Billy is attracted to an advert in the local paper asking for men to be recruited for a career in publishing. Mr Shadrack and his parents pour cold water on the idea, but unperturbed, Billy goes to the interview anyway and gets the job. However, the publishing life is not what it seems, and is in fact selling encyclopaedias door-to-door. It's not exactly legal either...
Billy's family are filled with admiration when he tells them that for the past six months he's been taking piano lessons, developing an amazing talent. Mr. Fisher is more sceptical and questions whether Billy can play at all. Billy has in fact been going to see a piano teacher all this time, but he's been playing drafts with the old man in a hope of being left a legacy when he dies. Billy is obviously horrified when a piano turns up at the house and his family urge him to play it...
Billy becomes obsessed by the television series Kung Fu, and in his imagination lives the life of duty and honour of its hero, Caine. After a kung fu smash on an expensive urn at the funeral parlour, Billy is suspended without pay, but fortunately this gives him the time to look after his grandma. With grandma due at the hospital, Billy's imagination soon runs away from him, dragging with it his grandma's wheelchair...
Barrie Rutter and Ken Platt star as Bob and Ben Buslingthorpe - Halifax-centric brothers whose relationship is knocked askew when Bob gets engaged. Written by Keith Waterhouse and Willis Hall. Directed and Produced by Ian Davidson
This edition of the long-running arts programme from 1983 concentrates on the life and works of Keith Waterhouse.