Man Like Mobeen

Man Like Mobeen is a British comedy-drama television series created by Guz Khan and Andy Milligan that premiered on BBC Three on 17 December 2017. Set in the Small Heath area of Birmingham, the series stars Khan as Mobeen, a former drug dealer who now tries to live a good life as a Muslim while raising his younger sister Aqsa in the absence of their parents and spending time with his friends Nate and Eight. By portraying the experience of second generation immigrants, the series is an innovative "transcultural comedy" - comically fusing West Midlands, working-class traditions with Pakistani-Muslim culture.

Main

 * Guz Khan as Mobeen Deen: A reformed former drug dealer raising his younger sister and trying to improve his community.
 * Tolu Ogunmefun as Nate: Mobeen's best friend and advocate.
 * Tez Ilyas (series 1–3) as Arslan "Eight" Mughal: Mobeen and Nate's close friend, part of the chosen family to Aqsa.
 * Dúaa Karim as Aqsa: Mobeen's aston villa younger sister, often exasperated with him but loves and looks up to him.

Recurring

 * Mark Silcox as Uncle Shady: a sadistic and outspoken figure in the local community, but close ally to Mobeen and co.
 * Perry Fitzpatrick as Officer Harper: a police officer who comes into frequent contact with Mobeen
 * Salman Akhtar (series 1 and 4) as Officer Sajid: a former classmate of Mobeen.
 * Asheq Akhtar (series 1 and 3) as Uncle Ahmed.
 * David Avery (series 2–3) as Cal: a childhood friend of Mobeen.
 * Art Malik (series 3–4) as Uncle Khan: a drug kingpin of Small Heath.
 * Jaykae (series 2) as Azaar: a local gangster.
 * Aimee-Ffion Edwards (series 2) as Miss Aitken: Aqsa’s English teacher.
 * Nikesh Patel (series 3) as Naveed: Uncle Khan’s nephew.
 * Kane Brown (series 3) as the Hood Whisperer
 * Janice Connolly (series 4) as Governor Burn
 * Yousef Kerkour (series 4) as Megalodon.
 * Specs Gonzalez (series 4) as Chippy: Officer Sajid’s cousin and an accomplice to Megalodon.
 * Al Roberts (series 4) as Memory Stick
 * Hussina Raja (series 4) as Nida

Production
While working as a humanities teacher in a secondary school in Coventry, Guz Khan began making YouTube videos in character as Mobeen, an opinionated care worker who is raising his sister Aqsa. One video reacted to Fox News's suggestion that Birmingham was a no-go area for non-Muslims while another went viral after calling for a boycott of Jurassic World due to its use of the word "Pachy" to refer to the dinosaur, Pachycephalosaurus, a herbivore from the Cretaceous period found in current day Baluchistan, as it sounds like the racial slur for people of Pakistani descent, "Paki". Steve Coogan's production company Baby Cow picked up on Khan's YouTube videos and made a pilot for BBC Three's new talent show, Comedy Feeds. Khan has described the pilot as "very generic, super-sitcomy" and stated that he wanted to make "something more substantial" with Man Like Mobeen. The four part first series, produced by Cave Bear and Tiger Aspect Productions, was announced by BBC Three controller Damian Kavanagh at the 2017 Edinburgh Festival and was released on iPlayer in December of the same year.

The show was picked up for a second series of four episodes in September 2018. During filming for the second series' first episode, which deals with knife crime, Khan and other members of the production called an ambulance after seeing a young boy attacked and threatened with a knife. Khan has stated that while waiting for the ambulance he felt that "nothing was more real than the very subject we were filming and talking about". In response to the success of the programme with younger audiences, the BBC announced in March 2019 that a third series of Man Like Mobeen had been commissioned, which aired in 2020. In September 2020, a fourth series was confirmed, which started airing in June 2023. In February 2024, a fifth series was announced.

Scripts for Man Like Mobeen were written by Khan and Andy Milligan, creator of the comedy drama Undercover and script writer for TV presenters Ant & Dec. Khan has stated that he wanted the show to portray "the funny yet complex realities of life for young working class men and women in Britain today", alongside an authentic account of Birmingham, which he feels "gets almost no positive representation in the media".

Critical reception
Writing for the Financial Times, Harriet Fitch Little described the first series as "an exceptionally funny character comedy that spins jokes with a subtlety that’s rare for such a young writer". Before the release of the third series in January 2020, the NME's Gary Ryan said that Man Like Mobeen "isn't just one of the funniest sitcoms of recent times – it may also be one of the most important" and described the show as "Only Fools and Horses meets Breaking Bad – a lightning-in-a-bottle sitcom that features flawed-but-loveable characters you enjoy hanging out with, while actually saying something about the world they inhabit".