It’s probably because I’m a massive fan of race realism and this was a look back at my childhood growing up around places like this…It even looked like Stapleford Abbott’s town and airfield…..England has certainly taken a turn for the worse.
I thought this was about Northern Ireland in 1973, cause I watched a video about the division of the Isle due to the four attempted acts of Irish Homerule, just before this.
I joined Thames Valley Police in 1976 and this was filmed in and around Thames Valley and a lot of it in Bracknell where I live now. It made me chuckle when I saw how things have changed since then. I retired after 35 years and the job has changed out of all recognition since then and not all for the better.
We called it a Hillman Limp. Made in Renfrewshire, Scotland. Mostly observed at the roadside with legs protruding from the underside. Cheap car at the time and popular among the working class.
@the.parks.of.no.return yes, but remember, when there were fewer car makers then, they all sold TONS of cars as a result. They were more concerned about churning them out and raking in the profit, than checking they made them carefully! Imp? I knew TWO girls that had them, and theirs were "lucky" ones. Great cars really.
I joined the Garda (Irish police) in 1983. A group of new trainee's came to Limerick city on the same day. As usual I was put on a unit and told to report for work the next morning while all the others had a few days off to settle in. Even though the flat I got was only about a 4 minute walk from my station I turned left instead of right and proceeded to get lost on my very first day. Everybody was saying good morning Garda but I could not very well ask for directions. I eventually backtracked and arrived at my new station barely on time for work. Retired in 2013 as a sergeant. This video made me remember those early days.
@@clavichord Not really. Was temporarily transferred to the border a few times for the various foot & mouth and BSE diseases but it was all uneventful checkpoints. An IRA crowd once plastered a building in Limerick with a painted slogan "we will avenge Loughall" (shortly after this incident) I caught them in the act but they were only done for criminal damage.
This filled me with nostalgia,as I was a kid in the 70s,and now I'm not just feeling old,but thinking,,,what's happened to Britain? Where the heck did it all go wrong?😥
Simple we let the criminals of the world in and destroy our country ,compare this to Japan who had a sensible immigration policy their country is still recognisable where ours is a Hell Hole.
@@bucko321 “At the beginning of 1924, we received a call from Baron Louis de Rothschild; one of his friends, Max Warburg from Hamburg, had read my book and wanted to get to know us. To my great surprise, Warburg spontaneously offered us 60,000 gold marks, to tide the movement over for its first three years.” In his book «Praktischer Idealismus», Kalergi indicates that the residents of the future “United States of Europe” will not be the native People of the Old Continent, but a kind of sub-humans, products of miscegenation. He clearly states that the peoples of Europe should interbreed with Asians and colored races, thus creating a multinational flock with no quality and easily controlled by the ruling elite.
That was a really interesting film! ... I remember 1973 very well, and our country has certainly changed over the last 51 years, and not necessarily for the better!
Not really, this looks like a grey, concrete shithole. Who wants to live in a grey, concrete shithole? Besides, you seem to have no problem with 21st century technology, I'd drop using it if you want to live in the 70s...
I knew this film would leave me with a feeling of gloom. Seeing how worse things are now compared to the Britain in this film is thoroughly depressing.
People were very much different, solid and character, and extremely well educated and bobbies on the beat, bobbies looking out for the good of communities. Now policing is done by the people, and not a piggin brain cell amongst most, rude, ill mannered, arrogant, children that needs a nanny state to look after them, and if you say Boo, you will have your collar felt
I joined in 1981, still remember the feeling of terror as I walked out on my first solo patrol 🤣 Happy Days. We were limited to foot patrol for 2 yrs apart from being taken in a car at really busy periods like Xmas. That was to learn the local community, and so they knew you and would remember if you didnt treat them right. Mining community during the miners strike, it was hard on both sides but we never mistreated our locals. They knew where we lived !
My dad worked every bit of overtime he could when the strikes were on ( copper) it paid for a portable colour tv for my Christmas present, best present I ever had
Your colleagues, tricked me into a Gay club when I asked them for the direction to a certain club in London? I noticed it was a Gay club when a guy gave me a full kiss with his tongue in 1991! The real club I was heading for was around the corner with my girlfriend later laughing hysterically when I had the trans-guys lipstick marks on my cheek.
@paulfrost8952 Good point well made ! I wouldnt but some would. I know officers from W Midd and The Met acted like animals on occasion as they had no sense of accountability being from out of our area. We were certainly abused by the miners just for being Police officers, I had to deal an accident involving one of their young sons. They didn't call me Maggies Army then.
Fast forward to 2022, and you’ve got almost 3 million Brits using a food bank, along with 14.5 million Brits living under the poverty line, as of last year alone. 🤷♂️
yeah funny what happens when you destroy social mobility, sell off public services, implement regressive taxation and dismantle manufacturing industry. still, the shareholders are doing well.
Takes me back to a time when i was around 12 yrs old and felt safe .with mum and dad etc now i am in my 60 s and i don't know where the time went ??? or common sense regarding what's happening these days 2023 ??
They don't even turn up after the event now. Unless you've said some hurty words on twitter, when they'll turn up mob-handed, take you back to the station, charge you and take you to court the following morning where you'll be given 3 years in chokey, all for calling somebody a doughnut or something.
Loved this. The good old 70s. Great recruitment film. The world is so different now. I guess that’s what 50 years does. There’s only one constant and that is change.
What a great old film. Loved seeing the interiors, the cars, clothes, vinyl records, everything. See the school climbing frame? No chance of seeing one of those now - health & safety!
It is sad how society has deteriorated since then. Now officers have to turn up in stab proof vests, tasers, cs spray, and many of them in the big cities are now armed as well. We have been badly let down by politicians who have let this country descend into a drug paradise. The type of officer in this film never had to deal with the situations they have to today.
🤣 Tories they started the shut down and supression and control the establishment and there all controlled Inc the media by the elites 🤑my this video must be propeganda film 🎥 by them 🤣🤣🤣👎✊
There was no CCTV back then. Things were very different and much better. I long to go back to the 1970s. I think music was better then too and entertainment.
It’s called respect for family , god, country . Those are four letter words now . We let a lot of cultures in that don’t respect women or community or the country. It’s very sad no one can speak the truth . Watch the movie “children of men “ that’s the UK within 20 years
My dad too, I remember him coming home for his dinner and having to listen to his walkie-talkie which he placed on the table while he ate, not too sure whether he was having a skive though :-) Happy days!
Remember seeing this around 1980, we all were very impressed and everyone in the class wanted to join the police. Life had so much to live for then compared to now. Never ever we had our front door locked and never had any vandalism to our car or home. Life was simple and far less complicated. We went to school, got back then went out playing till dark, bit of homework and bed, no hanging around or smoking pots and what not.
Totally agree. I'm 53 now and I remember being a kid in the 1970's (UK) This presentation captures the atmosphere of that time. As you say. Life was far more simple and straightforward.
Here we go, the old nonsense about foot patrol. Jesus........Complete ignorance. The UK police service doesn't have the personnel to deploy people on foot. It's not efficient, response times to emergency calls could never be met today if staff weren't mobile in vehicles. Footbeat is a complete waste of resources. You could be sat in your house now, and you wouldn't see if a police officer walked past your house. It's a MYTH that FB was effective at combating crime, the amount of ground that could be covered on foot is a fraction of that which can be covered in a vehicle. Furthermore, the vast majority of criminals use VEHICLES in the commission of their offences, whether that be drug dealing, or committing burglaries. Ergo, having people wearing out boot leather is utterly pointless when attempting to disrupt criminal activity. Don't compare the 1950's & 60's society with that of today, there is no comparison and crime has changed radically in that time. I'm pretty sure 'dad' never had fight individuals off their face on coke and intent on smashing his head in? I've done exactly that on at least two occasions. The level of violence directed towards the police far exceeds anything that occurred back in the 60's and beyond.
How human and humble everyone seems.. What has changed in the U.K. that knife crime , violence, looting , rapes ect are now a daily occurrence?.. Heartbreaking to see how quickly this country has deteriorated..
@@kesgreen4639 I owed a pub for many years my self.. Fights happened but were very rare and quickly resolved without police.. I never seen anyone stabbed nor any looting and women were confident regarding their safety at night.. That certainly not the case now.
@@kesgreen4639 my pub was in Scotland just outside Edinburgh but my best friend ran pubs in Covent Garden, Piccadilly and Richmond for nearly 30 years .. Spent many great times in London.. Seems like a different world now.
I enjoyed watching this thank you 🙏 The cars fashion Of the 70s absolutely brilliant! And going into the policeman’s house 🏡 the wallpaper in the kitchen I remember my mam having that in her kitchen proper nostalgia
@@theaylesburycyclist8756 Yes he must have . He worked at Thame police station, but he nearly became the local Bobby for long crendon, he got on the dog section in around 1973 , and worked all over the area then , but still based at Thame , we often used to go to Aylesbury police station to the bar for a drink at the weekend , when I was very young , he retired in 1996 and his leaving do was at Aylesbury station
The supposedly unreleased album by "The Blue Jays" that the villians are caught in possession of, is actually Psychedelic Lollipop by US band Blues Magoos. The titles are covered over of course. It would've been at least 5 years old by the time this film was made. They weren't well known in the UK and so the filmakers were probably banking on it not being easily recognisable!
I think the girl in the record shop was the key to the whole thing. She was later found selling illegal pressings of a Pickettywitch EP to fund the Berkshire Red Brigade. Her work with "Johnny" was a classic honeytrap operation.
@@simonjones7727nah, Pickettywitch never released an EP. Hang on though... did it fall off the back of the same lorry as the (not yet released) Blue Jays LP?
@@SIXTYDOLLARBOSS Exactly. The EP contained a specially recorded version of "That Same Old Feeling" that when played backwards at 78rpm contained a message of support for Ulrike Meinhof. Black Market Whisky and With It Green Jackets sold from a boutique in Bracknell High Street formed the rest of a sophisticated money laundering operation, It was, in hindsight, quite brilliant.
You mean when they pounded the beat, and you knew their names, but now bully boys that have left the streets, housed in building, sitting around, doing what?
There is simply not enough officers these days to walk the beat, secondly they are so inundated with paperwork you wouldn’t believe . I can guarantee that most officers these days wish it was the same as it was where they were proper on-the-beat police officers, not mental health nurses, social workers and everything in between.
@@joelangley7974 Not according to an ex Home Office official that I was talking to, who despaired hearing of officers, useless as a broken vase. Thousands more officers we now have, and as stupid and arrogant as they come.
@@fman02 The natural (did you/can you ever understand natural) order was established a very long time ago WITHOUT YOUR PERMISSION! All you people do is impose your imagined “phobias” or your “ists” on it. Now they are getting kids to spy on their parents. The antiChrist state we live under now assumes ownership of every families kids and groom then on a national scale for anything and everything unnatural. Yes, it WAS better back then, in fact the worst of back then is still better than the best of today.
@@arturo468 you should see the schools now ! taking over by left wing liberal teachers ! they dont even rase their voices to the kids now ! there are videos on youtube, they just let the kids do what they want ! girls are also acting bad as the boys now
Great show. Kind of like ADAM-12 here in the states. British shows in the U.S. are limited. Thanks to You Tube. I was a beat Cop in NJ. Brought back memories.
now just like in the usa, police forces put out videos of indictable arrests - now with some of time of "armed police drop your weapon, shots fired " etc
Funnily enough my dad, a British "Bobby" once visited a police station in New York, he loved the experience and the guys there welcomed him as they exchanged stories! This would have been the 1980s' I'd have thought.
Yes as a new policeman (Garda) I was on the beat constantly for the first 5 years. It was only rarely I would see the inside of a Garda car. I did not mind being on the beat during the day as there were plenty of people around but on nights (10pm - 6am) it was not much fun. I often could hear all the snoring through the open windows on summer nights at 4am and wished I was able to do the same.
They’ve changed their methods of preventing “crimes” happening and are going too far because they want to stop you even thinking about anything natural. Everything natural is now a crime to them.
11:06 - All it needed was Jack Regan and George Carter to walk in. "We're the Sweeny and we haven't had any dinner". "Oi, get yer trousers on, you're nicked". 14:45. Nice bit of "mixing".
I live in the town where this was filmed. Great to all those all shots of the town centre and the estates. I was 4 years old at the time. The film 'The Offence' with Sean Connery was also filmed here (Bracknell)
I never thought I'd ever see this film again. Back in about 1981 at school down in Exeter, the local police liaison officer was PC Marshall. He would visit the school and chat with us, and occasionally, no doubt to fill in the time, he'd show police recruitment films like this on the projector. There was another one I remember with a petrol tanker leaking all over the road after an accident - a bit more dramatic than this one. And at 4:14, I think the bloke on the left might be the actor Alan Dudley.
Rest in Peace, Father Britain, and the society you once had. I mourn the loss as I see everyone following her example. I suppose this is ... part and parcel.. of living in the modern world.
So Bracknell looked similar that what it did before the north part of town centre was knocked down but there were so few cars on the road and the youths had very long hair. Only the inside of the Police Station looks the same. Thanks, Andrew, for posting this bit of Bracknell history
I could tell you a story or two abut the police in south London back in the early '70s and '80s! They really did know how to "look after" the local community!
No madam I don't mind pushing your car ,I'm a public servant after all.. They seem to have forgotten that... Any current policy enforcement officers watching this ,take note...
I was a copper in the 80s and early 90s. Then the Police and Criminal Procedures Act kicked in and officers can no longer do their job effectively. Too much red tape and disproportionate rights for criminals. I left the job for this very reason. Thank God I did because these days it's even worse.
Coppers was a lot better then , our local copper was always round my house looking for me as a kid , the same copper was my referee for my shotgun and firearms certificates, Boys will be boys was his saying
And the elites .🤑remember the owner weather spoons when the so called pandemic started he laid off his staff before the furlough scheme came in.....? And yet there was a picture of him and your leader Boris standing with a pint in one of his establishments gloating the pubs will be open soon ...yeh 2 millionaire s together what does that tell you and no social distancing or face masks ... British citizens need to make there mind up ...I will be boycotting that businesses .👎
That's when they was respected a lot more. An influx of 'bad apples' throught the years and look what we are left with today. Don't get me wrong, there are 'bad apples' in all walks of life, but when statements were written in the old days, they had a habit of changing...
I was around in the 70, we had respect for the police in those days, not anymore sadly. They wouldn't bother with most of the crime in this, wouldn't give a toss. They've lost their way and the publics faith.
The narrator and main character is Simon Rouse who did a long stint as Jack Meadows in the Bill. His partner is Jeremy Bulloch who was the original Boba Fett
How come he doesn't sound anything like Jack Meadows? I think it must be a different person doing the narrating. Incidentally Jeremy Bulloch was in a few episodes of The Bill as well.
"Ello, ello, and what have we e're then? Little Jimmy trying to nick a Cessna 172 from the local airport, "You're not kiddin' me, young'n, you're off to jail me lad, let's be a'vin you"! Little shit!
I remember the local police officer very well 1960s, Mr Joe Farrer, a big Gentleman to be honest l remember him on the beat on foot , and on a bicycle he also knew everyone in our village this man was what we call "A Police Man" RIP JOE, YOU WERE A TRUE COPPER, WHEN COPS WE'RE COPS AND LAW MENT TRUTH
Seeing this, it's no wonder my elderly parents lament at the state of British society today.
This ain't a documentary! Police being called to attend a little bit of a heated argument in a cafe, come on!
I was 20 in 1973, and I remember all the old folk moaning about how society was crumbling and that young people had no respect.
I totally agree with your parents 💯
@@CatherineBirch-m5r They were right, though.
@@Khayyam-vg9fw Absolutely right.
Who else got this on their recommendation list out of nowhere ✋🏻 😂
I certainly do
It’s probably because I’m a massive fan of race realism and this was a look back at my childhood growing up around places like this…It even looked like Stapleford Abbott’s town and airfield…..England has certainly taken a turn for the worse.
I think Labour are behind that, trying to rub it in our faces
I thought this was about Northern Ireland in 1973, cause I watched a video about the division of the Isle due to the four attempted acts of Irish Homerule, just before this.
@@mousecat9398 "I'm a massive fan of race realism" has got to be one of the most cringewortthy statements I've seen on TH-cam. Bravo.
I joined Thames Valley Police in 1976 and this was filmed in and around Thames Valley and a lot of it in Bracknell where I live now. It made me chuckle when I saw how things have changed since then. I retired after 35 years and the job has changed out of all recognition since then and not all for the better.
Thames valley police are known for having the most notoriously bent coppers in the force. Watch the audits.
It should make you cry..not chuckle. Your government leaders destroyed the UK.
like shots fired calls
I thought it was Bracknell police station at the start, I was posted there in 1987!
Yes, you can no longer be sexist or racist.
My first car was a Hillman imp in 1988 that was always breaking down to lol.
That's why Gen. X are such good mechanics! 😉
They were renowned for it I believe.
We called it a Hillman Limp. Made in Renfrewshire, Scotland. Mostly observed at the roadside with legs protruding from the underside. Cheap car at the time and popular among the working class.
@the.parks.of.no.return yes, but remember, when there were fewer car makers then, they all sold TONS of cars as a result. They were more concerned about churning them out and raking in the profit, than checking they made them carefully! Imp? I knew TWO girls that had them, and theirs were "lucky" ones. Great cars really.
I joined the Garda (Irish police) in 1983. A group of new trainee's came to Limerick city on the same day. As usual I was put on a unit and told to report for work the next morning while all the others had a few days off to settle in. Even though the flat I got was only about a 4 minute walk from my station I turned left instead of right and proceeded to get lost on my very first day. Everybody was saying good morning Garda but I could not very well ask for directions. I eventually backtracked and arrived at my new station barely on time for work. Retired in 2013 as a sergeant. This video made me remember those early days.
You were kept busy with the Dundons and McCarthys I'd say.
Did you ever have to deal with Northern Ireland "Troubles" related matters in the 1980s/90s, as a member of the Garda in Limerick?
@@bastogne315 I left Limerick city in 1990 for Abbeyfeale minding Jerry Collins and then went on to Kerry so the Dundons were after my time thank god.
@@clavichord Not really. Was temporarily transferred to the border a few times for the various foot & mouth and BSE diseases but it was all uneventful checkpoints. An IRA crowd once plastered a building in Limerick with a painted slogan "we will avenge Loughall" (shortly after this incident) I caught them in the act but they were only done for criminal damage.
@@Lar308 Interesting. Thanks for sharing your memories
Man, I wish I could time travel back in time.
And stay there, much better times.
@@deannelson1388 I have just commented exactly this.
@@deannelson1388 You need to read some history about police corruption in the 1970s. You could start by looking at Operation Countryman.
Everyone wants to turn to the 70s but they don’t want to spend how little you got in the 70s 😂😂😂
@@Toodyslexicforyou I was born 1970 and it was a dam sight better than the crap today, by a country mile too.
“Better to prevent crime than turn up after the event” And now look at the state of the country.
Now your lucky if they turn up at all.
Even though its bubble bath.
This filled me with nostalgia,as I was a kid in the 70s,and now I'm not just feeling old,but thinking,,,what's happened to Britain? Where the heck did it all go wrong?😥
Simple we let the criminals of the world in and destroy our country ,compare this to Japan who had a sensible immigration policy their country is still recognisable where ours is a Hell Hole.
Tony Bloke when he was PM
@@bucko321 “At the beginning of 1924, we received a call from Baron Louis de Rothschild; one of his friends, Max Warburg from Hamburg, had read my book and wanted to get to know us. To my great surprise, Warburg spontaneously offered us 60,000 gold marks, to tide the movement over for its first three years.”
In his book «Praktischer Idealismus», Kalergi indicates that the residents of the future “United States of Europe” will not be the native People of the Old Continent, but a kind of sub-humans, products of miscegenation. He clearly states that the peoples of Europe should interbreed with Asians and colored races, thus creating a multinational flock with no quality and easily controlled by the ruling elite.
The 70s being mired by National Strikes, power cuts, massive inflation and rubbish in the streets. Are yes Britain was so much better back then!
@@bucko321 'Great Britain, built by men in overalls, and ruined by men in suits.' - _Fred Dibnah_
That was a really interesting film! ... I remember 1973 very well, and our country has certainly changed over the last 51 years, and not necessarily for the better!
You probably remember how everyone was complaining back then about long haired yobs and society collapsing etc. I do.
And if we don't get rid of this government it's going to get worse
@@wflack Yes, and they were right. Now we're complaining about 77th Brigade types on social media who gaslight us.
This Shows What We've Lost.. 2021... Great isn't it.
Yeah, but we've gained a lot of that lovely diversity haven't we...
The real England
Not really, this looks like a grey, concrete shithole. Who wants to live in a grey, concrete shithole? Besides, you seem to have no problem with 21st century technology, I'd drop using it if you want to live in the 70s...
@@lbukem4259 tell us some other fucking obvious points you've missed hammerhead.
I used to enjoy watching these videos in 1973. Or did I? TH-cam did not exist. The internet did not exist. We have gained far more than we have lost!
Jeremy Bulloch (Johnny, the young DC) was the original Boba Fett in The Empire Strikes Back & Return of the Jedi.
He was also in a few episodes of The Bill.
I knew this film would leave me with a feeling of gloom. Seeing how worse things are now compared to the Britain in this film is thoroughly depressing.
People were very much different, solid and character, and extremely well educated and bobbies on the beat, bobbies looking out for the good of communities. Now policing is done by the people, and not a piggin brain cell amongst most, rude, ill mannered, arrogant, children that needs a nanny state to look after them, and if you say Boo, you will have your collar felt
@@gailbirchall2163shut up you sad weirdo
@@gailbirchall2163
Now all done remotely via an APP on your phone
Things have changed everywhere even here in Australia. I was born in the 60s and I was a teen in the 80s, Im just so glad I was not born in America.
Cheer up, it might never happen
I joined in 1981, still remember the feeling of terror as I walked out on my first solo patrol 🤣 Happy Days. We were limited to foot patrol for 2 yrs apart from being taken in a car at really busy periods like Xmas. That was to learn the local community, and so they knew you and would remember if you didnt treat them right. Mining community during the miners strike, it was hard on both sides but we never mistreated our locals. They knew where we lived !
My dad worked every bit of overtime he could when the strikes were on ( copper) it paid for a portable colour tv for my Christmas present, best present I ever had
Your colleagues, tricked me into a Gay club when I asked them for the direction to a certain club in London? I noticed it was a Gay club when a guy gave me a full kiss with his tongue in 1991! The real club I was heading for was around the corner with my girlfriend later laughing hysterically when I had the trans-guys lipstick marks on my cheek.
@strikerorwell9232 Dont worry my 'colleagues' in a neighbouring force area did that to me when we were on a night out during a weeks training course !
would you have mistreated them if they weren’t your locals!?
@paulfrost8952 Good point well made ! I wouldnt but some would. I know officers from W Midd and The Met acted like animals on occasion as they had no sense of accountability being from out of our area. We were certainly abused by the miners just for being Police officers, I had to deal an accident involving one of their young sons. They didn't call me Maggies Army then.
Fast forward to 2022, and you’ve got almost 3 million Brits using a food bank, along with 14.5 million Brits living under the poverty line, as of last year alone. 🤷♂️
yeah funny what happens when you destroy social mobility, sell off public services, implement regressive taxation and dismantle manufacturing industry. still, the shareholders are doing well.
fast forward to 2024...perfect example of a fkt up country fkt up by governments past and present...like you i despair
@@michaelwalton-ii1ch It's the result of 45 years of Thatcherism.
And millions of........?
thank goodness we voted them out...
flashbacks to the old Bracknell town back in the 70s/80s. its changed so much these days
Y'know...Without the 3M building (Built in the 80s, I think?) in shot, I didn't even realise where it was! 😳
This is the most bizarre recruitment film I have ever seen. Brilliant though. Wish to be in 1973 again.
Yes, that is exactly what I feel as well. What a lovely world we had, really. All gone now, though.
Same here.
Takes me back to a time when i was around 12 yrs old and felt safe .with mum and dad etc now i am in my 60 s and i don't know where the time went ??? or common sense regarding what's happening these days 2023 ??
Your 💯 spot on mate 👌 👏👏👏👏👏👏🫡👍
...what?
“It’s better to prevent the crime happening than to turn up after the event” 😢 The opposite of Policing today.
They don't even turn up after the event now. Unless you've said some hurty words on twitter, when they'll turn up mob-handed, take you back to the station, charge you and take you to court the following morning where you'll be given 3 years in chokey, all for calling somebody a doughnut or something.
Loved this. The good old 70s. Great recruitment film. The world is so different now. I guess that’s what 50 years does. There’s only one constant and that is change.
Safer now especially round the elephant.
Ageing is another constant unfortunately.
@@bastogne315 I take it you mean the Elephant & Castle. Why do think this is ?,By which I mean, what do you think has led/caused it to be safer ?
What a great old film. Loved seeing the interiors, the cars, clothes, vinyl records, everything. See the school climbing frame? No chance of seeing one of those now - health & safety!
This was a brilliant watch. Would make a brilliant TV show.
Yes a TV show about the Old Bill. Wonder what it could be called?
@@jkkay477 weird that, cos I’m sure that tv show you’re sarcastic referring to is fiction
It is sad how society has deteriorated since then. Now officers have to turn up in stab proof vests, tasers, cs spray, and many of them in the big cities are now armed as well. We have been badly let down by politicians who have let this country descend into a drug paradise. The type of officer in this film never had to deal with the situations they have to today.
🤣 Tories they started the shut down and supression and control the establishment and there all controlled Inc the media by the elites 🤑my this video must be propeganda film 🎥 by them 🤣🤣🤣👎✊
You realise there’s less crime now than there has ever been? Facts v’s nostalgia
@@GrandPrixDecals Less crime reported, try reporting anything by phoning 101 and you can see why people give up after waiting 30 mins on hold.
There was no CCTV back then. Things were very different and much better. I long to go back to the 1970s. I think music was better then too and entertainment.
It’s called respect for family , god, country . Those are four letter words now . We let a lot of cultures in that don’t respect women or community or the country. It’s very sad no one can speak the truth . Watch the movie “children of men “ that’s the UK within 20 years
What memories...like watching my dear old Dad who was a Policeman from 1968 until he retired....and 6ft 4 aswell.
Yep my dad joined in 1966 , I remember the Mk1 escorts well . Happy childhood memories
My dad too, I remember him coming home for his dinner and having to listen to his walkie-talkie which he placed on the table while he ate, not too sure whether he was having a skive though :-) Happy days!
@@EarlEBird-fz6yrstrict parent....but we always felt secure....in our Police House.😊
Remember seeing this around 1980, we all were very impressed and everyone in the class wanted to join the police. Life had so much to live for then compared to now. Never ever we had our front door locked and never had any vandalism to our car or home. Life was simple and far less complicated. We went to school, got back then went out playing till dark, bit of homework and bed, no hanging around or smoking pots and what not.
Smoking pots 😂😂
Yes same here .
Unfortunately your police force got beaten by some POCs.
@@audreyogorman2923 I don't get these millennials and their pokeymans cards.
Totally agree. I'm 53 now and I remember being a kid in the 1970's (UK) This presentation captures the atmosphere of that time. As you say. Life was far more simple and straightforward.
Thoroughly enjoyed that old piece of nostalgia!
6:12 "Working for a computer."
How accurate that preposition turned out to be.
Proper cops that walked the streets not drivinging around in cars . My dad was on the beat from the 50 to the late 60
Where I live they've advanced to not even driving around in their vehicles, unless on a call.
Here we go, the old nonsense about foot patrol. Jesus........Complete ignorance. The UK police service doesn't have the personnel to deploy people on foot. It's not efficient, response times to emergency calls could never be met today if staff weren't mobile in vehicles. Footbeat is a complete waste of resources. You could be sat in your house now, and you wouldn't see if a police officer walked past your house. It's a MYTH that FB was effective at combating crime, the amount of ground that could be covered on foot is a fraction of that which can be covered in a vehicle.
Furthermore, the vast majority of criminals use VEHICLES in the commission of their offences, whether that be drug dealing, or committing burglaries. Ergo, having people wearing out boot leather is utterly pointless when attempting to disrupt criminal activity.
Don't compare the 1950's & 60's society with that of today, there is no comparison and crime has changed radically in that time. I'm pretty sure 'dad' never had fight individuals off their face on coke and intent on smashing his head in? I've done exactly that on at least two occasions. The level of violence directed towards the police far exceeds anything that occurred back in the 60's and beyond.
Shame he didn't teach you grammar.
How human and humble everyone seems.. What has changed in the U.K. that knife crime , violence, looting , rapes ect are now a daily occurrence?.. Heartbreaking to see how quickly this country has deteriorated..
Nice to know that according to you there was never a reported case of knife crime, violence, looting, robbery or r*pe in the UK till the year 2000 😂
Are they actually more common, or just more commonly reported? My dad worked in a Hammersmith pub in the '50s and there were always fights.
@@kesgreen4639 I owed a pub for many years my self.. Fights happened but were very rare and quickly resolved without police.. I never seen anyone stabbed nor any looting and women were confident regarding their safety at night.. That certainly not the case now.
@@thealchemistdaughter3405 where was the pub?
@@kesgreen4639 my pub was in Scotland just outside Edinburgh but my best friend ran pubs in Covent Garden, Piccadilly and Richmond for nearly 30 years .. Spent many great times in London.. Seems like a different world now.
I enjoyed watching this thank you 🙏
The cars fashion Of the 70s absolutely brilliant! And going into the policeman’s house 🏡 the wallpaper in the kitchen I remember my mam having that in her kitchen proper nostalgia
Wow, the wallpaper got me too. The cars, the clothes and 70s style. Very nostalgic indeed !
My old dad joined in 1966 for Thames valley police, he got into the dog section in 1974 and retired in 1996
Wow! So he would have in fact joined when it was still Buckinghamshire Constabulary. Thames Valley Police was created in 1968. 🙂
@@theaylesburycyclist8756 Yes he must have . He worked at Thame police station, but he nearly became the local Bobby for long crendon, he got on the dog section in around 1973 , and worked all over the area then , but still based at Thame , we often used to go to Aylesbury police station to the bar for a drink at the weekend , when I was very young , he retired in 1996 and his leaving do was at Aylesbury station
Thank him for his service. Hope he’s still around.
@@camptube7621 Cheers, yes he is still with us
"After all, I'm a public servant, aren't I?"
Oh boy how things have changed...
Big time change , our government is no better 2024 and things are only going to get worse with this government
The supposedly unreleased album by "The Blue Jays" that the villians are caught in possession of, is actually Psychedelic Lollipop by US band Blues Magoos. The titles are covered over of course. It would've been at least 5 years old by the time this film was made. They weren't well known in the UK and so the filmakers were probably banking on it not being easily recognisable!
I think the girl in the record shop was the key to the whole thing. She was later found selling illegal pressings of a Pickettywitch EP to fund the Berkshire Red Brigade. Her work with "Johnny" was a classic honeytrap operation.
@@simonjones7727nah, Pickettywitch never released an EP. Hang on though... did it fall off the back of the same lorry as the (not yet released) Blue Jays LP?
@@SIXTYDOLLARBOSS Exactly. The EP contained a specially recorded version of "That Same Old Feeling" that when played backwards at 78rpm contained a message of support for Ulrike Meinhof. Black Market Whisky and With It Green Jackets sold from a boutique in Bracknell High Street formed the rest of a sophisticated money laundering operation, It was, in hindsight, quite brilliant.
I loved that bicycle. And the cops looked really nice in those uniforms too
Now they are dressed like they want to fight and arrest you for a mean Tweet.
Lovely old fashioned strait level crossbar ,lever pivot brakes wonderful.
Wow I loved the 70s it’s heartbreaking to see what England became.
What became of England ??
The crime filled country it is now.
@Rockstar doobydoogle Gang stabbings, acid attacks commonplace, a police more likely to investigate a tweet than your burgled house.
@@freeman8879 and get arrested for having an England flag, right?
Yup
When police were useful and a well respected job can't say that in today's times sad really
You mean when they pounded the beat, and you knew their names, but now bully boys that have left the streets, housed in building, sitting around, doing what?
There is simply not enough officers these days to walk the beat, secondly they are so inundated with paperwork you wouldn’t believe . I can guarantee that most officers these days wish it was the same as it was where they were proper on-the-beat police officers, not mental health nurses, social workers and everything in between.
@@joelangley7974 Not according to an ex Home Office official that I was talking to, who despaired hearing of officers, useless as a broken vase. Thousands more officers we now have, and as stupid and arrogant as they come.
I was born in December 1973 so this is great to see.
I wasn't born until 1990, but this era looks like the good old days to me 👍 it's sad what this country has turned into 😕
What has our country turned into? Why is it sad ?
@@theproudbull5935 A shithole
I was at school in the 70s and things did seem a lot simpler than than they are now.
@@fman02
The natural (did you/can you ever understand natural) order was established a very long time ago WITHOUT YOUR PERMISSION! All you people do is impose your imagined “phobias” or your “ists” on it. Now they are getting kids to spy on their parents. The antiChrist state we live under now assumes ownership of every families kids and groom then on a national scale for anything and everything unnatural. Yes, it WAS better back then, in fact the worst of back then is still better than the best of today.
@@arturo468 you should see the schools now ! taking over by left wing liberal teachers ! they dont even rase their voices to the kids now ! there are videos on youtube, they just let the kids do what they want ! girls are also acting bad as the boys now
Love these early 70s excerpts..lovely Policemen ❤️❤️
Yes, life really was like this.
Yes, nowadays they would have the old lady whose Hillman Imp broke down Tasered before you could say "Z Cars"
It was, and even more depth the years previous.
50 years on and didn't we do well .
@simonjones7727 made me laugh mate 🤣
@@jamescorlett5272 Very well indeed. Give the police a cuddly toy to play with, keep them out of harms way.
Great show. Kind of like ADAM-12 here in the states. British shows in the U.S. are limited. Thanks to You Tube. I was a beat Cop in NJ. Brought back memories.
now just like in the usa, police forces put out videos of indictable arrests - now with some of time of "armed police drop your weapon, shots fired " etc
Funnily enough my dad, a British "Bobby" once visited a police station in New York, he loved the experience and the guys there welcomed him as they exchanged stories! This would have been the 1980s' I'd have thought.
Yes as a new policeman (Garda) I was on the beat constantly for the first 5 years. It was only rarely I would see the inside of a Garda car. I did not mind being on the beat during the day as there were plenty of people around but on nights (10pm - 6am) it was not much fun. I often could hear all the snoring through the open windows on summer nights at 4am and wished I was able to do the same.
When did you join the force?
@@jssjnehdjrndn6083 26th January 1983. I had just turned 24 years three days earlier.
@@Lar308 happy 65th bday
Born that year, but looking at this in 2024!
"It's better to prevent the crime happening than always turn up after the event" What ever happened to that?
Austerity
Lazy police
@Morocco Mole Paperwork, risk assessments & funding cutbacks. The rot set in when the Police Force started being run along business lines.
They’ve changed their methods of preventing “crimes” happening and are going too far because they want to stop you even thinking about anything natural. Everything natural is now a crime to them.
@@Ben-db5re More likely politics.
Nice classic cars.
See how beautiful and immaculate that council estate looks.
All the streets seem so clean and tidy! How surreal!
11:06 - All it needed was Jack Regan and George Carter to walk in. "We're the Sweeny and we haven't had any dinner". "Oi, get yer trousers on, you're nicked". 14:45. Nice bit of "mixing".
look how clean and tidy everywhere is
I live in the town where this was filmed. Great to all those all shots of the town centre and the estates. I was 4 years old at the time. The film 'The Offence' with Sean Connery was also filmed here (Bracknell)
I grew up in this era, and please take me back there. It was a much nicer country then.
I phoned the police a few years ago about a break in next door...........They could not find the house............ True Story
I phoned the police yesterday and they couldn't find the phone - Evening All ✋️
😳😳😳😳😳 😮😮😮😮😮
@DatamanBI Good grief! 😮
I'm glad my childhood was at this time ❤
Those Raleigh police bikes 😍 Rolls Royce of bicycles.
How society in the 70s 80s and 90s was way more civilised and respected back than compared today 🤦♂️
I never thought I'd ever see this film again. Back in about 1981 at school down in Exeter, the local police liaison officer was PC Marshall. He would visit the school and chat with us, and occasionally, no doubt to fill in the time, he'd show police recruitment films like this on the projector. There was another one I remember with a petrol tanker leaking all over the road after an accident - a bit more dramatic than this one.
And at 4:14, I think the bloke on the left might be the actor Alan Dudley.
Petrol tanker, best rhyming slang I've seen in months.
Rest in Peace, Father Britain, and the society you once had. I mourn the loss as I see everyone following her example. I suppose this is ... part and parcel.. of living in the modern world.
@Cal Anon Threatened with being stabbed whilst simultaneously being called a raciisss....it’s all part and parcel of multiculti Britain init
@@freeman8879 Same here on the other side of the pond. White children are going to grow up in a country where they're a despised minority.
I loved this film! Absolutely brilliant!
So Bracknell looked similar that what it did before the north part of town centre was knocked down but there were so few cars on the road and the youths had very long hair. Only the inside of the Police Station looks the same. Thanks, Andrew, for posting this bit of Bracknell history
My fave Bracknell memory is the spraying of the words "Welcome to West Beirut" on the Great Hollands sign near the Mill Pond roundabout.
@@fman02 I remember that, but my memory is slightly different, I thought it was 'Twinned with West Beirut'.
I could tell you a story or two abut the police in south London back in the early '70s and '80s! They really did know how to "look after" the local community!
Could we hear some?
No madam I don't mind pushing your car ,I'm a public servant after all.. They seem to have forgotten that... Any current policy enforcement officers watching this ,take note...
Some very well known 1970s British tv & film actors in that production
Police today could learn a lot from this vid here.
"Johnny, my mate" is actor Jeremy Bulloch -- who would later play Boba Fett in The Empire Strikes Back.
I was a copper in the 80s and early 90s. Then the Police and Criminal Procedures Act kicked in and officers can no longer do their job effectively. Too much red tape and disproportionate rights for criminals. I left the job for this very reason. Thank God I did because these days it's even worse.
Coppers was a lot better then , our local copper was always round my house looking for me as a kid , the same copper was my referee for my shotgun and firearms certificates,
Boys will be boys was his saying
Sadly the police of present times have no interest, just a job that keeps them from out of the shop or factory.
Good grief! Your experience sounds too much like American police nowadays. 😕
Frank's cafe, established over 50 years, went out of business due to the Covid restrictions in November last year
Really sad. A lot of family businesses also are going out of business around the world. The only winners are the big chains
And the elites .🤑remember the owner weather spoons when the so called pandemic started he laid off his staff before the furlough scheme came in.....? And yet there was a picture of him and your leader Boris standing with a pint in one of his establishments gloating the pubs will be open soon ...yeh 2 millionaire s together what does that tell you and no social distancing or face masks ... British citizens need to make there mind up ...I will be boycotting that businesses .👎
Only one winner as always and its the multi national elitist owned corporations.
@Windy Miller Yup, they are the really big winners
Where is it?
THIS IS CRAZY, looks like it was filmed yesterday!
Great vid, brings back family memories. Thank you for sharing 👍
These old radios are way easier to understand than the new ones
Putting a roach in your food is a common scam to get a free meal. I love the dispatcher’s Chelsea hairdo
Exactly and I think that's what was being hinted at here.
This was filmed in Bracknell, Crowthorne, Swinley and White Waltham.
I have got this film on a BFI COI (Central Office Of Information) collection DVD Police and Thieves.
That's when they was respected a lot more.
An influx of 'bad apples' throught the years and look what we are left with today.
Don't get me wrong, there are 'bad apples' in all walks of life, but when statements were written in the old days, they had a habit of changing...
It's actually very interesting this film
Truly unrecognizable to the bully boy militia that presently pass themselves off as peace officers. Those were simpler & better times.
It's funny seeing officers shorter than me I am shy off 5'8.
I was around in the 70, we had respect for the police in those days, not anymore sadly.
They wouldn't bother with most of the crime in this, wouldn't give a toss.
They've lost their way and the publics faith.
Is that Mr. Diana Dors, Alan Lake, half way through? Work must have been so scarce that he appeared in a training film.
He was always a nasty little villain type. I don't think he played anything else.
The narrator and main character is Simon Rouse who did a long stint as Jack Meadows in the Bill. His partner is Jeremy Bulloch who was the original Boba Fett
How come he doesn't sound anything like Jack Meadows? I think it must be a different person doing the narrating. Incidentally Jeremy Bulloch was in a few episodes of The Bill as well.
Brand new escort 1973 my dad drove a mini with blue doors
Wow today it is all about Hurty Words, how things have changed.
Or so called Far=right
Today "Sorry madam, I'm arresting you for breaching the Covid regs"!
£200 fine for you and your mate for walking around the park drinking a Starbucks coffee... Nice little earner init
Embarrassing aren't they
"Ello, ello, and what have we e're then? Little Jimmy trying to nick a Cessna 172 from the local airport, "You're not kiddin' me, young'n, you're off to jail me lad, let's be a'vin you"! Little shit!
You beat me to it John.
@@salvadormarley Not to mention the £200 fine for having a coffee on the park bench! Vote ReformUK!
FAB!,i recognise those Pye PF1 portable uhf radios, i used to repair them,wow how things have changed in UK now.
Old phone box xx
This must have been around easter time because of the eggs in the shop.the kids remind me of being 5 in 1973.
Quite a few recognisable actors appeared in this including Alan Lake, Jeremy Bulloch (Summer Holiday) plus others than cannot name!
I’m sure Life on Mars series was modelled on this , one looks like Sam Tyler
Was exactly the same when I joined in ‘86 was all gone when I was retired in 2003.
and not a rainbow in sight, how refreshing
I was born '89 but honestly, I would love a time machine to go back to these times. I would stay there. This day in age is just 🤮
Far better days by far l was born 1962 , ld return to the 60s70s in a second
The most amazing thing is 1:47 they're actually wearing seat belts 🤣
Great to see dependable, familiar TV actors earning a crust - much like me playing on advertising jingles!
And look how straight the German shepherds’ backs were then
that's actually a good point. Horrific inbreeding.
The youngster made it in the police - he reached the level of DCI, DCI Jack Meadows (Simon Rouse - The Bill).
didnt he become the super eventually even though it looked like there was hardly anyone else at sun hill by then
@@andrewjames3908don't forget that 'Johnny' became Boba Fett in Star Wars.
A stolen car is a priority how things have changed.
I remember the local police officer very well 1960s, Mr Joe Farrer, a big Gentleman to be honest l remember him on the beat on foot , and on a bicycle he also knew everyone in our village this man was what we call "A Police Man" RIP JOE, YOU WERE A TRUE COPPER, WHEN COPS WE'RE COPS AND LAW MENT TRUTH
I want to be a policeman in the 1970s.
Like “life on mars” policing?
It does look great. "The house comes with the job". The wife too, by the looks of it.
I was a teenager then the bobbies were super friendly and helpful. No one had heard of DEI 😂
A jolly posh version of Martin Freeman before he ended up in an office putting staplers in jelly.
Great minds!! I thought Martin Freeman as soon as I saw 'him'!!!!!! 👍😅
A moment in time......never to see again. 🇬🇧
Patrolling in a Ford Escort! :-)
1973 was a good year,mind you I'm bound to say that given I was born in it.
"I'm sure he wouldn't have minded THAT driving his car"🤭
Now there really are "THATS" driving the cars, with all the pronouns in effect.