Tuesday's TV Tips
If you’re one of those people who believes you could do a better job running your workplace than your boss, then this new series is right up your street.
It asks the question: what happens when a business is taken away from the managers and owners, and the rank-and-file staff are left to run things?
So the 58-year-old former Dragons’ Den investor Hilary Devey has persuaded bosses from companies around Britain to leave their business for three weeks and let their staff run the shop.
Each episode features a different struggling business which Devey hopes to help turn around.
This opening episode focuses on family-owned DIY store Taskers in Aintree, which is facing tough competition from market giants like John Lewis and B&Q.

The first of two observational documentaries detailing the work of British High Court Enforcement Officers, who are called in at the end of long – and often painful - legal battles to ensure that the judge’s order is met.
In the wake of the global financial recession, civil disputes involving debt and land have become more commonplace, leaving these specialist agents busier than ever, but they are often faced with the difficult task of delivering court orders to people struggling through debt, depression, unemployment and homelessness.
In the first programme, the officers evict dozens of squatters from a multi-million-pound office block in the City of London, and in Wolverhampton, an agent is assaulted while trying to reclaim a debt.
Narrated by Steven Mackintosh.
Fans of this cult fantasy drama were devastated when season eight came to an end, especially when the channel Sky Living announced it was dropping the show.
However, now that Supernatural has found a new home on E4, hopefully the end of season nine won’t feel quite so traumatic.
There’s still plenty of tension though, as Dean feels the effects of the First Blade and the Mark of Cain, while Metatron begins to reveal himself to humanity, leaving Sam and Castiel facing some shocking consequences.
Parks and Recreation star Aubrey Plaza heads the cast of this wonderful sci-fi comedy, which may appeal to fans of Doctor Who.
When a mysterious personal ad appears in their magazine, a journalist and two interns set out to find the person who placed it.
The ad states that someone willing to journey into the past is needed – could whoever wrote it have found the key to travelling in time?
One of the assistants may be about to find out when, after tracking down the scientist responsible, she volunteers to take part in the expedition.
Mark Duplass, Jake Johnson, Kristen Bell and Karan Soni are among the supporting cast.
90%
More than half-a-century after the death of one of America’s most popular, and controversial presidents, Oliver Stone’s powerhouse drama gets a welcome re-screening.
New Orleans District Attorney Jim Garrison launches his own investigation into the assassination of President John F Kennedy after becoming doubtful that gunman Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone.
As he tries to get to the truth, he begins to believe that the murder was actually part of a vast conspiracy, and begins a crusade to bring the real culprits to justice.
Kevin Costner is great as Garrison, while the all-star supporting cast includes Gary Oldman and Donald Sutherland.
The latter’s monologue is unmissable.
85%

