Lads' Army
| Lads' Army | |
|---|---|
| Also known as | Bad Lads' Army (2004) Bad Lads' Army: Officer Class (2005) Bad Lads' Army: Extreme (2006) | 
| Genre | Reality show | 
| Voices of | Kevin Whately (2002) Dennis Waterman (2004–06) | 
| Composer | Daniel Pemberton | 
| Country of origin | United Kingdom | 
| Original language | English | 
| No. of series | 4 | 
| No. of episodes | 32 | 
| Production | |
| Running time | 60 minutes (inc. adverts) | 
| Production company | Twenty Twenty | 
| Original release | |
| Network | ITV | 
| Release | 3 June 2002 – 29 August 2006 | 
Lads' Army (known in later series as Bad Lads' Army, Bad Lads' Army: Officer Class and Bad Lads' Army: Extreme) was a reality game show that constitutes a historically derived social experiment. Shown on ITV, the series is based on the premise of subjecting today's delinquent young men to the conditions of conscripts to British Army National Service of the 1950s to see if this could rehabilitate them.
The programme was derived from an earlier one simply called Lads' Army (a play on Dad's Army) in which a number of volunteers underwent four weeks of basic training for 1950s National Service. Unlike the three sequel series (the ones whose titles began with "Bad"), the original programme's experiment was merely to see if 18- to 24-year-old members of the modern British public could cope with the 1950s training, and how they compared to the public of that period. The success of the original series led to the experiment being repeated with the recruits having committed prior criminal offences. Participants were given the option to undergo the training by courts as an alternative to serving pending sentences to explore the proposition that it would be beneficial to reinstate National Service for petty criminals and delinquents as an alternative to more conventional sentences. Series four raised the maximum age for participants to 26.
The narrator for the first series was Kevin Whately, then Dennis Waterman took over until the show ended in 2006. Within each series a small number of the recruits have either walked out (after a 24-hour cooling off period), or been ejected. The majority of the remaining recruits claimed some benefit from the experience, with some choosing to enlist in the real British Army following their time on the show.