I really enjoyed this too. Haigh is terrific as Lampton. Moving Lampton into the 1970s is a great move, as he fits in wonderfully with that era of conspicuous consumption (eg, his purchase of a car costing six grand in 'Charity Begins at Home'). Materialism runs throughout the series, and makes Lampton an interesting counterpart to Thelma and Bob in WHATEVER HAPPENED TO THE LIKELY LADS?
The second series foregrounds the North-South conflict even more, and the new titles sequence of the second series plays on contrasting images of London and Yorkshire. Haigh has a great speech in one of the episodes on series two: ‘I’ve had enough of London. I mean, I’ve always known it was full of crap, but I thought I could handle that. In fact, for a while I even enjoyed it. I could always laugh up my sleeve at all of them. But yesterday, I went to visit my uncle Dick in Dufton, and driving through the streets, I felt like… I felt like I was a kid, as if I belonged there. It was nice to be back among real people again, people who’ve got real dignity and not the bullshit that passes for sophistication down here’.
I'd say the second series is definitely worth buying, if you're on the fence about it
