Coppers (British TV series) explained

Genre:Documentary
Director:Anthony Philipson
Narrated:Paul Thornley
Country:United Kingdom
Language:English
Num Seasons:2
Num Episodes:13
Executive Producer:Simon Ford
Producer:Ben Rumney
Editor:Mark Towns
Runtime:60 minutes
Company:Blast! Films
Channel:Channel 4

Coppers is a British fly-on-the-wall documentary television series broadcast on Channel 4, about policing in the United Kingdom. First broadcast on 1 November 2010, the series followed the day-to-day lives of police officers (colloquially known as 'coppers') from four territorial police forces around the country, covering various activities: custody suite operations, road unit policing, 999 response, night time policing and riot control.

A second and final series began on 9 January 2012 and ran for 8 episodes.

Concept

The premise of the series was presented by the producers as follows:

This referred to the impending cuts in police force budgets as a result of the 2010 Spending Review, the results of which were announced in October 2010, just before the show aired.

The series follows a reality television documentary style. Each episode features only a small amount of narration, and the majority of screen time is devoted to on location filming with interaction to camera from the police officers being filmed. This is supplemented with footage of officers talking to camera in a more formal setting, with minimal input by an interviewer. At the end of each episode, there is a summary of the outcome of the cases of many of the police officers and offenders featured.

Broadcast

The first series was broadcast as five one-hour episodes on Channel 4 on Monday nights in the 9 pm timeslot.The second and final series was broadcast as eight one-hour episodes on Channel 4 on Monday nights in the 9 pm timeslot.

Episodes

Series 2

See also

External links