Sick Note. Image shows from L to R: Daniel Glass (Rupert Grint), Dr Iain Glennis (Nick Frost). Copyright: King Bert Productions
Sick Note

Sick Note

  • TV sitcom
  • Sky One
  • 2017 - 2018
  • 14 episodes (2 series)

Comedy about a lie spiralling wildly out of control. Stars Rupert Grint, Nick Frost, Pippa Bennett-Warner, Daniel Rigby, Karl Theobald and more.

  • JustWatch Streaming rank this week: 5,187

Episode menu

Series 2, Episode 2 - New Balls

Sick Note. Image shows from L to R: Linda Zerafa (Marama Corlett), Katerina West (Lindsay Lohan), Michael Serasau (Karl Theobald). Copyright: King Bert Productions
Will_5000 stirs up a whole lot of trouble when he rocks up at Daniel's work.

Broadcast details

Date
Thursday 26th July 2018
Time
2:30am
Channel
Sky One
Length
30 minutes

Repeats

Show past repeats

Date Time Channel
Thursday 26th July 2018 10:30pm Sky1
Friday 27th July 2018 1:30am Sky2
Friday 27th July 2018 10:30pm Sky2
Sunday 29th July 2018 1:40am Sky1
Tuesday 25th June 2019 3:30am Sky1

Cast & crew

Cast
Rupert Grint Daniel Glass
Nick Frost Dr Iain Glennis
Pippa Bennett-Warner Becca Palmerstone
Karl Theobald Michael Serasau
Marama Corlett Linda Zerafa
Lindsay Lohan Katerina West
Belinda Stewart-Wilson Annette Glennis
Dustin Demri-Burns Will_5000
Miles Richardson Dr Samson
Guest cast
Beth Rylance Reporter Hampson
Writing team
James Serafinowicz Writer
Nat Saunders Writer
Production team
Matt Lipsey Director
Sarah Fraser Producer
Jo Sargent Executive Producer
Jon Mountague Executive Producer
Emma James Line Producer
Scott Aukerman Consultant Producer
David Jargowsky Consultant Producer
Pete Drinkwater Editor
Richard Drew Production Designer
Rosalie Clayton Casting Director
Leah Archer Costume Designer
Sarah Bartles-Smith Director of Photography
Nicola Coleman Make-up Designer
Carly Paradis Composer
Scott Bates 1st Assistant Director

Press

A second series for this sitcom starring Rupert Grint as Daniel, a feckless waster trying to capitalise on his cancer misdiagnosis. As we rejoin him, his tissue of lies comes close to disintegration as an online friend turns up out of the blue. A passable idea but never funny or involving enough to truly convince.

Phil Harrison, The Guardian, 26th July 2018

Share this page