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Radio Times Magazine
4-10 March 2023
NEW
George Michael features on this week’s Radio Times cover + 6
pages an article about him with pictures.
Ahead of a new documentary about how the singer was outed,
his ex-partner Kenny Goss and cousin Andros Georgiou reveal the truth behind a
scandal that shocked the world.
By Laura RutkowskiPublished: Tuesday, 28th February 2023 at
12:22 pm
Much has changed since 1998, not least the entertainment
industry’s approach to heart-throbs who happen to be uninterested in the
opposite sex. There has been a huge shake-up in such attitudes since, but
arguably one man did more to shift the tectonic plates than anyone else.
George Michael was a shy lad from north London whose genius
for pop music and boy-next-door good looks made him a pin-up in the '80s and
'90s. He also happened to be gay. Not that he talked about his sexuality, until
one day in April 1998 when he effectively outed himself in Beverly Hills.
It’s hard now to fathom the furore that followed, but it was
a tabloid scandal that rocked the world and led to Michael becoming not just a
pop icon but also an agent of social change.
This week, Channel 4 is showing George Michael: Outed, a
two-part documentary to mark the quarter-century since the story broke, and in
the latest issue of Radio Times magazine, Michael’s partner at the time, Kenny
Goss, and his cousin Andros Georgiou speak about their memories of him, what
really happened and how the man they loved emerged so strongly from it.
Also in this week’s Radio Times:
Feargal Sharkey on why he’s taken up the campaign to clean
up British rivers and accuses water companies of putting profits ahead of their
responsibilities.
Sophie Rundle says she still feels the need to apologise for
her death in Happy Valley, and reveals what she stole from the set of Peaky
Blinders – and what she wasn’t allowed to take.
Bible John podcast creator Audrey Gillan says murderous men
in TV dramas are romanticised, while women are often an afterthought, and we
need to change the narrative.
Mark Lawson on the changing face of British television, and
the BBC’s push to become a streaming service to ensure its long-term future.
Speaking on The Radio Times Podcast this week, Breaking Bad
star Bryan Cranston talks about his life-changing role and what it's like to be
broke. You can listen to the full episode below.
+
many more
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