The Cosby Show, without doubt, was one of my favourite shows growing up. I was so hooked that when the show kicked off, I would leap to my feet and mimic Bill Cosby's dancing. It did no harm that I fancied Phylicia Rashad (who played Clair) and Lisa Bonet (who played Denise). I also thought Malcolm Jamal-Warner (Theo) was the coolest human on the planet. There was a lot to love about the show. To celebrate the 25th anniversary of the show, the cast reunited on the Today Show, to help launch a new DVD collection. The show ran from September 1984 until April 1992 and never seemed to get tired. If you click over the jump, you can watch videos of the reunion and, yes, Bill does that dance.
Related: I fancy Clair Huxtable








The sixth day of the title is a biblical reference to the day God created man, and is borrowed to name a set of laws preventing human cloning. Don't let the whiff of science fiction put you off though. This is very definitely an action movie, and an extremely well-plotted and acted one at that. While the idea of cloning is central to the story, not to mention the various plot twists, it's not critical to the enjoyment of what is essentially a detective story with a good dollop of chase thrown in.



Hands up if you've seen Coast (UKTV History, Wednesday, Midnight)? Chances are, everyone in Britain has seen Coast at least once when flicking through the channels. It's been on the Beeb (BBC2 if I remember rightly) and now, it's on all the time on UKTV History. Coast, unsurprisingly, travels around the coastline(s) of Great Britain, looking at sunken U-Boats, nature, smugglers coves and lots of moody looking rocks... if a rock can look moody. Out moodying them all however is host Neil Oliver.
Flicking through the pages of Radio Times this week you might be forgiven for thinking that sooner or later you'll come across a programme called something like "I can't believe it's not a cookery programme." No fewer than three new such shows are starting up over the next 7 days and ubiquitous cockney urchin Jamie Oliver is, of course, one of them. But worry not, Oliver's not about to browbeat you with a turkey twizzler. No, he's turned his back on all of that and is going home. Literally home, to his back garden, to grow some greens and show us all how to cook them. As you might guess, when Oliver's about there's more to it than simply chopping them up and boiling them in a bit of water.

From: TV Review: Too Poor for Posh School, Channel 4, Thursday, 11 March, 9pm