• 230
    watchers
  • 684
    plays
  • 699
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  • 2022-01-17T21:00:00Z on Channel 4
  • 45m
  • 2h 15m (3 episodes)
  • United Kingdom
  • English
  • Documentary
999: What's Your Emergency? is a British factual documentary following the members of the emergency services in Blackpool, Lancashire. The series was filmed in Blackpool over 6 weeks in 2011 and follows members of the Police service, the Fire service and Ambulance service as they work together to tackle crime and disorder in Blackpool. Every episode highlights issues ranging from the damage caused by drugs and alcohol to the reality of domestic violence, and from the dysfunctional way that some people bring up their children to the plight of those who slip through society's safety net, with one or multiple issues raised per episode.

3 episodes

Season Premiere

2022-01-17T21:00:00Z

14x01 Episode 1

Season Premiere

14x01 Episode 1

  • 2022-01-17T21:00:00Z45m

Emergency services in South Yorkshire face a difficult night, beginning with an aggressive drunk in Doncaster town centre who is assaulting a police officer. In Sheffield, PCs Bernice Gott and Rachel Brightmore are monitoring pub and club-goers from a public order van. But as the night wears on, the focus shifts from crimes committed on a whim to premeditated acts.

2022-01-24T21:00:00Z

14x02 Episode 2

14x02 Episode 2

  • 2022-01-24T21:00:00Z45m

Cases involving alcohol-related call-outs involving excessive drinking by women. Officers are alerted by a taxi driver to someone who has been drunk and asleep in a gutter, while PCs Brad Phillips and Mike Doggett attend the scene of a mid-evening car crash. Elsewhere, a disturbance in a pub spills out onto the streets, resulting in an arrest for assault and an entire family of young children being forced to go into custody by their mother.

2022-01-31T21:00:00Z

14x03 Episode 3

14x03 Episode 3

  • 2022-01-31T21:00:00Z45m

Situations in Northamptonshire when people are taken into police custody. The rising number of first-time offenders in custody often leaving resources are stretched to breaking point, given that there are only 62 custody cells to cater for a population of 700,000 people. A 60-year-old drunk driver is brought in for her first offence, and detention officer Perry Chaplin has to deal with a detainee who has stripped naked.

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