Its funny that these working class muscle heads are more articulate than 90% of people you meet today.
@afterzanzibar10 ай бұрын
This was before it was cool to talk with ghetto slang.
@johnreidy280410 ай бұрын
@@afterzanzibar So true., Our culture was hijacked by............certain people
@johnmarty296610 ай бұрын
Well friend, this was well before the world we live in today.
@chuckgreen362910 ай бұрын
It's the Bri'ish accent.
@GIT_ARMAN10 ай бұрын
And intelligent
@ScorpionSuerte10 ай бұрын
Boxing and wrestling in the same gym. These guys were almost doing MMA in 1979.
@Nonegiven1458210 ай бұрын
If they'd gone to a boxing club. A decent 17 year old welterweight would have made them look stupid.
@lukeb4nts17210 ай бұрын
They train to get off first and hit hard. Not to be competitive. One of the guys said hit first to protect yourself. 😊
@jim-es8qk10 ай бұрын
Boxing and wrestling are two old school English working class pass times.
@scarred1010 ай бұрын
I@@Nonegiven14582 it's not about combat sport,you just need the absolute basics of striking and grappling done well over and over,its not even mutual combat.
@Nonegiven1458210 ай бұрын
@@jim-es8qk These guys can't box. And if they'd gone to an amateur club. Things wouldn't have gone well for them Was a guy who bounced at Kings in Colchester. Big guy. He came to a boxing show at Clacton town hall in mid 90's. Spent the whole evening looking at the floor
@Slim_4510 ай бұрын
“We never made it as boxers or wrestlers but never the less we are trained men” Should be the motto for G4S security!
@noelht110 ай бұрын
The motto for G4S would be we’ve never made it the boxers or wrestlers but nevertheless we are all cunts!
@ScorpionSuerte10 ай бұрын
But they aren't
@tonyneillaw10 ай бұрын
@@noelht1 😄
@JesusChrist2000BC10 ай бұрын
Lol these guys actually workout everybody at G4S is on the Krispy Kreme diet.
@aupster110 ай бұрын
yea right g4s higher any clown half the men on doors aren't up for the task
@EqualizerCombatives10 ай бұрын
Boxing, grappling and weights been a legit form of training for years.
@Rascarrr10 ай бұрын
thanks for the insight, captain obvious
@johnp773910 ай бұрын
@@Rascarrr The 3 of them together were done almost nowhere before the UFC started, Captain Missed-the-Obvious. This was 1979.
@chuckgreen362910 ай бұрын
@@johnp7739 "boxing and wrestling" clubs and university teams had been common in the UK, US, Canada, etc. before 1979. The Tough Guy Contest started in 1979 and before that it was common enough for boxers and wrestlers to train both, eg. James Jeffries, Danny Hodge, Paul Berlenbach, Jack Dempsey, etc.
@Scorch102810 ай бұрын
"If it ain't broke, don't fix it".
@insidiousmaximus9 ай бұрын
even Bruce Lee admitted western boxing and wrestling were far more practical for street fighting.
@Scorch102810 ай бұрын
I love how "gritty" this gym looked. I wish that more gyms were like that today.
@slanasik11879 ай бұрын
In 1979 dada was 28
@MattPearman-qr4sq9 ай бұрын
@ChrisMarsh-nj5ru yeah bet its all sanitised and poncey now with yoga and pilates classes
@peternagy-im4be9 ай бұрын
@@MattPearman-qr4sqwith idiots balancing dumbbells on their legs and thrusting up and down in front of a mirror
@MattPearman-qr4sq9 ай бұрын
@@peternagy-im4be think that's how it's done tbf mate don't think there is another way
@universesixhit6428 ай бұрын
The best gyms to train at, not a single stupid phone, just hard work.
@ExpertofEverything10 ай бұрын
I love the way the big guy at the beginning with the black hair talks. He sounds distinguished and educated but also he's from the streets and knows the dark side.
@andrewclack488110 ай бұрын
he sounds like Steve Davis
@smoochym10 ай бұрын
It's lamentable that the working class no longer have these sort of male role models.
@ericsierra-franco780210 ай бұрын
He also looked pretty damn tough! He knows how to throw punches.
@Vesividad8610 ай бұрын
cultured thug
@jotunblod10 ай бұрын
@@smoochym It's very weird, if not foreboding, that Western society has all but rid itself of tough men.
@EveryTongueShallTell10 ай бұрын
Why won't the tv heads just start making follow-up videos for these already? Just about everybody would love to see what happened, who's still alive and watch an interview with them now looking back on themselves here.
@rahuldahoob10 ай бұрын
Sadly TV execs don't like pursuing such projects 😢
@karkkimarkkinat210910 ай бұрын
This is a fantastic idea
@JohnDickson-ki3qr8 ай бұрын
Most of these archive videos are at least 40 years old, the majority of these people are probably dead.
@bonnetdedouche43710 ай бұрын
The comparison to childminder's is so very apt. Door staff are exactly that. Childminder's for adults. Because with a belly full of liquid poison in them, some people just cannot behave.
@sandipanbanerjee501010 ай бұрын
😂
@paulw425910 ай бұрын
I completely agree with you. Underpaid child minders with a dangerous clientele.
@sharpvidtube10 ай бұрын
And some child minders, shouldn't be anywhere near children.
@alastairgreen207710 ай бұрын
childminders. No apostrophe.
@Adam-pt8qm10 ай бұрын
@@alastairgreen2077Childminders, capital letter.
@rambledogs201228 күн бұрын
MY old man (RIP) was a doorman back then in Harrogate at a club called the Bali Hai. I was only a wee nipper but remember my Mum pacing up and down until he got back, safe and sound.
@danielintheantipodes674110 ай бұрын
Archive videos are so amazing! Even when it is a topic that is not of any personal interest in a current video, the historic nature of these makes them riveting! Thank you for the video!
@patrickboyle67279 ай бұрын
I agree
@petercoekin541910 ай бұрын
Fantastic footage of the inside of that nightclub with late 70s punters
@M1tjakaramazov10 ай бұрын
It's funny how most guys in those days looked like cunts. If you were a good looking handsome man in back then, you really had it made with the chicks 😅
@danski66948 ай бұрын
Punters? Are you British? Is that what they were called? Interesting Here in the states we use the term Bouncers.
@M1tjakaramazov8 ай бұрын
@@danski6694 "Punters" are the customers 😅
@gabrielpacana85969 ай бұрын
One of the most 1979 England videos I've ever seen.
@SuperKenno779 ай бұрын
No roids , no sunbeds, no Under Armour. Just sweat, brylcream and Lonsdale 💪💪
@user-PaulSean9 ай бұрын
Lol..."Under Armour", let's not forget the "Tapout" T-shirts with "scary" skulls and text that just scream: "I'm an unskilled, untrained, knob-end!". 🤣🤣🤣
@SuperKenno779 ай бұрын
@@user-PaulSean exactly right 😂
@peternagy-im4be9 ай бұрын
No steroids??
@handconstructed9 ай бұрын
... and cocaine
@user-PaulSean9 ай бұрын
@@handconstructed😅😅😅
@Bennyboy1210 ай бұрын
Felt sorry for the lad with the knife scars on his face. Sounded like quite a violent attack.
@rairyu75289 ай бұрын
Yeah, he seemed really soft spoken too. Didn't look like a bad guy.
@barnierobin57342 ай бұрын
@@rairyu7528my dad knew of him back in the day, a very hard man apparently
@zeddyteddy372910 ай бұрын
These type of men play a very important role in our society. Some folk don't want to admit it, But we need "tough guys".
@thededoidheskey612810 ай бұрын
Yeah weird thugs that can only fit in whilst fighting
@zeddyteddy372910 ай бұрын
@@thededoidheskey6128 not accurate what you say. These type of men are who you want to have around when something serious is about to happen. I doubt you are the type who will respond to danger by comforting it.
@thededoidheskey612810 ай бұрын
@@zeddyteddy3729 no I don’t deal with danger by “comforting” it.
@zeddyteddy372910 ай бұрын
@@thededoidheskey6128 simple typo. Confronting it I meant. You don't seem like that type. You seem like the type of man who puts "He/Him" at the beginning of your bio.
@thededoidheskey612810 ай бұрын
@@zeddyteddy3729 you seem like the type who checks for “he/him”
@orangutanfan317910 ай бұрын
People were much better spoken back then
@leoii699610 ай бұрын
because we hadnt yet imported people from somalia etc
@KanyeKetchup10 ай бұрын
😮😂
@stelladavis783210 ай бұрын
Much better? Yes, they were better spoken
@quantumblurrr10 ай бұрын
Nope lol guys that age in that area still speak *exactly* like that, sorry to break your weird fantasy
@quantumblurrr10 ай бұрын
@@leoii6996Nah before that we had Old English which is extremely unclear and weird
@obscuremusictabs592710 ай бұрын
All this title needs is a 70s bass line.
@Blade-gw8gk10 ай бұрын
The fella that hid slashed in the face, I would have never thought that voice would come out of his mouth 😂
@coolmacatrain943410 ай бұрын
2:17 I'm pretty sure he was Irish and was used to modifying his accent so that English people understood him better.
@Dreyno10 ай бұрын
@@coolmacatrain9434Definitely Irish. Might’ve moved over when he was a kid.
@Dreyno10 ай бұрын
@@wulfhere83 British Isles? Ireland isn’t in the “British Isles”. The U.K. is just another island off continental Europe.
@herb207810 ай бұрын
@@wulfhere83well said
@Dreyno10 ай бұрын
@@wulfhere83 A fact? It’s an opinion. It’s a disputed term and one the government of Ireland does not use. It was applied as a part of multiple failed campaigns to conquer Ireland in Tudor times and seeing as 80% of the island has successfully ejected British rule from its territory, it can no longer apply. Just because it warms your cockles to hear it used doesn’t make it any more legitimate.
@JohnHonda10110 ай бұрын
I started drinking in pubs and clubs in 1982, you knew if you gave bouncers any lip or caused trouble back then these were the kind of Men that would send you back to reality very quickly, a short sharp shock it used to be called.
@sharpvidtube10 ай бұрын
I remember a few times in Manchester, the bouncers walked away and left everyone to it, I don't blame them😂
@mda121810 ай бұрын
used to wager 💵 on pub 👊🏼 to KO: best when 3-4 settled it to last man standing
@chrisr549910 ай бұрын
Back then clubs must of been full of radge as you had lots of bother from Football Hooligans, Skinheads, Mods, Teds...even the Reggae scne.
@Scorch102810 ай бұрын
It's funny, a number of big name pro wrestlers like the Road Warriors, Demolition Smash, Warlord, Rick Rude, and Berserker started off as bouncers at the Minneapolis bar named Gramma B's. They actually got into contests to see who could throw a bar patron the furthest. When a new distance was achieved, they marked it. 😆 Back in the early-1980s, bouncers got away with stuff like that.
@user-PaulSean9 ай бұрын
Varusian Aikido by the 3rd Dr. Who started it all. One touch and... zap! Instant paralysis. Search it on the tubes it's hilarious.
@muldoun459 ай бұрын
Love these archival videos. Amazing to peep into history like this.
@Lee-ut3ob10 ай бұрын
Good mix of training there. Boxing. Wrestling and strength training. The best you csn do.
@bluesix284310 ай бұрын
Interesting yesteryear moment captured for all time. What would we do without YT! Worked the doors for 10 years just for fun. Great days.
@bwkid110 ай бұрын
Great video. I have been bouncing for over 30 years, and much is still the same today. The things that have changed are of course the licenses as mentioned. And as the guys say, this has ruined the industry. Many very capable guys have now had to leave the job often under bad terms, through no fault of their own. Because the licensing is not working. And we now have more and more guys coming into the job, who are just not up to the required standards needed to do this kind of work. And the SIA (our governing body) never help doormen. Their main job is to suspend our licenses for the smallest of issues. And keep handing out licenses to guys who will never be able to do the job, and most can't speak English, so won't even be able to talk to angry customers. If you can't communicate properly, then you should not be able to get a license.
@reflex1one10 ай бұрын
@bwkid1 100% true sia a total waste of time. You now have some 18 yr old 9 stone student working a pub scared of his own shadow. Or any guy whose hakf decent has to worry about loosing his badge
@redoinefaid810 ай бұрын
In australia its all tiny indian fellows who will never stand up for themselves yet alone others 😂😂😂
@_-MiamiVice-_10 ай бұрын
I remember visiting the UK not long ago, and the club we went to had "bouncers" who didn't even speak english properly...
@bwkid110 ай бұрын
Since we have introduced licensing for our doormen. The standards have dropped. Yes there are a few good guys coming through. But as the comments say. We have a lot of guys who are not up to the job, they are 7 or 8 stone, and are scared of their own shadow. And many can't speak English, so I have no idea how they communicate in a stressful situation. But this is what the fools who run the courses pass as good enough for the job. And they are also the reason why many good guys won't work anymore. Because the good guys do all the work, while these clowns do nothing and still get the same pay as the good guys.
@shingitai588210 ай бұрын
Did anyone else notice the Roy Shaw v Lenny McLean poster? The interview later then goes down the line of questioning them of regulating the job.🤣😂
@fasthracing10 ай бұрын
Sure did. (I'M THE GOVERNOR")
@TomTRIPZ10 ай бұрын
yep
@johnjoe731810 ай бұрын
That’s Johnny madden with the lonsdale T-shirt on, he done the door with McLean for years
@da90sReAlvloc10 ай бұрын
Wasn't McLean knocked out by cliff fields twice
@johnjoe731810 ай бұрын
@@da90sReAlvloc yeah , feilds a half decent domestic pro he was to and Johnny waldron
@leehannaford916610 ай бұрын
Excellent footage! Would like to see more of this kind of stuff👍🏻
@jaymac720310 ай бұрын
Man I love this channel lol Keep em coming BBC Archive 😊
@KravMagaThailand10 ай бұрын
Looks like they’d an early form of MMA there, crossing training boxing & wrestling.
@ruledtrendy506610 ай бұрын
It's funny, you don't often see wrestling in the UK
@TC264210 ай бұрын
Catch wrestling originated in the UK, there is quite a rich history of it that is little well known.
@baabaabaa-El10 ай бұрын
A lot of boxing gyms had wrestling mats, our trainer wd have us grapple to build stamina.. l rekn he'd done a bit of Greco Roman wrestling back in the day?
@MinotaurvsCyclops10 ай бұрын
Thought the exact same, they might've done alright in UFC 1.
@FloatingStranglers10 ай бұрын
@@TC2642yeah Man, Wigan Snake Pit comes to mind
@Tawny670210 ай бұрын
I used to go to the nightclubs in Bradford in the seventies, and some of those bouncers were downright psychopaths just looking for an excuse to beat the crap out of anyone…..even someone falling asleep! Now I’m not saying that they are all like that, I knew some that were great guys, but back then I saw many that were not!
@aa-up4sf10 ай бұрын
Bradford in the seventies, bet it was a lot different to now. I always wonder if people back then saw the changes coming.
@Tawny670210 ай бұрын
@@aa-up4sf if you are referring to the diversity of Indian and Pakistani people that are a predominant part of the city’s culture, It has been like that since well before the seventies! Bradford has been well known for its wool and textile mills for well over a hundred and fifty years, and they badly needed workers to fill the jobs that the indigenous population didn’t want to do anymore! So they definitely contributed towards the economy of Bradford, many started their own businesses and were conscientious hard working people! What the city it like now I don’t know as I haven’t visited it for at least twenty years.
@bertRaven110 ай бұрын
@@Tawny6702 "didn't want to do" is just cover for asking for a living wage
@Tawny670210 ай бұрын
@@bertRaven1 I agree, but in the late fifties and early sixties there was also generally an abundance of jobs, and your reason is just one as to why many people were leaving the mills in droves and why Indian and Pakistani people were in encouraged to work in them and in effect keep them going.
@bertRaven110 ай бұрын
@@Tawny6702 by keep them going you mean maintain the profit margin of the mill owners? The narrative now is that there was a post war shortage of labour, but if anything there was a wave of emigration out of Britain to places like Australia, NZ and Canada looking for well paid work.
@BradYaeger10 ай бұрын
Never been one, but I've trained a few bouncers and they were my favorite students because there's no time, room or desire for any theories . Just meat and potato basics that WORK. One guy was around 5'6 , 135 max. But he was Thai . So the club made him the head of security even though he was mediocre at best skill wise . But it was the early 90's during a martial arts craze so they bought him a cool suit , he never spook directly to anybody just stood there looking cool His nickname was "Secret Asian Man " . I mean everybody just figured that dude HAD to be a bad ass right? And it worked ! His guys would surround and hold somebody , Tom would stand nearby just looking, the guys would look at Tom , so the problem guy would too and just give in. Tom would tell me later stuff like "Thank GOD that dude didn't swing at me, he was HUGE! "
@African_Rose10 ай бұрын
Worked doors in Birmingham for 7 years just before covid. Only got injured twice one girl raked the back of my head with her high heel and the other was another girl throwing a bottle from across the street. I can tell you without question the women cause more problems. Gays just nause you and the lads aren't looking to knock you out it's someone else. If you throw your weight around and act like you're a gangster you'll get laid out real quick. Be courteous and calm right up until physicality and your restraint emotionally doing something combatative tends to take wind out of wallies sails real quick.
@Jf_190010 ай бұрын
Yup, working security you realise how hard it is do deal with women. Most men can understand what it eventually can lead to
@standenberg10 ай бұрын
Women do cause more trouble in Brum, from my experience. I recall one trappy confrontational young woman got sent to prison a couple of years ago for racially abusing a black doorman on Broad Street Birmingham. It was all recorded on a smartphone & I must say the bouncer was excellent & handled it really well, especially as she continually provoked him with nasty racist comments.
@northernking260410 ай бұрын
@@standenbergwomen can be very violent
@JesusChrist2000BC9 ай бұрын
@@standenbergWomen always think they are going to get away with everything and they usually do in the courts but not on the streets
@Mark_10610 ай бұрын
Best Bee Gee's hairstyles in them days, women were natural beauty looking with big hairy Fanny's.....what a time to be alive!!
@chrisr549910 ай бұрын
😆
@leeturton925410 ай бұрын
Forest of Avalon not for me
@rogermellie806810 ай бұрын
😂😂😂 mega muffs
@kaijones385310 ай бұрын
Nice trip down memory lane by the sounds 😂😂😂😂
@thekenneth823210 ай бұрын
Okay Mark
@BlacksmithBets10 ай бұрын
Really interesting to see them grappling, I never realised it was common back then.
@Scorch102810 ай бұрын
Yeah, catch wrestling was fairly common in England, particularly in Lancashire and Wigan, home of the legendary Snake Pit gym. That's where "Dynamite Kid" Tom Billington trained as a young man, before he broke into pro wrestling as one of the British Bulldogs. Catch wrestlers can throw down. I wouldn't want to mess with them.
@folksurvival10 ай бұрын
It has been common for thousands of years.
@CARLIN47377 ай бұрын
These docs are very important to remember our social history.
@ericsierra-franco780210 ай бұрын
I will say that these bouncers in this documentary have far more dedication to their vocation than you would find here in the US. I'm sure there are some bouncers here in the US that actively train and take the job seriously, but, many bouncers, in my experience, are good at looking tough but not so good at getting tough. Plus, society and the law takes a dour view of the profession; and business owners can face criminal or civil litigation if a bouncer seriously hurts someone, or even kills someone (which happens from time to time). Interesting documentary!
@jacko71710 ай бұрын
Great piece of history. I worked the doors in Manchester in the mid 90s, the first job I had was at a now long gone cabaret club ("The Willows" in Salford) we were still wearing bow ties and tuxedos then, I thought i was James Bond😄
@boatingmanchester10 ай бұрын
The Willows was very popular back in the day
@raoulduke34410 ай бұрын
When you think you're James Bond, but really more like Odd Job
@paulallen30118 ай бұрын
Remember boxing shows on there years ago, mate of mine got a big ovation after he boxed. Good memories
@jenkooper864710 ай бұрын
That was a great video 👍🏼
@jarraandyftm10 ай бұрын
Once got done in the back of the head by a bouncer in Leeds then carried spark out out of the back door. Never managed to find out why!
@pollocksjones778910 ай бұрын
Did you check your ass hole?
@HarryFlashman.10 ай бұрын
Mouthy and p*ssed, I'm guessing!
@Nick-io9uk10 ай бұрын
Have you ever lost your temper? Once now and again 😄
@chrisbayes297210 ай бұрын
That got me, too! 😂
@smegmadelhomme855110 ай бұрын
@@chrisbayes2972me too
@Scorch102810 ай бұрын
This guy loses his temper every night at work. 😆
@RICHARDGRANNON10 ай бұрын
This is great.
@vtrmcs10 ай бұрын
Bit of a life story here. If you were a young teen in the 80's, you'll maybe relate. I understand what the bouncers in the video are saying, but they are not relaying the whole truth, as anyone who ever went clubbing in the 80's would tell you. If not for the drug dealing in clubs, which the bouncers almost certainly controlled throughout the 80's, they would likely have been left somewhat more alone and unregulated. It definitely didn't help that almost every club had a group of bouncers that controlled the flow of drugs in the venue which eventually came into the focus of authorities. I was once threatened with a serious beating by a group of bouncers for having drugs in my possession in a popular city nightclub. They were mistaken as it was Golden Virginia hand rolling tobacco and wasn't even mine, I'd just run out of smokes and borrowed a plastic tobacco pouch (retail branding). Someone had seen me handrolling a cig in the dark and flashing lights and took it to be a marijuana, alerting a bouncer mate, I suppose assuming I hadnt bought the "drugs" from them. It took over 2 hours to sort out in the middle of a Friday night. I was introduced to a baseball bat in the back alley (just shown it, not hit). The group of them, 3 and later, 4, had no qualms about threatening me. Big, tough guys, it was a difficult situation even for someone slightly drunk. Eventually, and for me (very) thankfully, the tobacco packet was located by my good friend (still a friend today) as it had simply fallen off the table and been kicked by dancing clubbers to just under the stage near the dancefloor. He had brought it over and the bouncers looked at it. I was profusely apologised to. I had a lucky escape and, bizarrely, over time I ended up with the "run of the club", by way of a practical apology I guess. They allowed me to do whatever I wanted without any inteference at all, even to the point of if someone annoyed me, I could get them dealt with, no questions asked. It was ridiculous. I became "friends" with the door staff, serious criminals though they all were, they made sure I was taken care of for many years after. Any club or bar in the city, I could name drop and be looked after. Despite being so young (illegally so), I never had to queue - even for the most popular club they would lift the rope, I was never again asked for ID, usually got served first at the bar and also never got challenged about dress codes, despite wearing converse high tops lol. That's how much influence these guys had. Only many years later, did I really understand why. I can only assume that this was the result of me being honest and standing my ground in what I was saying even with the threat of violence, and then being proven as honest in front of them. Thats the only possible explanation for what happened after their threats. Of course I didnt really understand what I was doing, at the time I was just being factual. So naive. The only reason I even know this now is through watching gangster movies, where apparently if you're honest and dont blab about stuff, in certain circles, you're viewed as "OK". Looking back, I wasn't as responsible as I could have been with my new found "power", but nobody ever got hurt as a result of my actions, although thats pure luck in some respects as I didnt really understand the situation. I was 13 when that all happened, just 13. It was all routine then. Clubs were full of young teenagers and if you were 21+, you belonged in another bar down the street for old people. Maybe I was big for my age and not afraid of a scrap (in my head at least), but the whole 80's club scene was totally out of control in terms of letting in kids and the alcohol and drugs. I count myself extremely lucky that things turned out the way they did for me, but the modern regulation of doormen is a serious upgrade on what we had to work with back then, even if the current crop of 13/14 year olds don't get to have their 10p pints. Sorry we messed that up, kids! My own situation could have been extremely serious and in a decent society, actually was, when I think about it. I don't miss nightclubs, or those people. I still remember the bouncers names, all these years later. In some ways, being so young prevented me from having any latent trauma, because as an adult, whilst I can handle myself, I'd be far more aware of just how at risk I was, whereas as a kid, I don't think I had the first inkling. Saved me mentally.
@brianshields748510 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing your story I found it interesting I'm glad you lived to tell it
@CoIoneIPanic10 ай бұрын
I tried to read your story but my sundial chimed.
@Anthony-Testicali10 ай бұрын
They could make a movie about you called tobaccofellas and a young dexter jackson could play you
@t1nma5k226 ай бұрын
🧢🧢🧢
@PrimeMatt9 ай бұрын
That guy was spot on 👌🏼 I worked rough doors for 11 years from the mid 90's it was a totally different world and the police treated us worse than the people who came out to cause the problems. But it was a time I'd not change for anything 👍🏻
@francosamericanmusings15609 ай бұрын
A wel made video, and well done training!!
@blind_warriorr10 ай бұрын
I thought at first that one of the bouncers was Andy Kauffman just playing a character.
@gagacrazy109 ай бұрын
This was so good!!!!
@Sidecontrol123410 ай бұрын
Did the door for almost 4 years while at uni and a little after I graduated, great pay, great fun, but I'm glad to leave that part of my life behind.
@mpf651410 ай бұрын
The smell of stale farts at that gym literally emanates through the screen!
@BFFoundation-ke2pi10 ай бұрын
And brut
@CoIoneIPanic10 ай бұрын
Gyms should smell like a layer of sweats and fart. That's the smell of hard work. Unlike today's gyms where people hold their farts in. It's not healthy.
@ryanlongley505210 ай бұрын
A proppa mans gym not a poser in sight poncing around looking in the mirror and taking pics for their social media or a woman craving attention wearing pants that show what she had fo eat last night
@thomaslewis750410 ай бұрын
These guys have a better grasp on the English language than the majority of the modern public. Bravo.
@gunsharck10 ай бұрын
This sounds like its being narrated by David Schneider from The Day Today and Alan Partridge
@dickterpene869710 ай бұрын
Smell my cheese you mother!
@michaelturner445710 ай бұрын
It took until 2005 to become regulated, with the SIA Door Supervision licence
@Nick-io9uk10 ай бұрын
I wonder how much of it was to recover/tax their earnings. I worked (in a warehouse) with a guy who quit bouncing when they brought in regulations....prior to that he reckoned you would make more in the mid 1990s, tax free of course, than bouncers were getting paid when I talked to him (2020) I guess like so many jobs, wages have gone nowhere but down over the last 30 years sadly. though £5 to £30 doesnt sound great for night work in 1979 either.
@jacko71710 ай бұрын
Not true, local councils had their own registration schemes, and Manchester City Centre Door Safe scheme was the first to try and legitimise the job. My badge number was 0253. This would have been the late 90s.
@Nonegiven1458210 ай бұрын
I got my license in 2012 I think. Had it for 9 years. I thought licenses had come out before then. And looking it up it was 2001
@Split_Routine10 ай бұрын
I worked the doors & made collections in the 90s. Fortunately i was refused a licence in the 2000s and went on to have a successful career.
@Day-ZDuke10 ай бұрын
1:08 haha the Shaw vs McLean fight poster in the background!
@DisparityOfBeliefAndTruth9 ай бұрын
Buddy at 1:12 is getting tuned up by anyone with even just a dash of boxing experience lol.
@m.b.59310 ай бұрын
The guy’s throwing hooks but the mitt holder is holding for jabs and crosses lol
@kingdaleclarke10 ай бұрын
Terrible technique there
@deanstanley579910 ай бұрын
Nice china cups in the gym rest room 😂😂😂
@MikeHunt-fx9rg9 ай бұрын
This video is awesome
@peteburns6410 ай бұрын
1983 I started… Did a few yrs… Talking it down was always the best way, but odd times didn’t work.
@anthonyquinn713210 ай бұрын
People were much more articulate back in the day
@realtruth48043 ай бұрын
that brown tracksuit is class
@vinvincible810 ай бұрын
Interesting to see them grappling as well 👌
@magnusericsson78129 ай бұрын
Those were the days 😊
@herb20785 ай бұрын
Fantastic to see the old folk style English wrestling. Used to be all over the uk in British gyms along side the boxing and weight training
@pauldaviesantiques155610 ай бұрын
Gentlemen of the door: they don't make 'em like this anymore.
@mda121810 ай бұрын
100% male … 👊🏼
@crktritual10 ай бұрын
As a active bouncer, you are correct
@windowlicker130510 ай бұрын
100%
@Nick-io9uk10 ай бұрын
No skinheads but let the guy with the rather greasy looking combover in. Times have certainly changed.
@sharpvidtube10 ай бұрын
No trainers was the worst for me. I was never violent, but they let in thugs with shoes.
@Dreyno10 ай бұрын
It wasn’t a sartorial judgement. A skinhead wasn’t just someone who liked the look. Skinheads were thugs and racists (by that stage regardless of how they started).
@BFFoundation-ke2pi10 ай бұрын
Pointed shoes n dock martins
@chrisr549910 ай бұрын
Oxfords with segs @@BFFoundation-ke2pi
@Nonegiven1458210 ай бұрын
I have shaved my head since I was 14. The only question I got a club was if I was a squaddie. And that was in an army town. Back then though, being a skinhead might have been different.
@chrisbayes297210 ай бұрын
"I bloody well do, yeah"
@Waterford05110 ай бұрын
0:34 imagine getting belly bashed like that out the door. Sat night ruined 😂
@bqrre10 ай бұрын
Hahahaha game over
@asweeney1019 ай бұрын
😆😆😆
@steverabbits10 ай бұрын
Without lads and lasses on the doors every city centre would descent into absolute chaos on Friday and Saturday nights.
@andrewlally782810 ай бұрын
That gym looked alot more legit than the kung fu and karate classes that were available back then
@sportsreport_24710 ай бұрын
Love these old videos
@jameswhite444610 ай бұрын
You can almost FEEL the energy in the old skool gym
@jasonayres10 ай бұрын
(3:55) Will *someone* get that phone, please! (I'd get off the couch, myself, but I've got this back problem, you know..)
@sammyb165110 ай бұрын
Bugger! Just missed it! I wonder who it was?* *won't make sense to anyone who doesn't remember a world before mobile phones/1471.
@francosamericanmusings15609 ай бұрын
6:30 he was prophetic...
@SmartionАй бұрын
Hahah wasn’t just!
@dmode279310 ай бұрын
An interesting upload. It's a shame we can't go back to the days when bouncers received the respect they deserved. I've NEVER had an issue with one and have seen them stop trouble rapidly when they had a little more free rein.
@dwayneroberts316210 ай бұрын
Does anyone know if John Madden is still alive, I remember seeing pictures of Lenny and him on the door wearing bag gloves!
@LesBuckingham10 ай бұрын
Yes he is and still training
@patmadden115210 ай бұрын
Yes he’s very well
@dwayneroberts316210 ай бұрын
@@patmadden1152 thanks for replying, great to hear that, they def don't make them like that anymore
@patmadden115210 ай бұрын
They certainly don’t x
@LesBuckingham10 ай бұрын
Not only a very tough man but more importantly a gentleman
@lanslater10 ай бұрын
1979 flashback Thanks! Was Minder on telly at that time?
@jakartaman336510 ай бұрын
Yes. Minder started in 1979
@stephenrhughes10 ай бұрын
Was that Phil Daniels going into the club at 4:09?
@sharpvidtube10 ай бұрын
Crazy that they were allowed to throw the first punch. While most of them were OK, some loved intimidating people. A bit like the police now, a few bad ones ruined the reputation for the rest of them.
@bensims750110 ай бұрын
A bit like society....
@paulw425910 ай бұрын
You should have a look at the laws concerning self defence. Bouncers have (and had) no special rights under the law. And when this was made police had more or less no training in combat.
@sharpvidtube10 ай бұрын
@@paulw4259 Things have changed, probably the way the law is applied more now, when it used to be ignored. CCTV might be what changed things?
@olivere549710 ай бұрын
In the UK cops aint even supposed to punch an aggressive member of the public!
@Maxiey110 ай бұрын
Good and bad are in everything.
@paulbarracksog35910 ай бұрын
Gordon’s gym old skool.
@SEANPOL20310 ай бұрын
Old skool tough guys
@kevy2j2810 ай бұрын
The fella at the start looks like a pound shop version of Roy shaw
@druckerman2479 ай бұрын
Love thd strong neck fellow. Great exercises.
@peternagy-im4be9 ай бұрын
Looks pretty dangerous?
@BFFoundation-ke2pi10 ай бұрын
Proper old school toughies who just slung you out no messin
@THISISLolesh10 ай бұрын
Can see why they never made it as boxers after that padwork haha
@snakewad12310 ай бұрын
Honestly wasn't that bad. Had power in them shots. Head was moving off the center line. I've seen much worse in the ufc
@6ft7guy10 ай бұрын
@@snakewad123but UFC fighters who lack in striking are high level wrestlers and grapplers
@THISISLolesh10 ай бұрын
@@snakewad123 Mate. The big fella was pausing for a half second before every punch. Hopping around like the easter bunny.. Don’t get me started on 1:13
@tombevan952710 ай бұрын
@@snakewad123 the second one could pack a decent punch but apart from that their boxing was pretty horrendous.. even an amateur boxer would wipe the floor with these guys
@kevthegoat877410 ай бұрын
@@tombevan9527Good luck to an amateur or even a professional boxer if the guy at 1:33 gets ahold of them
@ModMokkaMatti10 ай бұрын
@7:22, Why are sirens not like that now?
@SuperFunkmachine10 ай бұрын
sirens used to be like that.
@ModMokkaMatti10 ай бұрын
@@SuperFunkmachine Which gets back to my original inquiry of why that's no longer the case. I've heard more contemporary sirens in video that I've watched online that sound a lot like what we have here in the States, which is really rather sad, IMO. I'm not particularly fond of seeing the Americanization of everything everywhere else - we're not worthy of being emulated/replicated, for a multitude of reasons.
@SuperFunkmachine10 ай бұрын
@@ModMokkaMatti The modern sound is meant to carry better and be more distinctive.
@Titus-q5b10 ай бұрын
Compared to some of the savage, knuckle-dragging thugs on the doors I came across while doing bar-work at Torquay nightclubs in the '80s and '90s, these men seem intelligent, reasonable and professional in their dealings with people.
@Handlethetruth66610 ай бұрын
The red vest over the purple t shirt 😂😂😂 state of him
@CompoundingTime3 ай бұрын
That fight training looked effective; the lifting....let's just say we've come a long way from then.
@jaffevance24762 ай бұрын
Like the Roy Shaw and Lenny McLean poster in the back ground
@wanderer4life8 ай бұрын
Good to see Jasper Carrott working the pads at 1.15.
@markmarshall982010 ай бұрын
Music machine my brother use to go the it’s called the coco now in Camden Town.
@johnrobinson739810 ай бұрын
Lost his temper twice, what a professional
@cgray826710 ай бұрын
Great content
@Analoguebubblebath8910 ай бұрын
Serving the public, but also knocking them out when they question you lol
@kdlofty10 ай бұрын
02:20 The most unbouncer sounding bouncer ever. Lol.
@thebodysnatcher435910 ай бұрын
Cool to see some catch wrestling shown here
@TheBlackMosaic10 ай бұрын
I worked and trained in Gordon’s gym between 1999 and 2001. I used to see Johnny Madden in there most mornings, he was a lovely and polite man. That gym had a real aura about it, even in the early 2000’s. That was also the place that I first met UK UFC legend Lee Murray. Him and Paul would also train in there most days around that time.
@BFNH4599 ай бұрын
"I've never seen a bouncer take a liberty" 😂🤣🤣 bollocks
@nickgodfrey114810 ай бұрын
Is that Gordon’s Gym in Woolwich? This was before my time so I’m taking a guess…
@nickgodfrey11489 ай бұрын
@ChrisMarsh-nj5ru I know Herbert Road. Think the gym shut down a few years back.