Fifteen Minutes (The Green Green Grass)
"Fifteen Minutes" is an episode of the BBC sitcom, The Green Green Grass. It was first screened on 7 December 2007, as the fifth episode of series three.[1]
"Fifteen Minutes" | |
---|---|
The Green Green Grass episode | |
Episode no. | Series 3 Episode 5 |
Directed by | Dewi Humphreys |
Written by | David Cantor |
Production code | 3:5 (20) |
Original air date | 7 December 2007 |
Running time | 30 Minutes |
Synopsis
Boycie can't believe that his staff are auditioning for a reality TV show, but the lure of fame proves too much for him resist. Meanwhile, Marlene has some plans of her own for when he's away resulting in confusion when Boycie returns home in a hurry.
Episode cast
Actor | Role |
---|---|
John Challis | Boycie |
Sue Holderness | Marlene |
Jack Doolan | Tyler |
David Ross | Elgin |
Ivan Kaye | Bryan |
Ella Kenion | Mrs Cakeworthy |
Peter Heppelthwaite | Jed |
Lisa Diveney | Beth |
Nigel Harrison | Ray |
Kim Thomson | Antonia |
Rufus Jones | Adrian |
Robert Forknall | Darryl |
Sarah Mahony Rachel Mitchem |
Groupie |
Continuity
The production company in this episode is called "Salop TV", "Salop" being an alternative name for Shropshire.
gollark: > 3. Garbage collector and memory leak detection tools?Again, not sure if anyone actually runs into this sort of issue in practice.
gollark: > 1. Performance penalties.> [some rambling about C++].NET is generally pretty much *fast enough*. If your application somehow hits performance bottlenecks, rewrite the slow bits in native code, don't just immediately take a development speed hit.> 2. Need to interoperate with C++ / Native (Windows) API’sI don't know how often you actually need to bind to a native API not wrapped by .NET or a third-party library, but you can do it, it's just annoying - but probably less than using C++ for everything!
gollark: This is outrageous pro-C++ anti-C# propaganda.
gollark: I have dreams occasionally, but they're stupid.
gollark: * issued
References
- "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 28 February 2009. Retrieved 2015-12-01.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
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