Advanced search
- TITLES
- NAMES
- COLLABORATIONS
Search filters
Enter full date
to
or just enter yyyy, or yyyy-mm below
to
to
to
Exclude
Only includes titles with the selected topics
to
In minutes
to
1-11 of 11
- Comedy series set in Birmingham following the trials and tribulations of (self appointed) community leader Mr Khan and his family.
- The Khans decide to have a family day out to visit Farley Manor, owned by Lord Anstruther, which is putting on a display of Indian treasures collected during the British Raj. Mr Khan's efforts to impress the council committee are put on hold while he takes Naani around the old manor. He becomes much keener on all things ancient and Indian after meeting Lord Anstruther, but his hopes of hobnobbing with the aristocracy are jeopardised by Naani's sticky fingers.
- Mr Khan over-tasks when he takes on a new role as a lollipop man, and a family-photo opportunity causes friction between Alia and Shazia. Mr Khan wants to get Baby Mohammad enrolled at a good school and tries to take the inside track by becoming a school crossing patrol officer, but the training regime and selection process are tougher than he expected, even with Amjad helping him to get fit round the Birmingham streets. Meanwhile, Naani wants the family to have a proper family photo done in a studio. Shazia and Alia clash when Alia tries to hijack the studio session to get photos for her personal fashion vlog, which already has thousands of followers--most of them drawn to a video of Mr Khan walking to the bathroom in his underpants.
- Baby Mohammad has a few unsettled nights and Shazia and Amjad are finding it difficult to cope with the lack of sleep. Mrs Khan thinks they need to spend some quality time together and deputizes Mr Khan to book them a romantic weekend away. Mr Khan is trying to win a Pride of Birmingham award (Alia misinterprets this as him going on a Birmingham Pride march), which leads to an altercation with a parking attendant at the supermarket. The dispute escalates and Khan finds himself staging a protest against parking fines from inside his car after the attendant tries to have it towed away. The police are called--in the form of community-support officer Amjad--and Khan is able to solve Amjad's problems and his own in one fell swoop. Meanwhile, Alia has managed to get herself and Baby Mohammad on a TV show--much to the family's embarrassment.
- Deciding that she and her husband should have more "together" time, Mrs Khan invites Mr Khan along to watch her tango-class demonstration. Mr Khan already has something planned: he's opening a fried-chicken franchise on the High Street. He is keeping it secret from Mrs Khan, as he has invested their pension money in it. He enlists Alia, Amjad, Naani, and nephew Faraz as his chicken-shop crack team. Complicating matter, the chicken-shop manageress Sandra takes a shine to Amjad--but Mr Khan thinks this is just what he needs.
- Mr and Mrs Khan are not happy when Amjad's mother informs them that she and her husband are moving to Bradford and want Shazia, Amjad, and Baby Mo to go with them. When Mrs Khan is rushed to hospital with stomach pains she attempts to match Alia with a handsome doctor while' her husband makes the mistake of posing as a doctor. Back home Shazia puts her parents' minds at rest when she tells them that she has decided against a move, but Khan's belief that Mo is psychic comes horribly true.
- In line with the great tradition of British Muslim baking, Mr Khan enters the Great Sparkhill Bake-Off. He is making his own version of the lemon drizzle inside-out cake. Meanwhile, there are more pressing problems on the domestic front: Alia has a boyfriend. Mrs Khan is worried that he sounds too rough and sends Mr Khan (and son-in-law Amjad) to give him a talking-to--at a pub. After negotiating a number of bearded biker men, Khan meets the boyfriend, and for purely selfish reasons he invites him over to the house. However, Mrs Khan makes a discovery that forces Mr Khan to quiz Alia about every father's worst nightmare.
- Snowmen, reindeer, and a real donkey--it must be Christmas in the Khan household. Mr. Khan embraces Christmas like never before, even launching his own range of traditional halal mince pies with help from a local business dragon. Shazia and Amjad try to find somewhere else to live, because their landlord is selling their house and they can't afford the deposit to buy it. Naani has a solution: she'll give them the money for the deposit. Her only mistake is entrusting it to Mr. Khan, who promptly loses it. To retrieve it, he heads to the Community Centre's Winter Wonderland, where Dave is putting on a show about a talking snowman that may or may not be able to fly. Mr. Khan finds himself re-creating an iconic festive scene. The story ends with a tearjerker as Mr. Khan suffers a very personal loss.
- Mr Khan makes an exhibition of himself in front of a packed house at Edgbaston Cricket Ground. Having been made to sleep in the car by Mrs Khan after forgetting their wedding anniversary, Mr Khan is on a mission to make amends. But his boast to Dave that he knows local boy Moeen Ali backfires when Amjad suggests he could get the famous England all-rounder to make a celebrity appearance at the fundraiser that Mrs Khan and Shazia are helping to organise. Mr Khan has no option but to get to the cricket match to find Moeen and do whatever it takes.
- Mr Khan has bought a drone camera to keep an eye on the neighbourhood, as he believes it is starting to go downhill. This is brought home when he finds out that his grandson Mo is being bullied at his nursery. But when he decides to teach Amjad how to be a better dad, he gets overwhelmed, both during a trip to the local pool and when re-enacting a scene from Birmingham gangster drama "Peaky Blinders." Meanwhile, Shazia and Amjad are getting ready to go on their first family holiday together, but Mrs Khan thinks she is going too. How will Shazia tell her that this won't be her first holiday since Great Yarmouth 1988?
- Tragedy strikes the Khan household: Amjad's bewigged father Mr Malik is knocked down and killed by the number 37 bus. The real tragedy for Mr Khan is that the grief-stricken Mrs Malik is staying with them and comfort-eating him out of house and home. But when Mr Khan discovers that he might be able to find an investor for his new invention among the funeral mourners, he throws himself into the burial arrangements.