opening statements got under way after the last jurors were finally picked on Tuesday, more than a week after the selection process began.

Prospective jurors were questioned about their backgrounds, life experiences and various other points that could potentially impact their ability to be fair and impartial about a case that has been so highly publicised. They have also been asked privately about their knowledge of the case and opinions on Weinstein.

Seven men and five women have been chosen to hear the trial.

Why is there a retrial?

In 2020, Weinstein was sentenced to 23 years in prison after being found guilty of charges of sexual assault in 2006 and rape in 2013, relating to two women.

But in April 2024, New York’s highest court overturned the convictions due to concerns of prejudicial testimony and that the judge in the original trial had made improper rulings.

Prosecutors announced a retrial last year and a separate charge concerning a third woman, who was not part of the original trial, has since been added to the case. She alleges the producer forced oral sex on her at a hotel in 2006.

Weinstein has pleaded not guilty to all charges and denies raping or sexually assaulting anyone.

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At a preliminary court hearing in January, he begged for the retrial to be held as quickly as possible due to his deteriorating health, telling the judge: “I don’t know how much longer I can hold on.”

Weinstein was also sentenced in February 2023 after being convicted of rape during a separate trial in LA – which means that even if the retrial ends in not guilty verdicts on all three counts, he will remain behind bars.

His lawyers are also appealing this sentence.

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