A Wednesday that serves up one of the most impressive 9pm line-ups of the winter. ITV1 launches The Stolen Girl, a gripping new four-part drama starring Denise Gough and Holliday Grainger about a mother whose daughter vanishes after an innocent sleepover — the full series is already on ITVX for those who cannot resist. Over on BBC Two, LS Lowry: The Unheard Tapes is a remarkable documentary built around hours of recently discovered interviews with the artist, with the extraordinary Ian McKellen lip-syncing the conversations. MasterChef: The Professionals moves to 9pm on BBC One tonight with 2022 champion Nikita Pathakji back to set challenges. On Sky Arts, Steve Coogan is brilliant in National Theatre Live: Dr Strangelove, adapted by Armando Iannucci. Then at 10pm, The Curfew reaches its series finale on Channel 5 and we finally find out who killed Helen. And there is still more — We Might Regret This returns on BBC Two at 10pm, Celebrity Lingo launches a new run on ITV1 at 7:30pm, and Landscape Artist of the Year tackles the Ouse Valley Viaduct on Sky Arts. Something for absolutely everyone, and rather a lot for those of us who insist on watching everything at once.
Quick Picks: Tonight’s Best
- The Stolen Girl — ITV1, 9pm — NEW SERIES: Denise Gough and Holliday Grainger in a taut four-part drama
- LS Lowry: The Unheard Tapes — BBC Two, 9pm — Remarkable documentary with Ian McKellen
- The Curfew — Channel 5, 10pm — SERIES FINALE: the killer is finally revealed
- National Theatre Live: Dr Strangelove — Sky Arts, 9pm — Steve Coogan is brilliant in four roles
- MasterChef: The Professionals — BBC One, 9pm — 2022 champion Nikita Pathakji returns
- We Might Regret This — BBC Two, 10pm — The joyously ribald comedy is back
- Celebrity Lingo — ITV1, 7:30pm — New run with Rachel Riley and Lesley Joseph
- Landscape Artist of the Year — Sky Arts, 8pm — The Ouse Valley Viaduct challenge
Also on Today
Celebrity Lingo — ITV1, 7:30pm (New Run)
Adil Ray hosts a new run of the word-association game show, and the opening episode has assembled a properly entertaining line-up of celebrity contestants. Rachel Riley brings her formidable numbers brain, Richie Anderson provides the energy, Lesley Joseph is a guaranteed joy, and Claire Sweeney rounds out a foursome that should make for a lively half hour. Celebrity Lingo has quietly become one of ITV1’s most reliable early-evening performers — it is simple, pacy and genuinely fun to play along with from the sofa. Catch up on ITVX.
Great British Menu — BBC Two, 7pm
The north-west chefs’ week continues with dishes inspired by classic British movies. By Wednesday, the competition has typically found its rhythm — the early-week nerves have settled, the ambitious ideas are either translating into brilliant food or collapsing under their own weight, and a clear picture of who is cooking at the top of their ability is starting to emerge. Andi Oliver hosts with warmth and wit, and Lisa Goodwin-Allen serves as guest judge for the week. The full run of episodes is available on BBC iPlayer. Watching live on a Wednesday evening, dinner on your lap, remains the proper way to enjoy Great British Menu.
Welsh Open Snooker
Coverage throughout the day from the ICC Wales in Newport. BBC Two Wales and BBC red button carry the action from 10am, TNT Sports 1 picks up from 1pm, and TNT Sports 4 has the evening session from 7pm. The Welsh Open is one of those mid-season ranking events that consistently produces excellent snooker — the prize money attracts the top players, but the Newport venue retains a slightly more intimate atmosphere than the Crucible or the Masters.
Early Evening (7:30pm — 8:30pm)
EastEnders — BBC One, 7:30pm
The latest from Albert Square. The Walford drama rolls on with its usual blend of confrontation, revelation and somebody storming out of a room at a dramatically convenient moment. Available on BBC iPlayer if you prefer to watch on your own schedule.
The Repair Shop — BBC One, 8pm
Jay Blades and his team of expert craftspeople tackle a wonderfully varied batch of repairs tonight. The headline item is a Chinese lion costume used to train young performers in traditional dance that has seen considerably better days — the kind of restoration that requires both technical skill and genuine cultural sensitivity. Alongside that, the team works on sculpture maquettes by artist Leonard McComb that were badly chipped when accidentally dropped, a damaged engagement ring that got stuck on someone’s finger, and a set of old woodworm-riddled beer pumps that bring a pint of history with them.
The Repair Shop continues to be one of the most quietly satisfying programmes on television. The combination of skilled craftsmanship, personal stories and Jay Blades’s warmth makes it the ideal 8pm watch — comforting without being bland, moving without being manipulative. Catch up via BBC iPlayer.
Emmerdale — ITV1, 8pm
The Dales drama continues. Nobody in the village seems capable of going a full week without a crisis of some description, which makes for reliably eventful viewing. Catch up on ITVX.
Alice Roberts: Our Hospital through Time — Channel 5, 8pm
Anyone who has had a bladder stone should steer clear of this one. Dr Alice Roberts explores the history of Barts Hospital in London, and tonight’s episode is not for the squeamish. The centrepiece is a re-creation of bladder stone surgery as it was performed in the 1600s — thick metal tubes forced through delicate regions, a procedure that Samuel Pepys endured, losing stones the size of avocados. Many patients died. The contrast between historical horror and modern precision is driven home when Roberts tries a contemporary surgical robot, dissecting a red pepper to pick off individual seeds with extraordinary accuracy.
Roberts brings her customary enthusiasm and rigour to what is essentially a history of medicine told through one hospital’s remarkable story. The Barts setting is inspired — it is one of the oldest hospitals in Britain, and its walls contain centuries of medical progress. Catch up via My5.
Landscape Artist of the Year — Sky Arts, 8pm
A cracking episode tonight as the remaining artists must tackle one of Britain’s most imposing structures: the Ouse Valley Viaduct. Thirty-seven arches. Eleven million bricks. The challenge, as judge Tai Shan Schierenberg explains, is not merely to depict the thing but to interpret it — how do you paint a monolith in an artistic rather than architectural way? That is the question that separates the competent from the inspired.
Six heat winners, the strongest runner-up and a wildcard are all competing, and a scorching hot day causes its own problems — crayons melt, the sun’s shifting position creates difficulties with light and shadow, and the artists must adapt on the fly. The resulting eight artworks are, according to the judge, astounding in their difference, which is precisely what you want from a painting competition. Catch up via Now.
Coronation Street — ITV1, 8:30pm
The Weatherfield drama continues on the cobbles. Catch up via ITVX.
Prime Time (9pm)
The Stolen Girl — ITV1, 9pm (New Series) ⭐
The full series is available on ITVX for those who want to binge, but this is the kind of drama that benefits from being savoured.
At the school gates, Elisa (Denise Gough) takes up Rebecca’s (Holliday Grainger) offer for their daughters to have a sleepover. A perfectly ordinary arrangement between two mothers. But the next day, when Elisa goes to pick up her daughter, she discovers the house is empty. Rebecca and her daughter have vanished. Just gone. No note, no message, no trace.
What follows is a missing-persons drama that very quickly reveals itself to be something far more unsettling. Elisa and her husband Fred (Jim Sturgess, doing an impressive impersonation of Richard Armitage) go to the police, but the investigation begins to surface secrets and uncomfortable truths that look set to be painfully unearthed. These are people with carefully constructed lives, and the disappearance threatens to pull every construction apart.
Meanwhile, eager local journalist Selma (Ambika Mod) is keen to land a big scoop from the story — but is her hunch about what really happened correct? The cast is outstanding. Gough brings a raw, escalating desperation to Elisa that makes every scene feel urgent. Grainger, in the few scenes before her disappearance, is chillingly convincing as the friendly, approachable Rebecca — the kind of mother you would trust with your child without a second thought, which of course is precisely the point. Sturgess is solid as Fred, and Mod — fresh from her star-making turn in One Day — brings sharp, ambitious energy to Selma.
Four episodes, all on ITVX now. A strong ITV drama that deserves your attention. Frances Taylor previews this in the magazine.
LS Lowry: The Unheard Tapes — BBC Two, 9pm ⭐
A recently unearthed recording can be a mixed blessing for the documentary-maker — the excitement of discovery sometimes obscures its actual merit. But the hours of interviews with artist LS Lowry, recorded by 27-year-old Angela Barrett, a university administrator who simply asked Lowry for a chat in 1972, are a genuine revelation.
This carefully solitary, private and self-effacing man discusses his loveless upbringing and the compulsive elements behind his work depicting life in the industrial north-west. He reflects on politics, love and legacy during changing times, and speaks movingly about the benefits of being a perennial outsider — the position from which he could observe the world without being drawn into its chaos.
A warm rapport develops between Lowry and Barrett after a tentative beginning, both audibly and visibly. The documentary handles this beautifully, allowing the relationship to unfold with the kind of patience that most modern television has forgotten. And the masterstroke: an impeccable Ian McKellen and Annabel Smith lip-sync the conversations, giving physical form to voices that might otherwise feel disembodied. McKellen brings Lowry to life with the subtlety and intelligence you would expect from an actor of his calibre — every gesture, every pause, every flicker of expression feels exactly right.
At 10pm on BBC Four, there is a companion piece: Lowry: a Simple Man, a ballet from 1987 celebrating the artist’s life and work, introduced by Albert Finney and danced by Moira Shearer and Christopher Gable. Together, the two programmes make for a magnificent Lowry evening. Catch up on BBC iPlayer.
MasterChef: The Professionals — BBC One, 9pm
Note the later time tonight — MasterChef has moved from its usual 8pm slot to 9pm, with The Repair Shop filling the earlier hour. Series 18 continues as 2022 champion Nikita Pathakji returns to set more tricky challenges for this batch of four contestants. The decision to bring in former MasterChef champions to set the skills tests continues to be one of the best tweaks to the format in years, opening the challenges up to different cuisines and styles.
Marcus Wareing, Monica Galetti and Matt Tebbutt judge. The triumvirate whose contrasting styles have given the current series a genuine dynamic remain in fine form — Wareing’s exacting standards, Galetti’s pastry precision and Tebbutt’s growing authority create a judging panel that is both entertaining and genuinely informative. Catch up on BBC iPlayer.
National Theatre Live: Dr Strangelove — Sky Arts, 9pm
Steve Coogan takes on Peter Sellers’s mantle in this acclaimed theatrical version of Stanley Kubrick’s ageless Cold War satire, and the result is nothing short of brilliant. Sellers famously played three roles in the original film. Coogan adds a fourth — the pilot who begins World War III — to go with the eponymous German scientist, the level-headed US President and the hapless pacifist RAF captain. Four roles. All different. All played with the kind of precision and comic invention that reminds you Coogan is one of the most gifted performers this country has produced.
Adapted by Armando Iannucci and Olivier-winner Sean Foley, the theatrical version retains the film’s black comedy while adding its own theatrical energy. It is a bracing and terrifyingly timely portrayal of overpromoted would-be strongmen — and they are all, pointedly, men — conducting heedless brinkmanship, as a council of war is hastily assembled following the initiation of nuclear protocols. The parallels with the current geopolitical moment barely need spelling out.
Iannucci’s fingerprints are all over the script, and his gift for finding the absurdity in political catastrophe is perfectly suited to Kubrick’s material. If you loved The Thick of It, if you loved Veep, this is the same sensibility applied to the prospect of nuclear annihilation. It should not be funny. It is devastatingly funny. Gabriel Tate writes. Catch up via Now.
NCIS: Sydney — US&Alibi, 9pm (New Series) ⭐
The NCIS franchise is one that welcomes you with a smile and the reassurance that we are here for a good time. This latest spin-off, about a joint task force of American agents and Australian police officers, was first shown on Paramount+ and stays true to form in that it wafts by like a welcome harbour breeze.
Set in and around Sydney, the show has the sun-drenched visual appeal you would expect and the procedural competence the franchise demands. The cases are solid, the banter is warm, and the chemistry between the American and Australian officers generates a gentle culture-clash comedy that never becomes forced. The only aspect that might send you to Doctor Google is the continual use of acronyms — not just NCIS, but the AFP, the DOD, NAVSEA, the JOC, and a threat to the AUKUS partnership. Catch up via Now.
Matlock — Sky Witness, 9pm
Matlock fans may have read about an abrupt change to the line-up mid-way through filming, with actor David Del Rio fired following allegations of sexual assault. His character Billy Martinez is no longer on screen, the explanation for his absence given over the phone rather than in the flesh — and even then, it is related by a third person. A rather ignominious and no doubt hastily written exit.
But despite that disruption, this is a strongly plotted episode. Its focus is a health crisis for Senior that puts Olympia at a moral crossroads, and the drama is handled with the kind of weight and nuance that the show has been increasingly capable of delivering. The legal procedural elements remain sharp, and the character work gives the episode genuine emotional stakes beyond the case of the week. Catch up via Now.
Our Yorkshire Pub Rescue with Jon Richardson — More4, 9pm
Jon Richardson’s pub restoration series continues in its cheerfully hands-on fashion. Tonight, the cellar is rebuilt, a range is restored, and glasses are raised to mark the work done so far — the kind of incremental progress that makes for satisfying, unpretentious television. Richardson’s dry wit keeps proceedings entertaining without overshadowing the genuine effort involved in saving a struggling pub.
Late Night (10pm)
The Curfew — Channel 5, 10pm (Last Episode)
This is it. The final episode of Channel 5’s dystopian thriller, based on Jayne Cowie’s novel After Dark, and the journey reaches its conclusion tonight.
As we hurtle towards the climax, the drama’s message about violence towards women is hammered home in the most unsubtle way. But that lack of subtlety is arguably the point. The depiction of male aggression only proves that violence can happen in the home and in daylight hours as well as on the street at night — a curfew on men obviously does not solve that. The drama has raised some genuinely interesting questions about surveillance, gender politics and the nature of safety throughout its run, even if the answers have sometimes been delivered with a heavy hand.
As to the plot itself, DI Pamela Green (Sarah Parish) does finally find out who killed teacher Helen (Alexandra Burke) and even manages to call her sidekick by the correct name. The sidekick is called Eddie, but Pamela has persisted in calling him Freddie — a running gag that somehow survived all six episodes without getting old.
Sarah Parish has been outstanding throughout the series. Her Pamela — part detective, part moral compass, part woman thoroughly out of patience with everyone around her — has been one of the most compelling performances on British television this winter. Mandip Gill and Anita Dobson have been excellent in support, and the world-building has been consistently impressive. The tagged men, the monitoring systems, the subtle power dynamics — all handled with a confidence that made the dystopia feel uncomfortably plausible.
Whether you feel the finale fully sticks the landing may depend on how much credit you give the show for asking the right questions, even when its answers are blunt. But the quality of the journey has been high enough that this deserves to be watched live. Full series on My5 if you need to catch up first.
We Might Regret This — BBC Two, 10pm (12 midnight Northern Ireland)
The full series is available on BBC iPlayer, and if you have not yet discovered this show, now is the time.
Phrases like “trailblazing” and “taboo-busting” tend to get bandied about when it comes to comedies featuring disability. This joyously ribald series focuses on the important thing: simply being funny. And it is very, very funny.
As it returns, tetraplegic artist Freya (co-creator Kyla Harris) is planning her wedding. Freya wants a relaxed affair, but reckons without her agents, who enlist her in an online content campaign with bridalwear visionary Bean (scene-stealer Sophie Thompson). Will Freya agree to be “inspiration porn”? Well, provided she uses the hashtag #wheelyinlove.
Harris is terrific in the lead — warm, sharp, unsparing and entirely unwilling to be anybody’s symbol. Sophie Thompson threatens to walk away with every scene she appears in, playing Bean with the kind of committed eccentricity that only a truly gifted comic actor can pull off. The writing is confident enough to find comedy in places that lesser shows would tiptoe around, and the result is a series that treats its characters as people first and makes everything else secondary. Michael Hogan writes. Catch up on BBC iPlayer.
Lowry: a Simple Man — BBC Four, 10pm
The companion piece to LS Lowry: The Unheard Tapes on BBC Two at 9pm. This is a ballet from 1987 celebrating the artist’s life and work, introduced by Albert Finney and danced by Moira Shearer and Christopher Gable. It is a beautiful, distinctive tribute to Lowry’s world — the matchstick figures, the industrial landscapes, the lonely observer at the edge of every crowd. If you have watched the Unheard Tapes first, this provides a wonderfully different artistic perspective on the same subject.
Sport
Football — Champions League: Real Madrid v Benfica on TNT Sports 1 at 7:30pm (kick-off 8pm). Play-off second-leg action from the Bernabeu.
Football — Championship: Stoke City v Oxford United on Sky Sports Main Event/Football at 7:30pm (kick-off 8pm).
Cricket — Men’s T20 World Cup: Super Eight match from Colombo on Sky Sports ME/Cricket at 1pm.
Snooker — Welsh Open: Coverage on BBC Two Wales/BBC red button from 10am, TNT Sports 1 from 1pm, TNT Sports 4 from 7pm. Evening session from the ICC Wales in Newport.
The Viewing Schedule
| Time | Channel | Programme |
|---|---|---|
| 10:00am | BBC Two Wales/BBC red button | Snooker: Welsh Open |
| 1:00pm | Sky Sports ME/Cricket | Cricket: Men’s T20 World Cup (Super Eight) |
| 1:00pm | TNT Sports 1 | Snooker: Welsh Open |
| 7:00pm | BBC Two | Great British Menu |
| 7:00pm | TNT Sports 4 | Snooker: Welsh Open (evening session) |
| 7:30pm | BBC One | EastEnders |
| 7:30pm | ITV1 | Celebrity Lingo (New Run) |
| 7:30pm | TNT Sports 1 | Football: Real Madrid v Benfica (k/o 8pm) |
| 7:30pm | Sky Sports ME/Football | Football: Stoke City v Oxford United (k/o 8pm) |
| 8:00pm | BBC One | The Repair Shop |
| 8:00pm | ITV1 | Emmerdale |
| 8:00pm | Channel 5 | Alice Roberts: Our Hospital through Time |
| 8:00pm | Sky Arts | Landscape Artist of the Year |
| 8:30pm | ITV1 | Coronation Street |
| 9:00pm | BBC One | MasterChef: The Professionals |
| 9:00pm | ITV1 | The Stolen Girl (NEW SERIES) |
| 9:00pm | BBC Two | LS Lowry: The Unheard Tapes |
| 9:00pm | Sky Arts | National Theatre Live: Dr Strangelove |
| 9:00pm | US&Alibi | NCIS: Sydney (NEW SERIES) |
| 9:00pm | Sky Witness | Matlock |
| 9:00pm | More4 | Our Yorkshire Pub Rescue with Jon Richardson |
| 10:00pm | Channel 5 | The Curfew (LAST EPISODE) |
| 10:00pm | BBC Two | We Might Regret This |
| 10:00pm | BBC Four | Lowry: a Simple Man |
What’s On Streaming
BBC iPlayer: MasterChef: The Professionals, The Repair Shop, LS Lowry: The Unheard Tapes, Great British Menu (full week), EastEnders, We Might Regret This (full series)
ITVX: The Stolen Girl (full series), Celebrity Lingo, Emmerdale, Coronation Street
My5: The Curfew (full series), Alice Roberts: Our Hospital through Time
Now: National Theatre Live: Dr Strangelove (Sky Arts), Landscape Artist of the Year (Sky Arts), NCIS: Sydney (US&Alibi), Matlock (Sky Witness)
Frequently Asked Questions
What time is The Stolen Girl on ITV tonight?
The Stolen Girl is on ITV1 at 9pm tonight (Wednesday 25th February 2026). This is the first episode of a new four-part drama starring Denise Gough, Holliday Grainger, Jim Sturgess and Ambika Mod. A mother’s daughter vanishes after a sleepover, and dark secrets begin to surface. The full series is available on ITVX.
What time is The Curfew finale on TV tonight?
The Curfew series finale is on Channel 5 at 10pm tonight (Wednesday 25th February 2026). This is the last episode, in which DI Pamela Green (Sarah Parish) finally discovers who killed teacher Helen (Alexandra Burke). The full series is available on My5.
What time is MasterChef The Professionals on TV tonight?
MasterChef: The Professionals is on BBC One at 9pm tonight (Wednesday 25th February 2026). Note the later time — it has moved from the usual 8pm slot to 9pm this evening, with The Repair Shop at 8pm. 2022 champion Nikita Pathakji returns to set challenges. Marcus Wareing, Monica Galetti and Matt Tebbutt judge. Catch up on BBC iPlayer.
What time is the LS Lowry documentary on BBC Two tonight?
LS Lowry: The Unheard Tapes is on BBC Two at 9pm tonight (Wednesday 25th February 2026). The documentary features recently unearthed interviews with the artist, with Ian McKellen and Annabel Smith lip-syncing the conversations with extraordinary skill. At 10pm on BBC Four, there is a companion piece: Lowry: a Simple Man, a 1987 ballet. Catch up on BBC iPlayer.
What’s the best thing to watch on TV tonight?
Our top picks for Wednesday 25th February 2026 are The Stolen Girl on ITV1 at 9pm — a gripping new four-part drama with Denise Gough and Holliday Grainger about a child’s disappearance. LS Lowry: The Unheard Tapes on BBC Two at 9pm is a remarkable documentary with Ian McKellen. The Curfew reaches its series finale on Channel 5 at 10pm. Steve Coogan is brilliant in Dr Strangelove on Sky Arts at 9pm, and We Might Regret This returns on BBC Two at 10pm with its joyously ribald comedy.
What’s on BBC One tonight?
BBC One tonight (Wednesday 25th February 2026) includes EastEnders at 7:30pm, The Repair Shop at 8pm and MasterChef: The Professionals at 9pm. Note MasterChef has moved to the later 9pm slot this evening.
Is EastEnders on TV tonight?
Yes, EastEnders is on BBC One at 7:30pm tonight (Wednesday 25th February 2026). Episodes are also available on BBC iPlayer.
What time is Celebrity Lingo on ITV tonight?
Celebrity Lingo is on ITV1 at 7:30pm tonight (Wednesday 25th February 2026). This is the start of a new run, hosted by Adil Ray. Tonight’s celebrity contestants are Rachel Riley, Richie Anderson, Lesley Joseph and Claire Sweeney. Catch up on ITVX.
Final Verdict
This is a Wednesday with genuine riches at every turn. The 9pm slot is one of the most competitive of the entire winter schedule, and the 10pm hour is not far behind.
The Stolen Girl on ITV1 at 9pm is the headline new arrival — a four-part drama that hooks you from the school gates and does not let go. Denise Gough is superb as the mother whose world collapses when her daughter vanishes after a sleepover, Holliday Grainger is chillingly convincing as the woman who disappears with her, and Jim Sturgess and Ambika Mod provide strong support. The full series is on ITVX for those who cannot wait, but there is something to be said for letting this one unfold at its own pace.
Over on BBC Two, LS Lowry: The Unheard Tapes at 9pm is the kind of documentary that makes you grateful for public service broadcasting. The recently discovered interviews with Lowry are extraordinary, and Ian McKellen’s lip-synced portrayal is impeccable. Followed at 10pm on BBC Four by Lowry: a Simple Man, a 1987 ballet that provides a beautiful companion piece. Together they make for a magnificent Lowry evening.
On Sky Arts, National Theatre Live: Dr Strangelove at 9pm gives Steve Coogan four roles and watches him nail every one of them. Adapted by Armando Iannucci and Sean Foley, it is terrifyingly timely and devastatingly funny. MasterChef: The Professionals moves to 9pm on BBC One with 2022 champion Nikita Pathakji returning to set the skills test, and the Wareing-Galetti-Tebbutt triumvirate remains in fine form.
At 10pm, The Curfew reaches its series finale on Channel 5. Sarah Parish has been outstanding throughout, and the question now is whether the reveal of Helen’s killer rewards the investment of those who have followed from the start. Also at 10pm, We Might Regret This returns on BBC Two with its joyously ribald comedy — Kyla Harris and Sophie Thompson are terrific.
Earlier in the evening, The Repair Shop on BBC One at 8pm delivers its usual quiet magic, Celebrity Lingo launches a new run on ITV1 at 7:30pm with a strong line-up, Landscape Artist of the Year on Sky Arts at 8pm tackles the magnificent Ouse Valley Viaduct, and Alice Roberts: Our Hospital through Time on Channel 5 at 8pm is fascinating if occasionally stomach-churning.
On the soaps, EastEnders is at 7:30pm, Emmerdale at 8pm and Coronation Street at 8:30pm. Sport lovers have Champions League football from the Bernabeu and Welsh Open snooker from Newport.
A properly exceptional Wednesday. The Stolen Girl is the new drama to watch, the Lowry documentary is the cultural highlight, Dr Strangelove is the theatrical event, and The Curfew finale is the appointment viewing. Enjoy it.
Related: What’s On TV Tonight Wednesday | What’s On TV Tonight Wed 18 Feb 2026 | What’s On TV Tonight Tues 24 Feb 2026 | What’s On TV Tonight Thurs 26 Feb 2026