Baby Reindeer and Mr Bates to compete at TV Baftas

Baby Reindeer and Mr Bates vs the Post Office will go head to head at the Bafta TV Awards, which take place later at London's Royal Festival Hall.
The event is one of the most prestigious in the TV calendar, and will see shows broadcast in 2024 compete for awards voted for by the British Academy.
First screened by ITV in January 2024, Mr Bates vs the Post Office was one of the most impactful shows of the year and led to widespread public outcry about the wrongful convictions of hundreds of sub-postmasters.
Baby Reindeer, meanwhile, was a breakout viral hit for Netflix about an aspiring comedian and his stalker, but it also prompted a defamation claim from the woman said to have inspired it.
also prompted a defamation claim
The TV Baftas mark the final stop on the awards circuit for both shows, after wins at other events such as the Emmys, Golden Globes, SAG and National Television Awards.
Which shows have the most Bafta nominations?

Scroll down for the nominations list in full
The above tallies include nominations for the memorable moment prize, the only award voted by the public.
The numbers do not include the shows' earlier nominations and wins at the Bafta Craft Awards, which took place last month and saw Baby Reindeer's Richard Gadd take home best comedy writing, with Slow Horses and Inside No. 9 among the other winners.

The Post Office scandal is widely considered the biggest miscarriage of justice in modern British history, and saw hundreds of sub-postmasters wrongly prosecuted and convicted of crimes they didn't commit, based on inaccurate data from the Horizon software system.
The story was reported in the media over several years, but ITV dramatisation Mr Bates vs the Post Office brought it a new league of public attention and prompted the government to announce new legislation to exonerate and compensate victims.
Meanwhile, Baby Reindeer told the story of a struggling stand-up comedian, the woman who stalks him, and the powerful man in the TV industry who mentors and then sexually assaults him. Richard Gadd's partly autobiographical drama became one of the most dissected series of the year.
Other nominees include Rivals, a Disney+ adaptation of a Jilly Cooper novel about two powerful men battling for control of a local TV network, and Slow Horses, about a dysfunctional unit within MI5 made up of disgraced agents.
Say Nothing, which followed the lives of those growing up during the troubles in Belfast, is also nominated, alongside Mr Loverman, a screen adaptation of Bernadine Evaristo's novel about an elderly man whose marriage falls apart after his long-term affair with his male friend is revealed.
Sherwood focused on a Nottinghamshire community still reeling from the 1980s miners' strike, while Wolf Hall: The Mirror and the Light continued Hilary Mantel's trilogy about Thomas Cromwell's continued rise to power and eventual fall from grace.
Other nominees include reality series The Traitors, a game of deception played in a Scottish castle, and Gavin & Stacey: The Finale, which saw the long-running series about two families from from Billericay in Essex and Barry in Wales reach an emotional conclusion.
Who is hosting the Bafta TV Awards?

Actor and TV presenter Alan Cumming will take over hosting duties this year, and we hope he brings just as much drama as he did to the latest cracking series of The Traitors US.
The Scottish star's film credits include Eyes Wide Shut, GoldenEye and Emma, as well as two absolute masterpieces of 1990s cinema - Spice World: The Movie and Romy and Michele's High School Reunion.
Bafta's executive director of awards and content, Emma Baehr, said Cumming would "definitely bring a playful sense of mischief and fun to the ceremony".
Elsewhere in the ceremony, Jessie J will deliver her first TV performance in six years, singing the appropriately titled The Award Goes To, while Tom Grennan will perform his new single Full Attention.
Awards will be presented by stars including Dame Mary Berry, Billy Porter, Suranne Jones, Ashley Walters, Katie Piper, Sir David Suchet, Big Zuu, Ellie Simmonds, Owen Cooper, Rose Ayling Ellis, Stacey Dooley and Baroness Benjamin.
How to watch the Bafta TV Awards

The ceremony will be broadcast on BBC One at 19:00 BST.
But it actually takes place a couple of hours earlier, so that some sections of the ceremony can be edited down before the show airs.
BBC News will be running spoiler-free coverage, with winners revealed on our live page in line with when they are announced on BBC One.
The Bafta TV nominations in full
Drama series
Limited drama
Scripted comedy
Leading actress
Leading actor
Supporting actress
Supporting actor
Female performance in a comedy
Male performance in a comedy
Soap
Entertainment programme
Entertainment performance
Factual entertainment
Reality
Daytime
International
Live event coverage
Current affairs
Single documentary
Factual series
Specialist factual
News coverage
Sports coverage
Memorable moment
Short form
Read more about the Bafta nominees:
Baby Reindeer stars win big at Emmy Awards
Netflix fails to get Baby Reindeer lawsuit dropped
The power of Mr Bates vs The Post Office in bringing about justice
Mr Bates vs Post Office drama lost £1m, ITV boss says
Rivals: Dame Jilly Cooper on why jogging is ruinous for our sex lives
Gary Oldman wants to play shabby secret agent 'for the long run'
Marian Price to sue Disney over Say Nothing murder scene
Life and Death in Gaza: 'I say bye to my kids, in case we don't wake up'
Scoop: Why Gillian Anderson found it 'scary' to play Emily Maitlis
Bankers 'neither villains nor rock stars', says Industry creator
'I was told Mr Loverman was too niche for TV'
Martin Freeman: The Responder star on why TV viewers can 'smell lies'
UK TV industry in crisis, says Wolf Hall director
Eric: Benedict Cumberbatch says dressing as monster is 'one of the most ludicrous things I've done'
Sherwood actress aims to break Down's syndrome barriers
TV drama Truelove puts seaside town 'on the map'
We Are Lady Parts: Why Anjana Vasan is done people pleasing
Nicola Coughlan: Why I hate on-screen vanity, in new show Big Mood
Gavin and Stacey tops Christmas Day TV ratings
Gavin & Stacey: An exclusive behind-the-scenes look at the Christmas finale
Alma's Not Normal: How anger and spa breaks fuelled new series
Extraordinary: Peat & Diesel music to feature on new Disney show
Blue Lights series two promises 'absolute chaos'
Supacell: Superhero series tackling knife crime and sickle cell
Lost Boys and Fairies writer proud of adoption drama
One Day: I rarely saw people like me in lead roles, says Ambika Mod
Derek Thompson: Casualty's Charlie Fairhead exits after 38 years
Coronation Street's Gail bids farewell after 50 years
EastEnders gets ratings bump for 'flawless' live episode
Why is Race Across the World so popular?
Rylan Clark and Rob Rinder: 'The tour that helped mend our broken hearts'
Sort Your Life Out: How to plump up your saggy sofa
Ant & Dec's Saturday Night Takeaway: More than 4m tune in for final show
The Traitors finale was most-watched live episode in show's history
Late Night Lycett: Joe Lycett behind Banksy mural hoax
Michael McIntyre's Big Show: LeAnn Rimes in duet with Harrogate mum
Romesh and Roisin remember the original Taskmaster
Sara Davies to 'step away' from Dragons' Den
Matt and Emma Willis on a 'very British' Love is Blind
Shogun: A guide to the hit Japanese samurai epic as its finale cuts deep
King and Queen hear first-hand D-Day veteran stories
Glastonbury 2024: 15 magical and memorable moments
Thousands wave flags to classics at Last Night of the Proms
Maternity: Broken Trust: Parents hope documentary will help maternity inquiry bid
Hell Jumper: Story of Ukraine war victims' rescuer told in film
Freddie Flintoff: Star returns to BBC with second Field of Dreams series
To Catch a Copper: Avon and Somerset Police staff 'betrayed' by Channel 4 documentary
Atomic People: 'Atomic bomb hell must never be repeated' say Japan's last survivors
BBC Breakfast: Post Office Special: 'I carried the shame - I refuse to carry it any longer'
Paris 2024: How is France preparing for the Olympics and Paralympics?
Five Wimbledon storylines to look out for
Bridgerton or Strictly? Bafta opens vote on best TV moments of 2024
Peaked: Actress returns home for Derbyshire-set comedy
Bafta TV Awards 2025: The list of nominations
Bafta TV Awards 2025: The list of nominations
Baby Reindeer leads Bafta TV nominations
Baby Reindeer leads Bafta TV nominations
Bridgerton or Strictly? Bafta opens vote on best TV moments of 2024