COLD FEET, STV, 9pm

ADAM (James Nesbitt) kicks off this second episode in typical cheeky chappie fashion. Standing at the altar with his beautiful bride who’s waiting for him to say “I do”, he starts to panic.

He sorts out his worries in the toilets, telling his pals after the ceremony that he can’t go and live in Singapore with his new wife like he told her he would. He can’t leave his son at such a difficult age. “When would be the best time to break it to her?” he asks.

“Er, before you got married?” is the reply.

So while Adam panics and frets as he goes through “the five stages of grief – and all before take off”, poor old Pete is the opposite.

He’s sunken in a terrible depression, with no money and no hope. Jenny is similarly fed-up with her lot, and tries to recapture the spark by suggesting a bit of bedroom role play, but poor Pete has no appetite for anything.


BRITISH SITCOM: 60 YEARS OF LAUGHING AT OURSELVES, BBC4, 9pm

EVEN the most ferocious Scottish nationalist would have to admit Britain is quite brilliant when it comes to sitcoms, and this documentary celebrates the best of the past sixty years.

The show starts back in the black and white 1950s, dishing up some of Hancock’s Half Hour, and then it takes us forward, claiming that as sitcoms evolved they tried to reflect the social and cultural changes in society. So we can grasp a humorous social history of Britain by watching its sitcoms.

Steptoe and Son was sitcom’s first working class family, and then shows such as Bread and Only Fools and Horses carried that onwards. The Likely Lads was the first to be set in the north of England and The Liver Birds the first with female lead characters.

But if the changing face of Britain isn’t your thing, you can simply enjoy the talking heads here, who include comedy greats such as Steve Coogan, Richard Curtis and Graham Linehan.