Ampika whisks the Housewives away for a country escape, but a suitcase full of gossip leads to tears, tantrums and tension between one pair.
Fearing his daughter would be taken out of state, a father says he loaned his ex thousands to help her buy a house and stay nearby. She says the money was a gift and countersues for $10K, accusing him of spreading lies with a false CPS report.
1989. Niall is struggling at university when he invites Ruben to join him and his flatmates for freshers week. What begins with excitement ends in devastating consequences.
Kate sends Cyclops on an audacious mission inside Russia's secret service Moscow HQ to try to trap the MI6 mole once and for all. As Kate reels from the fallout, a new prime minister enters Downing Street. Thriller adapted from Tom Bradby's novel, starring Gemma Arterton.
Emma's trail cams capture a family of hungry otters, big money is at stake for Ally at a prestigious ram sale, and it’s showtime on Arran for Callum and Zara’s young kids.
A Scottish teenager claims that he's come to meet his girlfriend from a gaming website; when a couple arrives with a large amount of cash split into bundles, officers dig deeper and see that the man is under investigation by the FBI.
ROADSHOW harvests hidden treasures at Grant’s Farm, including a 1960 Ansel Adams Portfolio III: Yosemite Valley, a Persian Qashqai Gabbeh rug, ca. 1935, and 1959 JFK’s boxer shorts with signed photo. One find reaches $40,000-$60,000!
A mother-daughter vacation abroad takes a devastating turn when Gali is arrested for drug possession. Refusing to accept the charges, her mother Orna risks everything on a quest for freedom—only to get entangled in a web of Gali's secrets.
Lucy goes missing, and Donna hatches a plan to make the real culprit take the fall.
Heat three is upon us, which means one thing: six exciting new amateur cooks have left their home kitchens ready to compete for one of four coveted MasterChef aprons.
Obsessed fans, an attempted kidnapping and a rumor of an illegitimate child are just a few of the setbacks *NSYNC, 98 Degrees and O-Town faced in their rise to teen idols. And one member reveals an arrest that has been kept hush-hush for years.
Starting their dating journey are Married at First Sight legend Lucinda Light, rugby star James Haskell, 'Loose Woman' Coleen Nolan, Love Islander Gabby Allen, rapper Professor Green and agency alumni David Potts. The new faces are welcomed with a dinner party, but there's a twist as truths are revealed and some familiar faces arrive to surprise the celebrities.
Chris Rock crashes Kevin's live semifinal as comics unload their best material. Your real-time vote decides which four punch their ticket to the finale.
The chefs pack their knives as they head to Greenville, S.C., where they are welcomed by renowned restaurateur Carl Sobocinski. He opens the door to one of his notable restaurants, Soby’s, where the chefs will stage the ultimate dinner party for a room full of esteemed local restaurateurs and chefs. For the Quickfire Challenge, they will host a pre-dinner cocktail reception, followed immediately by the start of their Elimination Challenge, where they must serve an eight-course meal. Kristen, Tom and Gail will be joined at the judges’ table by Carl Sobocinski and “Top Chef” season 22 finalist Shuai Wang.
Chef Ben and Jenna try to take their flirtations to the next level, but Eddy’s jealousy and Mike’s interference get in the way. After Mike crosses a line with Daisy, tensions explode across the boat. Crew gossip sparks a room swap. A shrimp-cocktail dispute causes Daisy and Ellie to clash.
Car lover Dave has 17 huge, painful head bumps that concern his girlfriend.
As America's situationship with Iran hits the 60-day War Powers Act deadline, Trump brazenly ignores Congress's authority while spouting nonsense about America's depleted weapons inventory, and Jon Stewart marvels at the "genius" president's faulty math and cognitive skills. Also, a visit from a real monarch, King Charles, shines a light on the lack of checks and balances from America's absent Congress. Civil rights lawyer and founding director of Howard Law School's 14th Amendment Center for Law & Democracy, Sherrilyn Ifill, sits down with Jon Stewart to discuss the Supreme Court's weakening of the Voting Rights Act. They talk about how the reinstatement for purposeful discrimination overturned the court's own precedent, how the Voting Rights Act protects the voting strength of minorities and their candidates of choice, and the dangerous potential for Trump and Republicans to redistrict using this precedent in an effort to turn seats in the House.