This article is about the British television series. For the song recorded by the Mamas & the Papas, see Monday, Monday. For the album by Paul Horn, see Monday, Monday (album).
It is set in the head office of a supermarket that has fallen on hard times and had to re-locate its staff from London to Leeds.[2] The show was initially announced as part of ITV's Winter 2007 press pack, but was "iced" until 2009 due to falling advertising in the wake of the economic downturn.[2][3]
The show was commissioned by ITV's director of drama, Laura Mackie.[1] Mackie said that the show aimed to "entertain, engage and strike a chord with the audience".[1] Although the show was initially announced as part of ITV's Winter 2007 press pack, it was put on hold until 2009 due to falling advertising rates in the wake of the economic downturn.[2][3] According to Broadcast, the show aimed to "shed light on a world of alcoholic HR bosses, power-crazed managers and sexually unfettered PAs".[2]
Towards the end of the first episode, Christine is shown to be an alcoholic, which she eventually admits. As the series progresses the failing life of Christine becomes more central to the plot.
Plot
The show features a group of head office workers for struggling supermarket chain Butterworths.[4] As a result of downsizing, the workers are forced to move cities, relocating from London to Leeds.[2]
Neil Stuke – Max Chambers, Acting Head of Marketing
Laura Haddock – Natasha Wright, Marketing Assistant (prev. PA to Vivienne Wyatt. With Vivienne off sick recovering from cancer, Natasha is seconded to Max Chambers)
Saikat Ahamed – Vince, PA to Max Chambers & Natasha Wright (prev. PA to Max Chambers)
The departments named above are the main departments focused on but other departments are mentioned or featured on presentations. They include:
Contracts
Sourcing
IT
Design
Property
International Sales
National Sales
Butterworths Group PLC
Butterworths Head Office
The Head Office is arranged into a North Wing and a South Wing on all floors above the Lower Ground Floor.
Lower Ground: Canteen, Building Services/Property/Facilities Management & Sourcing
Ground Floor: Marketing (South) Meeting Area (North) & Reception/Security in Centre
First Floor: Human Resources (South) Contracts (North)
Second Floor: International Sales (South) Finance & Chief Executive's Office (North)
Third Floor: National Sales (South) Design (North)
Other Services than Retail are Insurance Sales. Each department is managed by a Department Head and each department head has a personal assistant
Episodes
Episode 1 (13 July 2009)
Episode 2 (20 July 2009)
Episode 3 (27 July 2009)
Episode 4 (3 August 2009)
Episode 5 (10 August 2009)
Episode 6 (17 August 2009)
Episode 7 (24 August 2009)
Broadcast and reception
The show did not receive good reviews. Tim Walker of The Independent stated that the shows rival in the same timeslot, BBC One show The Street was "a darn sight more interesting than watching Fay Ripley walk into doors". Walker said that the show was filled with shots of Leeds, saying that the show was purely "advertising it as an attractive nightlife destination" or "to prove beyond doubt that ITV was fulfilling its obligations to the regions." (something that may have been fitting with ITV mothballing many parts of its Leeds Studios the same year).[5] Sam Wollaston of The Guardian also criticised the show saying that it was "lame and laboured, tired and predictable".[6]
The poor reception was reflected in the show's ratings, the show bringing in 3.7 million, a 16% viewing share, six per cent and 1.3 million viewers lower than The Street. The show, however, was second in its timeslot, beating the other three terrestrial channels in the slot.[7] Despite being second in the timeslot, the show was down on the 5.6 million for ITV1's channel slot average so far in 2009.[8]
Not helping matters in terms of viewing figures was the fact that STV continued its recent trend of declining high-ticket ITV productions, thereby avoiding having to contribute to the production cost on a pro rata basis, and so Scottish viewers of terrestrial broadcasts were unable to view the series. The series average, based on overnight ratings was 2.90m, equating to a 13.2% viewing share.
In Australia, this programme aired each Friday at 8:30pm on ABC2 from 28 January 2011.[17]
In Serbia, this programme aired on Fox Life. In the United States the show is on Hulu.com and currently available via Netflix and YouTube.