Pick the right talent and the right topic and a show that is nothing more than people telling stories to the camera can be very entertaining. That's the case with The Swiping Game, which sees young people talking about the world of dating while sitting on their beds. This episode focuses on those who are still living with their parents and how that impacts on their dating (hint - it impacts a lot). The people being interviewed are engaging and entertaining; you feel like you're in the room talking to them rather than watching on TV. It's a short show - it clocks in at just a tick over 20 minutes - which is actually quite a clever move. The result is that it leaves you wanting more, keen to tune into the next episode. I'm old enough to remember a time when movie and TV studios actually created new product. They took a punt on creators, who came up with fresh ideas and bankrolled a TV series or movie. Sure, it wasn't guaranteed to succeed every time; some creations were awful. These days, so many take the easy way out and remake an old favourite, apparently using the logic "well, if it was a hit before, maybe it will be a hit again". This is one of those shows. The original Quantum Leap - where Dr Sam Beckett involuntarily jumped through time and ended up in other people's bodies - ran from 1989 to 1993. This reboot sees a team of scientists trying to work out the mystery of Dr Beckett's machine and what happened to him. For reasons that are unclear - but suggesting he is a moron - Dr Ben Song jumps into the machine and guess what happens. Yeah, he gets lost in time too. If you want to spoil it all and Google who won the top prize, you can absolutely do that. This is the last in a four-episode series that looks at all the nominated houses - for the 2021 competition. So an online search will clearly tell you who won. I'm not one to give away the ending of a show but I will say you can rest easy. The home shown in the photo above does not win. And this is a very good thing - that home looks like a place where gnomes live. Apparently it's an oast house, which was used for drying hops during the beer-brewing process. Seems these odd-looking places are all over Kent. Still, that doesn't mean people should go around living in them. Especially when the upstairs bedrooms are tiny and round - good luck hanging a picture on those walls. Not to mention trying to dust the tops of those conical ceilings. To be honest, it's not the only ugly house in this episode; they all are. And they all look immaculate, as if no-one ever lives there. How the family with three kids keeps their grubby fingers off all that internal glass is a mystery to me. I couldn't live in any of these places - no matter how excited host Kevin McCloud gets about them. No idea how they got into the finals for the house of the year