Tonight's TV features Gary Stevenson advocating for wealth tax and The Office celebrates 25 years
Tonight's TV features Gary Stevenson presenting arguments for a wealth tax targeting the super-rich in a new documentary.

A documentary airing this evening follows Gary Stevenson, a former finance professional turned economics educator, as he advocates for a 2% annual wealth tax on assets exceeding £10 million. Separately, The Office airs a special retrospective marking 25 years since the British sitcom first aired. The programmes reflect two distinct angles capturing viewer interest: wealth inequality and comedy nostalgia.
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Stevenson's Wealth Tax Proposal
Gary Stevenson, who built a YouTube following through his Gary's Economics channel, positions himself as a working-class success story turned advocate for economic reform. The 39-year-old amassed wealth as a finance professional in his mid-20s before shifting focus to public education on economics and wealth gaps. His documentary presents an argument that without intervention, billionaires will increasingly consolidate ownership of assets and resources. The proposal for a 2% annual tax on wealth above £10 million challenges conventional views held by wealthy interviewees, one of whom characterises the idea as "absolute populist claptrap." This framing reflects the central tension Stevenson explores: whether current economic structures serve ordinary people or concentrate power among the ultra-wealthy.
The Office's Quarter-Century Milestone
At 10pm on BBC Two, The Office airs a special programme in which Martin Freeman and Mackenzie Crook, stars of the gamechanging sitcom, look back at its creation and cultural impact. The retrospective explores how the show cast then-unknowns Freeman and Crook, who auditioned for each other's roles before landing their iconic positions as Tim Canterbury and Gareth Keenan. The special addresses production anecdotes, including how cast members struggled to maintain composure during takes—a challenge so severe it threatened to halt filming. Comparisons between the British original and the American remake also feature in the retrospective, allowing both men to assess how their work shaped international television comedy.
Additional Evening Programming
Beyond these two centrepiece programmes, tonight's schedule includes documentary coverage of critical care teams across the Thames Valley, a firefighting drama featuring Station 42 confronting a wildfire, and Emily Blunt's film debut in Paweł Pawlikowski's 2004 drama My Summer of Love. A segment examining a white Lotus car allegedly from the 1977 James Bond film The Spy Who Loved Me also appears in the schedule, exploring whether the vehicle represents one of eight special models built for the production.
What is Gary Stevenson's proposed wealth tax?+
How did Martin Freeman and Mackenzie Crook get cast in The Office?+
What is My Summer of Love about?+
Who is Gary Stevenson and what is his background?+
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