Waiting For God (TV Series) - Episodes (with Original Air Date and Title)

Episodes (with Original Air Date and Title)

Sequence number Original airdate Episode title
Series 1
1
28 June 1990
Welcome to Bayview
2
5 July 1990
A Trip to Brighton
3
12 July 1990
Cheering Up Tom
4
19 July 1990
The Christening
5
26 July 1990
Fraulein Mueller
6
2 August 1990
The Psychiatrist
7
9 August 1990
The Helicopter
Series 2
8
5 September 1991
Counselling for the Dying
9
12 September 1991
The Partition
10
19 September 1991
Daisy Takes Charge
11
26 September 1991
The Thief
12
3 October 1991
Tell the Truth
13
10 October 1991
The Hip Operation
14
17 October 1991
Glamorous Grannies
15
24 October 1991
Foreign Workers
16
31 October 1991
Young People
17
7 November 1991
The Boring Son
Series 3
18
10 September 1992
The Funeral
19
17 September 1992
Two Nasty Children
20
24 September 1992
Looking for Work
21
1 October 1992
Harvey's Fiancee
22
8 October 1992
The Estate Agent
23
15 October 1992
Scandal
24
22 October 1992
Sabotage
25
29 October 1992
Politics
26
5 November 1992
Sleeping Pills
27
12 November 1992
Great Aunt Diana
Special
28
23 December 1992
Christmas at Bayview
Series 4
29
9 September 1993
Financial Difficulties
30
16 September 1993
Living Together
31
23 September 1993
Living in Miserable Sin
32
30 September 1993
Shelves
33
7 October 1993
The Seance
34
14 October 1993
The Promotional Video
35
21 October 1993
Adult Education
36
28 October 1993
Sent to Coventry
37
4 November 1993
Waterworks
38
11 November 1993
The Conference
Special
39
22 December 1993
Another Christmas at Bayview
Series 5
40
8 September 1994
After the Operation
41
15 September 1994
The Bayview Conservation Society
42
22 September 1994
After A Royal Visit?
43
29 September 1994
Diana's Diet
44
6 October 1994
Trouble with Men
45
13 October 1994
Harvey the Priest
46
20 October 1994
Bungee Jumping
47
27 October 1994
A Double Wedding

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Famous quotes containing the words episodes, original, air and/or date:

    Twenty or thirty years ago, in the army, we had a lot of obscure adventures, and years later we tell them at parties, and suddenly we realize that those two very difficult years of our lives have become lumped together into a few episodes that have lodged in our memory in a standardized form, and are always told in a standardized way, in the same words. But in fact that lump of memories has nothing whatsoever to do with our experience of those two years in the army and what it has made of us.
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    Man, even man debased by the neocapitalism and pseudosocialism of our time, is a marvelous being because he sometimes speaks. Language is the mark, the sign, not of his fall but of his original innocence. Through the Word we may regain the lost kingdom and recover powers we possessed in the far-distant past.
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    He who will one day teach men to fly will have displaced all boundary stones; the boundary stones themselves will fly up into the air to him, and he will rebaptize the earth—as “the weightless.”
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    Modern tourist guides have helped raised tourist expectations. And they have provided the natives—from Kaiser Wilhelm down to the villagers of Chichacestenango—with a detailed and itemized list of what is expected of them and when. These are the up-to- date scripts for actors on the tourists’ stage.
    Daniel J. Boorstin (b. 1914)