"Give Police a Chance" | |
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The Goodies episode | |
Episode no. | Series 1 Episode 3 (of 76) |
Directed by | Jim Franklin |
Produced by | |
Starring | Tim Brooke-Taylor Graeme Garden Bill Oddie |
Original air date | 22 November 1970 (Sunday — 10.35 p.m.) |
Guest stars | |
Paul Whitsun-Jones as
Alexander Bridge as "..." Bartlett Mullins as "..." Katya Wyeth as "..." |
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Series 1 episodes | |
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List of The Goodies episodes |
Give Police a Chance is an episode of the British comedy television series The Goodies — a BAFTA-nominated series for Best Light Entertainment Programme.[1][2][3]
This episode is also known as "Love the Police" and as "Police Public Image".
As always, the episode was written by members of The Goodies.
Contents |
The Goodies are asked to help with the public image of the police, because nobody likes them. The police have no idea why they are so unpopular. The Police Sergeant, and the policeman accompanying him, rough the Goodies up, demanding that they help. The Goodies are terrified, but they agree to help anyway.
The Goodies, dressed as policemen, turn an Identikit into an Identikit Game (for all the family), and open "The Coppe Shoppe" (where they sell handcuffs as a 'charm bracelet', and also sell police helmets). Riding their trandem, they give flowers to people, take away restrictive traffic signs and traffic meters, paint LOVE on the road, block off some streets so that children can use the streets to play in, and go swimming in a "no swimming" area at a park. Everyone begins to love the police, including small children (who run to the Goodies and mob them, whenever they see them).
The Goodies are eventually arrested for 'breaking the law' and appear in Court on trial for their misdeeds. They discover that the Judge is actually the Police Sergeant who hired them, and that a policeman is acting as both the Prosecutor and Defence Counsel. The jury, likewise, is completely composed of policemen (who also double as witnesses in the trial) and they all declare the Goodies guilty immediately — even before the trial begins. All seems hopeless, until Tim makes an impassioned plea to the Judge, commenting that it was the Judge, himself, who asked them to make the police more popular.
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