Waiting for the Out

Rebecca Chapman  |  Features  |  culture watch
Date posted:  13 Feb 2026
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Waiting for the Out

Source: IMDb

The start of 2026 has brought some cracking television already. With glossy big-hitters like The Traitors and The Night Manager returning to our screens, or the cultural phenomenon that was the finale of the sinister paranormal horror/coming-of-age series Stranger Things, it would be easier to miss some of the more genuinely unusual gems on television.

Waiting for the Out is one of these. The language at points might be strong, but it will make you laugh, make you cry, and certainly make you think. Waiting for the Out is a six-part BBC series (available on iPlayer) based on the memoir The Life Inside by Andy West, about his experience going from academia to teaching philosophy to prisoners, while the men in his own family had spent time behind bars.

Each episode is 45 minutes – just long enough to feel substantive, but not too much. And each episode is a lot. Fascinating and funny, dark but not grim, this looks at not only the life of those inside prisons, but how their time there impacts those around them. Dan, played by BAFTA-nominee Josh Finan, is the Andy character, the teacher we see right from the start of his first day at work in the prison, anxious about how the system inside works. His anxiety initially looks notable but normal. As the series unfolds we learn more about him and his past, and see the impact this has had on him. His quiet turmoil and OCD symptoms and later his private prison of fear that he will become like his dad. The prison he goes to work in is presented as a sort of pressure cooker. (Dan’s actual cooker gets significant screentime in its own sinister way.) It is well cast, well written and well acted, but it isn’t glossy or showy. This is a character drama, and one where compulsive behaviours are shown sensitively. It is trying to go beyond clichés into something more meaningful. about what it might be like doing prison chaplaincy, the cost to all those who work in prisons – and how I might better pray for those who are called to either of these roles, as well as those in prison.

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