Show cover for The Moaning of Life

The Best Episodes of The Moaning of Life Season 1

Every episode of The Moaning of Life Season 1 ranked from best to worst. Discover the Best Episodes of The Moaning of Life Season 1!

Now Karl’s turned 40 and has officially hit middle age, it’s time for him to re-assess his life. He’s not married, he doesn’t have kids,...
Genres:ComedyDocumentary
Network:Sky One

Season 1 Ratings Summary

"Marriage" is the best rated episode of "The Moaning of Life" season 1. It scored 7.7/10 based on 172 votes. Directed by Richard Yee and written by N/A, it aired on 10/20/2013. This episode is rated 0.5 points higher than the second-best, "Happiness".

  • Marriage
    7.7/10172 votes

    #1 - Marriage

    Season 1 Episode 1 - Aired 10/20/2013

    Karl Pilkington travels the world in search of answers to some of life's most important questions. He begins with marriage, wondering whether he is wrong about not wanting to tie the knot with his long-term girlfriend. In Delhi, he gains an insight into arranged marriages by going on a date with a prospective wife - and her parents - and in Bangalore, he is asked to help a pair of elite wedding planners. He also sniffs out a scientific approach to finding the perfect partner in LA, before searching for an alternative way of getting hitched in Las Vegas.

    Director: Richard Yee

    Writer: N/A

  • Happiness
    8.2/10171 votes

    #2 - Happiness

    Season 1 Episode 2 - Aired 10/27/2013

    Karl Pilkington tries to find out how people achieve happiness, something he isn't sure it is worth pursuing. In Mexico, he joins members of a tribe who enjoy running ultra-marathons and meets a group that finds pleasure in pain. In LA he hangs out with some hip-hop clowns, experiences a day of beauty with a plastic-surgery addict and gives up his possessions to see if the simple life is the answer to contentment.

    Director: Benjamin Green

    Writer: N/A

  • Kids
    7.5/10148 votes

    #3 - Kids

    Season 1 Episode 3 - Aired 11/3/2013

    Why do people have children? That's the puzzler bothering world-weary philosopher Karl this week. Travelling the globe, he tries to understand why couples feel the need to become parents, visiting a fertility festival in Japan and a natural birthing centre in Bali - where he lends a hand with a delivery - and meets an LA couple looking to take the next step.

    Director: Richard Yee

    Writer: N/A

  • Vocation and Money
    7.8/10132 votes

    #4 - Vocation and Money

    Season 1 Episode 4 - Aired 11/10/2013

    Karl aims to get to the bottom of his relative lack of a vocation, and visits an 85-year-old Japanese inventor to discover whether he has what it takes to become a genius. When the results prove less than encouraging, he sets his targets a little lower by trying his hand at becoming a traditional Japanese handyman. On the opposite end of the spectrum, he hangs out with a self-made millionaire in South Africa and jets off to Los Angeles to strut his stuff in a Hollywood fashion show. Karl makes a favourable impression on brazenly ostentatious South African playboy Kenny. Kenny's the kind of guy who sits on a throne at home and is keen to show off his wealth to the cameras, so Karl receives the full rap-star treatment. He sips champagne by the pool, rides in a helicopter and gets a facial. And then moans about it all.

    Director: Benjamin Green

    Writer: N/A

  • Death
    7.8/10119 votes

    #5 - Death

    Season 1 Episode 5 - Aired 11/17/2013

    Karl ends his journey with a look at differing attitudes to death. He visits Ghana, where he shops for a customised coffin, before attending his first-ever funeral and the accompanying parade. He also meets members of a community in the Philippines who live and work with the deceased, is taught how to cry and deal with grief by a professional mourner in Taiwan, and returns to Britain where he creates a memorial. The last part of Karl Pilkington's Sky One travel show, set in the Philippines, has been pulled in the wake of Typhoon Haiyan.

    Director: Richard Yee

    Writer: N/A