Totally agreeDaft as a box of frogs mind you, but the more years I spend on this planet I tend to think all the best people are
It's bathtime afternoon on Sunday's and the queue will be massive for it. They'll be along soon enough........Interesting that none of our newly acquired nobbers have watched it or commented on it !
There’s a film there Lee if you fancy branching outIncredible stories, true heroes who kept the stains embroiled in court action which helped keep their eye off the ball for the bigger battles to come which thankfully they lost.
A big part of a massive collective effort so pleased it all helped toward getting us to where we are now.
Just watched it to a conclusion.Just watched the 1st 30 mins....
Brilliant stuff; two real heroes of the campaign against the oystains! 🖒
“Everybody’s” you thick Thornton yokelJust watched it to a conclusion.
Two very special guys, by their own admission not everybodies cup of tea, but they certainly got under the skin of those parasites!
Indeed and very brave men the pair of them. I wasn't aware that Raggy was so articulate and he's quite a well balanced guy too,taking that all in his stride and not allowing himself to be affected by it.Just finished it..** brilliant..love Raggy and the Afroman ❤ And proud to know em ..big Bollocks the pair of em to crack on throughout that despite suffering threats, , bankruptcy, mental health problems, some Blackpool fans slating them and so on
Raggy is very impressive with his honesty and reasonable nature looking back at what they did well, what others may not like, why they did it anyway etc. Someone who is so entrenched in a battle for a few years usually comes out with a warped view of what was happening, but he's kept pretty sensible and telling the same versions of the story. He has some claims which will remain claims because nobody can possibly prove it, most of those made the book, others couldn't, and I'm very glad he and Afro had the opportunity to just sit and talk for 90 minutes. This is absolutely the best medium for them and it was great.Indeed and very brave men the pair of them. I wasn't aware that Raggy was so articulate and he's quite a well balanced guy too,taking that all in his stride and not allowing himself to be affected by it.
Great viewing, great stories and they'll talk about this for generations to come, where the fans really did win against all the odds and triumphed over appalling adversity
When you look at how little effect supporters have had in reclaiming the game back, you have to wonder if these two would be better off ruining the show and giving it the balls it needs to get that change.
In the video it says you didn't approach the Afro (or did I miss hear that?).Raggy is very impressive with his honesty and reasonable nature looking back at what they did well, what others may not like, why they did it anyway etc. Someone who is so entrenched in a battle for a few years usually comes out with a warped view of what was happening, but he's kept pretty sensible and telling the same versions of the story. He has some claims which will remain claims because nobody can possibly prove it, most of those made the book, others couldn't, and I'm very glad he and Afro had the opportunity to just sit and talk for 90 minutes. This is absolutely the best medium for them and it was great.
I probably should have done but the part I focused on was Raggy so I interviewed him. I didn't touch upon Karl's case against Afro as it didn't really have anything to do with the club in isolation. I think that would have been a long tangent which the book didn't have space for, albeit a good one. For completeness I probably should have interviewed him, but listening to the video I'm satisfied that Raggy told me pretty much everything anyway and I don't suspect it would have changed the book at all.In the video it says you didn't approach the Afro (or did I miss hear that?).
If not, what was the reasoning behind that?