A documentary celebrating Carrie Fisher and Debbie Reynolds makes for essential viewing, while the team behind Keepin It 1600 launch a new politics podcast to take on Trump
Bright Lights
Affecting in its own right, this HBO film looking at the relationship between Carrie Fisher and her mother Debbie Reynolds was lent an almost unbearable poignancy by the pairs deaths within a day of each other just before Christmas. If that makes Bright Lights seem glum, it really isnt: for the most part, this documentary acts as a celebration of a delightfully eccentric mother-daughter bond. Its also at times, extremely funny, with Fisher responsible for some great one-liners: If you die when youre fat, are you a fat ghost, or do they go back to a more flattering time? she asks, mock-guilelessly at one point. Essential viewing.
Available now
Annie Mac: Who Killed The Night
The recent reopening of Fabric, while welcome, obscured a troubling truth about the rapid atrophying of nightlife in the UK, with almost half of the countrys clubs having closed over the past decade. In this BBC3 doc, DJ and Radio 1 host Annie Mac looks at the various factors contributing to clubbings demise, from property development to punitive policing. Can anything be done to arrest this demise?
Available from Wednesday 18 Jan
Reggie Yates: Hidden Australia