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Road Wars is a British police reality television programme created by Raw Cut TV for British Sky Broadcasting and broadcast on Sky1 from 26 July 2003 to 24 January 2010. From Series 1 the show was narrated by actor Lee Boardman.[1] The 2nd half of series 7 was narrated by actress Claire Goose.[2]
Road Wars | |
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Created by | Bill Rudgard Steve Warr |
Narrated by | Lee Boardman (2003–09) Claire Goose (2009–2010) |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Original language | English |
No. of series | 8 |
No. of episodes | 96 |
Production | |
Producer | Raw Cut TV |
Running time | 50–60 minutes (inc. adverts) |
Production company | Raw Cut Productions |
Original release | |
Network | Sky1 |
Release | 26 July 2003 24 January 2010 | –
Related | |
Street Wars Police Interceptors |
As of 2023, the show has repeats on Sky Showcase, Sky Replay, Sky Mix, Sky Witness and Sky Crime.[citation needed]
Format
editRoad Wars followed the work of police officers, documenting the changing tactics of criminals and the response of the UK police forces. For six seasons the show followed officers in the Thames Valley, but moved to Devon and Cornwall for the last series in 2009. The programme also features some police videos both in the UK and US.
Lee Boardman narrated the show until the second half of series 7, employing a light-hearted and pun-intended approach. At the opening narration Boardman says "In Road Wars, the unexpected is always just around the corner".
The title music was composed by Nainita Desai and Malcolm Laws. Other music was made by the series' co-creator Bill Rudgard. In series 1 the title card consisted of 'ROAD WARS' in red dot-matrix form. A new title card was made for series 3, which was slightly edited with yellow accents for series 6. The first two series had six episodes, series 3 and 4 had eight episodes each, and series 5 and 6 had 20 episodes each.
For series 7 as the show moved to another police force, a new title card and new music was composed. Boardman left his position as narrator and the last 8 episodes were narrated by Claire Goose.
Thames Valley Police
editFor series 1–6, the programme followed the fourteen members of the Thames Valley Police's roads policing proactive unit (Road Crime Unit) – known as "Tango Victor". They are also said to be known to fellow officers as "Tango Vulture", taken from their callsign prefix TV (Tango Victor) and the joke that they swoop to steal arrests from other officers while they carried out their duties.
The footage from this team is combined with video footage from police forces around the world (though largely UK and US forces).
Officers
editOfficers involved in Road Wars are listed below. As a specialist unit, officers tended to appear in a couple of series, or just for one series.
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Regular teams
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Vehicles
editThe Thames Valley Police unit operates high-specification, unmarked 3.2L V6 Vauxhall Omegas (B2 model), replaced in later series by unmarked 2.8L Turbo V6 Police Special Vauxhall Vectras. The unit is tasked with taking a proactive role in fighting crime especially _targeted towards street robbers and burglars, but also undertaking general traffic policing (the officers are drawn from normal Roads Policing teams).
Devon & Cornwall Police
editIn October 2008 Thames Valley Police pulled out from the show after concerns on how its officers are depicted.[3] From Series 7, the show moved on to follow the Road Crime Unit and the front line Dog Squad of Devon and Cornwall Police. The Road Crime Unit operates marked BMW 3 Series along with unmarked 2.5L Ford Focus STs.
Transmissions
editThere have been eight series of Road Wars. Four special episodes have been shown including two American episodes (known as Road Wars USA), which aired in 2005, where British police from the series travel to the U.S. to see the difference in police and criminal behaviour and two Christmas specials shown in 2003 and 2004. Three compilation editions entitled "Ultimate Road Wars", featuring action from the first six series, first aired on Sky1 on 11 November, 13 November and 1 December 2008.
Series | Episodes | First aired | Last aired |
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1 | 6 | 26 July 2003 | 30 August 2003 |
2 | 6 | 21 June 2004 | 26 July 2004 |
3 | 8 | 3 March 2005 | 21 April 2005 |
4 | 8 | 5 October 2006 | 23 November 2006 |
5 | 20 | 8 May 2007 | 18 September 2007 |
6 | 20 | 29 July 2008 | 9 December 2008 |
7 | 20 | 17 February 2009 | 30 June 2009 |
8 | 8 | 30 November 2009 | 24 January 2010 |
Special
editIn a special two part series called Road Wars USA, Andy Samuels[4] and Chris Piggott spent a couple of months attached to a Gang Unit in Cicero, Illinois, near Chicago, to note how law enforcement is practised in the United States.
Notable death
editOn 5 December 2017, an on-duty policeman PC James Dixon, who appeared in the show was killed in a motorcycle collision along with a 91-year old woman on the A4 road in Wargrave, Berkshire. He was 39 years old.
International broadcasts
editThe Road Wars series has also been sold to these television networks and stations:
Country | Channel |
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Netherlands1 | RTL 7 |
New Zealand | TV3 and CI |
Australia | Seven Network and CI |
Russia | TV Network |
United States | Fox Reality |
Sweden | TV4 Fakta and TV4 Sport |
Finland | MTV3 Fakta in Finland |
Estonia | TV6 |
Denmark | Canal 9 |
Latvia | TV5 Riga |
Belgium | 2BE |
Notes:
- ^1 Broadcast under the name 'De Politie Op Je Hielen
See also
edit- Police Interceptors a show following police in Essex and South Yorkshire, and made by the same producers as Road Wars.
- Traffic Cops, (sometimes listed as Motorway Cops and Car Wars) a similar programme now shown on Channel 5.
- Brit Cops, similar police documentary on Sky Livingit.
- Police Stop!, a show from the 1990s showing footage from police car dashboard cameras, with occasional presenter links.
- Police Camera Action!, a similar programme on ITV.
- Street Crime UK, a similar programme shown on Bravo.
References
edit- ^ "Road Wars: Lee Boardman". Sky One. Retrieved 2 May 2010.
- ^ "Claire Goose | Apple TV (UK)". Apple TV. Retrieved 15 February 2023.
- ^ "Thames Valley police pull out of Road Wars". TheGuardian.com. 18 October 2008.
- ^ "Road Wars - an Unofficial Fan Site". Archived from the original on 14 November 2009. Retrieved 22 August 2010.