Fresh Meat. Image shows from L to R: Kingsley (Joe Thomas), Vod (Zawe Ashton), Josie (Kimberley Nixon), JP (Jack Whitehall), Howard (Greg McHugh), Oregon (Charlotte Ritchie). Copyright: Objective Productions / Lime Pictures
Fresh Meat

Fresh Meat

  • TV comedy drama
  • Channel 4
  • 2011 - 2016
  • 30 episodes (4 series)

Comedy drama following six mis-matched students who are starting university in Manchester and sharing the same house together. Stars Jack Whitehall, Joe Thomas, Charlotte Ritchie, Kimberley Nixon, Zawe Ashton and more.

  • JustWatch Streaming rank this week: 1,575

Episode menu

Series 4, Episode 6

Fresh Meat. Image shows from L to R: JP (Jack Whitehall), Vod (Zawe Ashton), Kingsley (Joe Thomas), Josie (Kimberley Nixon), Oregon (Charlotte Ritchie). Copyright: Objective Productions / Lime Pictures
Come the day of graduation there's revelations galore. But will our housemates be hosting the alternative Grad Ball to end all Grad Balls or will they have to flee Manchester under cover of darkness?

Preview clips

Further details

Finals are over and most of the housemates are enjoying their freedom. Then the results come in and our gang are 'branded for life'. And it's fair to say that not everyone is happy with their degree. Come the day of graduation there's revelations galore. But will our housemates be hosting the alternative Grad Ball to end all Grad Balls or will they have to flee Manchester under cover of darkness? Vod has an idea! But even if you manage to have the best party ever, how do you bid goodbye to the best years of your life?

Broadcast details

Date
Monday 28th March 2016
Time
10pm
Channel
Channel 4
Length
50 minutes

Repeats

Show past repeats

Date Time Channel
Thursday 31st March 2016 1:25am 4seven
Saturday 17th September 2016 2:45am C4
Sunday 18th September 2016 2:25am 4seven

Cast & crew

Cast
Jack Whitehall JP
Joe Thomas Kingsley
Charlotte Ritchie Oregon
Kimberley Nixon Josie
Zawe Ashton Vod
Greg McHugh Howard
Tony Gardner Professor Shales
Richard Goulding Tomothy
Guest cast
Cicely Giddings Natasha
Rob Mallard Dale
Abigail Burdess Vice Chancellor
James Burrows Colin
Abigail Cruttenden Oregon's Mum
John Draycott Oregon's Dad
Amy Gavin Janine
Julie Hannan Howard's Mum
Stewart Marquis Howard's Dad
Writing team
Tony Roche Writer
Hannah Mackay Script Editor
Production team
Jamie Jay Johnson Director
Tony Roche Director
Rhonda Smith Producer
Judy Counihan Executive Producer
Andrew Newman Executive Producer
Sam Bain Executive Producer
Jesse Armstrong Executive Producer
Charlie Fawcett Editor
Tom Sayer Production Designer
Christian Henson Composer

Video

School is Up

The gang discuss their final results. Warning: this clip contains some potential spoilers.

Press

We say a fond farewell and rather a sad goodbye to the students of Manchester Medlock University in the final episode of Fresh Meat. As a massive fan of all four series of the comedy drama I was hoping for a satisfying finale and thankfully I wasn't disappointed. The episode started with all of the gang, bar second year Josie (Kimberley Nixon), learning their final grades for their course. Most got what they were expecting with the exception of Vod (Zawe Ashton) who achieved a 2:1 and Oregon (Charlotte Ritchie) who got a 2:2 despite her feeling that she deserved a better grade. There was also good news for Howard (Greg McHugh) as he achieved his dream of a first and a job at Ordnance Survey however he briefly believed that all of his housemates would be coming with him. Luckily after working at Vod's graduation ball, which was moved to their house, Howard acquired the social skills he needed to live with other people. Elsewhere Josie finally realised that she had feelings for JP (Jack Whitehall) especially after he finally stood up to his brother and rejected an offer of the job at his bank. Instead JP hoped to live his dream of being an estate agent and if he was really being able to drive one of those minis. I do feel that everybody pretty much got what they deserved and the extra scene that was available online saw all of the boys living together whilst Vod and Oregon were in Laos researching the latter's novel. I did worry that writer Tony Roche would have a lot to get through but I think he gave each character an equal amount of time however I felt that this final episode deserved a little more than fifty minutes to wrap everything up. As is always the way with Fresh Meat, the comic moments were incorporated with elements of drama such as JP standing up to Tomothy and Oregon finally revealing her true self to her parents. My favourite revelation of this final episode had to be the fact that Howard actually lived two streets away from the share house and that his annoying parents kept trying to invite the rest of the gang round. Overall I feel that all six of the cast members have benefited from their time on Fresh Meat and most have already gone on to bigger and better things. So while I've enjoyed spending time with the gang over the past four and bit years I feel it's best that we never return to see what these characters are up to again as it would spoil for what has been in my opinion an almost perfect series.

Matt, The Custard TV, 2nd April 2016

Fresh Meat finale: social media reaction

Fresh Meat ended and everyone either cried or freaked out.

Ellie Walker-Arnott, Radio Times, 29th March 2016

Fresh Meat: What jobs would they get in London?

Fresh Meat is over, and it's time for the residents of Hartnell Avenue to make a go of it in the real world. Howard's plan for 'House 2' in Colliers Wood might have been brushed aside, but like countless graduates, we reckon most of the Fresh Meat massive would end up in London. What kind of jobs could they expect to find in the capital? Here's our careers advice.

Will Noble, Londonist, 29th March 2016

The superlative student sitcom bows out after four series as the gang get their results, attend graduation and stage one last hurrah in the form of alternative end-of-year ball Vodstock. As well as capturing the minutiae of undergrad life with astounding accuracy, the show has also managed to simulate the experience of university itself: you're parachuted into a cast of weird new characters, over the years you grow to love them unconditionally and, finally, everyone just goes home and all you're left with is nostalgic reminiscence.

Rachel Aroesti, The Guardian, 28th March 2016

Farewell, Fresh Meat - and good luck in the real world.

The student houseshare sitcom wasn't just a daft comedy. It was a surprisingly moving elegy to the very idea of university - even if our heroes were left with crippling debt and zero job prospects.

Abigail Chandler, The Guardian, 28th March 2016

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