WHAT TO WATCH 7-13 June
- Elliot Gonzalez
- 2 days ago
- 5 min read
Time to wave goodbye to your summer as Love Island returns!

This week's best telly includes the return of Love Island, Not Going Out and The Gold as well a Soccer Aid special of The 1% Club and a new documentary from Jamie Oliver
Here are 5 TV shows you can't miss this week...
1
 CHARITY SPECIAL
THE 1% CLUB
FOR SOCCER AID
Saturday 7th June at 8.20pm on ITV1

Lee Mack is back to host a Soccer Aid special of The 1% Club as 100 sports stars and celebrities compete to see if they can answer a question only one per cent of Britain got right.
Have you ever wondered how clever you are compared to some of the nation’s most famous sporting heroes? This is your chance to find out - and all while also seeing which star will come out triumphant and potentially win up to 100,000 pounds for Soccer Aid.
 STREAM ON ITVX
2
 RETURNING DRAMA
THE GOLD
Sunday 8th June at 9pm on BBC One

BBC One's hit drama The Gold, which is inspired by the true story of the 1983 Brink’s-Mat robbery and the decades-long chain of events that followed, returns this week for its second and final series.
Following the conviction of some of those involved in the theft and handling of the Brink’s-Mat gold, the police realised that those criminals only ever had half of it.
Series two explores what happened to the other half, and the criminal fortune it created. As the police investigation continues, it becomes a tense, high-stakes journey into international money laundering and organised crime, the police embark on a series of dramatic manhunts as they desperately try to solve the longest and most expensive investigation in the history of the Metropolitan Police.
Returning cast members include Hugh Bonneville as Brian Boyce, Charlotte Spencer as Nicki Jennings, Emun Elliott as Tony Brightwell, Tom Cullen as John Palmer, Stefanie Martini as Marnie Palmer and Sam Spruell as Charlie Miller as the investigation around what happened to the gold continues to unfold.
 6 EPISODES  CONTINUES WEEKLY
 STREAM ON BBC IPLAYER  ALL EPISODES AVAILABLE
3
 RETURNING REALITY TV
LOVE ISLAND
Monday 9th to Friday 13th June at 9pm on ITV2

Maya Jama is back to preside over all of the in Villa action as the class of 2025 get set for a summer full of twists and turns in a brand new series of Love Island.
From bombshell arrivals to surprise dumpings, Islanders in sun-drenched Mallorca must truly expect the unexpected as this series promises more twists then ever before. And with a series promising more twists than ever before as Love Island turns 10, who will couple up and walk away with that £50k prize?
CONTINUES NIGHTLY
 STREAM ON ITVX
4
 BRAND NEW DOCUMENTARY
JAMIE'S DYSLEXIA
RESOLUTION
Monday 9th June at 9pm on Channel 4

Jamie Oliver is no stranger to campaigning, but in his new Channel 4 documentary, Jamie's Dyslexia Resolution, this time it's more personal than ever. As one the UK's most well-known figures who has dyslexia, Jamie delves into the challenges and issues that are still faced by children with dyslexia across Britain.
Around 10 to 15% of the population are thought to have dyslexia and about 25% are neurodiverse, which means that a quarter of every class is struggling through an education system that wasn't designed for them.
As science allows us to know so much more about the different ways we learn, Jamie asks why should we expect everyone to fit the same Victorian model of education and assessment and takes the fight to the government's door. As Jamie sets out on his campaign, he speaks to teachers, charities, parents and children who want and need a government intervention.
Out of 100 kids, at least 10 to 15 have dyslexia but only two are diagnosed at school, meaning at least 80% go through the whole of their schooling undiagnosed. Early identification can change lives as without it, kids are more likely to struggle with confidence, self-esteem and anxiety that can stay with them for life.
As a parent of five kids, Jamie knows that teachers do a brilliant job and that they're not the ones to blame, the system is. Despite a quarter of their classes being neurodiverse, a typical three-year training course for new teachers offers just half a day dedicated to children with learning differences, and teachers who are already in the role have little to equip them unless schools pay for it themselves.
With rising levels of awareness of Special Educational Needs and budgets that are being cut, our schools and teachers need help to support all their students equally, for a chance to level the playing field. Jamie asks his social media followers to help take the campaign to the government and is inundated with heartbreaking stories from kids, parents, adults and teachers who've all been let down and are desperate to do more.
Things need to change, and fast, as Jamie takes his two key asks to Bridget Phillipson, the Secretary of State for Education.
 STREAM ON CHANNEL 4Â
5
 RETURNING COMEDY
NOT GOING OUT
Friday 13th June at 9pm on BBC One

It's the longest running UK sitcom currently on air, and as Not Going Out returns for its fourteenth series, it'll see the story of wise-cracking Lee and long-suffering wife Lucy enter a new chapter.
In 2006, the show introduced us to Lee, a juvenile and lazy slacker drifting from one job to another, a man unburdened by ambition or drive, living off the good graces of his Californian landlady.
That was before Lee’s best friend’s sister Lucy, played by Sally Bretton, bought the flat he lived in, setting in motion a will-they-won’t-they chain of events that led to the unlikely couple marrying in a highly emotional series seven finale and Lucy having a baby shortly after.
Next in Lee and Lucy’s lives, series eight jumped forward eight years into their marriage and into the midst of a chaotic family life with three children.
Series 14 now rolls the story on several years again, with the couple moving away from their suburban ‘empty nest’ and finding plenty of time to focus on each other… what could possibly go wrong? Spoiler: quite a lot!
As the show heads into episode 101 and beyond, House Move sees Lee and Lucy decide to move house and view the home of their dreams. But when Lee asks to use the loo, it causes unwanted tension with the vendor.