Lads' Army

Lads' Army
Also known as Bad Lads' Army (2004)
Bad Lads' Army: Officer Class
(2005)
Bad Lads' Army: Extreme
(2006)
Genre Reality Game show
Voices of Kevin Whately (2002)
Dennis Waterman (2004–6)
Composer(s) Daniel Pemberton
Country of origin United Kingdom
Original language(s) English
No. of series 4
No. of episodes 32
Production
Running time 60 minutes (inc. adverts)
Production company(s) Twenty Twenty
Distributor Warner Bros. Television Productions UK
Release
Original network ITV
Picture format 16:9
Original release 3 June 2002 (2002-06-03) – 29 August 2006 (2006-08-29)
Browndown Training Camp in Hampshire, home of Bad Lads Army

Lads' Army is a reality game show specifically of the kind that constitutes a historically derived social experiment – other examples being The 1900 House and The Frontier House. Shown on ITV, Bad Lads Army is based on the premise of subjecting today's delinquent young men to the conditions of conscripts to British Army National Service of the 1950s to see if this could rehabilitate them.

The programme was derived from an earlier one called simply Lads Army (a play on Dad's Army) in which a number of volunteers underwent four weeks of basic training for 1950s National Service. Unlike the three sequel series (the ones whose titles began with "Bad"), the original programme's experiment was merely to see if 18-24 year old members of the modern British public could cope with the 1950s training, and how they compared to the public of that period. The success of the original series led to the experiment being repeated with the recruits having committed criminal offences, often given the option to undergo the training by courts as an alternative to serving pending sentences, to explore the proposition that it would be beneficial to reinstate National Service for petty criminals and delinquents as an alternative to more conventional sentences.

The programme format is simple. The recruits are issued period uniforms and equipment and fed, quartered and trained according to the standards of the era. Their free time is limited to visits to the NAAFI with period refreshments and facilities. The recruits form a single platoon made up of two sections, each under the care of a section commander, either Richard Nauyokas (in series 3 Nauyokas was replaced by Glen Thomas but still featured as a relief corporal) or Joe Murray. During training the sections compete against each other, building a sense of competition but also of teamwork and loyalty. Success brings modest rewards. Praise is given for whole-hearted attempts at tasks. The NCOs and officers running the training are all, or have been, professional British soldiers.

Each season had a slightly different format to its predecessors, although the theme of 1950s military training is common to all. The 3rd season (known as Bad Lads' Army: Officer Class) had the volunteers train to become officers while the 4th season (known as Bad Lads' Army Extreme) had the volunteers train to become paratroopers.

Within each series a small number of the recruits have either walked out (after a 24-hour cooling off period), or been ejected. The majority of the remainder claim some benefit from the experience and some have chosen the British Army as a career at the end of it.

The narrator for the first series was Kevin Whately, then Dennis Waterman took over until the show ended in 2006.

Transmissions

SeasonStart dateEnd dateEpisodes
13 June 20025 July 200210
28 July 200426 August 20048
328 July 20058 September 20057
411 July 200629 August 20067

Ratings

Official episode viewing figures are from BARB.[1]

Series 1

Episode
no.
AirdateViewers
(millions)
ITV1 weekly
ranking
13 June 2002N/AN/A
25 June 20026.1415
310 June 20026.2714
414 June 20025.4718
517 June 20025.2823
621 June 2002N/AN/A
724 June 20025.9814
825 June 20025.1916
928 June 20024.9318
105 July 20025.4218

Series 2

Episode
no.
AirdateViewers
(millions)
ITV1 weekly
ranking
18 July 20046.4815
215 July 20046.5813
322 July 20046.2315
429 July 20045.4517
55 August 20045.6416
612 August 20045.4117
719 August 20045.4416
826 August 20044.7216

Series 3

Episode
no.
AirdateViewers
(millions)
ITV1 weekly
ranking
128 July 20055.1315
24 August 20055.2415
311 August 20055.2315
418 August 20054.6718
525 August 20055.0515
61 September 20055.0915
78 September 20055.4018

Series 4

Episode
no.
AirdateViewers
(millions)
ITV1 weekly
ranking
111 July 20063.8719
218 July 20063.3121
325 July 20063.1421
41 August 20063.3125
515 August 2006N/AN/A
622 August 2006N/AN/A
729 August 2006N/AN/A

References

  1. "Weekly Top 30 Programmes". Broadcasters' Audience Research Board. Retrieved 22 October 2015.
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