I’m a Celebrity, day 2 review: Nigel Farage becomes the ‘anus event’
After Farage snacked on crocodile bum, camel teat and sheep, as well as goat and chicken feet, it's hard to imagine things could get worse
	After Farage snacked on crocodile bum, camel teat and sheep, as well as goat and chicken feet, it's hard to imagine things could get worse
	Jonathan Dimbleby talked to his brother Nicholas about living with the disease and their thoughts on life after death
	It's lucrative and a global brand, but the show's demise is no surprise in today's climate
	As Ian McKellen announces he is playing the debauched knight, we look at the character Michael Gambon described as a 'duplicitous b-----d'
	The PR machine has made our stars seem bland or inauthentic. So Louis Theroux's encounter with The Libertines star was a welcome exception
	
	
	
	
	
	
	Rock's untold stories, from band-splitting feuds to the greatest performances of all time
	
	
	
	
	
	Your complete guide to the week’s television, films and sport, across terrestrial and digital platforms
A regular series telling the stories behind film and TV's greatest hits – and most fascinating flops
Juno Temple and Mad Men's Jon Hamm whip out an equal helping of jokes and violence, but it's Jennifer Jason Leigh who steals the show
	Ridley Scott’s new film is the latest example of British obsession with the ‘Corsican ruffian’ – but what explains our interest?
	The Telegraph's Poetry Book of the Month choices transport readers from the Trojan War to post-apocalyptic Scotland
	Orbital, a slim, soulful and haunting novella by Samantha Harvey, drifts through a single day in the life of six ISS astronauts
	A slate of superb 20th-century histories were matched by a couple of magnificent, long-anticipated conclusions to medieval series
	When filmmaker Mary Haverstick researched pilot Jerrie Cobb, she had no idea she was about to be investigating the Kennedy assassination...
	Almost all of the movement’s protagonists are represented in this neat, clear argument for reconsidering what we deem a ‘finished’ work
	As a new National Gallery exhibition shows, a work of art left in limbo when its creator dies isn’t always a failure
	Architect Miles Pennington took part in the Tokyo Toilet Project scheme which has modernised the city’s outdated public conveniences
	This absorbing, museum-quality new survey at the Saatchi Gallery reveals just how grand, rich and ususual the pair's artistic vision is
	
	
	
	
	
	Mongol Khan is now running at the London Coliseum, having been cancelled in China at the eleventh hour
	The National Theatre's big Christmas production is charmingly exuberant - but oddly light on drama
	Ridley Scott’s new film is the latest example of British obsession with the ‘Corsican ruffian’ – but what explains our interest?
	Jonathan Dimbleby talked to his brother Nicholas about living with the disease and their thoughts on life after death
	Juno Temple and Mad Men's Jon Hamm whip out an equal helping of jokes and violence, but it's Jennifer Jason Leigh who steals the show
	In a drama-packed, chaotic third instalment, the focus went off Nigel Farage – to his apparent disgruntlement
	Still fabulous at 90, Dame Joan met Theroux at her home in St Tropez for a chat that covered Hollywood, sexual assault and getting older
	Who will prove the most convincing, Michael Sheen or Rufus Sewell, Ruth Wilson or Gillian Anderson? And which drama has the best scoop?