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Boy 2011 | Top

Critics praised it, but the show faced an uphill battle. After a second season in 2013 (which concluded on a cliffhanger), Channel 4 controversially cancelled Top Boy in 2014, citing funding issues. For four years, the fate of Dushane and Sully was left in limbo. The 2011 series would have become a cult footnote had it not been for an unlikely fan: Drake . The Canadian rapper was so obsessed with the show that he launched a campaign to revive it. In 2017, he announced that his label, OVO Sound, would partner with Netflix to produce a third season.

While the Netflix seasons offer spectacle, the 2011 original offers truth. It is not an easy watch, but it is an essential one—a stark, brilliant, and heartbreaking portrait of a Britain that mainstream television rarely dares to show. Before the fame, before the global hype, there was just the block. And Top Boy captured it perfectly. Top Boy 2011

Before it was revived by Drake and became a global Netflix juggernaut, Top Boy was a raw, four-part time capsule of life on a fictional East London housing estate. Premiering on Channel 4 on October 31, 2011, the original series was a quiet thunderclap—a hyper-local story with universal themes of survival, loyalty, and the brutal machinery of the drug trade. Critics praised it, but the show faced an uphill battle

The catalyst for the season’s chaos is the seizure of a £300,000 cocaine shipment by a rival gang led by the volatile Bobby Raikes (Geoff Bell). Suddenly, Dushane and Sully are in debt to a ruthless Turkish supplier, forcing them to escalate their operation. The eight episodes (originally four hour-long slots in the UK, later recut) track their desperate scramble to recover the money while navigating police surveillance, internal betrayals, and the collateral damage of their world. The 2011 series would have become a cult