Alan Bennett in Conversation | BFI Q&A

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 23 кві 2023
  • The acclaimed British writer visits the BFI Southbank to discuss the influence of his northern roots.
    Few writers have successfully mined northern culture and specific northern speech patterns as Alan Bennett. Growing up in Leeds, he listened in on the chatter of his relatives, absorbing the patter of domestic conversation, which would emerge across a glittering and much-loved range of plays, particularly those written for television. Here, Bennett explores the way northern culture is so integral to his creative process.
    Part of the BFI's Northern Voices season:
    whatson.bfi.org.uk/Online/def...
    Subscribe: bit.ly/subscribetotheBFI
    Claim an extended BFI Player Subscription free trial (UK only) - subscribe using code BFIUA-cam: theb.fi/player-subscription
    Watch more on BFI Player: player.bfi.org.uk/
    Our TikTok: / britishfilminstitute
    Like us on Facebook: / britishfilminstitute
    Follow us on Instagram: / britishfilminstitute
    Follow us on Twitter: / bfi
  • Фільми й анімація

КОМЕНТАРІ • 125

  • @Ukedc259
    @Ukedc259 Рік тому +52

    Full of fanboy admiration, I tried to interview him while I was at university. He said no. He sent me a postcard reply. “I advise you to talk to homeless people who’d be far more interesting than me, and more deserving of your time.” Perspicacious to a fault.

    • @mortemoccasus2412
      @mortemoccasus2412 6 місяців тому +4

      This is how legends are....humble by their own vast accomplishments and genius...what a man...

  • @tonyg8067
    @tonyg8067 Рік тому +55

    An astonishing man. Forget national treasure. He is the National conscience.

  • @hilaryepstein6013
    @hilaryepstein6013 Рік тому +76

    Alan Bennett still has the power to enthrall with his understated wisdom and humour. His generation of Oxbridge writer/performers of the 1950s/60s are the best we've ever had I think and these interviews are precious.

    • @JoKeo-mn8vx
      @JoKeo-mn8vx 9 місяців тому +4

      Please don’t forget Victoria Wood who is also an amazing observer and writer of some of the best we have to offer and note that although she is dead her writings and humour will outlast all of us.

    • @mikelukebaynham
      @mikelukebaynham 8 місяців тому +2

      And still funny.

  • @MrSwifts31
    @MrSwifts31 Рік тому +13

    Alan's Mother (according to him) wanted to "Live life with the crusts cut off" Says everything about where he got a lot of his humour from!

  • @jameswithey182
    @jameswithey182 Рік тому +29

    Him and Victoria Wood are my complete heroes. I could listen to him talk for hours.

  • @rogernichols1124
    @rogernichols1124 Рік тому +11

    As a fellow Northerner from a working class background and a Cambridge education, so much of what Alan Bennett writes and says resonates with me. His wisdom and talent for getting to the heart of the character of Northerners is wonderful. He makes me laugh, cry and reflect in equal measure. A truly great man.

  • @shackledcitizen
    @shackledcitizen Рік тому +17

    Only two days ago, he came into my mind. I wondered if he was still with us. I was so pleasesd to see this interview. He has lost nothing of his old self. Tnank you for this presentation.

  • @aderynzajicova7230
    @aderynzajicova7230 Рік тому +17

    He is so full of love and humour. Love him.

  • @paulinerodgerson2476
    @paulinerodgerson2476 Рік тому +6

    I lived in Armley and served Alan with Pick and Mix on the sweet counter in Woolworths on Town Street.

  • @njp
    @njp Рік тому +11

    A breed of writer that only comes along in a once in a lifetime form.
    If you are very lucky you may just catch a return, but may not choose to come back as a writer .
    Thank you Alan Bennett.

  • @geoffjoffy
    @geoffjoffy Рік тому +8

    He's looking good for 89. Still no grey hair yet either. That's his natural hair color. Long may he reign!

  • @jakegodfrey4320
    @jakegodfrey4320 11 місяців тому +9

    I have always been a fan of Alan Bennett but what I really love him for is when I wrote to him when I was at school. My letter was full of quite over the top effusive praise about his work, he actually took the time to write a long postcard back, answering all my questions and even giving me advice on writing a monologue.

    • @angelabrady9374
      @angelabrady9374 10 місяців тому +2

      What a Legend im from. LEEDS He reminds me of my father he grew up. In Headingly just loved listening to you Alan in the interview sooo intresting 🤗🌟🌟

  • @marynorth7988
    @marynorth7988 15 днів тому

    Just watched The Lady in the Van again this evening.... just another brilliant example of his work. This man is indeed a gem.... and he is a Yorkhire man ....!!

  • @stephenridley1153
    @stephenridley1153 Рік тому +19

    Lovely tribute to Victoria Wood 💕

  • @elainemagson213
    @elainemagson213 Рік тому +42

    He is amazing. I've adored him since I was eleven. And he's still got it. So wonderfully funny. Not surprised the interviewer was rather awkwardly diffident. Many thanks bFI.

  • @mrduckspeak
    @mrduckspeak Рік тому +83

    We should treasure such a brilliant observer of British (probably more accurately, English) life. There won't be anyone quite like him once he's gone.

    • @annishilcock4587
      @annishilcock4587 Рік тому +5

      There are so many men and women of brilliance that we will be so much poorer without when they are gone.

    • @revol148
      @revol148 11 місяців тому

      @mrduckspeak how many of his plays have you watched?

  • @havingalook2
    @havingalook2 8 місяців тому +3

    If there ever was a national treasure - it is Alan Bennett.

  • @jamesharding17
    @jamesharding17 7 місяців тому +2

    He looks and sounds amazing. His wit, as acerbic and erudite as ever

  • @jestermoon
    @jestermoon Рік тому +12

    Take A Moment
    Mr Bennett, your work is wonderful, thank you sir.
    I will always love your style, timeless genius. 3:02

  • @lee70687
    @lee70687 4 місяці тому +1

    Simply wonderful. The reading he gives at the end is funny, emotional and beautiful.

  • @carolking6355
    @carolking6355 Рік тому +16

    What a really, lovely man. I wish I could tell him of one of my Victorian Dads sayings. If you asked him where something was and he didn’t know. He would say “have you looked on the piano” ? We didn’t have a piano.

    • @glynischapman3044
      @glynischapman3044 Рік тому +2

      We used to say " It's in Annie's room, behind the clock "

    • @joozimek9643
      @joozimek9643 Рік тому +4

      When told of a neighbour s marital problems, my mother said “I’m not surprised,have you seen the colour of her whites “

  • @harri2626
    @harri2626 Рік тому +27

    As someone born in Bramley, Leeds, albeit ten years later than Alan, I recognise all he has to say about Northern attitudes, nuances and speech cadences. My mother could have slotted into one of Alan's pieces with ease. She typified the class distinctions of the period - being "common" and "uncouth" in the negative, and "select" and "refined" in the positive. There were even distinctions made about people "with money". They were either naturally wealthy and could handle it well, or "not used to having money and can't cope with it". She always seemed to be convinced that, somewhere in her not too distant past, she had aristocratic blood and it was only a matter of time before this was revealed. Sadly, those attitudes rubbed off on me, and I have spent the rest of my life trying to live them down.

    • @PK-yf3hd
      @PK-yf3hd Рік тому +3

      Thanks for your evocative piece of nostalgic wisdom....I recall and rejoice in the type and the same world

    • @gabriellehollington5163
      @gabriellehollington5163 Рік тому +3

      Sheer priceless brilliance. Utterly human & relatable. True genius.🤩

  • @franrowe8696
    @franrowe8696 Рік тому +14

    Oh my days, he is everything that embodies growing up in the north for me.

  • @samsum3738
    @samsum3738 Місяць тому

    If he had never written a thing , i could still listen to him all day .

  • @steeleye2112
    @steeleye2112 Рік тому +10

    Always been a hero of mine, I was from the next generation who benefited from the walls and barriers he and his contemporaries demolished. I don't want these people to ever go. I also don't want them to ever retire which is hardly fair.

  • @nononame113
    @nononame113 Рік тому +29

    National treasure, of course. Outstanding hair, also.

    • @t.p.mckenna
      @t.p.mckenna Рік тому +2

      Ah, yes, but with a little help from a bottle, surely. It looks like spun gold ... at 90?!

    • @anoddsortofthing9604
      @anoddsortofthing9604 Рік тому +5

      @@t.p.mckenna No, 100% natural. He did said that.

    • @t.p.mckenna
      @t.p.mckenna Рік тому +1

      @@anoddsortofthing9604 pardon my cynicism. I missed that.

  • @SunofYork
    @SunofYork Рік тому +16

    If you think there is a culture difference twixt London and Leeds, you could ponder my plight. On Friday 13th October 1967 I joined Leeds City Police at age 19 and worked in the old Kirkstall etc. By gum it were rough ! I live in Wisconsin now in a bugger off mansion, and 'her indoors' is the product of parents from Mississippi/Arkansas. The culture gap is GALACTIC ! I tell her to "stick wood in't oil" and she doesn't always jump to it ! My dad was a co-op grocery van driver /coal man in Guiseley and I love being able to do dialect and posh English and a bit of septic...(17 years in) I am visiting Leeds next month and I fit in instantly ! Haddock and chips at Murgatroyd's Yeadon ..... and curry sauce !

    • @mongolmcphee7791
      @mongolmcphee7791 19 днів тому

      Do the Southerners on that side of the pond find Northerners from this side of the pond easy to understand?

    • @SunofYork
      @SunofYork 19 днів тому

      @@mongolmcphee7791 Yes. I did 4 years in Washington State and never heard "Should of went" and the accent was clear to my Leeds(slight) accent...... Leeds is the home of call centers in da yookay coz they are clear (crisp anglo-saxon, Germanic ) accents..... and they have the best (not frozen), Icelandic haddock

    • @mongolmcphee7791
      @mongolmcphee7791 19 днів тому +1

      @@SunofYork I'm from the Far North West and I nearly died of thirst in New York cos no one could understand me saying "water"

    • @SunofYork
      @SunofYork 19 днів тому

      @@mongolmcphee7791 You are now exposed as being NORMAL ! In McDonalds, asking for coffee is a nightmare. They look blank at me. Apparently it is CAR-FEE and not Cough-ee.. This is all the fault of the Irish immigrants who were trying to transition from Gaelic...... In Wisconsin they are all Germans where ever letter so pronounced... So in WI and canada, "out" is pronounced "O- oo- tt" like a german would.. O U T oh-oo- tt.

  • @jencoldwell4036
    @jencoldwell4036 Рік тому +4

    ‘Enjoy’ was ahead of its time. It’s a brilliant script, of course

  • @marymurray5059
    @marymurray5059 Рік тому +5

    He’s just amazing.

  • @margaretmoore7034
    @margaretmoore7034 Рік тому +8

    He is great.. I have walked most of the fells in the Lake District and I own all of his guidebooks. The best thing about this great man is the animal sanctuary that he opened, he should be granted a Knighthood for his services.

  • @johnthomson6507
    @johnthomson6507 Рік тому +7

    Such a nice man and great playwright

  • @julianlyons711
    @julianlyons711 Рік тому +6

    A great guy and true classic character .. one of the last remaining

  • @dogsbody49
    @dogsbody49 9 місяців тому +1

    I could listen to him all day. A national treasure indeed.

  • @FF-so3su
    @FF-so3su Рік тому +8

    Wonderful writer, wonderful speaker and narrator ❤

  • @tonyhibbs1600
    @tonyhibbs1600 Рік тому +4

    A brilliant playwriter

  • @cavendish009
    @cavendish009 Рік тому +9

    It sounds as if they had a much larger vocabulary than most people nowadays. Good for them enjoying language!!!! We use such a small amount of words these days.

  • @WhippetOut
    @WhippetOut Рік тому +4

    My hero.

  • @peterpeterking1
    @peterpeterking1 Рік тому +4

    Blummin brilliant

  • @annysqu
    @annysqu Рік тому +5

    Touching Eliot story

  • @FF-so3su
    @FF-so3su Рік тому +5

    Thora was fantastic

  • @pdjhh
    @pdjhh Рік тому +2

    I didn’t realise how good Stewart Lee’s impression was 😂

  • @nelsonwhaley6348
    @nelsonwhaley6348 Рік тому +4

    I loved his Westminster Abbey chats...he above most of the mediocres.

  • @FF-so3su
    @FF-so3su Рік тому +5

    Waiting for the telegram made me cry

  • @Carducci1959
    @Carducci1959 8 місяців тому

    Hugely talented, and wonderfully down to earth!

  • @georgielancaster1356
    @georgielancaster1356 Рік тому +10

    I was shocked that AB sounded so old, then was shocked to realise his age. There should be a law that National Treasures get an extra 50 years, around the 50 year mark. We'd still have VW, if that were so. I feel that way about WW2 participants. And WW1... the nice ones, of course, not the war criminals! I show my age, when I say I think of WW1 as 60ish. Even when I adjust, WW2 men are 80ish. I know there are only crumbs of people left who actually served in WW2, all 100ish plus, and I wail inside that they are gone. All their experiences, with them.
    I don't really mourn my age, though I barely get about, now, but I really want my heroes to live to delight, to move, generations more, as they are - living beings.

  • @gwae48
    @gwae48 Рік тому +1

    love him to pieces ! Love the reading at the end !!!❤❤❤👌🏻👌🏻👌🏻

  • @moeezS
    @moeezS Рік тому +6

    Only heard of him thanks to Stewart Lee's hilarious comedy special Tornado/Snowflake. Thanks for putting this up!

    • @highdownmartin
      @highdownmartin Рік тому +2

      Beverly reached over and moved the plate of lemon fingers, to avoid them getting covered in blood that was spraying out of the neck of her now lifeless husband, as he lay on the Turkish rug. His headless torso lying still in contrast to the enormous shark that was thrashing around next to him, sending fragments of glass around the room…

  • @darrenhoskins8382
    @darrenhoskins8382 Рік тому +3

    Aaaaw the piece at the end ☺️☺️☺️☺️☺️☺️👌👍🙏

  • @iestyndavies2675
    @iestyndavies2675 Рік тому +2

    Cut 'the 'crust of 'teas'.

  • @ianmartinezcassmeyer
    @ianmartinezcassmeyer 9 місяців тому

    I'm reading the book of his Talking Heads monologues. The man's words are amazing

  • @gohumberto
    @gohumberto Рік тому +3

    I put a Custard Cream under his chair, to see if Thora Hird would clean it up.

  • @r.i.p.volodya
    @r.i.p.volodya Рік тому +8

    I wanted to know if "The Habit of Art" would really be his final play... I love Alan's writing. In fact, I've taken more from Bennett than I ever got from Stoppard, e.g.

    • @simonratcliffe2765
      @simonratcliffe2765 Рік тому

      Two full length plays since then: “People” and “Allelujah”. There’s a recent film of “Allelujah” too.

    • @r.i.p.volodya
      @r.i.p.volodya Рік тому

      @@simonratcliffe2765 Thank you VERY VERY much for drawing my attention to these plays 😁

  • @robertclatworthy1857
    @robertclatworthy1857 Рік тому +4

    An absolute genius, the male version of Victoria Wood 😂😂

  • @shawnanthony1992
    @shawnanthony1992 Рік тому +11

    Erving Goffman would have liked that.

  • @FF-so3su
    @FF-so3su Рік тому +1

    Teas are the best😊👍

  • @stevouk
    @stevouk Рік тому +3

    It's interesting that AB does not see himself as being able to write verbose, 'faux-literary' sentences. At the start of his 1979 TV play, "Afternoon Off", a rather pompous father (played by Ben Whitrow) writes a cheque for a waiter, stating, "I think you'll find that if you present this at any branch of Lloyd's Bank, you will find yourself adequately recompensed." It's not quite the same as Duncan Preston's character in "Dinnerladies" (the character is a Southerner for one thing, and Whitrow plays it as lower-middle-class) but it does suggest AB was being a little self-deprecating about his skills here.

  • @michaelcullen5308
    @michaelcullen5308 5 місяців тому

    I can only imagine that during Alan's uninterrupted three-minute TS Eliot story, on one of those awful TV "talk" shows he would have been interrupted about 40 times.

  • @normanchristie4524
    @normanchristie4524 Рік тому +8

    Oh gawd....! I remember Beverley Nichols.

    • @stephenridley1153
      @stephenridley1153 Рік тому

      You must be nearly as old as me 😂

    • @georgielancaster1356
      @georgielancaster1356 Рік тому

      So do I! He liked cats.
      Wasn't he in intelligence in WW2?
      I remember reading something of his and reflecting how gently and charmingly he lived his life, and thinking of Alan Turing, and if he had gone into the arts world, he would have been nurtured and indulged and protected - and probably lived a long, happy life, but not taken years, it is estimated, from the length of WW2.
      Churchill was told about Turing's work. He could have sent for that cursed judge and given him a long lecture on what Britain owed Alan - but did nothing. Just makes me want to throw chairs, at the fury I feel over that redneck, prurient, vile judge. And my normality is very staid, middle class. The most I normally throw, year to year, is a tissue.
      If I were related to the judge, I would feel I had to keep wiping myself down with metho, I'd feel so unclean.
      I keep meaning to find out the name of the judge, so I can give people a name to despise.
      Forever, now, I think of Beverley Nichols, and it becomes a Pavlovian response, to think of Alan.

    • @tonyduncan9852
      @tonyduncan9852 Рік тому

      Shush.

    • @SoulArsal
      @SoulArsal 10 місяців тому

      ​@@tonyduncan98526:44

  • @thirdperson6802
    @thirdperson6802 Рік тому +9

    Why do interviewers stick to prepared questions instead of listening to the interviewees response and building a conversation?

    • @normanchristie4524
      @normanchristie4524 Рік тому

      An interesting point however too easy to get dragged into a particular area of investigation.

    • @highdownmartin
      @highdownmartin Рік тому +2

      @Teesee indeed. The first question, did growing up in Leeds a long time ago influence your work? Ffs. It’s been asked a hundred times…

  • @t.p.mckenna
    @t.p.mckenna Рік тому +5

    Does nobody review subtitles? I'll suggest a few corrections, but I doubt anyone at the BFI will ever pick up on them, so this is mostly for my own amusement ... We have Brian Tufano correctly subbed at 7.31, but by 13.11 he's become 'Brian too far now' (subtextual irony, perhaps, as he's passed); 15:41 Michael Frame, better known as FRAYN; 30.31 Ian Foster, more usually known as E.M. FORSTER; 32.05 Not 'a Leeds ask him', but a Leeds AXIOM and at 50.00 'saved to centre ... ' which should be 'saved to sent to ....

    • @georgielancaster1356
      @georgielancaster1356 Рік тому

      Must have a link with yt corrections, which frequently picks up a perfectly rationally used word, correctly spelt, and changes it to something insanely out of place, and I only pick it up, after posting it.

    • @janii4
      @janii4 Рік тому +1

      Robots don't know everything.

  • @iestyndavies2675
    @iestyndavies2675 Рік тому +2

    "Farewell 'Albert 'Jack'
    'We know 'you'll be 'back'
    'You may be 10 feet tall'
    But you don't 'scare us at all
    Your big,bold and 'tough'
    But your not all that 'rough'
    And you 'scream' as you 'plummet' 'away'
    'She 'rides a black bike'
    She 'drives through the night
    She's 'big' 'round' 'and' 'fat'
    But 'dont' you' dare her tell
    her that'
    Her 'glove' starts to 'glean'
    And gives a' 'scream' as she
    'plummets' 'away'
    'Ooh!..'hello...
    'Bye for now.'

  • @mcduffxyz
    @mcduffxyz Рік тому +5

    This is a Master clas in the process of writing and characeririsation and basic Humanity. Love Him!

  • @heartofoak45
    @heartofoak45 Рік тому +10

    WHY OH WHY HAS ALAN BENNETT NOT RECEIVED A KNIGHTHOOD?????

    • @hilaryepstein6013
      @hilaryepstein6013 Рік тому +12

      He was offered a knighthood in 1996 but he turned it down. He said "it would be like having to wear a suit every day".

    • @tonyhibbs1600
      @tonyhibbs1600 Рік тому +3

      I could be wrong but I think I have read he has been put forward for one but has refused

    • @johnglenn30csardas
      @johnglenn30csardas Рік тому +2

      A K would be insufficient.

    • @franrowe8696
      @franrowe8696 Рік тому +2

      What a legend.

    • @willhovell9019
      @willhovell9019 Рік тому +9

      He has probably refused a knighthood, after successive governments attempts to destroy public libraries in England

  • @chasleask8533
    @chasleask8533 Рік тому

    "Your parents were Northern working class" . . . . . . . . .How exotic ! Ee bah goom .

  • @monicahornyansky3045
    @monicahornyansky3045 4 місяці тому +1

    😊 19:38

  • @jestermoon
    @jestermoon Рік тому +1

    7:08 ❤😅 7:40

  • @iestyndavies2675
    @iestyndavies2675 Рік тому +1

    'Bucket'(bouquet)..'telephone 'speaking 'voice'

  • @geoffrundel3343
    @geoffrundel3343 4 місяці тому +1

    Being a fan of you would you like to do another epic The man in the van to even things out gender wise name as lord Klondike ❤

  • @dominiccavendish1641
    @dominiccavendish1641 Рік тому +1

    fantastic but some of the subtitles, BFI... "Michael Frame".. !

  • @patrickhicks9880
    @patrickhicks9880 10 місяців тому

    My grandmother met Dennis potter she disliked him because he had a clammy handshake
    I thought that was a bit like an Alan Bennett line

  • @malacca1951
    @malacca1951 Рік тому +2

    What a pity the presenter could not speak without saying 'Er' or 'Erm' SO many times! His first question contained eight and there were dozens later! Given that he had his notes written down, you'd expect few hesitations and 'fillers'! (He'll never win 'Just A Minute' on Radio4 !

  • @billythedog-309
    @billythedog-309 Рік тому +9

    The fact that the BFI has to have a special northern voices section is a real condemnation of the whole setup.

  • @iestyndavies2675
    @iestyndavies2675 Рік тому +1

    'Come 'on' 'Allen' 'isn't 'common' 'class'

  • @FF-so3su
    @FF-so3su Рік тому +1

    Alan is great but not overly impressed with the interviewer

  • @MrLetmein2011
    @MrLetmein2011 22 дні тому

    I find myself wondering what his views would be on current obsession’s .
    Immigration ,
    Pronouns.
    Brexit ,
    The conflict in Gaza .
    I’m sure he’d surprise us with his views.

    • @Peter-ov6xh
      @Peter-ov6xh День тому

      I've just been reading his diaries from the 90s and he's quite left-wing. The only thing that pleased him when he revisited his old school was that all the best pupils were Asian. Also says that policemen were punished for mistreating police dogs, but probably wouldn't have been had they killed black people. And other examples.

  • @googleisgay3289
    @googleisgay3289 28 днів тому

    "Sweet spot of tragic comedy" and Alan Bennett with his hair about to fall off: "Oh oh oh oh (please don't say it like that)!" Don't make the summit for those who trekked up a godawful mountain into something so regrettably disgusting as a sweet spot. My God. Did we only climb this high to lose our brains?

  • @romyromweber4195
    @romyromweber4195 Рік тому

    7 h

  • @jenniferfairless8198
    @jenniferfairless8198 11 місяців тому

    Why did the interviewer have to continually read from his script. Not a natural interviewer.

  • @stuarthastie6374
    @stuarthastie6374 Рік тому

    Plot. ""An Inocent brod", i rwal wish he hd been sceptical of the ctoes tall tail nd done some research into tailoring. Clearly she was a liar and he hd nevwr hd Saville Row suit.

  • @TL-ps5qo
    @TL-ps5qo Рік тому

    Awful private school 'PS' people, such as Alan Bennett, are gifted opportunities. Their obnoxious and anti-social attitudes are unacceptable.

    • @magistrafortis
      @magistrafortis Рік тому +15

      Alan Bennett is a wit wordsmith & raconteur & was not a private school boy. He's a clever northerner who has done very well for himself & given millions of people pleasure made them laugh & think - and what sort of person are you exactly!?

    • @timothyasbridge8562
      @timothyasbridge8562 Рік тому +3

      I’m sorry but your post is very incoherent. What exactly are you trying to say?

    • @artymiss77
      @artymiss77 Рік тому +1

      He went to a state grammar school not private school!

    • @hilarylazard7554
      @hilarylazard7554 4 дні тому

      What?!,

  • @stringer-ik1pc
    @stringer-ik1pc Рік тому +7

    Im surprised hes not been cancelled for writing too white.

    • @yinoveryang4246
      @yinoveryang4246 Рік тому

      ..not yet. It must be quite uncomfortable for Bennet to find himself FORCED to descend the hierarchy of virtue signallers. To a point where the looming prospect of 'cancellation' becomes a real possibility. It's a remarkable shift for those individuals, particularly the older generation of the left who've witnessed the causes they championed materialise before their eyes. But where has it left them? Their once outspoken and 'honest' voices now display a noticeable change in demeanour, opting to keep their heads down with an air of bewilderment. What once were democratic choices have now become forced.

    • @PK-yf3hd
      @PK-yf3hd Рік тому +1

      He's one of the metropolitan set and absolved from accountability