Episode 2
The night shift has just started when a call comes through for all roads policing officers to attend what they fear might be a potentially fatal RTC on the M5. As Sgt Gladwin rushes towards the scene on the blues and twos he is presented with a more immediate problem, a truck on fire at the side of the carriageway. The smoke from the fire is spreading across the road onto the traffic coming from the opposite direction making driving hazardous for all. With no choice Sgt Gladwin needs to stop all traffic on the motorway until the fire can be put out. The driver and passengers have managed to get out of the truck, but as they wait for the fire brigade to arrive the car starts to explode, putting more lives at risk. As the fire brigade get the flames under control Sgt Gladwin turns his attention to the truck driver and checking his documents. Unfortunately, the insurance the driver had has run out and has not been renewed, meaning he will be left to pay for all the damage including replacing the truck.
PC Webber and his colleague are heading back to the station for a break when they are stopped by a member of the public who is concerned that he is being targeted by an online scam. Unsure of what to do he approaches the officers for help. They explain that it probably is a scam and advise the man to change his passwords for his banking.
Elsewhere in Gloucestershire a shopkeeper has asked for police to attend when a woman who appears drunk has taken a bottle of wine from the shelf and is imbibing it without paying. After a long negotiation with the woman, who they arrest because she says she has no money, PC Tom Spiers persuades her to let him try her bank card and the payment goes through. With the woman ‘de-arrested' the shop can close and the staff can go home.
PC Webb, known as Bear, is out on patrol when he spots a car speeding with heavily tinted windows and an illegal number plate, but after words of warning he lets him go. Later, Bear on solo patrol, pulls over a van driver on a busy carriageway to let him know that his back lights are out. He suspects that the driver has been drinking and as he tries to test him the man becomes aggressive. Bear attempts to handcuff the man, but he spits liquid out at him and pushes him into the path of the lorries who are thundering by on the road. Concerned for his life he presses his State Zero button to get other units there as quickly as possible. Luckily for Bear they are only a few miles away. The man is arrested for drink driving and assaulting a police officer.
Roads policing officer PC Dudfield is called to stop a car with a drugs marker that is travelling on the M5 by boxing him in, but it doesn't go to plan when first there are traffic works in the way and then a lorry. Eventually the car is stopped and searched but there are no drugs, only a large sum of cash so the man is free to go.
Trailer
Recently Updated Shows
Deal or No Deal Island
The iconic game of Deal or No Deal is back and unlike anything you have ever seen before! This new format transports audiences to the Banker's private island where he makes the rules and there are twists behind every palm tree. Hidden on the island are over 100 cases with millions of dollars split between them, which teams must retrieve so that they can play a game of Deal or No Deal against the Banker. Only one team will survive until the very last episode, where they'll compete to beat the Banker for the biggest prize in Deal or No Deal history.
Emmerdale
Emmerdale is a British soap focusing on the lives of several families and locals living around an estate, a farm and the nearby village in the Yorkshire Dales. It is the second longest British soap in television history since airing its first episode on ITV in 1972, as 'Emmerdale Farm', the show was renamed in 1989.
Malcolm in the Middle
In the words of They Might Be Giants' rollicking Grammy-winning theme song, "life is unfair." The inventive and wholly original sitcom Malcolm in the Middle has been honored with a Peabody Award and Emmys for directing and writing, but if life was fair, it would have earned an Emmy for Best Comedy Series, not to mention statuettes for its pitch-perfect cast. With his perpetual "yes, me worry" expression, Frankie Muniz instantly earns audience empathy as Malcolm, whose chances for a normal life are thwarted not only by his genius IQ, but also by his outrageously dysfunctional family: Lois, his obsessive, control-freak mother; Hal, his loving but ineffectual father; Francis, his eldest brother waging his own private war at military school; middle brother Reese, a delinquent savant; and Dewey, the put-upon youngest. As Malcolm observes at one point, "This family may be rude, loud and gross, and have no shame whatsoever, but with them you know where you stand."
Coronation Street
Coronation Street is the story of working people and the city street in which they live. The show has been seen all around the world and has remained in the top viewing ratings throughout its long lifetime.