A Small Problem (TV Series 1987– ) Poster

(1987– )

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6/10
Message misunderstood
Prismark108 October 2013
In the 1980s opposition to Apartheid in South Africa was reaching a crescendo.

A new wave of comedians emerged with the 'Alternative comedy' tag. They were in opposition with the mainstream comedians who picked on easy targets such as women, gays, ethnic minorities etc.

A Small Problem was a BBC sitcom that was intended to be a satire on prejudice and especially racial prejudice.

Unfortunately many people missed the point of the satire altogether and thought the series was picking on short people and getting easy laughs at their expense.

The show was based in a vision of Britain that practised a form of apartheid based on people's height. Anyone below 5 foot were moved to a ghetto south of the River Thames.

The main star was Christopher Ryan, more famous as Mike from The Young Ones. The series really did not take off because it was weighed down by the controversy of its subject matter.

The writers, one of them being Tony Millan was also famous as a sitcom actor. He tried to explain that the series was a satirical allegory but to no avail. It was sporadically funny and a brave attempt to do something different.
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6/10
What it was about
michael_howey16 March 2007
In general there small people where ghettoised and the main protagonist insisted that he wasn't a "small" because when they shifted from Imperial to Metric, he no longer made the cut. This was the point where any comparison to a real discriminatory situation ended. An arbitrary decision could alter the line. Like being a "bit" gay or a "bit" black or a "bit" Muslim. Didn't quite make sense. I'm sure the idea was to make the view feel like they could easily be discriminated against but it didn't quite make it. It was supposed to be a bit more cutting than it actually was but then I was only 11 so what did I know.

I particularly remember the theme.

They're the lowest of the low. They refuse to grow you know. They like it down there.
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6/10
Audience participation
nameloc-8240517 January 2020
Fortunate enough to have been in the audience for one episode. Funny but sadly, never really took off.
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Long Forgotten?
hotspur9529 December 2005
Just an average comedy from the 80's. It had Mike from the young one's in it. I remember it from when I was a kid, but I can't find anyone else that remembers it!

Well, basically, short people are put into ghetto's and segregated from the rest of society.

A fairly weird concept I guess, but I suppose there must have been a political under-current there about how it is silly to judge people because of how they look.

This would have gone over my head (ho-ho!) at the time as I was only just into my teens then, but I seem to remember it was amusing enough.
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5/10
''They refuse to grow, you know!''
Rabical-913 May 2018
Warning: Spoilers
If 'A Small Problem' is remembered at all, you can bet your bottom dollar that it will only be for the controversy that it stirred up. Mike Walling and Tony Millan's creation was meant as a satire on the prejudice that befell the vertically challenged, however the message was taken the wrong way ( as was the case with the earlier, and far superior, ITV sitcom 'Curry & Chips' ) and viewers took as though it were encouraging such bigoted opinions and consequently it was canned after only six episodes.

In all honesty it's not hard to see why as overall it wasn't a very good show. The scripts featured very little in the way of genuinely funny lines and the mix of characters was not strong. Mike Elles played central character Roy Pink, a short man who ironically is a heightist. One day, a vigilante mob capture anyone under 5ft tall and force them to live in tower-block ghettos away from people who are of normal height.

It is in the ghetto he meets Fred ( Dickie Arnold, who played silent dogsbody Willie in 'The Magnificent Evans' ) and his wife Lily ( Christine Ozanne ), who are both members of the Residents Association, Howard the leader of the 'Small Liberation Front' ( Christopher Ryan ), foul mouthed Sid ( Mick Walter, credited here as Big Mick ), eccentric Japanese couple Mr & Mrs Motokura ( Tetsu Nishino and Sayo Inaba ) and would-be feminist Jenny ( the lovely Cory Pulman ).

The sea of complaints that flooded into the BBC's offices ensured that 'A Small Problem' would not return for a second series and it seems extremely unlikely that it will ever appear on DVD. Best of the lot in the cast was Christopher Ryan, who had earlier been seen to better comic effect as Mike in 'The Young Ones'.
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10/10
Wish I could see it again
linda-mackie16 October 2012
I loved this show and found it hilarious - also an imaginative and intelligent script. I'm small, and I can't believe people complained. Although funny, it gave a bit of an idea of what it must have been like under the Nazis - what with internment camps for small people, the book 'Little Women' being burned, short people having to hide with sympathisers (relatives) and being betrayed etc. I remember there was an 'undergroud' movement which was actually below a block of flats, where they would plan how they could survive. Another part was that everything was designed for taller people, making everyday life very difficult. Sounds about right! The whole thing was very thought-provoking. Wish I could see it again.
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I watched every episode
kerouhak9 March 2006
I think it was taken 'off air' as there was a hint that it may have been making fun of 'small people' The politically correct brigade were around at that time too!!

I always remember the guy who used to be a 'tall' then he was banished to the ghetto after they changed to metric :-) I've tried everywhere to buy a copy of the complete series without success. If anyone knows where I could locate one then I would be most grateful Also starred David Rappaport I believe. His 'student card' picture was of the top half of his head only, as the chair in the photo booth only wound up so far
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