thank you Freddie Foreman , your autobiography answered a mystery about my late grandfather Alexander Thomson. my family here in New Zealand thank you for calling him a man of honour , to us and me in particular he was a true man of honour. your son Jamie is a great actor as well :)
The quote from Only fools and horses that granddad said is actually very precise, they promised us homes fit for heroes, instead they give us heroes fit for homes
Interesting fella. Listening to him talk is like listening to an overexcited 5 year old kid telling you stories...there's no full stops and the story keeps rolling taking unpredictable turns
My father was a bare knuckle fighter in the day. He never harmed anyone and done things to help the poor, he fed them by means of stealing. He never once bragged and did his time.
Many thanks for another great interview, Bernard! You have a very good rapport, with Mr Foreman. You totally put him at his ease. I wish you all the best for your future projects. xxxx
Great documentary..I'm not into true crime things but this was in my recommend from vague association with other stuff I'd watched.. got to say I'm pleased curiousity got better of me, not knowing who he was until it got going and it became evident.. well made.. interesting. concise. Historically important..thanks..
Agree 100% the majority are thick as mince and Frankie Fraser was an absolute c##t. A coward and robbing his own countrymen during WWII, waste of oxygen like the rest of them.
If Freddie hadn’t been a villain he would have been a brilliant comedian. I’ve read all his books and some of the stories he tells had me crying with laughter just picturing it. Freddie was old school he didn’t believe in hurting for the sake of hurting usually it was because someone took a liberty. His mistake was getting involved with the Krays had he not of he wouldn’t have got jail time. He was successful in the businesses he ran he earned good money and was comfortable. He did a lot for charity and helped people who had very little. Their are plenty of people who have nothing but good things to say about Freddie.
@@ellenlyons4090 I think you'd be surprised what any person can do. Do you think he is the hardest man in the world, or still has the balls to do his own work? Gangsters are cowards that gets others to do their work. It's why the dumbasses get caught.
So why did the Krays call on Freddie to sort their shit out. If their right hand man was the bollocks. It’s said the Krays feared and respected Freddie. They would never take a liberty with him.
If he wrote a book to be published after his death it would make some reading and answer a lot of underworld mysteries, i would like to know why his family no longer speak to him...something serious must have came to light for that to happen because Fred and his son Jamie were extremely close.
I actually think this man is real, has a good heart, he might have made mistakes but he is loyal, he has a presence about where you just know not to mess with him
The bigger picture encompasses much of post war history, and offers a detailed insight into London life. There is no judgement here, more of an education, and awareness of how things were, and the evolution that's prevalent in today's society.
Absolutely bangin'! I take on what others have said, but the ending is true, that old style of a residing respect has gone, villainy these days is without character.
Be aware: The narrator never was (nor was there ever an ‘essex boys’) a ‘member’ of this media named ‘essex boys’ > this fella was muscle for a few toe rags and nothing more
How do you know the same thing as me bouncer with forty RUclips channels milking certain people to bits .channel running dry bosh open another upload .I thought this was smithing new but it’s BM again who would have thought you can now say goodbye to you’re comment .lol cool tools has the GOLD
This man was a victim of his circumstance. There’s no way he would hurt any innocents, man, woman or child. Foreman always strikes me as a decent, straight up person. Even among gangsters he was known to be a gentleman. We are all sinners with a past and no one is beyond redemption. I hope Freddie has found peace with God and the demons we all have to face.🙏❤️.x
I nearly agreed until I remembered he shot Frank Mitchell for the Krays for a favour after they couldn't control him after initially assisting his jailbreak. A decent bloke doesn't kill another human being period nevermind one that hasn't ever wronged him just for a favour. That's only one of the multiple murders he's known for. There's obviously more no one knows about.
@@martinmcguire5458 He wouldn’t harm Joe public in the street us what I was inferring. Those worlds they operated in were merciless. You don’t “know” his affiliation with Frank Mitchell or the Krays. They all took the same risks in many ways, live by the sword die by it. I’m not saying it’s right either. Like I said circumstances and upbringing massively influence our objectives, trajectory and choices. I still maintain that given this context Foreman is a decent guy.x
??? "No one is beyond redemption" ??? I can think of many who are way way way beyond redemption! Some of them are that bad that only deserve to be in the deepest darkest corner of hell! It's beyond me why we keep some of the child molester peadophiles alive for 30+ years at the expense of the tax paying public. These people have no right to be kept alive!
@@robertkelly9349 I meant in the context of “the gangster world/fraternity”. Sexual crimes etc…I agree are on another level of evil as far as I’m concerned. That’s why those kind of offenders are protected for there own safety in prison because of the nature of there crime. However my original comment stressed that the likes of Foreman would not harm children, woman or indeed innocent men who are not in those circles. That’s my point.x
Same as my family during the war years, imagine living under the threat of being bombed 24/7, the thought of your country being invaded, while your family and loved ones went away to fight someone elses war....imagine that today...most of the country would be down the solicitors to sue the government for 'stress' and 'anxiety' ....back then people just got on with things and made the best of it, different breed, whether they were villains or straight.
I despise criminals... that being said, this gentleman here, regardless of his crimes, he had morals. I was highly impressed with his loyalty and the thought of safety of people who weren't involved. Very few criminals have high morals to separate the family, women and kids from the person that does the indecencies against other gangsters. He may be my favorite gangster. I also liked the "you kick the dog you kick the master" part, seems he cared about his underlings as well. Proper chief here.
I know, pathetic bragging about being part of the so called Essex boys firm must think it has clout cis of the success of the films My question is why doesn't carlton leach mention him? Or why isn't he in rise of the footsoldier? Surely a member of the said firm would be at least mentioned in one of the 100 rise of footsoldier movies 😂😂
I have read, watched and listened to these amazing gangster life stories. I find it easier to believe as I try and understand the reality of death in the war or even end of world. Who knows which way we would have gone??? They lived and died through it all. Xx
Fred did see some shit as a kid during the war. Seen him talk many a time and I'm sure if my memory serves me correctly Fred and his mates found a body.
Blighty has, evidently, some of the scariest criminals who have ever drawn breath. Take away even the most fierce American criminals' firepower and throw the two sets (if numbers were comparable) into a closed space and I have no doubt whatever who would walk out. These people, raised from children (in one of the segments of this series, the pretty seven or eight-year-old daughter of one of them was incidentally shown in a [serious] boxing cum [serious] weight-training gym, throwing, with her skinny little arms, punches against a heavy bag) to swim when deemed necessary -- and that can mean anything -- in an unimaginably violent world. These people are the germination of the phrase, "When you see me comin', better step aside". And judging from what I've seen in this series, I damn sure would . . . except I'd run.
Jay Kaye........ You might just be right. A person who is fierce etc can often have a flip side to their personalities - they can be fierce with their love too. I do believe every one has goodness in them, sometimes they're afraid to show it, perhaps they would never be able to make it come to the surface but the goodness is there regardless. Attack is said to be the best form of defence.
your leaving your self wide open to lie & deception by having the believe very one has goodness in them the reailty is they dont some have full entity attachment take over its not person in the driving seat to speak its a entity with a malevolent agenda a high ratio of criminals and those who work for government ain't in the driving seat psychopath and narcissist have no empathy or compassion for anyone they fake emotions to get alone with others or to meet their own objectives but their is never any emotional authenticity carried cross with such types of people .
He always has come across as very fair it seemed his game was more doing robberies then investing the money to go straight I don`t think Foreman was squeezing money from places like the Krays were,
Why don't we celebrate the people who worked hard all their lives,pay taxes,and pay their way,never breaking the law ? Instead we celebrate thugs who take what they want by violence and put two fingers up to the rest of us ! All families had members who fought in the war,many, like my father,had to survive with injuries he received.He had a bad back which often saw him doubled up in pain,but he never thought to demand money from a pub or club by threats of violence.
@@AndrewRobertson-kl4vi Many years ago there was a documentary called harry's out. The harry in question was Harry Haywood out of Deptford who had just been released from prison. Anyway after while the conversation got round to his brother Billy Haywood who was involved in the Mr Smith's turn out. This was when Harry told the reporter when standing back to back he and his brother Billy were unbeatable. After hearing this Ronnie turned his to friends who were watching the documentary with him and said back to back that's the way i bury them
@@AndrewRobertson-kl4vi He was very well known in southeast London. Indeed in one of Freddy's books there are several pictures of Ronnie Oliffe. In fact Ronnie fell out with Freddy over the pictures that drew attention to him which he didn't appreciate
@@AndrewRobertson-kl4viThey were partners, and Foreman was certainly the senior partner as it were - much more fearsome reputation. Ronnie was a smart crim, had a lot of muscle around him, but wasn’t feared in the same way Foreman was. He (Foreman) wouldn’t have been mugged off by the lot over the water, like Ronnie was. If Foreman had been around they wouldn’t have taken liberties like they did; Foreman was much more respected, and I doubt he’d have swallowed that one, whereas Ronnie has to.
He way bigger than the Kray's and regretted teaming up with them, he said if they weren't found guilty at their trial they were both getting clipped, He also was the man who gave the Costa the name Costa Del Crime after they settled there after the security express robbery ,He had business's all over London and Bob Hoskins based his character in the film Long Good Friday on Fred . He wasn't a bully he's a rare breed pure old school
@@davidpowell9713 That as well, but drugs in the sixties were never as prevalent as they have been over the last four decades. In the sixties, speed tabs and the occasional joint were all people took, coke was harder to find, because coke was a film star thing, the buzz was too fleeting as well as it cost too much, plus there were only around one thousand registered heroin addicts in the UK, then again I think it could have been just 600, and mick Jagger was one of them. Drugs destroyed the tight and un breakable crews which used to exist before the drugs flooded the UK. There weren't many gangs doing what I would term as legit crime, after the flood hit. Criminality change with the influx of drugs. Criminals had to take advantage of the situation, otherwise they would be left behind, and exposed to richer, stronger firms. And this is where your ruthless foreign criminals came into the picture, a lot of them had control of the heroin trade. Sorry for the book, haha.
Who would've known. My grandparents also grew up in Battersea in the 30's and then moved to Woking (Sheerwater) after the war. Wonder if they were ever neighbours! 😝
Mine too! My grandparents are gone now, bless 'em, but they moved to Sheerwater from Battersea a long time ago. Sheerwater and Woking are very different nowadays. It was great about 40 years ago, it's a shithole now🙁
You gotta love Brown Bread Fred Gave no fuks at all, just did what he wanted to do. Different world in those days and people of today cant understand how they could do what they did. Once he's gone its all finished with and confined to mythology. Long live Fred
I think GB is unique in its portrayal of it's underbelly of crime and violence in the world of unlicensed boxing and cage fighting mixed up with all sorts in the underworld. Violence has become popular. It has spread, and in the mix it has scuped up every kind of undesirable that normal would have been screened out. Greed and power is the motivation because there's lots to be had in the fight game. Reminds me of the scene in the Dear Hunter, the Russian Rulet scene. 🤕🔫
Remember him coming in the Putney Yacht Club in Fulham, before Fulham got posh! Thing was there was no yachts!! When he came in we left, he used to drink with Bindon.
Don't know how well you know Fulham Hammersmith and Fulham but have you heard of a drinking club called SAJAC which existed in the 50s 60s and 70s. It used to be on the Greyhound road. I'm trying to get more info on this place but can't find anything.
@@danielfrancis3660 Yes, very well indeed, it was a doorway entrance which led downstairs, its was a private/illegal club, and the faces that drank there were let's say not your normal punters..... late lock in's and card schools
Absolutely terrific. Freddy seems like the sort of gentleman who would pay for your shopping and carry it home for you. He'd then go to the pub for a bitter lemon, and buy whatever the barmaid serving him wants, before having a punch up outside and then getting some fish and chips on the way home. An absolutely smashing film. 😃🥹😊🛒🛒🛍🛍🍹🍋🍋🙆♀️🐟🐠🐟🐠🍟🍟🍟🍟🥊🥊🥊🥊
Idolising murderers and torturers...not for me! All these criminals including Foreman were just brainless animals.And yet how many turned up for the funerals of these monsters?!...the very people that may have had friends or family terrorised by the person they are giving respect to!
This interview is quite old but still very informative and entertaining. I remember seeing it and thinking that Bernard hardly spoke throughout the interview! 😄 I've read nearly ever book known to man about all the Eastend gangsters and ya man here always had some manners and morals. They were are all a different breed of man back then. No honour or loyalty (even for criminals!)
Different breed; no honor or loyalty? Don't kid yourself. Corruption is alive and well. Just look at the politicians in any English speaking country. Have a closer look at American imperialism and the New World Order crowd if you want to single out psychopathic crazy.
When I grew up in the Gorbals in Glasgow in the Sixties and seventies we always watched the Men coming out of the Pubs and having a Square Go with each other, if you don't come from Glasgow a Square Go is a fair fight.
thank you Freddie Foreman , your autobiography answered a mystery about my late grandfather Alexander Thomson. my family here in New Zealand thank you for calling him a man of honour , to us and me in particular he was a true man of honour. your son Jamie is a great actor as well :)
The quote from Only fools and horses that granddad said is actually very precise, they promised us homes fit for heroes, instead they give us heroes fit for homes
Interesting fella. Listening to him talk is like listening to an overexcited 5 year old kid telling you stories...there's no full stops and the story keeps rolling taking unpredictable turns
My father was a bare knuckle fighter in the day. He never harmed anyone and done things to help the poor, he fed them by means of stealing. He never once bragged and did his time.
He most likely harmed people by stealing. Just saying
@Tbo1235 no in our days we were in abject poverty. He stole to feed his family. Not stealing makeup, coffee to fund any habit. To feed his children.
Many thanks for another great interview, Bernard! You have a very good rapport, with Mr Foreman. You totally put him at his ease. I wish you all the best for your future projects. xxxx
Great documentary..I'm not into true crime things but this was in my recommend from vague association with other stuff I'd watched.. got to say I'm pleased curiousity got better of me, not knowing who he was until it got going and it became evident.. well made.. interesting. concise. Historically important..thanks..
My mum and dad went through the blitz. My dad fought in Korea... but like most cockneys he was not a gangster terrorising his neighbours.
I've never understood the idolising of criminals. Quite sad really.
Well said.
You came to this video though 🤦🏼♂️
@@Mic.check1.2.1.2 and left it very quickly
Likewise sad and pathetic 👌🙏
Agree 100% the majority are thick as mince and Frankie Fraser was an absolute c##t. A coward and robbing his own countrymen during WWII, waste of oxygen like the rest of them.
Freddie Foreman aka The Managing Director OF British Crime 💪
Brilliant documentary. Well done.
Great documentary.bernard 👍
It must be awful to have stolen the property that belonged to other people who worked very hard to own it.
like the banks he might have robbed foreman didn't do house breaking, he stole from the big institutions that are still robbing the public today.
Brilliant documentary
Freddie reminds me of Mr Wolf from Pulp Fiction, a man with contacts and who gets things done but seems an ok kind of guy.
He wasn't a bad fella in his day. Did his crime and time. Could fight a bit then eat the sausage sandwich
Remember this guy when I worked at full Sutton prison in the 80s, he was always respectful and polite- a gentleman
He was a fucking THUG
If Freddie hadn’t been a villain he would have been a brilliant comedian. I’ve read all his books and some of the stories he tells had me crying with laughter just picturing it. Freddie was old school he didn’t believe in hurting for the sake of hurting usually it was because someone took a liberty. His mistake was getting involved with the Krays had he not of he wouldn’t have got jail time. He was successful in the businesses he ran he earned good money and was comfortable. He did a lot for charity and helped people who had very little. Their are plenty of people who have nothing but good things to say about Freddie.
If Freddie hadn’t been a villain he would have been a brilliant comedian.
Yeah, he was a right joke
@@oldmanonamission8055 Bet you wouldn’t have the balls to say it to his face.
@@ellenlyons4090 he's a fucking old man and you would lose that bet
@@oldmanonamission8055 you reckon you’d be surprised what that old man can still do.
@@ellenlyons4090 I think you'd be surprised what any person can do. Do you think he is the hardest man in the world, or still has the balls to do his own work?
Gangsters are cowards that gets others to do their work. It's why the dumbasses get caught.
I liked listening about the history of London before, during and, after the war.
Lucky for Freddie that Ron Pickering wasn't around at the same time
Can't believe people are still using this joke.
Ronnie Pickering was krays right and man
Who?lol
@@harrycallahan9143 if you know you know
So why did the Krays call on Freddie to sort their shit out. If their right hand man was the bollocks. It’s said the Krays feared and respected Freddie. They would never take a liberty with him.
Very interesting vid, great job. I luv this channel, the good ole day'z. 👍🇺🇲🗽🏴👍
What a fascinating, well researched and presented doc. Those gentlemen still dress as such. End of an era though.
If he wrote a book to be published after his death it would make some reading and answer a lot of underworld mysteries, i would like to know why his family no longer speak to him...something serious must have came to light for that to happen because Fred and his son Jamie were extremely close.
Its legal problems that I doupt wnt come out as long as he's alive .thats as much as I know .
Was he a train robber that got away
The guy as no.mony lives of the state in a nursing home
@@frankyhoward9197 He doesn't live in a nursing home,he lives in Little Venice in Maida Vale
@@frankyhoward9197 That could be a possibility.
I can't help but like him.
31:05 , Christine Keeler ! Instrumental in the down fall of at least one Government Minister .
The Profumo affair.
They do NOT know what respect is
People do NOT respect thugs
@@gowdsake7103 they do if their wired up wrong most people fear them
they control people through fear without fear they have no power over people
They know what respect is in their own world 🌎
Makes me laugh when he was moaning the police broke the law taking him back to the UK 😂
Reminds me of my grandfather here in Glasgow
I actually think this man is real, has a good heart, he might have made mistakes but he is loyal, he has a presence about where you just know not to mess with him
Ohhh the glamour
😁😉👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
The bigger picture encompasses much of post war history, and offers a detailed insight into London life. There is no judgement here, more of an education, and awareness of how things were, and the evolution that's prevalent in today's society.
Is it just me or did Freddie talk for 8 plus minutes straight without saying anything. Brings to mind politicians
I couldn't understand shit either
He hasnt got the brains to make sense
It's just London talk, it probably wasn't on the curriculum at your posh school.
Absolutely bangin'! I take on what others have said, but the ending is true, that old style of a residing respect has gone, villainy these days is without character.
good documentary, when was it made?
Freddie was the most dangerous man in this country by a country mile. A legend in his own right & in a league of his own…
No he wasn't.
He was dangerous and very smart i aggree but not the most dangerous man in UK london there are many 100 times worse
@@davidjoseph3188 in every City there's dangerous people Manchester has many .
@@garycroft4960 I know the noonan brothers very dangerous
@@davidjoseph3188 there's alot worse than them know especially in Salford.
Be aware: The narrator never was (nor was there ever an ‘essex boys’) a ‘member’ of this media named ‘essex boys’ > this fella was muscle for a few toe rags and nothing more
How do you know the same thing as me bouncer with forty RUclips channels milking certain people to bits .channel running dry bosh open another upload .I thought this was smithing new but it’s BM again who would have thought you can now say goodbye to you’re comment .lol cool tools has the GOLD
A wanna be plastic Gangsta ehh.......... typical
Without even watching, let me guess… Bernard?
@Suk my Dik nicely put.. I knew these people and lived in that manor for some time sweet heart x
Like he knew the krays he was 9 when they was banged up
I read his book respect on holiday and I couldn’t put it down
This man was a victim of his circumstance. There’s no way he would hurt any innocents, man, woman or child. Foreman always strikes me as a decent, straight up person. Even among gangsters he was known to be a gentleman. We are all sinners with a past and no one is beyond redemption. I hope Freddie has found peace with God and the demons we all have to face.🙏❤️.x
I nearly agreed until I remembered he shot Frank Mitchell for the Krays for a favour after they couldn't control him after initially assisting his jailbreak. A decent bloke doesn't kill another human being period nevermind one that hasn't ever wronged him just for a favour.
That's only one of the multiple murders he's known for.
There's obviously more no one knows about.
@@martinmcguire5458
He wouldn’t harm Joe public in the street us what I was inferring. Those worlds they operated in were merciless. You don’t “know” his affiliation with Frank Mitchell or the Krays. They all took the same risks in many ways, live by the sword die by it. I’m not saying it’s right either. Like I said circumstances and upbringing massively influence our objectives, trajectory and choices. I still maintain that given this context Foreman is a decent guy.x
??? "No one is beyond redemption" ??? I can think of many who are way way way beyond redemption! Some of them are that bad that only deserve to be in the deepest darkest corner of hell! It's beyond me why we keep some of the child molester peadophiles alive for 30+ years at the expense of the tax paying public. These people have no right to be kept alive!
@@robertkelly9349
I meant in the context of “the gangster world/fraternity”. Sexual crimes etc…I agree are on another level of evil as far as I’m concerned. That’s why those kind of offenders are protected for there own safety in prison because of the nature of there crime. However my original comment stressed that the likes of Foreman would not harm children, woman or indeed innocent men who are not in those circles. That’s my point.x
@@wormsnake1 couldn't agree with you more 😉👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
Fred was more than your expectations of him
Freddie's childhood rings similar to what my late Mum and Auntie told me about their childhood as well.London and the Blitz
Same as my family during the war years, imagine living under the threat of being bombed 24/7, the thought of your country being invaded, while your family and loved ones went away to fight someone elses war....imagine that today...most of the country would be down the solicitors to sue the government for 'stress' and 'anxiety' ....back then people just got on with things and made the best of it, different breed, whether they were villains or straight.
I despise criminals... that being said, this gentleman here, regardless of his crimes, he had morals. I was highly impressed with his loyalty and the thought of safety of people who weren't involved. Very few criminals have high morals to separate the family, women and kids from the person that does the indecencies against other gangsters. He may be my favorite gangster. I also liked the "you kick the dog you kick the master" part, seems he cared about his underlings as well. Proper chief here.
Bless him what a man a proper man Freddy was I didnt know him but we can tell he was a decent man 🥂👍
He’s still alive
he's a murderer you tool
Still is you mean
When was this interview with Freddie.
He wasn’t an Essex boy he was just a door man!!!!
I know, pathetic bragging about being part of the so called Essex boys firm must think it has clout cis of the success of the films
My question is why doesn't carlton leach mention him? Or why isn't he in rise of the footsoldier? Surely a member of the said firm would be at least mentioned in one of the 100 rise of footsoldier movies 😂😂
@@brianmunich553 who Bernie?
@@JohnSmith-rw9dl yeah
He’s a idiot , knew the krays he was 9 when they was banged up , bloody 🛎 end
@@brianmunich553 thats a question av always wanted a answer to why does carlton never mention bernie and why is carlton never on bernies docs
I understand if you listen to Freddie he has a strong family ties and was livid how his brothers who all served were treated.
I have read, watched and listened to these amazing gangster life stories. I find it easier to believe as I try and understand the reality of death in the war or even end of world. Who knows which way we would have gone??? They lived and died through it all. Xx
Fred did see some shit as a kid during the war. Seen him talk many a time and I'm sure if my memory serves me correctly Fred and his mates found a body.
self pity and envy are the real motive , I worked for similar characters and the stories are always amazing 😕
Thanks ovoo
Has he had his electricity cut off?
Gangster no. 1 is an awesome film.
He seems Very friendly and like a good Person. Hope He lives His remaining Years in Peace and happiness
50:17 I don’t think Dickie Hart was the Krays cousin.
He wasn't I think they always get mixed up with Ronnie Hart
Not that people idolize criminals it seems to be a fact they have led interesting life's x😮😮
Anybody who’s never Brocken the Law . As never gone bed hungry !
Freddie brother George was a heavyweight boxer and mean machine. Bought one of his Grills in 2012 so i did
MAXIMUM RESPECT..LOVE THEASE TRUE STORYS...THANKS....
Stealing from corporations is a community service
I don't agree with glamourising crooks but I didn't go through a war...
Too much for a child to take. This is probably why he ended up being a gangster; coupled with a predisposition that lead him that way.
Love listening to Freddie Foreman and Albert Donoghue
Both good men, could have a fight and eat the sausage sandwich afterwards
When was this excellent documentary filmed, please?
Years ago
2017
@@TBATTIECYCLING Thank you.
Fred a stand up guy
Frog and bucket
Blighty has, evidently, some of the scariest criminals who have ever drawn breath. Take away even the most fierce American criminals' firepower and throw the two sets (if numbers were comparable) into a closed space and I have no doubt whatever who would walk out. These people, raised from children (in one of the segments of this series, the pretty seven or eight-year-old daughter of one of them was incidentally shown in a [serious] boxing cum [serious] weight-training gym, throwing, with her skinny little arms, punches against a heavy bag) to swim when deemed necessary -- and that can mean anything -- in an unimaginably violent world. These people are the germination of the phrase, "When you see me comin', better step aside". And judging from what I've seen in this series, I damn sure would . . . except I'd run.
Love you're manner ...great bloke..chin up...respect....
This seemed to be almost more about the Kray twins than about him.
Jay Kaye........ You might just be right. A person who is fierce etc can often have a flip side to their personalities - they can be fierce with their love too. I do believe every one has goodness in them, sometimes they're afraid to show it, perhaps they would never be able to make it come to the surface but the goodness is there regardless. Attack is said to be the best form of defence.
your leaving your self wide open to lie & deception by having the believe very one has goodness in them the reailty is they dont some have full entity attachment take over its not person in the driving seat to speak its a entity with a malevolent agenda a high ratio of criminals and those who work for government ain't in the driving seat
psychopath and narcissist have no empathy or compassion for anyone they fake emotions to get alone with others or to meet their own objectives but their is never any emotional authenticity carried cross with such types of people .
Imagine being proud of being 'a friend of the Krays'. Like being one of Jimmy Saviles pals. Pathetic stuff.
That's mad. from pompey and went to write something and saw the amount of comments were 657 and now forgot what I was gonna write
Let's goooo! 👐🏾👐🏾👐🏾👐🏾
He always has come across as very fair it seemed his game was more doing robberies then investing the money to go straight I don`t think Foreman was squeezing money from places like the Krays were,
He should have lived a straight life, could have got a job on a building site and worked his way up to foreman.
Bernard ya ur face at the rate of talking from him in first 2 mins 😂🤷♀️
Does a great grill too 👍well done
Yeah he cooked them on it
Eddie is a g for real. 💯
Nice
Was his son in East Enders or am I confusing him with someone else?
He was Jamie good actor. Also layer cake rise of the footy solider
Fred, the Real Godfather of British Crime, The Krays "go to" man when they were in sticky situations, and a True Gentleman. Legendary
I've visited him in his nursing home hes 90 k
now a nice chap
I’d love to go and see him I’ve always thought Freddie was a cut above the rest of them. His loyalty to the nutty Krays was his downfall sadly
Why don't we celebrate the people who worked hard all their lives,pay taxes,and pay their way,never breaking the law ?
Instead we celebrate thugs who take what they want by violence and put two fingers up to the rest of us !
All families had members who fought in the war,many, like my father,had to survive with injuries he received.He had a bad back which often saw him doubled up in pain,but he never thought to demand money from a pub or club by threats of violence.
I like Freddie.
I love Freddie Foreman. But he's not undisputed Godfather of Britain. Its a chuck up between Fred and Joey Pyle.
Ronnie Oliffe a stone cold killer and the leader of the gang Foreman was in was the guvnor
@@johnlewis9158 Thanks for the knowledge. It's always the ones nobody knows about that are the real power.
@@AndrewRobertson-kl4vi Many years ago there was a documentary called harry's out. The harry in question was Harry Haywood out of Deptford who had just been released from prison. Anyway after while the conversation got round to his brother Billy Haywood who was involved in the Mr Smith's turn out. This was when Harry told the reporter when standing back to back he and his brother Billy were unbeatable. After hearing this Ronnie turned his to friends who were watching the documentary with him and said back to back that's the way i bury them
@@AndrewRobertson-kl4vi He was very well known in southeast London. Indeed in one of Freddy's books there are several pictures of Ronnie Oliffe. In fact Ronnie fell out with Freddy over the pictures that drew attention to him which he didn't appreciate
@@AndrewRobertson-kl4viThey were partners, and Foreman was certainly the senior partner as it were - much more fearsome reputation.
Ronnie was a smart crim, had a lot of muscle around him, but wasn’t feared in the same way Foreman was.
He (Foreman) wouldn’t have been mugged off by the lot over the water, like Ronnie was.
If Foreman had been around they wouldn’t have taken liberties like they did; Foreman was much more respected, and I doubt he’d have swallowed that one, whereas Ronnie has to.
He way bigger than the Kray's and regretted teaming up with them, he said if they weren't found guilty at their trial they were both getting clipped, He also was the man who gave the Costa the name Costa Del Crime after they settled there after the security express robbery ,He had business's all over London and Bob Hoskins based his character in the film Long Good Friday on Fred . He wasn't a bully he's a rare breed pure old school
Drugs have destroyed the old unwritten laws which particular communities lived by.
The days of the trustworthy criminal have gone.
There was always drugs. It’s the influx of ruthless foreign criminal gangs that’s changed the face of London’s underworld
@@davidpowell9713 That as well, but drugs in the sixties were never as prevalent as they have been over the last four decades.
In the sixties, speed tabs and the occasional joint were all people took, coke was harder to find, because coke was a film star thing, the buzz was too fleeting
as well as it cost too much, plus there were only around one thousand registered heroin addicts in the UK, then again I think it could have been just 600, and mick Jagger was one of them.
Drugs destroyed the tight and un breakable
crews which used to exist before the drugs flooded the UK. There weren't many gangs
doing what I would term as legit crime, after
the flood hit.
Criminality change with the influx of drugs. Criminals had to take advantage of the situation, otherwise they would be left behind, and exposed to richer, stronger firms.
And this is where your ruthless foreign criminals came into the picture, a lot of them had control of the heroin trade.
Sorry for the book, haha.
Was sure I'm Freddie's book 'Respect' he admitted and detailed the the brinx mat job
Freddie wasn't in on that job.
Ginger Marks got weighed in by the firm but the man got found no guilty 😊
The world has changed. You'd have think he was talking another world. HE WAS!
Did Bernard know the kray twins personally? I keep hearing he did but then some say he's too young 🤷🏼.
Yea he did s bit of stuff with Reggie
BROWN BREAD. Top Tier 🫡👊💯👑👏🥊
Freddie's the man realest of them all
17.45 I was in Stamford House in 1979.
Who would've known. My grandparents also grew up in Battersea in the 30's and then moved to Woking (Sheerwater) after the war. Wonder if they were ever neighbours! 😝
They probably all had sex together I'd imagine.
Mine too! My grandparents are gone now, bless 'em, but they moved to Sheerwater from Battersea a long time ago. Sheerwater and Woking are very different nowadays. It was great about 40 years ago, it's a shithole now🙁
You gotta love Brown Bread Fred
Gave no fuks at all, just did what he wanted to do. Different world in those days and people of today cant understand how they could do what they did. Once he's gone its all finished with and confined to mythology. Long live Fred
I think GB is unique in its portrayal of it's underbelly of crime and violence in the world of unlicensed boxing and cage fighting mixed up with all sorts in the underworld. Violence has become popular. It has spread, and in the mix it has scuped up every kind of undesirable that normal would have been screened out. Greed and power is the motivation because there's lots to be had in the fight game. Reminds me of the scene in the Dear Hunter, the Russian Rulet scene. 🤕🔫
Remember him coming in the Putney Yacht Club in Fulham, before Fulham got posh! Thing was there was no yachts!! When he came in we left, he used to drink with Bindon.
Don't know how well you know Fulham Hammersmith and Fulham but have you heard of a drinking club called SAJAC which existed in the 50s 60s and 70s. It used to be on the Greyhound road. I'm trying to get more info on this place but can't find anything.
@@danielfrancis3660 Yes, very well indeed, it was a doorway entrance which led downstairs, its was a private/illegal club, and the faces that drank there were let's say not your normal punters..... late lock in's and card schools
8:00-8:01 He wound up in Mombasa...I live in Mombasa. Karibu Kenya. Hakuna matata..just love.
Absolutely terrific. Freddy seems like the sort of gentleman who would pay for your shopping and carry it home for you. He'd then go to the pub for a bitter lemon, and buy whatever the barmaid serving him wants, before having a punch up outside and then getting some fish and chips on the way home. An absolutely smashing film. 😃🥹😊🛒🛒🛍🛍🍹🍋🍋🙆♀️🐟🐠🐟🐠🍟🍟🍟🍟🥊🥊🥊🥊
And help you dispose of a body
Good guy Freddie if you want crime in your area .
Absolutely mind numbing 🤕
Be numb
Idolising murderers and torturers...not for me!
All these criminals including Foreman were just brainless animals.And yet how many turned up for the funerals of these monsters?!...the very people that may have had friends or family terrorised by the person they are giving respect to!
Ginger was a silly man for getting involved with Freddie and the firm
Lesson #1, Respect your elders. You never know if you might get whacked.
This interview is quite old but still very informative and entertaining. I remember seeing it and thinking that Bernard hardly spoke throughout the interview! 😄
I've read nearly ever book known to man about all the Eastend gangsters and ya man here always had some manners and morals. They were are all a different breed of man back then. No honour or loyalty (even for criminals!)
Different breed; no honor or loyalty? Don't kid yourself. Corruption is alive and well. Just look at the politicians in any English speaking country. Have a closer look at American imperialism and the New World Order crowd if you want to single out psychopathic crazy.
I had to stop after 5 minutes. He gave me a headache.
This guy Bernard weren’t a member of the Essex gang charlton leech has said it already and don’t like him either cause he’s profiting off his mates.
Carlton
When I grew up in the Gorbals in Glasgow in the Sixties and seventies we always watched the Men coming out of the Pubs and having a Square Go with each other, if you don't come from Glasgow a Square Go is a fair fight.
One thing I can say about George foreman is respect
george?
Yeah he was a great boxer and makes a mean grill
Freddie