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Trapped.
Who killed Finnur? ... Trapped. Photograph: Lilja Jonsdottir/BBC/RVK Studios/Lilja Jonsdottir
Who killed Finnur? ... Trapped. Photograph: Lilja Jonsdottir/BBC/RVK Studios/Lilja Jonsdottir

Saturday's best TV: Trapped; The Jonathan Ross Show

This article is more than 5 years old

The Icelandic saga twists ever closer to the killer, as Ross returns for a new chatshow run, joined by Samuel L Jackson, Jennifer Hudson and Bryan Adams

All Together Now
7.30pm, BBC One

One of the more bizarre vocal contests of recent times (although who remembers Let It Shine with Gary Barlow?), the only programme on TV with 100 judges, a former Spice Girl (Geri) and which runs the gamut from Winehouse to Rudimental returns. ATN remains a head-scratching proposition, which effectively boils down to one big, lawless karaoke session-meets-reverse musical chairs. But if you like your TV full of chopping, changing and, er, an Adele tribute singing Led Zeppelin, you could do worse. Hannah J Davies

Child Genius: The Final
7pm, Channel 4

After five days of tough competition only five unfeasibly bright children remain, each one ready to be tested on their chosen specialist subject. Mind-boggling topics including epidemiology, eukaryotic cell biology, cryptoanalysis, the periodic table and the physics of black holes. Mike Bradley

Trapped
9pm, BBC Four

It’s funeral time as writer Clive Bradley’s Icelandic saga takes a yet more sombre turn. The police still have no idea who killed Finnur or why Gisli took the action he did. Andri and Hinrika don’t have to look far for signs of family tension in the chapel, as Halla makes a grand entrance and Vikingur finally has his say. MB

The Jonathan Ross Show
9.25pm, ITV

Ross launches a new run of his chatshow, joined by a sofa full of famous faces, including Captain Marvel co-stars Brie Larson and Samuel L Jackson alongside The Voice UK coaches Jennifer Hudson and Will.i.am, plus comedian and Strictly black sheep Seann Walsh. Music is from Bryan Adams. MB

Body Cam
11pm, Quest Red

The use of bodycams is intended to provide a neutral record of contested encounters between cops and civilians. This lurid new US series takes disorientating raw footage and edits it along with actual 911 calls to create intense accounts of volatile incidents, including a terrifying armed standoff in Ohio. Graeme Virtue

Mayans MC
11.45pm, BBC Two

This decent series concludes with a double bill, which leaves enough open for an already commissioned second run. In the penultimate episode, a snake in the grass motif recurs as Potter makes a deal with EZ and Angel that has murderous consequences, creating a rift between the brothers. David Stubbs

Film choice

A real knockout ... Michael B Jordan as Adonis Johnson and Sylvester Stallone as Rocky Balboa in Creed. Photograph: Barry Wetcher/Warner Bros

Creed 10.40pm, ITV
Having fought his final bout, Sylvester Stallone’s battered hero begins a new career as trainer of Apollo Creed’s son, Adonis Johnson (Michael B Jordan). Black Panther director Ryan Coogler works a real knockout boxing movie out of Adonis’s title fight against Liverpool’s “Pretty” Ricky Conlan (Tony Bellew). Paul Howlett

Live sport

Premier League Football: Tottenham Hotspur v Arsenal. 11.45am, BT Sport 1. The last of Wembley’s north London derby days, theoretically.

ODI Cricket: West Indies v England. 2.30pm, Sky Sports Cricket. Final game of the series.

Women’s International Football: USA v England. 9.45pm, BBC Two. Live from Nashville, Tennessee.

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