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In a different dramatic story we live with a woman named Sam, a woman suffering from rising debt and having to work for one hour on minimum wage as a cleaner in Canary Wharf. Perhaps that profession will change her life forever, making Sam's life thrown into chaos when she discovers access to lucrative stock market information. This information may completely change things, as there are some illegal things in the office you clean that will change the course of events.
Cleaning Up groans under the weight of contrivances, but what will make viewers return next week, despite the plot being as daft as a loo brush, is Smith.
Smith exhibits the skill that has made her one of this country's favourite actresses, but it is yet another case of how she continues to be typecast in working-class roles.
This is completely preposterous, of course, but the series also comes with a stickily sentimental, lightly Dickensian atmosphere that might be just right for this time of year.
You can't help rooting for them in the absurd scene where Sam balances on a desk to plants a microphone in the ceiling of the insider dealer's office and cheering as their 50 investment blooms into 500.