This is Boston in Lincolnshire see how much it has changed and not for the better.
@andrewrcmadwilkinson69992 ай бұрын
ILLEGALS OUT 😊
@mathewgreen40996 жыл бұрын
Many thanks for posting. Films like this are very pleasant to watch, as well as being informative.
@patdavies7811 жыл бұрын
I used to live in Boston. It's amazing to see many familier places including the garage at the bottom of London Road, the road we used to live on.
@jf72433 жыл бұрын
What a beautiful cameo of Boston, Lincs during the war.
@deejay397110 жыл бұрын
if we still made videos like this the childern would probably grow up with a sense of identity and community value
@gloriaking53219 жыл бұрын
dee jay hopefully, but the schools soon change that, remember the council are a hard faced lot, the system does not want it do they, i think there musy be a way.but glad others feel as me and my son feell. i lived in corringham born in 1949 and still saw this and reaped the benifits.
@MrDaiseymay7 жыл бұрын
I blame the EU
@eshaibraheem42183 ай бұрын
They were pŕopaganda films. Do you want to feed today's children propaganda?
@crochetandcrashhelmets350510 жыл бұрын
My home town, born and bred in Boston, Lincolnshire x
@philforbes74673 жыл бұрын
fiddled with then ?
@peterjohnson617 Жыл бұрын
That was just wonderful,thank you so much. As a New Yorker I also live out in a country town. This is what made me want to come and see your country ,not cities like London. I have returned several times over the years and always to the country........Peace,pj
@lawomega17 ай бұрын
Lovely to read it ,the help we had during WW2 from USA and many other countries saved us Brits ,us oldies never forget ,because as kids we were there (born 1939) When we saw a American serviceman in the street we used to run after ,got any gum chum ,we used to shout and nearly always they would give us gum or other sweets ,they always generous to us kids . On another compliment to our USA friends , the USA is still the bread basket of the world,and is freely given ,rgds JRL .
@thehumblenarrator13813 жыл бұрын
Im from Boston, this town, and it is sad to see how far downhill its gone.
@peternagy-im4be4 ай бұрын
For Boston read most UK towns.
@regd.2263 Жыл бұрын
I just love music that goes with these sort of films
@LimesRickie5 жыл бұрын
Love everything done at Merton Park Studios and this was no disappointment. Absolutely wonderful!
@wordsmith5211 жыл бұрын
Well done BFC for allowing everyone to see these films and the vital history that goes with them - unlike some bodies who try to restrict people from seeing and hearing productions because they want to make a fast buck and sell small extracts at ridiculous prices..
@kiwitrainguy3 жыл бұрын
Denying people access to films such as these is a form of "rewriting history". I watched a documentary-drama about George Orwell the other day.
@robertsmith3672 Жыл бұрын
5 . St. Thomas parish rooms . Crown and Anchor pub. My first job as apprentice painter 1957.
@davidclark86853 жыл бұрын
Boston 1943....the year I was born.....just down the road .... Fishtoft Road. The house was called Romanica. My Grandfather, Capt. Charles Deakin, the local Dock and Harbour Master lived next door with his wife Lily. Their house was called Finlandia. The two houses in those days were quite isolated. I think there is a large pea factory opposite the houses now! So good to see the little piece of England where I was born! I still have childhood memories of the market in the town centre.
@Dylan_MD3 жыл бұрын
It’s a shame things aren’t the same anymore I’d love to grow up in Boston when it was like that I’m only 16
@klbird9 жыл бұрын
I good look back. Market days are still held but its a different world today.
@danielmalachi87938 жыл бұрын
Simpler times, seemingly happier times... Old England
@Time_Line_Archive_Project8 жыл бұрын
always make me wonder when people say that. simpler times? we live in an age now where people can have four children as a single parent and live off benefits without issue or challenge. All of their children fully equpped with iPads, iPhones, Xbox and PlayStation. If anything, life can be in England now, blissfully ignorant - wasting life away on pointless technology and free games, where a large part of society considers itself "entitled" NOT to work and that they should have everything for free with little to no effort. Films like this certainly do have something of a romantic feel to them,. but then of course it's in context to both the times and the visual aesthetics too. The 1940's was popular for its picturesque landscape, basically the beautiful. The result is that its easy for us to look back at this stuff and see just that, the beautiful. And not the harsh realities of it all really.
@MrDaiseymay7 жыл бұрын
ignorant you mean
@ceilingsandfloors7 жыл бұрын
yeah Britain in 1943 happier times...when people were losing their friends and family members en masse in the middle of fucking World War II.
@gavinreid83516 жыл бұрын
Middle of a war!
@sheilapratt49144 жыл бұрын
i dont fit in n
@TheTwopeesinapod9 жыл бұрын
I saw this as a lad growing up in London, unbelievable!!!
@repairworld23678 ай бұрын
It all ended in the late 1990's. I'm a Blackcountry man and that was when our industry started to be destroyed. I had a haulage business and there were many around, British owned. Dudley used to have an agricultural show at Himley Hall. Stourbridge had it's own hospital. We had a local livestock market. And an abbatoir. Marsh and Baxter's were well known sausage and meat purveyors known the world over. Stourbridge was famous for it's cut glass. Everything has gone. Nothing left of what I've just described.
@Wench648 ай бұрын
I'm backcountry as well, great bridge high street died when they built another Asda, shut the market after the pandemic, one butchers left, all barbers, west brom shite, dudley shite, merry hill going the same way, I miss the 60s and 70s when you could get everything in the high street, even a wedding dress as well as food, the markets were brilliant, I miss those days, started going to Blackheath and that's changed over the years, to many charity shops
@Wench648 ай бұрын
Also we had a devis, so by our school, my brother was 3rd generation at horsely piggott that got closed, now houses, but they said they still got a good order book, glass works houses, hale and hale and jeavons houses, gas works houses, all the factories that employed men have all gone, no wonder why I'm depressed, I'm 59 my son is 17 (to old to have him) he doesn't know what job to do, because there are no jobs round here anymore
@MimiPipoo3 жыл бұрын
Time is just a blast. This is barely 80 years ago and we see it as grey and distant but in 80 years time it's how we'll be looked at. All of us being forced to be satisfied and believe we are at the pinnacle of our advancement when that'll never be true.
@jacksugden81904 жыл бұрын
I enjoyed that very much, what would my life had been like in 1943, 77 years ago in 2020, it was only 13 very long years before I was born in 1956, makes me wonder now the life of my late parents in WWII.
@crossleydd4210 жыл бұрын
Interesting to see what my local film studio, Merton Park Studios', near Wimbledon, were producing during the war, doing their bit for the war effort. .Post-war, they made lots of crime films, notably ones narrated by Edgar :Lustgarten.
@kiwitrainguy3 жыл бұрын
This film was directed by Julian Wintle who would go on to direct (or produce, I forget which) the TV series The Avengers in the 1960s.
@katief82113 жыл бұрын
I think that's my grandmother walking through the shot in the market stalls! And she's probably pushing my mother in the pram!
@wayinfront14 жыл бұрын
Which town was it? Ah, I see now from comments below it was Boston.
@GeoffsSousChef3 жыл бұрын
wowwww.
@andrestarazona61904 жыл бұрын
They were happy without cellphones
@robmc72154 жыл бұрын
YEAH WITHOUT CELL PHONES MEANT PEOPLE COULD STAY ON TASK MUCH EASIER AND NOT HAVE TO DEAL WITH A PHONE RINGING ALL THE TIME
@norrinradd35493 жыл бұрын
They used their mobiles, they didn’t let the mobile companies use them, and that’s the difference.......... Ps, they were phone boxes, not cells, the cells were all in the cop shops and gaols....... :-)
@kiwitrainguy3 жыл бұрын
I'm happy without a cellphone.
@mrpvhillier-palmer30307 жыл бұрын
We went to Lavenham and saw part of Lowland village. So I asked how this short film could be seen. I was told here on youtube. I think this gradually changed but for me it was very start of the 1980s that I saw the greatest change and not always for the better either!!
@joesprinks42154 жыл бұрын
1943!dont remeber muchabout it as I was three years old !!
@brianjames98285 жыл бұрын
If only things were like that in Boston Today
@MrDaiseymay7 ай бұрын
THANKS. I THOUGHT IT WAS BOSTON, WAS THAT THE FAMOUS ''STUMP''. ?
@suebradford8905 жыл бұрын
Interesting snippets in this film: the factory girls canning vegetables didn't have germ-free space suits/gloves on, just grabbed handfuls of beans and shoved 'em in the cans! Also the workers from outside the area going into the fields to pick the produce, as opposed to the East Europeans who come to do it now. "Yes, we're a healthy lot!" Yes because people weren't eating rubbish then. Everyone looked just the right size, no obesity. How different was life then, slower paced.
@jonka13 жыл бұрын
A healthy lot? Almost everyone smoked and men in particular often died before or just after retirement.
@sarahstrong71743 жыл бұрын
I doubt that people working all day & then attending an ARP meeting or Home Guard training in the evenings felt life was slow.
@None-zc5vg3 жыл бұрын
@@jonka1 That was the case in my city street in the 1950s.
@norrinradd35493 жыл бұрын
The only reason, why the townies were able to go to the fields and do the jobs there, was because they had been doing them since they were kids, and were working with their parents instead of going to school(to make ends meet), so that they could pick the crops, but they were not good at reading and writing or any other thing that needed education, and that’s why I know so many people in the sixties/early seventies, who were the first in their families history that went to university......... And I for one think that our kids are better off being educated, than they are learning how to do back breaking work for a pittance(they got less as kids than adults), just to make the landowners richer than they already were at that time, and this is the best thing about leaving the bad old times, of where the majority of the people were ignorant because of the lack of education behind, and if they are ignorant now, it’s not because they have never had a chance of being educated, simply because their family was poor.!.!.!.!.!.
@anuradhainamdar89673 жыл бұрын
I agree, today dispite gloves on hands for canning we are not germ free, epidemics have increased even after 1918 Spanish flu like " Ebola" " " Avian flu " " H1N1" " Foot and mouth disease " and now the world swamping Pandemic " Coronavirus ".Which has killed more Americans than the second world war.
@paulbroderick84384 жыл бұрын
Not a beached whale in sight! All elegantly slim and free of tattoos. Greetings from a Brit residing in the USA.
@philthycat14083 жыл бұрын
Yeh, that's what war rationing does to people.
@norrinradd35493 жыл бұрын
@@philthycat1408. I don’t believe that rationing in the US was that strict, and it’s not been carried on this long, so he must be in a gated community that doesn’t allow the fat tattooed yanks in.............
@philthycat14083 жыл бұрын
@@norrinradd3549 it's Britain.
@norrinradd35493 жыл бұрын
@@philthycat1408. I am thinking that you are possibly, confused, stupid or you suffer from attention span deficit, because he actually says, that he is, “a Brit residing in the USA”, and they’re the last six out of eight words in his very short comment.!.!.!.!.!. Which obviously means, that you’re either stupid, highly confused or you have the attention span of a gnat, I just can’t be bothered to work out which one, or more it is..............
@philthycat14083 жыл бұрын
@@norrinradd3549 feel better now child ?
@stephenholt46703 жыл бұрын
I clocked the Boston Stump fairly early on, but found it interesting they never said the name of the place in this film. Thought the big reveal was coming at the end, but no... "In a place called.... ...Country Town!"
@Fintoman3 жыл бұрын
A quick check on the web revealed Harvey Bros livestock transporter are still in business.
@anuradhainamdar89673 жыл бұрын
That's good news to hear.
@GeoffsSousChef3 жыл бұрын
I have a confession: I’m obsessed with England 🤷🏼♀️
@Nipajim3 жыл бұрын
I'm obsessed with never returning ... !
@GeoffsSousChef3 жыл бұрын
I think I’m partial to the Coastal Village film 😊 that’s my dream existence after watching 7 seasons of Doc Martin
@simontaylor23192 ай бұрын
Luv the 30's G A R A G E. - reminds me of a similar styled building - a svhool in Tottenhoe, Beds, Does this still exist....Listed if so?
@MrCptjohn3 ай бұрын
My home town I remember most othose fishing smacks ,and lived alongside south qauy ,I was a Boston fisherman beam trawling for pink shrimps in the wash,wonderfull memories of my childhood in the 1950s.
@haroldpearson60258 ай бұрын
I was born in Birmingham in 1941. My dad was a driver on the LMS railway. He and my mum were often criticised by neighbours wanting to know why he was not off fighting. But railway crews faced their own dangers.
@chrisblackmore61598 ай бұрын
A hugely responsible and necessary job back then, fraught with its own dangers of bombing and transporting of dangerous loads. as well as all the critical ones of food etc...we wouldn't have got very far without the railways!
@farouqomaro5983 жыл бұрын
Love those bicycles. Have 3 of them myself.
@julianwaugh9683 жыл бұрын
I lived near Guildford in Surrey, it changed a lot over the years, no more cattle market and the old brewery was knocked down a sports center was built to replace the indoor Victorian one. Lovely town.
@gru74725 жыл бұрын
I watching this movie to improve my English Vocublary: Shoping centre, clothes , flowers Fishing Farmers , agriculture,fruit and vegetable, growing food for the whole nation , growing for over the sea . post offerser, Seed , examined sorated , Cinema, parks rollersketer felid , saterday dance
@tectorama7 жыл бұрын
I imagine most of these were shown at the cinema, to promote a feel good factor during WWII ? Interesting to look at now, but not everything was better then.
@gavinreid83516 жыл бұрын
Yes, a propaganda film/government information.
@kiwitrainguy3 жыл бұрын
Similar films were probably being shown in Nazi Germany at the time also.
@gch8810 Жыл бұрын
Things were better back then. Not perfect, but better.
@vernonjones36133 жыл бұрын
There’s not many kids of 10 around hear who doesn’t know how to use a telephone well today there’s not many kids under 10 who doesn’t own a telephone. How times have changed but allass not for the better
@highburydesign3 жыл бұрын
my brother's job in the 60s was converting home 'phones to dial 'phones. Had to show people how to dial a number; most people had no idea.
@craighamilton55703 жыл бұрын
What we have lost !!!
@peternagy-im4be4 ай бұрын
Everything
@jakmak11993 жыл бұрын
Hope the old lady @ 8:17 got her alarm clock. 😁
@trollmeistergeneral34672 жыл бұрын
Boston in Lincolnshire. Interesting stat; popn. of 22500 at that time, as the narrator tells us more than once. But 80 yrs later the official popn. Is only 35000 - I was expecting much more. BUT according to one reliable online source, Boston is probably the most dangerous medium sized town in the county. Crime levels off the Richter scale. So what went wrong?
@pinchermartyn39594 жыл бұрын
This type of living isn't allowed these days.
@Paul-md8de3 жыл бұрын
@Johnny Rep yeah PROGRESS who'd of thought it eh !
@Stevecamden4 жыл бұрын
I was looking on Google maps - the landscape is very flat. Never been to this part of the country- looks very nice
@substituteband13 жыл бұрын
Great film! Where did they find the looney Cockney woman asking about alarm clocks?
@gavinreid83516 жыл бұрын
This part of the country was, still is, popular with cockneys on holiday. Also during the war she may have moved to avoid the Blitz.
@mredwardward4 жыл бұрын
@@gavinreid8351 Or for countless other reasons at any time. The idea that people didn't move around much in the past is total fiction.
@evolveausevolveaus3 жыл бұрын
Love these old brit docos 👌
@yellowbelly19496 жыл бұрын
This was when England was England,a Country worth dying for,now it is not !
@vladtheimpala15 жыл бұрын
Yes, but the poverty in the inner cities was off the scale. Worth dying for that?
@rattytattyratnett4 жыл бұрын
Yes worth dying for. Many people from commonwealth countries such as India, Africa, Australia died fighting the Nazis and Japanese during the war.
@jonka13 жыл бұрын
It sounds like you've already died.
@battlewaterloo3 жыл бұрын
@@vladtheimpala1 Prick
@gch8810 Жыл бұрын
@@vladtheimpala1Yep. Having less material wealth has nothing to do with being a great country.
@heathstjohn67755 жыл бұрын
Nice to see reminders of what people no longer value ; not because I've any hope that they'll return , but , just as a permanent record of comparison against which today's slobs may be compared. Some examples should be : smartly dressed , ( make that clothed , as well ) , bodies , nearly all slim , with the skins not sheepishly asking us to remember they need to breathe , by peeking out between any body area accidentally-uncovered by tattoos ; no f-ing and b-ing as part of the conversational daily exchange , included in the commentary ; REAL natives , of mostly country , and some town , doing between play , purposeful things , rather than venturing out to buy another ripped pair of trousers , or an object they don't need , to add to their unworn and unused objects at home , which themselves haven't satisfied , etc.. Thanks very much for uploading it.
@Plumduff33034 жыл бұрын
You ever read the child of the jago?
@heathstjohn67754 жыл бұрын
@@Plumduff3303 Hello. "Read", no; but just seen their website, thanks to your lead. I'd say it was Steampunk. Some nice items, between the outrè. I like the Kneebone Jacket, in Bouclè; and the Black Teach. Thanks very much for the lead.
@rosscityofliverpool.9838 жыл бұрын
Looks so peaceful .
@MrDaiseymay7 жыл бұрын
cos it's fiction
@edwardkerrigan53564 жыл бұрын
@@MrDaiseymay You really are bitter and ignorant.
@gch8810 Жыл бұрын
@@MrDaiseymayQuit shilling for the globalists.
@vincekerrigan83003 ай бұрын
@@MrDaiseymayNo it isn't!
@richardcummins546510 ай бұрын
Cant go there today. Havnt got a passport!
@philipashbourn15383 жыл бұрын
Not many Lincolnshire accents to be heard. The locals were not allowed to speak - actors did the job. It took years before the media allowed working class people to have their own voice.
@anuradhainamdar89673 жыл бұрын
On sports British council missed out County cricket.
@ria1636Ай бұрын
It's clerk of works not clark.
@hassanhamadtou8764 Жыл бұрын
It's very interesting.
@joydeepdhar5198 Жыл бұрын
❤good one
@franksmith66376 ай бұрын
Our beautiful England so sad to see what it's become
@cornerstoneenglishinstitut30585 жыл бұрын
regards from cornerstone.
@pip110.53 жыл бұрын
Oh what I wouldn’t give to go back the to the good old days. No central heating or mobile phones. I’m 70 years now and remember the good old days.
@jimwalker54123 жыл бұрын
The town is now part of Eastern Europe.
@andywilcox94293 жыл бұрын
We live 8 miles from Boston but it’s totally changed we shop in Lynne nowadays or at a push Spalding but Boston has been taken over totally
@jimwalker54123 жыл бұрын
@@keithbrown7681 I do, we have an allotment
@rogbow694 жыл бұрын
wouldn't it be fantastic if these old movies of wartime England were colourised
@annphillips49153 жыл бұрын
NO!!!
@highburydesign3 жыл бұрын
it's been done now, finally. Does look better in colour.
@ОльгаВикторовна-ц1ы2 жыл бұрын
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
@williamusher36337 ай бұрын
Ahh even nostalgia isn't what it used to be
@buffplums3 жыл бұрын
Blimey changes....you think you have seen changes chap... you should see what it’s like today... so it goes to show that the world never stands still, change is constant
@davidlovell2917Ай бұрын
If anybody can tell me how flooding the country with 3 world immigrants has improved this beautiful country for the better then enlighten me
@roastbeef10103 жыл бұрын
Shame Boston is so bad today!
@philforbes74673 жыл бұрын
"Theres Bill Garson who runs the forge we saw earlier, he bowls a right good wood" said his grandchildren never
@geoffcrisp72258 ай бұрын
When only English was spoken with an accent. Destroyed by self serving politicians since the 1960's.
@nemo66867 ай бұрын
Elected by self-aggrandizing voters...
@peternagy-im4be4 ай бұрын
Overthrow them then. You have the power. People's revolution.
@TheVickersDoorter3 жыл бұрын
A time when Britain wasn't trying to be "World Class" at everything. And the better for it.
@bluegtturbo3 ай бұрын
It must have been a joy to be a farmer back then... All those land army girls with boyfriends overseas... 😊
@welshlyn90973 жыл бұрын
Where did it go so 😑
@harrytd3 жыл бұрын
Relish these films before the Wokists have them removed; lament the loss, despite its hardships, of a much happier and meaningful time and wake up to the fact that for all the technological advances, we are living among the ashes of civilisation.
@iliketilly80028 ай бұрын
Idiotic comment about wokists.
@harrytd8 ай бұрын
@@iliketilly8002 An idiotic comment by a wokist
@johnomelia29917 ай бұрын
So you’re complaining about not being able to see films like the film you’re commenting on? I certainly agree that you’re not ‘woke’ but it seems possible that you aren’t clear on what that means.
@harrytd7 ай бұрын
@@johnomelia2991 Knock it off with the sophistry. We all know what woke is and we suffer the destruction that follows in its wake.
@harrytd7 ай бұрын
@@iliketilly8002 Idiotic comment by a wokist.
@terranceparsons51857 ай бұрын
Ah yes! All the men wore hats and smoked pipes, using them to point with, the women kept home and the children were seen and not heard.
@ianwatt99043 жыл бұрын
Things change, sometimes for good, sometimes for ill. Fr Richard Coles served his curacy in Boston. Back then a gay man would have found it impossible.
@madcarew51687 ай бұрын
Wot....no mosques!!!
@utpalkumar61636 жыл бұрын
suitable all learns...
@barbarapineda57303 жыл бұрын
Needs transportation. A bonnet. 🚗 🚘 🚔.
@MrDaiseymay5 жыл бұрын
Blimey, I was 2 then.
@fredfarnackle54553 жыл бұрын
I was three and well remember the 40's, 50's and 60's. Emigrated to Australia in 1972, I could see that the Common Market (as it was called then) was going to end in tears. Thank goodness people woke up and voted to leave the EU - that (EU) was a debacle and a waste of money!
@MrDaiseymay7 ай бұрын
@@fredfarnackle5455 THANKS FOR SHARING. I'M AFRAID WE WERE TRICKED, WE NEVER GOT A FULL BREXIT.
@firosen53623 жыл бұрын
Interesting to note..... this film was made in the middle of World War II..... so not quite as idyllic as it may seem!
@jamessmith5303 жыл бұрын
No migrant workers in those days
@johnathandaviddunster389 ай бұрын
My aunt was a IMMIGRANT she worked and payed taxes for more than 45years as a nurse wiping arses of arseholes who hate Johnny foreigner
@peternagy-im4be4 ай бұрын
@@johnathandaviddunster38it's the sheer NUMBERS that people object to and i thoroughly agree. Indigenous people being shunted to one side by mass unwanted fcking immigration.
@user-ky6vw5up9m4 жыл бұрын
No NHS, No guaranteed secondary education, less treatments for illnesses, longevity less than now.
@gch8810 Жыл бұрын
Oh no, how could they have managed (sarcasm). They did just fine without those things and they led much healthier and fuller lives.
@vincekerrigan830019 күн бұрын
It was actually better then, and although medicine was not as technologically advanced, there was stiil a wealth of experience. Access was the same day at your GP, with usually a morning and evening surgery, and they made regular house calls including at night - you didn't wait months, or longer for treatment. A&E was exactly that, used for accidents and emergency only, so largely empty most of the time, and not blocked solid through being used as a substitute for the GP surgery. Other than for accidents, patients didn't telephone for ambulances - the first call was on the GP, who would visit the patient and decide if they needed to go to hospital, and would order the ambulance. Treatment was of it's time, of course, but there was no waiting, which is a massive downside of today's service. The treatments are far more advanced, but that is of no particular benefit if you can't access them.
@tazzmania498612 жыл бұрын
Ely ?
@TheCraggym8 жыл бұрын
Tazz Mania Boston
@MrDaiseymay5 жыл бұрын
read the info above
@user-ky6vw5up9m4 жыл бұрын
I live there so know i knowi am scum. Thank you
@NSResponder8 жыл бұрын
Price controls are idiotic. -jcr
@scottmitcell37503 жыл бұрын
So many white people ..who would have thunk it 🤔
@gch8810 Жыл бұрын
That is a great thing. Britain is a white nation and will remain so. The foreign invasion will be stopped.
@johnathandaviddunster389 ай бұрын
Millions of white Europeans killed millions of white Europeans at this time and they still are ..
@barbarapineda57303 жыл бұрын
It stated their health systems. In the yrs 1945s miss waked up. And shut fuck down.okay.
@martynjones85603 жыл бұрын
Easy to see how inbreeding might have been a problem - certainly the 2016 referendum result from Boston points in that direction ...
@gch8810 Жыл бұрын
Sounds like a lot of cope.
@vincekerrigan830019 күн бұрын
Well, look who lives in Boston now - very few would resemble those in the film.
@newroundheadcommandos25898 ай бұрын
Allas paradise lost , dont u love multiculturism .😊
@peternagy-im4be4 ай бұрын
Nope. Don't want it and don't welcome it. An idea born of by fcking imbeciles.