I can't stand any of the British daily press.
Biased reporting is inevitable - it's impossible to be 'unbiased', but you can at least have standards about how you go about it. There's also different shades of reliability - The Mail, Express, red-tops etc. have a level of reliability roughly approximate to a man in the pub, while the better papers do admittedly score higher.
While it's certainly still biased, I can't reccommend 'The Economist' highly enough. It's well-researched, decently written and also has a genuine level of integrity and journalistic standards - they quite frequently publish qualified attacks on their articles, for instance. It's also completely upfront about what it's guiding principles are, and doesn't ruthlessly subordinate its analysis to them (for instance they argued that bailing out the banks was the best option on the table while acknowledging how undesirable it was very early in the crisis - and it frequently admits it was wrong to support the Iraq war).
'The Week' is good just as a basic overview of stuff that's happened but it does basically repeat what papers have been saying across the week. 'Prospect' is also an interesting weekly that genuinely tries to take a view from both sides on several issues, but its coverage can be a bit esoteric.