1982: BOB HOSKINS: London is being "Sterilised by greed" | Omnibus | Classic TV report | BBC Archive

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  • Опубликовано: 14 янв 2022
  • "That makes The Long Good Friday look like a story out of Winnie the Pooh" - Bob Hoskins.
    Bob Hoskins, the actor and proud Londoner, takes Barry Norman on a riverside walk along the South Bank from Coin Street to Tower Bridge. Along the way Bob passionately condemns what various architects and property developers have done - and are planning to do - to the sites they pass.
    Clip taken from Omnibus, originally broadcast 9 May, 1982.
    You have now entered the BBC Archive, an audiovisual time machine that will transport you back to the golden age of TV. Let us educate, entertain and enlighten you with classic clips from the BBC vaults.
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Комментарии • 2,2 тыс.

  • @fatwalletboy2
    @fatwalletboy2 2 года назад +1865

    That line from Bob hits hard...."keep treating people like crap theyre gunna turn into crap".....Bob could understand what was going on......fair play too for a man who despite his own success still cared about community.

    • @trainrover
      @trainrover 2 года назад +17

      cleptoparasitism now celebrates its emergence

    • @v.o.r
      @v.o.r 2 года назад +1

      @@trainrover How?

    • @trainrover
      @trainrover 2 года назад

      WTF must it be about either their germ- or warfare thatcher missing, pray tell, hmmm...?

    • @v.o.r
      @v.o.r 2 года назад

      @@trainrover Flaptulated germintine!

    • @trainrover
      @trainrover 2 года назад +1

      something about V.o.R's kniption might've displeased even the cuckoos, coz it's been scrubbed

  • @kramnam4716
    @kramnam4716 3 месяца назад +275

    Loved him. I passed him on the street one day. Our eyes met, he gave me a huge smile and a nod, nothing said. Beautiful fella.

    • @dennisvanoord3278
      @dennisvanoord3278 2 месяца назад +5

      @@turbotrout8216Doesn’t mean he couldn’t have met him one day

    • @davidh503
      @davidh503 Месяц назад +1

      I literally would have died. He was the cutest bear ever to walk the face of the earth.

    • @mrknobchopps
      @mrknobchopps Месяц назад

      @@turbotrout8216 and…..

  • @SirAmicVarze
    @SirAmicVarze Год назад +718

    How depressing that it's been 40 years and this problem has only gotten worse and worse.

    • @bittasweetsymphony726
      @bittasweetsymphony726 Год назад +3

      what problem are you refering to?

    • @famalam943
      @famalam943 Год назад +54

      LTNs, ULEZ, the total cutting off of areas of London for people rich enough to live there. Khan has ruined London.

    • @mojonojo3
      @mojonojo3 Год назад +17

      @@famalam943 would have said Livingstone & Johnson were worse.

    • @famalam943
      @famalam943 Год назад +6

      @@mojonojo3 they didn’t literally block off entire areas of London for yuppies and the ulez is much worse than CC.
      So for me, though there’s a lot of criticism, I’d take either over Khan and the Labour councils any day.

    • @mojonojo3
      @mojonojo3 Год назад +14

      @@famalam943 ROFL. Congestion charging was introduced by Livingston and expanded twice under Johnson. ULEZ is an expansion of that tax scheme. It's revenue raising for the London assembly.

  • @zsht
    @zsht Год назад +902

    As a 90s baby Londoner, it's crazy to know that Waterloo once housed families.
    Development can kill communities overnight.

    • @mojonojo3
      @mojonojo3 Год назад +26

      I lived in waterloo for over a decade, it was a wonderful place to live.

    • @Lee_303
      @Lee_303 Год назад +36

      My blind uncle lived in Islington, when I came to help him move out he somehow left his keys in the flat & locked us out.... practically everyone nearby from the block all rallied round to help & managed to locate the caretaker, on a Sunday. Londoners are great people, they look out for each other, even in the tower blocks. London needs to give back to the Londoners.

    • @ondolite3789
      @ondolite3789 Год назад +6

      @@mojonojo3 I have lived in Waterloo for 30 years.
      Not great!

    • @mojonojo3
      @mojonojo3 Год назад +3

      ​@@ondolite3789 I lived on Nelson Sq, Loved it, and Lower Marsh & The Cut during the early 2000s, the area really changed as soon as the Tate, and the new southwark tube station opened.

    • @ondolite3789
      @ondolite3789 Год назад +5

      @@mojonojo3 Just brought a delicious Ethiopian (not literally) on Lower Marsh before a gentle workout in Archbishop Park so, not all doom and gloom!

  • @DenkyManner
    @DenkyManner 2 года назад +776

    "Sterilised by greed" is precisely what has happened to London. It's too expensive for anything interesting to survive here now. There's no point going into central London because there's nothing there if you want to do anything other than look at buildings from the outside. Pubs are obscenely expensive, independent shops are all but gone. Soho is almost dead. It's just a business machine, not a place for people to live. Working class or just poor artists have been stamped out by greed.

    • @AColonelPanic
      @AColonelPanic Год назад +53

      NYC, particularly Manhattan has experienced this as well. I moved out of NYC because i couldn't afford it anymore 😞

    • @Eralen00
      @Eralen00 Год назад +65

      This is pretty much happening everywhere, just that London seems to be among the first and the worst places for it. Almost all media also is being "sterilized by greed" - movies, music, video games etc. Everything now is about making the biggest profit possible with the least investment in time, resources and effort

    • @Emulous79
      @Emulous79 Год назад +39

      @@Eralen00 It's sickening. I've become a literal hermit and refuse to engage anymore.

    • @lohphat
      @lohphat Год назад +1

      As with San Francisco, as with New York.
      The money has poisoned the cities by killing economic diversity. Now it's just for rich people pushing out the working classes which staff the stores and restaurants the rich want to frequent. SF is a ghost town compared to what it was in the early 1990s. New buildings of expensive condos no one is buying.

    • @Emulous79
      @Emulous79 Год назад

      @@lohphat Unregulated capitalism has put the western world out of balance.

  • @EmptyGlass99
    @EmptyGlass99 2 года назад +579

    When he says 'Mars Bar' that's cockney rhyming slang for 'scar' - and he's not wrong.

    • @jamesjameson4566
      @jamesjameson4566 2 года назад +12

      @@Mickyway I think in this case he did Michael

    • @nickyfield137
      @nickyfield137 2 года назад

      Ah, traditional rhyming slang !

    • @MrAlistar99
      @MrAlistar99 2 года назад +2

      @@jamesjameson4566 nah he used it twice

    • @jamesjameson4566
      @jamesjameson4566 2 года назад +1

      @@MrAlistar99 yeah I know

    • @krob2327
      @krob2327 Год назад +5

      I don’t like cities for this reason. Too many high rise buildings. Londoners get very sensitive if you question their city aha

  • @RickP2012
    @RickP2012 Год назад +926

    Back in the days when the BBC could still be critical of government policy.

    • @bobrew461
      @bobrew461 Год назад +24

      When did you last watch the BBC?
      Back in the early '80s?
      :-0

    • @tankthelord1178
      @tankthelord1178 Год назад +30

      Agreed, say anything bad about them now then you either get a knock on the door, your window smashed or your phone line tapped.

    • @fraggsta
      @fraggsta Год назад

      @@tankthelord1178 That just isn't true. The BBC is constantly criticizing the government.

    • @WioWio-sf5pc
      @WioWio-sf5pc Год назад

      today they are pushing feminist/cancel culture/multi ethnic agenda

    • @fraggsta
      @fraggsta Год назад

      @@WioWio-sf5pc It's interesting, I talk to other people online who say exactly the opposite, that the BBC is pushing an anti-feminist, transphobic, racist agenda. It obviously can't be doing both, but there seem to be a lot of people who have a rather strange view of what the BBC is doing.

  • @willrueb9573
    @willrueb9573 Год назад +529

    I had no idea Bob Hoskins was so involved with his London community. You can tell he's lived and breathed his country's heritage.

    • @AntaresBottia
      @AntaresBottia Год назад +32

      Was a regular guy. I worked with his cousin, very grounded family

    • @CARLIN4737
      @CARLIN4737 Год назад

      No just London. He didnt know anything or anywhere else. so many idiots posting comments without thought.including you.

    • @suedenim6590
      @suedenim6590 Год назад +16

      He was a legend. So outspoken and critical although it would cost him work

    • @DelosFive
      @DelosFive 3 месяца назад +9

      He was a normal cockney way before he was an actor.

    • @pedazodetorpedo
      @pedazodetorpedo 3 месяца назад

      ​@@DelosFivenot Cockney, he grew up in North London.

  • @andrewmurray5542
    @andrewmurray5542 2 года назад +375

    "People are secondary to property"
    Nothing has changed

    • @daveruda
      @daveruda Год назад +7

      @@More-than-ladyboys property is owned by oligarchs instead of Londoners

    • @TristanBanks
      @TristanBanks Год назад

      @@More-than-ladyboys how to say a lot without saying anything at all

    • @More-than-ladyboys
      @More-than-ladyboys Год назад +1

      @@TristanBanks Yeah, must have been baked when I wrote that. Hope your comment made you feel good though.
      Enjoy your moment.

    • @gettinoveritgettinoverit1062
      @gettinoveritgettinoverit1062 Месяц назад

      @andrewmurray5542/// 😮 Property & W-Y Xenomorphs

  • @seaninterpop
    @seaninterpop Год назад +190

    I just wish this clip were longer. Listening to Bob Hoskins’ passionate and informed defence of London is such a delight, especially in our modern age of bland soundbites and press releases that have to be vetted by the comms department. Bob keeps it real and I’m having this all day.

  • @jonathangarrison
    @jonathangarrison 2 года назад +174

    So, in addition to having been a brilliant actor, Bob Hoskins was also a premier London tour guide and historian? Absolutely fascinating. The love and enthusiasm he expresses for London is infectious.

    • @raylder6339
      @raylder6339 Год назад +4

      I feel what you’re saying. I think this is a campaign piece but his knowledge of history feels like a passionately narrated documentary.

  • @uppercut2246
    @uppercut2246 Год назад +39

    “Those who are able to see beyond the shadows and lies of their culture will never be understood, let alone believed, by the masses.”
    ― Plato

  • @TRIPPLEJAY00
    @TRIPPLEJAY00 2 года назад +566

    Shame Bob isn't about to say "I told you so."

    • @maratonlegendelenemirei3352
      @maratonlegendelenemirei3352 2 года назад

      Why didn't you piss and moan about your own freedom when it was taken away 2 years ago hmmm??? Give your head a wobble winkle!

    • @twcmaker
      @twcmaker 2 года назад +19

      True.. Sad state

    • @heresjohnny602
      @heresjohnny602 2 года назад +7

      Oh please London has been plagued by greed for centuries now, there's always been a disproportionately rich and powerful community there that has put other less fortunate members of the population to work for them to build their playground.

    • @haeuptlingaberja4927
      @haeuptlingaberja4927 2 года назад +29

      @@heresjohnny602
      Yeah, and? That's a bit like saying there's always been wealth inequality, so what difference does it make that this inequality is now on steroids and that the wealth gap is now accelerating like never before in human history?

    • @heresjohnny602
      @heresjohnny602 2 года назад +1

      @@haeuptlingaberja4927 Yeah and ? 😂😂 it means Bob didn't "tell us" anything new, the "gap" as you put it has always been there (steroid imagery not withstanding)....it's not growing it's just stupid people like you are now opening their eyes to the fact that the medieval system that allows a few to fatten themselves off the backs of the many has been going on forever....."yeah and. ?" The childs equivalent of "yeah but"....🤭

  • @arsenal10141014
    @arsenal10141014 2 года назад +263

    Bob was on the money. Over developed. London is losing it’s identity to residential blocks that look like they are in Dubai.

    • @EdekLay
      @EdekLay 2 года назад +43

      Losing? You mean lost?

    • @euchrideucrow1970
      @euchrideucrow1970 2 года назад +28

      @@EdekLay Exactly. It lost all identity many years ago.

    • @micheledibenedetto7780
      @micheledibenedetto7780 2 года назад +3

      Bring back snouting in boozers for starters

    • @darrelltregear3571
      @darrelltregear3571 2 года назад

      Not just London this is globalization it doesn't just stop at brick and mortar it's now attacking the British culture it's self.

    • @krob2327
      @krob2327 Год назад

      Agreed. London has embraced globalism which means goodbye white working class

  • @dismith73
    @dismith73 2 года назад +25

    Robert William Hoskins 26 October 1942 - 29 April 2014
    Barry Leslie Norman 21 August 1933 - 30 June 2017

  • @Pulsonar
    @Pulsonar 3 месяца назад +25

    I think Bob Hoskins would’ve made a great Mayor of London had his movie career not been so successful. This doc was a few years before his famous Oscar winning movie Mona Lisa took him off to Hollywood in the mid 80s. I’m flabbergasted by his London knowledge, about the backstreets, every drainpipe and sewer to gleaming skyscraper city office window panels, from dockside labourer to multi billion corporate magnates and cartels, from estate management to city finance and investment, etc… and his take on the shady politics behind it all. The man was a genuine diamond geezer in every respectful sense of the word.

    • @glowing571
      @glowing571 14 дней назад +1

      Well said. He appeared to be someone who truly knew the city and the communities inside out and actually cared about what happened to them. I think he would have made an outstanding London mayor.

  • @Paul-md8de
    @Paul-md8de 2 года назад +769

    The great Bob Hoskins should have been an MP , the working class needs people like him to speak truth to power .

    • @madMARTYNmarsh1981
      @madMARTYNmarsh1981 2 года назад +41

      @Jack Warner it's all about money mate. They get in office with good intentions and then the brown padded envelopes start to appear on their desks and they lose their way. I'm sure many of them go into office expecting and hoping for those envelopes too, especially now days.

    • @royalbloodedledgend
      @royalbloodedledgend 2 года назад +8

      Yuck, the “working class”

    • @athelstan927
      @athelstan927 2 года назад +8

      All too late.. the fight went with it..

    • @TehDawg
      @TehDawg 2 года назад

      We had Corbyn in the palm of our hands, but the thick, uneducated muppets of this country voted for boris over him, because they thought he was a terrorist 🤣 this country is beyond embarrassing

    • @PeachesandCream225
      @PeachesandCream225 2 года назад +44

      @@royalbloodedledgend yuck the “owning class”

  • @jamesgravil9162
    @jamesgravil9162 2 года назад +225

    I lived in London for twelve years. Left last year after suffering a mental breakdown. It's not a healthy place to live if you're on your own and not making bags of money.

    • @simondjangothe4349
      @simondjangothe4349 2 года назад +37

      Best wishes to you James, I hope that you are recovering and now in a better place. Good luck for the future👍

    • @jamesjameson4566
      @jamesjameson4566 2 года назад +30

      And English

    • @theSPUDereHD
      @theSPUDereHD 2 года назад +5

      Where did you move to, out of interest?

    • @jamesgravil9162
      @jamesgravil9162 2 года назад +31

      @@theSPUDereHD A quiet country village in Derbyshire.

    • @theSPUDereHD
      @theSPUDereHD 2 года назад +8

      @@jamesgravil9162 sounds nice - glad you’re doing better

  • @dannyward673
    @dannyward673 Год назад +182

    He was spot on ole Bob. I’m an east ender many generations down the line and my daughter born and raised cannot afford to live in the area and she’s a hard working secondary school teacher on the manor. It’s absolute criminal what’s happening.

    • @nazbrit
      @nazbrit 3 месяца назад +4

      Sorry this has happened to your daughter Took the DLR from Canary Wharf to the Excel centre, and the conductor confirmed the exorbitant prices of local flats. They were ugly too and full of traffic!

    • @johnwoodhead5950
      @johnwoodhead5950 3 месяца назад +3

      Legal thieving, it's extremely subtle and it's not without some benefits to a few, but it is still legal thieving and it's government backed

  • @lmusima3275
    @lmusima3275 3 месяца назад +31

    40 years plus onwards I’ve been to Tower Bridge lately. It’s a lot different from what we see in this video. Bob is correct. He saw 40 years into the future, regenerated buildings, luxury homes at high prices

  • @lg5819
    @lg5819 2 года назад +574

    The sad reality is, most of those side streets and turnings, beside the river Thames, which belonged to Londoners at one time, and their communities are now closed off to ordinary folk, turned into plush offices and expensive real estate for wealthy investors, who don’t live in them most of the time. Destroying the character of London, at the price of losing its soul.

    • @Tmuk2
      @Tmuk2 2 года назад +21

      I'm sorry but that's wrong - you can walk all along the river on both sides - Hays Wharf is still there but converted into restaurants and shops, the same with Shad Thames.

    • @trainrover
      @trainrover 2 года назад

      I'd apologise to yourself instead were I you, coz your wilful blindness at calibrating cleptoparasitic corporateria into ordinariness's gonna fuckingly bitecha...!

    • @Tmuk2
      @Tmuk2 2 года назад +6

      @Bill Haha, he's edited his post to change what he originally said. Pretty pathetic.

    • @ummerfarooq5383
      @ummerfarooq5383 2 года назад +5

      @@Tmuk2 any primary schools there?

    • @jimcowan6472
      @jimcowan6472 2 года назад +11

      Wrong. It’s all open up now; a vibrant bustling area. You can walk the whole length of the south bank all along to Woolwich..called the Thames path and it’s great.

  • @yemalad1.
    @yemalad1. 2 года назад +389

    I found this fascinating. Bob seemed very intelligent and obviously proud if his city. Thanks for uploading.

  • @TachyonKing
    @TachyonKing Год назад +59

    Bob was 100% on the mark here- he knew what was going on, not by some foresight, but because he read into it- he understood what the big property developers were up to and wasnt afraid to call them out on it.

  • @McFraneth
    @McFraneth Год назад +70

    "Keep treating the people like crap and they turn into crap." Thirty years on and it's true.

    • @VintageLifeCars
      @VintageLifeCars Год назад +2

      Dumbing down.

    • @McFraneth
      @McFraneth Год назад

      @@VintageLifeCars Absolutely. The long game. That and closing down libraries and underfunding education. Tactics of fascism. The EU is a fascist entity serving corporations and we are its hostages.

    • @MohamedAli-cy4qs
      @MohamedAli-cy4qs Год назад

      40 years

  • @jol0973
    @jol0973 2 года назад +101

    This is fascinating. People objecting to big business being able to speak freely on TV. It's like another dimension.

    • @user-tm9ho3bm4v
      @user-tm9ho3bm4v 10 месяцев назад +11

      That was before the 1984 simulator we live in right now.

    • @arostwocents
      @arostwocents 2 месяца назад +5

      Fascism was only just starting in 84. Remember that socialist Britain had only ended in the 70s, when the oil crisis and thatcher broke the working class and deindustrialised as we adopted US neo liberal economics.

    • @arostwocents
      @arostwocents 2 месяца назад

      Fascism is now so deeply within every part of power and our society and reflected in everything including mass migration and 90% are too stupid to see the reasons behind what is happening, even as their homes and standard of living is taken from them due to the population explosion meaning noone can afford to live in even small towns

    • @arostwocents
      @arostwocents 2 месяца назад +7

      Grinding down wages due to migrants also ruins everything in society as when people have no money, businesses cannot run. When the minimum wage rises, profits increase as people have more money. Now, all people's money goes to rentier landlords. Mass migration was something Labour was against when they cared for the working class.

    • @jgmediting7770
      @jgmediting7770 28 дней назад

      It as only 3 years into the capitalist revolution.

  • @DrumToTheBassWoop
    @DrumToTheBassWoop Год назад +17

    Inner London is just one big holiday home for the wealthy foreigners to reside in.

  • @patkearney9320
    @patkearney9320 3 месяца назад +15

    Bob was a working class hero he knows what’s happening look how wise and sharp RIP BOB HOSKINS.

  • @caaaaats9890
    @caaaaats9890 Год назад +21

    I cannot fathom that Waterloo looked like THAT all cosy and everything - there were communities living there?! It just looks touristy, cold and officey now. Gentrification is horrific, and I see it happening everywhere in London 😭

  • @WolfTrap1000
    @WolfTrap1000 2 года назад +301

    Crazy seeing as this was made in 82 how quickly London has gone to shite!

    • @spanishpeaches2930
      @spanishpeaches2930 2 года назад +47

      How many stabbings did we have per month , in London, in 1982 ?

    • @garethjames1300
      @garethjames1300 2 года назад +14

      Not as many as now so what is that?

    • @hmq9052
      @hmq9052 2 года назад +13

      @@spanishpeaches2930 We did have mass unemployment though.

    • @growlerthe2nd712
      @growlerthe2nd712 2 года назад +30

      THATCHERISM .

    • @spanishpeaches2930
      @spanishpeaches2930 2 года назад

      @@hmq9052 This is true, but that was an effect of the total overhaul of the country. Seventies Britain was an absolute shitehole when the unions were running the country and we had to be bailed out by the EMU/IMF to keep us afloat. Before you think i am a Tory , I'm not, nor Labour.

  • @simonhodgetts6530
    @simonhodgetts6530 2 года назад +410

    I loved Bob Hoskins - such a great actor! His passion for London shines through in this piece. I also miss England in this form, prior to the over development and gentrification we see now……..the ordinary person has been pushed out of areas in the name of financial gain ever since. A great shame.

    • @paulcolville5972
      @paulcolville5972 2 года назад +29

      True, and continues today in all of our large cities. There is no end to it. Apparently it's called progress you know. Sad.

    • @jjs3287
      @jjs3287 2 года назад +30

      And worse even than that is the subsequent attitude towards the (mostly white) working class who used to live there.

    • @spidyman8853
      @spidyman8853 Год назад +16

      Call it progress, gentrification or call it development, when ordinary people get priced out of the areas they grew up in, to me, this is called Greed plain and simple.

    • @richardburns5925
      @richardburns5925 Год назад +1

      Gentrification means social cleansing. You either have gentrification or urban decay. Why can't you have democratisation? It's all about money and big business, why have social housing, working man's social clubs and greasy spoons, when you can sweep all that away, rebuild, gentrify, charge more for everything? Best to sweep anything working class away, including housing, then the yuppies have nothing to compare their expensive boxes to! Get rid of the social clubs, cafes, open expensive bars and delis instead. By virtue of something being expensive, it's got to be better you see.

    • @reginaldforthright805
      @reginaldforthright805 Год назад +22

      And mass immigration

  • @Macho_Fantastico
    @Macho_Fantastico Год назад +81

    I would've loved to take a tour of London with Bob, what a legend.

    • @sujatadasroy4269
      @sujatadasroy4269 Год назад +5

      Not sure he would love London as much now though sadly . It's lost all of its soul

  • @spidyman8853
    @spidyman8853 Год назад +33

    Bob Hoskins cared about the ordinary people of London

  • @kenneth2656
    @kenneth2656 2 года назад +58

    Bob was right Londoners were sold down the river excuse the pun, and that continues today, the sheer greed of the city boys investment houses and property developers asset stripped the homes and future of Londoners many of whom had lived and worked there for generations.

    • @mikeymc3094
      @mikeymc3094 Год назад

      It’s happened in all the big city’s Inner city housing estates were the scourge of every city Now they’re all goin To Be replaced with offices nobody needs an unaffordable housing

  • @cheapskateninja2655
    @cheapskateninja2655 2 года назад +63

    I met Bob several times and he was a lovely guy, really down to earth.
    The last time I saw him he was wandering around Harley Street London in his dressing gown and slippers, he wasn't well at that time I think his brain was going sadly, I forgot to say though that he was a true English man and he really loved London with all his heart! although he was born in Suffolk he was brought up in Finsbury Park I believe from a baby. This amazing man although small in stature could do everything, sing, dance and do gymnastics too! R.I.P Robert, you are not forgotten and are still much loved.

    • @maaretrahkonen7706
      @maaretrahkonen7706 Год назад +1

      Now we need a dokumentary on him.

    • @philjamesakaowlman6230
      @philjamesakaowlman6230 Год назад +1

      Excellent actor, much missed and clearly an intelligent person, some great performances obv, the long good Friday and mona Lisa, playing tough but vulnerable characters, but also felicias journey, twenty four seven, Brazil and the uneven but nicely observed room for romeo brass.

    • @philjamesakaowlman6230
      @philjamesakaowlman6230 Год назад +2

      Also r.i.p Barry norman,

    • @Elcore
      @Elcore 3 месяца назад

      Damn that's sad if true. There's a lot of dignity in that, isn't there? Going out like a raspberry ripple.

  • @gjones8847
    @gjones8847 3 месяца назад +32

    How true was Bobs prediction from 42 years ago

  • @hopefulpellinore5490
    @hopefulpellinore5490 Год назад +75

    This hurts to watch. Well spoken Mr. Hoskins. I hope with all my heart that you and all those who passed on since the making of this video, with their hopes and dreams dashed by greed, are getting to enjoy an unspoiled spot of natural beauty by a nice river somewhere. Rest in peace.

    • @spookybaba
      @spookybaba Год назад

      And they were the days when people could burn buildings down, unseen.

  • @davidmccann9811
    @davidmccann9811 2 года назад +24

    I remember Waterloo when it was like that because I grew up about a mile away. Lots of the property was Victorian slums, for example the house I grew up in was falling apart and still had the toilet outside even in the 70s. The whole Southbank was basically abandoned and derelict warehouses full of rats (which we played in). The problem is that they were also communities of people that had lived there for generations, and when they modenised the area they just swept our communities away with no care about that community. They saw us as working class Londoners who had no 'right' to live in London unless we had big money, which we didn't.

    • @user-gc8pc3ol6l
      @user-gc8pc3ol6l Месяц назад

      The living memory of London as Hoskins obviously has his family living there for generations. Unless you have a picture book to hand it's incredibly difficult to see how the riverside used to look like.

  • @RetroGamebloke
    @RetroGamebloke 2 года назад +335

    When the BBC was actually reporting in a non-biased way. All true and still going on today it seems. Kudos to Bob Hoskins for seeing it back then!

    • @RetroGamebloke
      @RetroGamebloke 2 года назад +16

      @IIWII What I meant with my post is that these days, the BBC presenter would probably add their own views to the discussion. Back then they just reported the stuff, or at least tried to. Not saying everything was perfect back then, far from it :) Bob Hoskins probably lived with the views he is stating (from people close to him) for a long time before making it as an actor. The presenter at least didn't try to talk over him with his views and for that, I have to give it a plus.

    • @SimonHorrocks
      @SimonHorrocks Год назад +27

      BBC wouldn't be allowed to make this program now

    • @joechapman8208
      @joechapman8208 Год назад +18

      The BBC now would brand him and everyone else in this clip the "hard left", and bring on some people to call them "enemies of progress". You know, for balance.

    • @bobrew461
      @bobrew461 Год назад +1

      @@SimonHorrocks
      Bullshit!
      You didn't see the Panorama show about gentrification in the north AND south of england, just a few months ago.

    • @lutherblissett9070
      @lutherblissett9070 Год назад +8

      He'd be called a "champagne socialist" by the usual suspects if this was made today.

  • @BathedInMilk
    @BathedInMilk Год назад +53

    I miss Bob but I'm gld he didn't see what the Big Smoke has become now. None of any of where they walked exists anymore. All exactly as he said: luxury flats and offices. No one lives in central London anymore. Well said Bob, wish more people had listened.

    • @freehermanjose5816
      @freehermanjose5816 Год назад +8

      Not to mention Orcs.

    • @seansmith445
      @seansmith445 Год назад +1

      Where did this name the "Big Smoke" come from. It's just "The Smoke".

    • @BathedInMilk
      @BathedInMilk Год назад +6

      @@seansmith445 Says who? My Mum, born and raised in Stretham, always called it the big smoke. Just because you don't say doesn't mean no one else does. Don't put diktats on language.

    • @rahamedstechnicalologyguid3613
      @rahamedstechnicalologyguid3613 Год назад

      @@seansmith445 gta san andreas

  • @paulblack8887
    @paulblack8887 Год назад +17

    There is a sublime aspect to famous, talented, articulate people expositing on their passions and concerns for the atomized inarticulate masses, who are prey to the power structures of their age. RIP Bob

    • @wiegraf9009
      @wiegraf9009 Год назад

      The residents weren't even atomized they just weren't rich enough to fight off the powerful

    • @paulblack8887
      @paulblack8887 Год назад

      @@wiegraf9009 he is describing atomization throughout. The idea of atomization is disconnection from social structures and identity, which is useful for power structures, the dissolving of Londons myriad neighborhoods and class identities being the case in point. Thanks for playing, better luck next time.

  • @lauramartin5579
    @lauramartin5579 2 года назад +14

    Then we wonder why the media and rentier class are screaming "Get back to the office!"

  • @fingerhorn4
    @fingerhorn4 2 года назад +26

    London has gone beyond salvation. It will soon be indistinguishable from any city apart from a few landmarks which cannot be seen anyway because they are masked by yet another swathe of soulless glass and concrete. It is probably the ugliest ancient city in Europe, and arguably the most dystopian major European city of all. Muggings, knife crime, gun crime, car and bike hijackings are all the result of the alienation and poor social and infrastructure spending, and the grabbing of decent areas by Oligarchs who never live in the places they takeover but wait for prices to inflate. The government does not care. They have impounded the mega yachts but left the mega properties to carry on ruining the social structure of London. This film was prescient.

    • @barrelrolldog
      @barrelrolldog 2 года назад +5

      I 100% agree. I've been all over the world and london is the shittest most soulles place i've ever been to. And it doesn't end with london. I prefer the english countryside.

    • @tommcfadden5232
      @tommcfadden5232 3 месяца назад +1

      Tourist Slogan: London. Where there’s no there, there.

  • @alanknotts1844
    @alanknotts1844 Год назад +108

    I lived in Hackney in the mid 80's and saw the gentrification of the Borough first hand. Was shocking to see the acceleration of working class people being pushed out by the middle class. I loved the old East end of London and I'm Glaswegian. Shame. Bob was a great man, sorely missed.

    • @mrnickb
      @mrnickb Год назад +6

      As nostalgic as I get about London on the 90s, areas like Hackney are objectively better now. Much cleaner and safer. I miss the history, but I’d prefer it how it is now

    • @andyw3152
      @andyw3152 Год назад +6

      @@mrnickb So is the East End. Had family that lived there 80 years ago. It wasn't the nicest place to live.

    • @michaeljay3846
      @michaeljay3846 Год назад +10

      @@andyw3152 Your both wrong , I live on the manor and my family go back 3 generations here. It is a jungle and the trendies/ hipsters have made it a ghetto ! One side money one side poverty , like most boroughs in London ! Not for locals anymore !

    • @andyw3152
      @andyw3152 Год назад

      @@michaeljay3846 Why was I wrong? I'm referring back to many years.

    • @michaeljay3846
      @michaeljay3846 Год назад +12

      @@andyw3152 It may have been poorer back then but now the gap between rich and poor is greater . Socially cleansed London has become Ghetto like , people who do not live here do not know how real London is , also crime rates , knife and gun crime / murder rates , are off the Richter ! So as I am in my fifties and my family go back a long way here , I know the difference between then and now . Wealth and investment does not mean progress .

  • @carlgrove8793
    @carlgrove8793 Год назад +31

    It was in the 80s that I first noticed the new buildings going up everywhere, especially in my favourite place, Charing Cross Road. Almost all of them removed forever some of the little book shops that gave the road its character. I think there must have been around 20 - 30 book shops in those days -- now only one segment of the road still has a couple of book shops, although there are still a few in Cecil Court, I believe. I last went up to London about 7 years ago and actually lost my bearings completely at one stage. They've done just as Bob predicted, turned it into a high rise nightmare.

    • @h.r7050
      @h.r7050 Год назад +1

      I was gutted when my favourite area around Victoria was turned into monstrous offices and shopping centres, my favourite Army and Navy gone.

    • @agnidas5816
      @agnidas5816 Год назад +1

      book stores went out of business

  • @ImmortalRimas
    @ImmortalRimas 2 года назад +159

    Bob Hoskins Bloody called it all the way back in 1982. I’m surprised BBC uploaded this as Good Old Bob is essentially criticising their Lords & Masters

    • @honesty_-no9he
      @honesty_-no9he Год назад +20

      This is the BBC ARCHIVE department no one pays any attention to them.

    • @crayzmarc
      @crayzmarc 3 месяца назад +1

      Powell did before him

  • @sonnyirish3678
    @sonnyirish3678 2 года назад +111

    If he saw what London is like today he would not believe it.

    • @mrn13
      @mrn13 2 года назад +11

      Nobody would. Nobody

    • @sq1rlsqu4d
      @sq1rlsqu4d 2 года назад +14

      The sad fact of the matter is that he probably would believe it :( He saw the writing on the wall 40 years back...

    • @sonnyirish3678
      @sonnyirish3678 2 года назад +5

      @@sq1rlsqu4d You think.We all knew that the buildings going up were a disaster,what no one knew was that the people would change so so much.

    • @sonnyirish3678
      @sonnyirish3678 2 года назад +29

      @@mrn13 I concur.An English city that is not very English anymore.

    • @theone3662
      @theone3662 2 года назад

      He was a Corbyn supporter and big on Multiculturalism and not a racist like you that blames poor people for the greed of the elites

  • @peterwilson5528
    @peterwilson5528 3 месяца назад +19

    The 1980s were a tough time. I was born in London and was in chaos everywhere, it was a bad feeling everywhere that Thatcher touched. We just could not take living in the slum dwellings, and joblessness. I had loved a holiday in the Lake District as a child and the wife had been in love with Scotland after a Scottish holiday she had as a child. We found a house exchange to the West Highlands packed our belongings into a van and headed North. People in Scotland were so kind. We arrived jobless, moneyless, and with not much else. 1983 began in Lochaber with heavy snow. falls. Then vanished and it was the most beautiful long summer and from our house window was Ben Nevis. Oh, Scotland you glorious place. There are few places on this planet as stunning as Western Scotland. But I can say that the Scottish people are what makes Scotland so great. London was lost a long time ago.

  • @hoofie2002
    @hoofie2002 Год назад +41

    Barry Norman was a great presenter and interviewer wasn't he? He just let's Bob take the lead and drive the conversation this time as it's a subject Bob was passionate and informed about.

  • @timgreen7409
    @timgreen7409 2 года назад +68

    Kick the working tax paying voters out for their rich mates with tax dodging companies, what a surprise. Time to build guilotines... the'll never expect the Brirish Inquisition. Bob, a man of the people ❤

  • @ExileGilby64
    @ExileGilby64 2 года назад +37

    I went on a river tour of the Thames a few years back, the guide gave excellent history about most buildings along the river that are now luxury apartments... Was very sad.

  • @RootlessNZ
    @RootlessNZ Год назад +22

    Bob Hoskins, sorely missed.

  • @DanHlrzr
    @DanHlrzr Год назад +18

    What a great character and person, not many people like him around anymore...

  • @liamliosmyth
    @liamliosmyth 2 года назад +53

    Respect to Bob for speaking the truth 👊🏼

  • @nicolasansom2681
    @nicolasansom2681 2 года назад +24

    so prophetic - its why I left London

  • @epicellen7299
    @epicellen7299 Год назад +19

    London was one of the most beautiful places to visit. No wonder so many true Brits race to foreign countries where historic architecture still stands, and laws against any thought of demolition. Modern buildings never last. Glass will be to expensive to replace. More demolition. Then what? Love Bob Hoskins

    • @moominmay
      @moominmay Год назад +1

      True brits? Regardless of your nationality, if you really dislike your country of birth and can afford to go where somewhere that suits better than obviously most people would just go lol

    • @MeiinUK
      @MeiinUK Год назад

      Have you ever been to Florence ? I recently saw a documentary on YT... about how the old London used to be. Am surprised that it was so... Cos the bridge in Florence was exactly like that. Such a warm feeling when I saw that.. I don't know why... What and how would people really react.. if one London, we brought that back into modernity ? Would people really go back in time.. and move back to London ?.... That entire bridge had both houses and people working there. Small shops.... but literal businesses. I dunno why, but I also love those old architectures.

  • @davidflaneau2810
    @davidflaneau2810 3 месяца назад +4

    Bob Hoskins was a passionate, good man. Wish we all had a bit of that spirit.

  • @carlashcroft6652
    @carlashcroft6652 2 года назад +54

    A great actor, a great man!

  • @Oathie1
    @Oathie1 2 года назад +259

    I must say, this BBC channel is a revelation. Some really interesting videos, and this is no exception. Times haven't changed much, and the insidious creep of pseudo-public space (actually owned by corporations) is one of London's biggest problems today.

    • @tobywardrop6870
      @tobywardrop6870 2 года назад

      The BBC are anti British and even then they were involved

    • @lewis5384
      @lewis5384 2 года назад +9

      Thames TV is also another really great channel that is similar

    • @tobywardrop6870
      @tobywardrop6870 2 года назад +2

      Walter Williams: Why the Founders Did Not Want a Democracy A must watch, even though it's america but in all reality no difference

    • @joachimmacdonald2702
      @joachimmacdonald2702 Год назад +10

      The amount of times I’ve been turfed out of places that look, feel and aught to be public squares by private security In london is quite shocking

    • @conradmason87
      @conradmason87 Год назад +2

      Forced and unwanted immigration on the indigenous population was/is the biggest killer.

  • @michaeloshea5505
    @michaeloshea5505 3 месяца назад +5

    Nice to see a superstar that didn't disappear up his own arse.
    RIP BH.

  • @patnevin4478
    @patnevin4478 Год назад +8

    I used to see Bob in the pubs around the Cally(Islington) was always a nice gentleman R.I.P

  • @roberthayes9842
    @roberthayes9842 2 года назад +77

    Well having been brought up and lived in London for 48 years I went back 5 years ago after having left 17 year's ago, the south Bank to London Bridge is unrecognisable, vast rows upon rows of Riverside flat's, sorry apartments that only the very rich can afford, communities up and down the country have forced locals out from Cornwall to Edinburgh even Dublin, people who grew up there from generation after generation can no longer buy a two up two down because of an ever changing world that ain't for the better for the average person

    • @madMARTYNmarsh1981
      @madMARTYNmarsh1981 2 года назад +27

      When I was a lad my next door neighbour bought her council house for £3,000. 30 years or so later and that house, which was a proper state, just sold for £240,000! This is in a town where the average wage is about £25,000. Locals can't afford to buy here now and it's not because they can't afford a mortgage, they can afford rent which is two to three times a mortgage payment so they can afford it, banks would rather loan to land lords, its exploitation of the poor and is obscene and vile.

    • @kidkieran77
      @kidkieran77 2 года назад +12

      @@madMARTYNmarsh1981 Yes it's ridiculous. I even left the UK to save money but the banks won't give me a mortgage unless I make £75,000 a year. I actually make decent money due to the low cost of living where I am and I save £1,500 a month. I could easily afford a mortgage and have enough for. sizeable deposit. The system is completely rigged.

    • @roberthayes9842
      @roberthayes9842 2 года назад

      @@madMARTYNmarsh1981 its the biggest blagg in modern history, all instigated by banks and self serving governments they say villains rob bank's the real crooks own them, I bought my first house for £10,000

    • @madMARTYNmarsh1981
      @madMARTYNmarsh1981 2 года назад

      @@kidkieran77 seeing an article in The Financial Times about the kinds of loans Elon Musk has access to only proves your point that the system is rigged in favour of the already vilely wealthy. Banks shouldn't be there to help millionaires or billionaires, they should be loaning to people that actually need their help. The idea of a loan was originally to help poorer people afford something that would improve their lives, they pay for it over time, now they've become a method of tax avoidance for people who already have more wealth that they'll ever need for themselves and their entire families. I hesitate to say it's unfair because life isn't fair but you know the system has gone wrong when it's used the way the mega wealthy are using it to the expense of people that actually need that money to progress their lives.

    • @kanthakathewhite1012
      @kanthakathewhite1012 2 года назад +1

      @@kidkieran77 where do you live ?

  • @Littletime839
    @Littletime839 2 года назад +10

    Not joking but it didn't occur to me that Waterloo had a community, I just accepted it was offices, high spec riverside apartments, cafés and bars.

  • @robcherry6734
    @robcherry6734 Год назад +10

    With Coin St, the residents won, a rare win for the common man. Bob was a truly nice guy, before he got ‘Hollywood Famous’ in Who Framed Roger Rabbit he used to come into the camera shop where I worked and would often spend hours over a cup of tea discussing everything from the best street photography lens made for his latest 2nd hand Leica to his latest casting call for a part playing an East End market trader/gangster (he hated that he was, at that time, typecast and couldn’t get the parts he wanted). As a young 19 yo it was a fascinating experience.

  • @Ksim3000
    @Ksim3000 Год назад +8

    What is amazing back then is that people still had a heart and tried to fight back for their own communities and ways of life. Now? Nobody cares about their country anymore and just focuses on their own lives. It really is sad actually.

  • @keef71
    @keef71 2 года назад +47

    the thing is, for all the talk in the '80s of investment and development, at first it was just a turkey shoot for companies to 'invest' in derelict dockland etc. for tax breaks etc. it wasn't really until Docklands/Canary Wharf came in that the money was providing something that could actually exist and progress. Either way, the incumbent residential population were always going to be 'inconvenient'. Scariest thing is that this bit of Bob's London of 1982 was probably nearer that of 1942 than what we have in 2022 (40 yrs either way)

    • @paulmaryon9088
      @paulmaryon9088 2 года назад +3

      Yes you are quiet right there, I remember this area in the 60s still a shithole then

    • @raycroal
      @raycroal 2 года назад +12

      a thought i had the other day was thinking how the atom bomb and the vee 2 rockets were a lot closer to victorian times than today, which is staggering when you think of jack the ripper vs rockets and splitting the atom

    • @mojonojo3
      @mojonojo3 Год назад +1

      even after the first wave of docklands development it still took a decade for it to take off.

  • @kaysmith8992
    @kaysmith8992 2 года назад +29

    Reminds me of how people move into Shoreditch or Hackney today because they want "the real London" when the real Londoners have left already.

    • @infesticon
      @infesticon 2 года назад +9

      Shoreditch has had a rep for people who work in TV and twatty hipsters for more than 20 years.

    • @andrewdavy9921
      @andrewdavy9921 2 года назад

      @@infesticon and most are talentless bas...

    • @Johnconno
      @Johnconno 2 года назад +2

      Your 20 years out of date.

    • @marknewbold2583
      @marknewbold2583 Год назад

      The real Londoners are people living in London

    • @mojonojo3
      @mojonojo3 Год назад

      the 'cool' days of Shoredich was over when i was knocking around there in the late 90s, the action had already moved over to Brick lane.

  • @Matt10670
    @Matt10670 Год назад +7

    Wow, Bob Hoskins has such a force of personality and gravitas in this it's almost like he's a character in a film.

  • @Poseiden2
    @Poseiden2 Год назад +7

    Great actor, big personality with a social conscience (no agent-led vapid soundbites with Bob!), he makes important points, and the Long Good Friday was a wonderful, timeless film . RIP to both Bob and Barry.

  • @phmwu7368
    @phmwu7368 2 года назад +26

    Nothing has changed ... about time houses in London require the owners to actually permanently living in these houses !

  • @Geffo555
    @Geffo555 2 года назад +15

    This is brilliant. Bob and Barry. And a London lost in time. Oh man, I miss so much.

  • @marioavossa
    @marioavossa Год назад +30

    When I moved to London 20 years ago, whatever it was when I moved here has gone. Its just changed so much, from something vibrant and exciting to a city that even before the pandemic feels that its dying, going through the motions of nothingness.

    • @ajs41
      @ajs41 Год назад +2

      It's not as interesting as it used to be. But I still visit every so often.

    • @MrRock1878
      @MrRock1878 Год назад +2

      That might be an age thing ,no?

    • @dazauto1400
      @dazauto1400 Год назад +9

      It feels like it's been sterilised. It once had an edge and character. Just the excitement walking around. Like you what it once had has now gone. In the 80s and 90s it was the best city on earth.

  • @kirishima638
    @kirishima638 2 месяца назад +3

    What a character!

  • @That_Random_Bloke
    @That_Random_Bloke 2 года назад +5

    In between takes Bob took Barry for a drink at a slightly dodgy bar.
    Hoskins later returned for a drink there and the barman confided to Bob that he’d thought Barry was a gangster and Bob his bodyguard!
    Lovely story in Barry’s book. Hoskins came across as a great bloke.

  • @MrMamooshka
    @MrMamooshka 2 года назад +37

    Seems to me that if the world was deprived of a great actor London might have had a great civil engineer in Bob Hoskins.

    • @-xirx-
      @-xirx- Год назад +1

      Or tour guide!

  • @mohawk876
    @mohawk876 3 месяца назад +2

    Bob was not only a great actor... 'long good friday' and 'pennies from heaven' and great londoner with pride in his heart of local communities

  • @thelostone6981
    @thelostone6981 Год назад +7

    I live in Salt Lake City and few years back, the government saddled us tax payers with the bill to move a state prison. Why? Because the community it is in, which use to be a rural farming community, has become one of the richest in our county and developers want the land for large, expensive houses. So we pay the bill and the developers get rich.
    I know it’s slightly different than what Bob is talking about, but the common man/woman are the ones picking up the bill while the rich get richer.

  • @therealleonidas229
    @therealleonidas229 2 года назад +17

    Heartbreaking RIP Bob and London 🙏

  • @tonyluxton3726
    @tonyluxton3726 2 года назад +36

    Good old Bob a legend he was and greatly missed. Rip Bob Hoskins

  • @lazyeight01
    @lazyeight01 Год назад +12

    God I love Bob Hoskins. Legends never die.

  • @chekkatechno
    @chekkatechno 3 месяца назад +6

    What was being done to London 40 years ago had since been rolled out to do many other cities too

  • @scottblack9213
    @scottblack9213 2 года назад +29

    So endearing to see the passion this man has.. born and bred in London, this great town and the love he has for his town.

  • @davidvasey5065
    @davidvasey5065 2 года назад +13

    Completely natural conversation

  • @woodfox8803
    @woodfox8803 3 месяца назад +6

    So well informed and articulate. We could use him today

    • @christopherrobin4619
      @christopherrobin4619 21 день назад

      He be branded a racist and likely arrested by the MET for wanting to preserve local communities and speaking his mind. Hate speech against DEI and multiculturalism would keep him quiet or destroy his then burgeoning career.

  • @E36ist
    @E36ist Год назад +6

    Loathe as I am to ‘like’ a BBC video, it’s Bob Hoskins’ passion and sincerity that earns my respect.

  • @lawsonrichards2584
    @lawsonrichards2584 2 года назад +20

    RIP BOB, AMAZING MAN

  • @nazb33
    @nazb33 2 года назад +7

    Bob is a true legend. He reminds me of Uncle Albert when he was talking to Del and Rodney about where he grew up.

  • @dimi3ixian
    @dimi3ixian 2 месяца назад +7

    Everything he said came to pass as they would say in biblical times. Absolute legend and oracle

  • @macklee6837
    @macklee6837 2 месяца назад +2

    4:44 I love Barry Norman's cockney "Where's that then?" 😆

  • @McNab1986
    @McNab1986 2 года назад +91

    Crazy how true it ended up being. Look at the state of London now, be lucky to meet a proper Londoner

    • @je6874
      @je6874 2 года назад +1

      What constitutes a proper Londoner?

    • @McNab1986
      @McNab1986 2 года назад +36

      @@je6874 you'd know if ya met one, given you had to ask you most likely havent which backs my comment

    • @tentringer4065
      @tentringer4065 2 года назад +6

      @@McNab1986 classic begging the question. Why don't you say what you mean. Aren't Londoners supposed to be plain speaking? You prefer to talk in riddles mate.

    • @McNab1986
      @McNab1986 2 года назад +13

      @@tentringer4065 when asked a question i suspect the anwser is already known, i aint entertaining that. If you wanna entertain stupid, go ahead and explain it for them

    • @tentringer4065
      @tentringer4065 2 года назад +7

      @@McNab1986 You are not even capable of voicing your own opinion; are you ashamed of it?

  • @jesusisking3974
    @jesusisking3974 2 года назад +17

    Wow ! So informative...Bob would have made a great Ambassador for the ordinary London citizens who's family generations financially supported London with all their trades and craftmanship yet were eventually sold down the swanny (river).
    This type of inequality, snobbery, greed and Privitisation still exist's today but more aggressively and progressively.
    Sad but True !

  • @buffywhatever1093
    @buffywhatever1093 Год назад +3

    I met Bob in the Marlborough Pub in Brighton. He was a proper interesting fella, which is shown here clearly.

  • @acerimmer1023
    @acerimmer1023 Год назад +5

    The river belongs to the wealthy now..... Bob would be heartbroken to see what they've done to our beautiful city.....
    London's river communities are the oldest in the city..... Now they're mostly gone
    I so wish Bob were still with us .... Sorely missed..... God bless you Bob.
    Thanks for the upload 👍👍👍👍👍

  • @wizard3060
    @wizard3060 2 года назад +11

    He was ahead of his time…as I write this in 2022 nothing has changed!

  • @ThermoMan
    @ThermoMan 2 года назад +28

    It’s got a lot worse over the last 40 years

  • @RT-zk7yr
    @RT-zk7yr 2 месяца назад +2

    Bob Hoskins spitting facts wandering around the south bank with Barry Norman in the year I was born. Magic!

  • @steveconn
    @steveconn Год назад +5

    Miss this man...the honest voices of society.

  • @martinguest167
    @martinguest167 2 года назад +31

    Shame it all came true London looks like New York and Birmingham nowadays horrible concrete monstrosities ugly buildings lost heritage and history

  • @drpancake4103
    @drpancake4103 2 года назад +65

    Wasn't expecting I'd watch this, but damn he was right and entertaining at the same time. Well put together.

  • @Pulsonar
    @Pulsonar 3 месяца назад +1

    It’s absolutely fantastic and mind boggling watching a documentary of London from 40+ years ago. Bob Hoskins done a magnificent job here with Barry Norman, boy i miss these 2 legends of the movies and journalism industries.

  • @thehumblegent
    @thehumblegent 2 года назад +8

    Barry seemed to get more cockney the longer he spent with Bob. Brilliant.
    Fantastic upload, Bob reality knew his stuff.
    Peace and Love