Missed Programs On Itv This Morning
Good Morning Britain (ITV 1984–1993, 2014–present) The Goodies (BBC Two 1970–1980, ITV 1981–1982) The Good Karma Hospital (2017–present) Grimefighters (2009.
However, the controversial host was noticeably absent from the Good Morning Britain studio today – with Charlotte Hawkins taking his place.
Joking about the former newspaper editor's absence, Susanna said: 'So you may be forgiven for thinking that Piers has been moved out of the chair by Charlotte..'
Alison Hammond Itv This Morning
Referring to her annoyance that Piers kept interrupting her during Monday's show, Charlotte, 43, laughed: 'I've taken action, I’ve locked him in the broom cupboard!'
Clarifying, Susanna, 47, added: 'But of course because Piers is taking a break this morning.. he has a golf tournament.'
ITV
NEW LOOK: Charlotte and Susanna hosted the show without PiersPiers Morgan's most controversial moments
“Niall Horan finally meeting his hero”
Piers MorganHowever, little was known about the star's sporting trip away until now.
Taking to Twitter, the Kim Kardashian-hating columnist shared a snap with none other than One Direction legend Niall Horan.
Itv Player
Posing on the golf course at Wentworth in Surrey, Piers beamed away as he and Niall tried out their skills ahead of the BMW PGA Championship.
Bbc Television Programmes
SPORTING FAN: Piers Morgan is a big follower of golfCaptioning the shot, Piers joked: 'Niall Horan finally meeting his hero.. and wondering how he could ever get legs as skinny as mine.'
Within minutes, eagle-eyed Directioners picked up on the pic and flooded it with comments.
'So that's where you were this morning,' one GMB viewer replied.
A Niall fan wrote: 'He probably doesn't even know who you are to be fair.'
Suzuka sub indo 480p. 'So hard to bite my tongue with the s**t you talk,' a third added.
Another joked: 'Flip me, you kept that one quiet.. he's absolutely gorgeous, how long have you been an item?'
Sometimes there's just too much great telly to watch in one week. Hundreds of channels, thousands of shows, you're bound to miss out on some brilliant telly.
If you need a hand finding some gems that you missed out on, here are five brilliant shows, still available on BBC iPlayer, that you can catch up on right now.
1. Line of Duty
If you haven't caught up with Line of Duty yet, firstly - why not? Secondly - get on iPlayer pronto. The full series is still available to view, so don't dally and make sure you don't miss out on the finest British drama of 2014 so far.
With a career best performance from Keeley Hawes and a script from Jed Mercurio that flips and twists more than a Premier League footballer in the penalty area, this truly lives up to the billing of 'must watch TV'.
2. Prostitution: What's The Harm
She's got a Louis Theroux-style approach to her docs - it's wide-eyed fascination and heartfelt interest in her subjects without judgement or prejudice - and it would be a shame if her rising star was one of the many things lost in the BBC Three shake-up.
This documentary, which questioned those who buy and sell sex, had many eye-opening moments. From orgies and naked women waiting in saunas in Prague to British lads Adam and Declan who don't find it remotely humiliating that they have to splash the cash to get a girl 'that looks like she's from Nuts magazine'.
And that's before we even mention webcam girl and prostitute Charlotte and her regular online punter who enjoys inserting golf balls where the sun doesn't shine. Eye-opening TV? Eye-watering more like.
3. Life and Death Row
Reason No.2 to Save BBC Three. Would this documentary from Ben Anthony have been made without the BBC's 'yoof channel'. If the answer is no, we need to be fighting a hell of a lot harder to keep it.
Telling the stories of two young inmates on death row, the documentary was powerful, complex, provocative and unflinching. With access to the young men, just days before they were set to get the death penalty, and some of the victims and victims' families, it presented both sides of the capital punishment argument.
It was haunting, but compelling television and there are further episodes to come.
4. Stewart Lee's Comedy Vehicle
We should never take a comedian like Stewart Lee for granted. Sneaked out at 10pm on Saturdays with little fanfare, his abrasive and confrontational style is bound to rub plenty of people up the wrong way, but he remains an original, razor sharp and willing to snarl at audiences' expectations and boundaries.
In his latest series, perhaps more than ever before, Lee has reveled in twisting and bending jokes back in on themselves. It's a masterclass in stand-up, which isn't really stand-up and it's the perfect antidote to endless Live from the Apollo repeats on Dave.
5. Arena: Whatever Happened to Spitting Image?
These days political satire on TV is reduced to snarky comments on panel shows and David Mitchell bumbling pleasantly on 10 O'Clock Live. But it wasn't always so.
Back in the '80s and early '90s, millions used to tune in to watch politicians of all colours being savaged by latex puppets. This Arena documentary was a timely reminder of the show's success and how badly we miss it today.
Many claim that the modern politician is too slick, bland and PR-savvy for mickey-taking. But isn't it just the case that all politicians just seem that way nowadays because there isn't a show like Spitting Image to rip them to shreds every week?