Gareth Roberts

Gareth Roberts

Gareth Roberts is a TV scriptwriter and novelist who has worked on Doctor Who and Coronation Street

The Trump-Zelensky clash was the most awkward TV in decades

The visits of Keir Starmer and president Zelensky to the Oval Office last week were both agonising to behold, in very different ways. We witnessed two examples of how/how not (opinions vary which was which) to approach the court of what is described memorably vividly in David Mametโ€™s brilliant 1987 film House Of Games (nothing

Why Brits keep getting a tongue lashing from Team Trump

So much for the Special Relationship. Since Donald Trump took office in January, Brits have been taking quite a tongue-lashing from the US presidentโ€™s team. Keir Starmer, who touches down in Washington on Thursday to meet Trump, has been nicknamed โ€œtwo-tier Keirโ€ by the presidentโ€™s consigliere Elon Musk over his handling of grooming gangs. JD

Why the Germans donโ€™t do it better

Germany, not so very long ago, was the example of how to do it. Shiningly spotless and effortlessly efficient โ€“ the country where theyโ€™d got it right. Today, with its economy doom-spiralling and levels of internal unquiet that look likely to see the Alternative fรผr Deutschland (AfD) do very well in this Sundayโ€™s federal election,

Gareth Roberts

How Star Trek invented DEI

Values. Whenever some poor soul gets cancelled, sacked, scalped etc., thereโ€™s almost always a bland, impersonal statement from the institution carrying out the scalping. In third-person corporatese, from the moral high ground, such pronouncements will conclude with the sentence: โ€˜The comments of Person X do not align with the values of Institution Y.โ€™ Where do

Andrew Gwynne and the truth about WhatsApp

Labour MP Andrew Gwynne has been sacked from the government, and suspended from the party, for sending โ€˜vileโ€™ WhatsApp messages. Gwynne, who reportedly wrote that he hoped an elderly constituent who had complained about bin collections would die, is also said to have made antisemitic remarks and jokes about Diane Abbott. He stands exposed of

The voice coach row reveals how Keir Starmer will come unstuck

The news that the Prime Minister Keir Starmer, the adenoidal android, has employed a voice coach is simply astonishing. โ€˜Iโ€™ll take no lectures from the party opposite,โ€™ is one of Starmerโ€™s most well-worn sentences. At least now we know who he will take lectures from: actress Leonie Mellinger, star of The Winters Tale and the

The triumph of Otto Schenk

A long life well spent doing what we love is more than most of us can hope to get anywhere near. Otto Schenk, who died a few weeks ago aged 94, took that trophy; his career as a director (and sometimes performer) of opera stretched over considerably more than half a century. Many of his

The strangeness and sanity of Donald Trump

The Village People joined Donald Trump on stage at the conclusion of his pre-inauguration rally last night. โ€˜You wonโ€™t recognise them, theyโ€™re a little bigger, but thatโ€™s life,โ€™ The Donald informed us beforehand, in one of the many interesting digressions in his long, long address. This was less of a speech and more of a

Why weโ€™re horrified by Bonnie Blue and Andrew Tate

OnlyFans content creator Bonnie Blue claims to have broken a world record by sleeping with over a thousand men in twelve hours. I say โ€˜slept withโ€™ but obviously the euphemism doesnโ€™t really apply to this dubious feat. Blue, who was born in Nottingham but now lives in the United States, added to the glamour of

The grooming gang scandal needs to change our entire worldview

The recent re-eruption of the grooming/child rape gang scandal has been disorienting, seeming to blow up from nowhere. It has re-emerged โ€“ as far as I can ascertain, it moved so fast โ€“ through posts on X that quoted horrific extracts from trial proceedings. Within hours the full horror of what happened (and may well

The joy of Kemi and Farageโ€™s Christmas feud

A feud can be very tedious and tiring if youโ€™re one of the combatants. But letโ€™s be honest: for onlookers, feuds are fun. Videos of spats in which one or other party is โ€˜schooled, owned, destroyedโ€™ ratchet up millions of views. Itโ€™s even more fun when both sides donโ€™t lose their temper and civility is

Pulp have always been in the wrong place at the wrong time

Pulp, the legendary band fronted by Jarvis Cocker, have revealed that theyโ€™ve signed a new recording deal with equally legendary independent label Rough Trade. Although they formed in Sheffield in 1978, when Cocker was 15, Pulpโ€™s biggest success โ€“ and it was very big โ€“ came in the second half of the 1990s, with smash

Letโ€™s hope Donald Trump doesnโ€™t mess it up

Thereโ€™s been a โ€˜vibe shiftโ€™. After the resounding victory at the recent US election, at long last things are changing, and heading towards some form of hope and sanity. This Christmas, thereโ€™s hope for the future on the right.  Is this December 2024 or December 2019? Because the current anticipation for the second Donald Trump

Whatโ€™s the truth about the New Jersey drone sightings?

What is going on with the drones buzzing over New Jersey in the United States? Reportedly โ€˜the size of carsโ€™, sometimes flying low in formation, these mysterious semi-identified flying objects have been sighted in their thousands every night โ€“ and only at night โ€“ for weeks. They might not even be drones. Are they alien

The Trafalgar Square Christmas tree is a truly sorry sight

Itโ€™s bad manners to complain about a gift of any kind, and very bad manners to complain about a Christmas present that comes with epic historical significance. But the Trafalgar Square tree, supplied from the good people of Norway every year since 1947 as a thank you to Britain for looking out for them in

Iโ€™m A Celebrity has been enjoyably dull

The current series of Iโ€™m A Celebrityโ€ฆ Get Me Out Of Here! has been a big contrast to the previous two. The 2022 and 2023 camps contained politicians, and they were two particularly hot โ€“ in the potato sense โ€“ politicians. Matt Hancock and Nigel Farage carried baggage with them into the camp. In Hancockโ€™s

The truth about Labourโ€™s โ€˜class warโ€™

Keir Starmerโ€™s critics might have you believe that the Labour government is fighting a class war. They point to Education Secretary Bridget Phillipsonโ€™s crackdown on private schools and Chancellor Rachel Reevesโ€™s attack on farmers. These initiatives certainly donโ€™t appear to be just about money: whacking VAT on school fees and hitting dead farmers with inheritance