The following is a list of episodes for the British sitcom Porridge and sequel series, Going Straight , which aired on BBC1 from 5 September 1974 to 25 March 1977 and 24 February to 7 April 1978 respectively. A further sequel series following the grandson of Fletcher, Porridge , aired in 2016 and 2017.
Series | Episodes | Originally aired | Ave. Viewership (millions) | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Series premiere | Series finale | |||||
Porridge | ||||||
P | 1 | 5 April 1973 | N/A | |||
1 | 6 | 5 September 1974 | 10 October 1974 | N/A | ||
2 | 6 | 24 October 1975 | 28 November 1975 | N/A | ||
S | 1 | 24 December 1975 | N/A | |||
S | 1 | 24 December 1976 | N/A | |||
3 | 6 | 18 February 1977 | 25 March 1977 | N/A | ||
Going Straight | ||||||
1 | 6 | 24 February 1978 | 7 April 1978 | N/A | ||
Porridge feature film | ||||||
F | — | 12 August 1979 | 12 August 1979 | N/A | ||
Life Beyond the Box: Norman Stanley Fletcher | ||||||
F | 1 | 26 December 2003 | N/A | |||
Porridge (2016) | ||||||
1 | 7 | 28 August 2016 | 10 November 2017 | N/A | ||
No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | UK viewers (millions) [1] | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Pilot | ||||||||||||
1 | "Prisoner and Escort" | James Gilbert | Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais | 1 April 1973 | TBA | |||||||
Norman Stanley Fletcher, a career criminal, and his escorts – kind-hearted Mr Barrowclough and authoritarian Mr Mackay – make the journey on New Year's Eve from London up to Slade Prison in Cumberland. | ||||||||||||
Regular Series | ||||||||||||
2 | "New Faces, Old Hands" | Sydney Lotterby | Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais | 5 September 1974 | TBA | |||||||
It is Lennie Godber's first time in prison, and Fletcher shows him the ropes, as the two go through the checking-in process along with the rather dim-witted Heslop. Mackay explains that Heslop is not too much of a threat, as he is "thick as two short planks"; Godber is young and naive, but Mackay comments that he may be corrupted by the older Fletcher, who has been in and out of prison. Upon meeting the new arrivals, Mackay gets Fletcher to tell Godber and Heslop about prison routine. | ||||||||||||
3 | "The Hustler" | Sydney Lotterby | Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais | 12 September 1974 | TBA | |||||||
Fletch starts an illicit gambling enterprise that soon runs into trouble. Fletcher along with Lukewarm, Evans and Heslop are in the boiler house for their game of snakes and ladders; however, Mr Mackay and Mr Barrowclough are aware of the game taking place. Barrowclough tries to reason with Mackay that the men would gamble regardless, but Mackay's principles are that "gambling leads to debts, debts lead to antagonism, ill-feeling and lack of discipline" - so Mackay arranges for a special delivery. | ||||||||||||
4 | "A Night In" | Sydney Lotterby | Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais | 19 September 1974 | TBA | |||||||
Largely set in relative darkness one night. With 698 nights left for Godber, within the confines of their cell, Fletcher and Godber ponder life in prison and many other aspects of their lives. Fletcher has been informed that Godber is to become his new cellmate. Understandably, Fletcher is not too happy because he had just been given a single cell. Godber soon finds out that Fletcher has rather strict rules about his cell. | ||||||||||||
5 | "A Day Out" | Sydney Lotterby | Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais | 26 September 1974 | TBA | |||||||
Fletch, Godber, Ives, some other prisoners go out on a work party. Fletcher is even less pleased with the prospect of the day ahead when he finds out that Ives is part of the work party and that Mr Mackay is in charge. However, Mr Barrowclough is coming with them, so this partly reassures Fletcher. After Ives gets stung by a bee, Fletch is able to escape for a pint at the local pub, on the pretext of getting first aid. | ||||||||||||
6 | "Ways and Means" | Sydney Lotterby | Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais | 3 October 1974 | TBA | |||||||
New prisoner McLaren proves troublesome, and Barrowclough also expresses shock at McLaren's prison infraction of assaulting a prison officer by dunking his head in a pot of soup. McLaren says the officer insulted him by calling him a "black bastard", which Fletcher points out is "not exactly wrong" as McLaren is black and of illegitimate birth. Fletch decides to help out with McLaren, but they both end up on the roof. | ||||||||||||
7 | "Men Without Women" | Sydney Lotterby | Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais | 10 October 1974 | TBA | |||||||
Fletch fancies himself as a bit of an agony aunt and is called upon by his fellow inmates to help out. During visitation, his daughter, Ingrid, informs him that his own marriage is in trouble. Prisoner Warren asks Fletcher if he could read him his love letter from his wife, as Warren is unable to read. Fletcher composes a response to this letter and also offers his services to his fellow prisoners, including the homosexual Lukewarm and the dim-witted Heslop. |
No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | UK viewers (millions) [1] | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Regular Series | ||||||||||||
8 | "Just Desserts" | Sydney Lotterby | Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais | 24 October 1975 | TBA | |||||||
Fletch is appalled when someone steals his tin of pineapple chunks and is determined to catch the culprit. This comes as no surprise, as there are 600 men in Slade Prison, and two-thirds are in for theft. Fletcher means there is a thief on the inside, as his tin of pineapple chunks has been stolen. Other prisoners comment that they have had things stolen, such as a jar of gooseberry preserve. This suggests that the thief has a sweet tooth. | ||||||||||||
9 | "Heartbreak Hotel" | Sydney Lotterby | Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais | 31 October 1975 | TBA | |||||||
After his girlfriend, Denise, breaks up with him via a Dear John letter, Godber assaults a fellow inmate. At the same time, Fletch starts questioning his daughter, Ingrid, over her personal life. Godber asks Fletcher why the BBC never plays prisoners' requests on the radio. Fletcher explains it is because the system is open to abuse, where songs may be a message for someone to help with an escape. | ||||||||||||
10 | "Disturbing the Peace" | Sydney Lotterby | Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais | 7 November 1975 | TBA | |||||||
The prisoners are overjoyed when Mackay leaves on a promotion course, until they meet his replacement, Mr Wainwright, whom Fletcher remembers from a previous stretch in Brixton. Wainwright is a harsh prison officer who soon recognises Fletcher and starts bullying the prisoners. His antics included punishing Godber for accidentally dropping mashed potatoes on his shoe and purposely treading on Fletcher's hand. | ||||||||||||
11 | "No Peace for the Wicked" | Sydney Lotterby | Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais | 14 November 1975 | TBA | |||||||
With everyone watching a football match, Fletch attempts to snatch a few precious minutes of peace and quiet, only to suffer constant interruptions, among whom are Mackay and visiting members of the Home Office, who then insist on questioning Fletch about his views on the penal system. | ||||||||||||
12 | "Happy Release" | Sydney Lotterby | Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais | 21 November 1975 | TBA | |||||||
Mackay is appalled to discover that Fletch has been severely injured (a broken ankle) and is in the hospital wing. He and Blanco devise a plan for revenge on Norris, who had stolen his possessions some time before Fletch arrived. | ||||||||||||
13 | "The Harder They Fall" | Sydney Lotterby | Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais | 28 November 1975 | TBA | |||||||
Fletch, under "Genial" Harry Grout's orders, tries to rig a boxing match so that Godber, who is favourite to win, loses, only to discover Godber is taking orders from one of Grouty's rivals. | ||||||||||||
Specials | ||||||||||||
14 | "No Way Out" | Sydney Lotterby | Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais | 24 December 1975 | TBA | |||||||
A planned escape causes all kinds of trouble just before Christmas, and Fletch attempts to spend some valuable time in the infirmary. | ||||||||||||
15 | "The Desperate Hours" | Sydney Lotterby | Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais | 24 December 1976 | TBA | |||||||
Fletcher, Godber, Barrowclough and the governor's secretary are held hostage by a desperate prisoner with a homemade gun attempting to escape. |
No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | UK viewers (millions) [1] | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Regular Series | ||||||||||||
16 | "A Storm in a Teacup" | Sydney Lotterby | Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais | 18 February 1977 | TBA | |||||||
After a capsule containing pills that Harris stole goes missing, Grouty attempts to locate them and Fletch is recruited to help, not realising that they are in his mug of tea. | ||||||||||||
17 | "Poetic Justice" | Sydney Lotterby | Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais | 25 February 1977 | TBA | |||||||
Fletch is incensed to discover that he is getting a new cellmate. To make matters worse, it turns out that the cellmate is the judge that sentenced him. | ||||||||||||
18 | "Rough Justice" | Sydney Lotterby | Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais | 4 March 1977 | TBA | |||||||
After Judge Rawley's watch is stolen, everyone is convinced that Harris is the culprit, and so a kangaroo court is set up in an effort to convict him of the crime. | ||||||||||||
19 | "Pardon Me" | Sydney Lotterby | Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais | 11 March 1977 | TBA | |||||||
Blanco refuses parole after serving a life sentence for a murder he always claims he never committed, so Fletch sets up an appeal committee to get him pardoned. | ||||||||||||
20 | "A Test of Character" | Sydney Lotterby | Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais | 18 March 1977 | TBA | |||||||
Fletch is determined to help Godber pass his History O-level, so he has Warren steal the papers, only to discover that Godber does not want them. Meanwhile, a debate flares up over a claim of Warren's that, at a certain scale, the nearest star from the Sun would be in Johannesburg. | ||||||||||||
21 | "Final Stretch" | Sydney Lotterby | Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais | 25 March 1977 | TBA | |||||||
With his parole hearing less than a week away, Godber has a fight with football hooligan Jarvis, and Fletch realises that he will have to risk solitary confinement and loss of his own remission to help Godber. Meanwhile, Fletch is suspicious of his daughter's holiday plans. |
No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | UK viewers (millions) [1] | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Regular Series | ||||||||||||
1 | "Going Home" | Sydney Lotterby | Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais | 24 February 1978 | TBA | |||||||
Fletch, having been paroled, makes his way home from prison. On the train, he bumps into Mr Mackay and an old friend. | ||||||||||||
2 | "Going to be Alright" | Sydney Lotterby | Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais | 3 March 1978 | TBA | |||||||
Fletch visits his probation officer and reveals his wife has left him, and steals Godber's lorry to drive to Essex to dig up a buried stash of ill-gotten gains. | ||||||||||||
3 | "Going Sour" | Sydney Lotterby | Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais | 10 March 1978 | TBA | |||||||
Fletch is diverted from his own problems when he comes across a young runaway girl (Roberta Tovey) in his local cafe, and tries to set her on the straight and narrow, with debatable success. | ||||||||||||
4 | "Going to Work" | Sydney Lotterby | Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais | 17 March 1978 | TBA | |||||||
Fletch is set up with a job by his probation officer as a night porter but cannot face starting his first ever conventional job. | ||||||||||||
5 | "Going Going Gone" | Sydney Lotterby | Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais | 24 March 1978 | TBA | |||||||
Fletch, while at work, recognises an old fellow inmate (Nigel Hawthorne) and does his best to prevent a crime from occurring. This episode also includes an appearance from Pete Postlethwaite. | ||||||||||||
6 | "Going off the Rails" | Sydney Lotterby | Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais | 7 April 1978 | TBA | |||||||
Fletch almost falls off the straight and narrow on the day Godber is to marry Ingrid when he assists an old friend (Alfred Lynch) with a bank raid, but has a change of heart before it is too late when he walks into a pet shop: the sight of all the animals in cages triggers memories of his many years in prison, and he abandons the job to attend the wedding. |
No. | Title | Director | Writers | First broadcast | Ratings (millions) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "Porridge" | Dick Clement | Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais | 12 August 1979 | N/A | |
Set a year before the final episode of the TV series. |
No. | Title | Director | Writers | First broadcast | Ratings (millions) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "Life Beyond the Box: Norman Stanley Fletcher" | Kim Flitcroft | Danny Robins, Dan Tetsell | 26 December 2003 | 2.2 [2] | |
The life of Norman Stanley Fletcher is detailed, with interviews with his family, friends and old cellmates |
No. | Title | Director | Writers | First broadcast | Ratings (millions) | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Pilot | ||||||||||||
1 | "Porridge" | Dominic Brigstocke | Dick Clement, Ian La Frenais | 28 August 2016 | 5.68 | |||||||
After being caught and put on trial for hacking credit cards and committing other cyber crimes for personal gain, Nigel Norman Fletcher is sentenced to five years at Wakeley Prison. A few weeks after arriving, Fletcher finds himself sharing his cell with a new prisoner, Joe Lotterby, a senior criminal who knew his grandfather in the past. Meanwhile, Richie Weeks, a hardened criminal who runs an enterprise in the prison, requests that Fletcher use his IT skills to sanitise his record, to ensure his upcoming parole hearing goes without a hitch, though things do not go as smoothly as Fletcher hopes for. | ||||||||||||
Regular Series | ||||||||||||
2 | "The Go-Between" | Dominic Brigstocke | Dick Clement, Ian La Frenais | 6 October 2017 | 3.98 | |||||||
Fletcher has taken to helping his fellow inmates with appeals, letters home and the like, to earn a few things on the side. But things soon become complicated when he agrees to help a new prisoner maintain contact with his girlfriend, only for his own words and charm to earn their attention instead of their boyfriend's. | ||||||||||||
3 | "The Cake" | Dominic Brigstocke | Dick Clement, Ian La Frenais | 13 October 2017 | N/A | |||||||
Concerned that Braithwaite is not suitable for guard duty, Meekie requests a replacement, who turns out to be his female equivalent in terms of her tough stance with the prisoners. Meanwhile, Parfitt instructs one of Fletcher's friends to accept a visit from one of his girls and take a gift from them, but a mix-up soon puts Fletcher into hot water with him. | ||||||||||||
4 | "The Minder" | Dominic Brigstocke | Dick Clement, Ian La Frenais | 20 October 2017 | N/A | |||||||
As a way of Richie Weeks thanking him for helping him get paroled, Fletcher finds himself receiving Parfitt's right-hand man Scudds as his personal minder. But he soon finds it being quite problematic having him around, especially when he has to get rid of a dead pigeon that has been used by another prisoner to smuggle in drugs. | ||||||||||||
5 | "The Witness" | Dominic Brigstocke | Dick Clement, Ian La Frenais | 27 October 2017 | N/A | |||||||
With Wakeley Prison set to receive a visit from a group of VIPs, seeking to see how well the prisoners are being treated, Fletcher finds himself being recruited to be an adviser for Parfitt's gang. He soon finds himself not liking the position, when his efforts to ensure Parfitt is rid of any illegal business he has in the prison winds up causing a fight during the VIP's visit, where he soon finds himself stuck in a cupboard with one of them, who happens to be the mother of the girl he was committing cyber crimes for. | ||||||||||||
6 | "The Listener" | Dominic Brigstocke | Dick Clement, Ian La Frenais | 3 November 2017 | N/A | |||||||
Learning that Rob Strange, a former rock star with possible suicidal tendencies due to depression, is set to arrive at Wakeley Prison to serve time for illegally making drugs, Fletcher finds himself tasked by Littlewood to keep an eye on him, in exchange for receiving something in return if he accepts. But it's not an easy task for him, especially when he has to rely on his ex-girlfriend to track down someone Strange sent away at his last gig. | ||||||||||||
7 | "The Rift" | Dominic Brigstocke | Dick Clement, Ian La Frenais | 10 November 2017 | N/A | |||||||
Having acquired himself the right to run a radio station within Wakeley Prison, Fletcher soon finds it causing friction between himself and Lotterby due to his need to be up early to run his morning radio show. But he soon regrets his attitude towards his cellmate, when he finds him unconscious outside in the freezing cold weather. |
Open All Hours is a British television sitcom created and written by Roy Clarke for the BBC. It ran for 26 episodes in four series, which aired in 1976, 1981, 1982 and 1985. The programme was developed from a television pilot broadcast in Ronnie Barker's Seven of One (1973) comedy anthology series. Open All Hours ranked eighth in the 2004 Britain's Best Sitcom poll. A sequel, titled Still Open All Hours, aired from 2013 to 2019.
Porridge is a British sitcom, starring Ronnie Barker and Richard Beckinsale, written by Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais, and broadcast on BBC1 from 1974 to 1977. The programme ran for three series and two Christmas specials. A feature film of the same name based on the series was released in 1979.
Spooks is a British television spy drama series that originally aired on BBC One from 13 May 2002 to 23 October 2011, consisting of 10 seasons. The title is a colloquialism for spies, and the series follows the activities of the intelligence officers of Section D in MI5, based at the service's Thames House headquarters, in a highly secure suite of offices known as The Grid. In the United States, the show is broadcast under the title MI-5. In Canada, the programme originally aired as MI-5, but later aired on BBC Canada as Spooks.
New Tricks is a British television police procedural comedy drama, created by Nigel McCrery and Roy Mitchell, produced primarily by Wall to Wall, and broadcast on BBC One. The programme originally began with a pilot episode on 27 March 2003, before a full series was commissioned for 1 April 2004; New Tricks concluded after twelve series on 6 October 2015. The show had an ensemble cast, of which Dennis Waterman was the only constant over all twelve series; the cast variously included Alun Armstrong, James Bolam, Amanda Redman, Denis Lawson, Nicholas Lyndhurst, Tamzin Outhwaite, and Larry Lamb.
Channel 5 is a British free-to-air public broadcast television channel owned and operated by Channel 5 Broadcasting Limited, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Paramount Global's UK and Australia division. It was launched in 30 March 1997 to provide a fifth national terrestrial channel in the United Kingdom.
Heathrow: Britain's Busiest Airport is a British documentary series, aired by ITV from 2015 until 2022.
Made in Chelsea: Buenos Aires, a spin-off series of Made in Chelsea, a British structured-reality television programme began airing on 9 December 2019, and concluded on 30 December 2019 following four episodes and a special "End of Yah Quiz" hosted by Matt Edmondson and Mollie King. This makes this the shortest of the show's "Out of Chelsea" spin-offs. The series was confirmed on 4 November 2019 when it was announced that the cast of Made in Chelsea would be travelling to Buenos Aires, Argentina to film a special version of the show, however the final episode of the series was filmed back in Chelsea. This was the sixth spin-off series of the show, but the first to air outside of its usual Summer schedule.
The Real Housewives of Jersey is a British reality television series that premiered on ITVBe on 28 December 2020. Developed as the second British installment of The Real Housewives franchise, it aired for two seasons and focused on the personal and professional lives of several women living in Jersey.
The twenty-third series of Made in Chelsea, a British structured-reality television programme began airing on 4 April 2022, and concluded after ten episodes on 6 June 2022. For the first time since 2016, episodes due to air the following week were uploaded to All4.