List of Footballers' Wives Episodes

List Of Footballers' Wives Episodes

The following is a complete episode list for the series Footballers' Wives, which began on 8 January 2002, and ended 15 July 2006.

The first series included 8 episodes. The second series also included 8. The third comprised 9 episodes, one of which was 90 minutes long. The fourth series comprised 9 episodes, two of which were 90 minutes long. The fifth and final series included 8 episodes and the series premiere and finale were 90 minutes long.

Normal episodes were 60 minutes long, and around 45 minutes without breaks. Some series premieres and finales (listed above) were 90 minutes long, and around 70 minutes without breaks.

Read more about List Of Footballers' Wives Episodes:  Summary, Series 1 (2002), Series 2 (2003), Series 3 (2004), Series 4 (2005), Series 5 (2006), Special

Famous quotes containing the words list of, list, wives and/or episodes:

    A man’s interest in a single bluebird is worth more than a complete but dry list of the fauna and flora of a town.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)

    We saw the machinery where murderers are now executed. Seven have been executed. The plan is better than the old one. It is quietly done. Only a few, at the most about thirty or forty, can witness [an execution]. It excites nobody outside of the list permitted to attend. I think the time for capital punishment has passed. I would abolish it. But while it lasts this is the best mode.
    Rutherford Birchard Hayes (1822–1893)

    A village seems thus, where its able-bodied men are all plowing the ocean together, as a common field. In North Truro the women and girls may sit at their doors, and see where their husbands and brothers are harvesting their mackerel fifteen or twenty miles off, on the sea, with hundreds of white harvest wagons, just as in the country the farmers’ wives sometimes see their husbands working in a distant hillside field. But the sound of no dinner-horn can reach the fisher’s ear.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)

    What is a novel if not a conviction of our fellow-men’s existence strong enough to take upon itself a form of imagined life clearer than reality and whose accumulated verisimilitude of selected episodes puts to shame the pride of documentary history?
    Joseph Conrad (1857–1924)