In 1992, the BBC accidentally pulled off the greatest Halloween prank since kids discovered you could fill apples with razor blades. Ghostwatch aired once, on October 31st, and never again—unless you count the reruns on niche horror channels decades later, or the nightmares of British children who spent years checking their understairs cupboards for a poltergeist named Pipes. Written by Stephen Volk and directed by Lesley Manning, this mockumentary managed to scare a nation, traumatize kids, enrage parents, and make Michael Parkinson look like he was one séance away from hosting Songs of Praise in Hell.
If Orson Welles’ War of the Worlds made America panic about Martians, Ghostwatch made Britain panic about plumbing. And honestly, isn’t that more relatable?
The Setup: Live TV, Dead Kids, and Michael Parkinson
Ghostwatch was styled as a live broadcast, anchored by Parkinson, Britain’s most reliable television dad, who probably thought he was signing up for a nice evening of spooky storytelling. Instead, he became the straight man in a national haunting.
The program investigated the Early family in suburban Northolt—Pamela and her daughters Suzanne and Kim—tormented by a poltergeist named “Pipes.” Why Pipes? Because when you hear banging in the walls, you blame the plumbing. A demon that moonlights as central heating—it’s the most British haunting imaginable. Forget Dracula or Freddy Krueger; the real nightmare is an angry boiler.
Meanwhile, Sarah Greene bravely spent the night in the haunted house, Mike Smith handled the flood of (staged) viewer phone calls, and Craig Charles roamed the streets interviewing locals with the energy of a man who thought this was a warm-up gig before hosting Robot Wars.
The Haunting: Pipes Gets a Primetime Slot
At first, the broadcast was cozy Halloween fluff. A little knocking, a little ghost-story seasoning, the kind of thing you’d expect before Parkinson poured himself a Scotch and everyone went to bed. But slowly, things got weirder. Viewers at home swore they saw a strange figure lurking in the background. Scratches appeared on Suzanne’s face. Cats were heard hissing and screeching in the night, though none were in the house.
Then came the big reveal: Pipes wasn’t just a spooky figment. He was the ghost of Raymond Tunstall, a disturbed man who had believed himself possessed by the spirit of a Victorian child killer named Mother Seddons. He’d hanged himself under the stairs, where his corpse was gnawed on by his cats. So yes, the BBC fed millions of viewers a children’s bedtime story about a child-murdering pedophile whose body was turned into kibble. Happy Halloween, everyone!
The climax? Suzanne gets possessed, Sarah Greene vanishes into the under-stairs hellmouth, and Parkinson—national treasure Parkinson—ends the night mumbling nursery rhymes while Pipes clearly puppeteers his body like a sinister marionette. The BBC studio itself becomes haunted, leaving viewers to wonder whether their own living rooms were now demonically sublet.
The Reaction: Nation, Meet PTSD
If the creators had wanted to traumatize an entire generation, mission accomplished. Roughly a million people called the BBC switchboard that night, half to complain and half to beg for exorcisms. Parents were furious that their children had been allowed to watch what they thought was a documentary until Sarah Greene was dragged to Hell live on TV. The Broadcasting Standards Commission later ruled the show was “excessively distressing,” which is British understatement for “we accidentally invented Satanic PTSD.”
The fallout was so severe that Ghostwatch was banned from broadcast in the UK ever again. Not censored, not shuffled to BBC2 at 2 a.m.—flat-out never shown again. For a nation that tolerates EastEnders, that’s saying something.
The Craft: Haunting on a Budget
What makes Ghostwatch work, even thirty years later, is its pitch-perfect realism. It looked exactly like a BBC live special of the time. The sets were mundane, the banter awkward, and the technology laughably clunky. They even used the real BBC call-in number. The effect was devastatingly convincing: millions of viewers thought they were watching live TV slowly unravel into supernatural chaos.
And the genius trick? Pipes barely appears on screen. He’s a whisper, a shadow, a reflection. Half the time, you aren’t even sure you saw him until someone rewinds the tape. It’s the ultimate trick: the ghost isn’t just haunting the characters, he’s haunting the audience.
The Humor: Britishness as Survival Mechanism
Despite its reputation as nightmare fuel, Ghostwatch is laced with accidental comedy. Craig Charles treats interviews about haunted houses like man-on-the-street sketches. Mike Smith spends most of the runtime looking like he’d rather be anywhere else. And Michael Parkinson—stoic, dignified Parkinson—delivers lines about child-murdering spectres with the gravitas of a man announcing the Wimbledon results.
Then there’s the sheer absurdity of Pipes. A cat-mauled, dress-wearing poltergeist named after faulty plumbing? It sounds like a rejected League of Gentlemen character. Yet that ridiculousness only makes him creepier. Horror always hits harder when it teeters on the edge of comedy.
The Legacy: Once Was Enough
Ghostwatch has never been repeated on British TV, and that’s part of its legend. It exists as a one-night-only cultural trauma, preserved in bootlegs, documentaries, and the fever dreams of those who saw it live. It’s studied in film schools, referenced in horror anthologies, and held up as a precursor to The Blair Witch Project and Paranormal Activity. But unlike those, Ghostwatch didn’t advertise itself as fake. It was the BBC, for crying out loud. If the Beeb tells you ghosts are real, you believe them.
Even now, watching it feels dangerous—like Pipes might crawl out of the cathode-ray tube and scratch your face for old times’ sake. Streaming it on Shudder doesn’t dull the edge; if anything, watching it alone at night makes you understand why a million Brits lost their collective minds in 1992.
The Verdict: A Broadcast Too Good for This World
Ghostwatch is a masterpiece of televised horror, equal parts brilliant and reckless. It weaponized the trust audiences had in the BBC, exploited the aesthetics of live TV, and slipped genuine terror into prime time. It was so effective it broke itself, banned forever like a cursed videotape.
And that’s why it remains unforgettable. Most horror films you can rewatch until the jump scares lose their power. But Ghostwatch? You don’t just watch it—you survive it.
So raise a glass to Pipes, the most infamous poltergeist in British broadcasting history. He may have been banished from the airwaves, but he’s still under the stairs, waiting for the next poor soul to tune in.

