The sixth series sees Tiswas nearing a national broadcast as the ITV London region take up the show. Featuring the debut of Spit the Dog's song, this edition also features a rare serious moment as Chris warns about the danger of fireworks.
Cliff Richard is one of the guests on this edition, and 16mm film inserts of Cliff in concert at the Odeon are the only part of this episode still existing in the ITV Archives.
Lenny Henry appears as the newsreader of "(No) Shoos at Ten", but with his impression of Trevor McDonald going under a different name to how it would later appear. Guests include Annie Lennox with her band the Tourists.
The Westward and Channel regions receive Tiswas for the first time, in an edition that includes Elvis Costello and Aimi Stewart as guests. There's also more from Bob Blackman, the singer who hits himself over the head with a metal tray.
Bob Carolgees and Charlie the Monkey try skiing, Sally James profiles The Police, the Masked Poet delivers more terrible verse, and will the audience really cut Chris's hair with gardening shears?
The usual mix of cartoons and music, including an interview with Flying Lizards, plus impressions from 13-year-old Jacqueline Fisher, Spit the Dog and the Bucket of Water Song.
Richard O'Sullivan joins the show as a guest, while Sally has some Pop News, and Lenny Kinte is looking to find his roots. Yet there's problems in the studio with an epidemic outbreak of Cooperitis.
Phil Collins and Mike Rutherford of the rock band Genesis come into the studio to promote their new album, Duke, and receive the customary Tiswas treatment.
Tiswas gets replaced for the morning by a series about the knights of Camelot - or does it? There's also interviews with members of Sky and Madness, in an edition that only exists as a domestic video recording, with some sequences missing.