Homelessness & Poverty In Destitute Seaside Town 🇬🇧

  Рет қаралды 1,600,191

Wendall

Wendall

8 ай бұрын

Grimsby is a once booming fishing port on the North East coast of Lincolnshire in England. The town has fallen on very hard times since the sharp fall of its fishing industry from the mid 20th century. It once housed the world’s largest fishing fleet but now the industry is all but decimated. This has left an acute level of deprivation and decline in the town. On some streets 70-80% of shops are shuttered or boarded up, jobs opportunities are few and homelessness is rife. Many locals born from the mid 1970’s onwards are institutionalised by this situation and see poverty as the norm.
I took to the streets and chatted to the warm and friendly locals, asking them what life is like in Grimsby and neighbouring seaside resort Cleethorpes.
#reallife #britain #uk #england #grimsby #cleethorpes #homeless #poverty #crime #costoflivingcrisis #streetinterview
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Пікірлер: 5 900
@saffronsolo9668
@saffronsolo9668 8 ай бұрын
Britain needs to take care of its own population before others.
@jonnydoeson5562
@jonnydoeson5562 8 ай бұрын
Take care of yourself you big baby.
@G4RY1159
@G4RY1159 7 ай бұрын
@@jonnydoeson5562 All the loyal hardworking staff that once worked in the hotel industry were looking after themselves, then those same Hotels were filled with migrants and the loyal people all paid off, what were they doing wrong ?
@markbebber2284
@markbebber2284 7 ай бұрын
It’s a political choice not to look after our own.
@jonnydoeson5562
@jonnydoeson5562 7 ай бұрын
@@G4RY1159 they can get another job. I would. What’s the problem?
@DuggyDarko
@DuggyDarko 7 ай бұрын
None of your problems are the fault of immigrants. None of these peoples situations in the video is the fault of immigrants. This is a managed decline that lays squarely at the foot of the government.
@JamieRussell-cq6zi
@JamieRussell-cq6zi 6 күн бұрын
*I was homeless, got into drug's went to prison and then I got to know Jesus and he changed my life...Heaven came through for me in my finances too, getting $50,000 in 2months . I can support God's work and give back to my community. God is absolutely more than enough! Now I have a new identity and a child of God*
@MildredChen-wx1wy
@MildredChen-wx1wy 6 күн бұрын
Hello how do you make such monthly ?? I'm a born Christian and sometimes I feel so down of myself because of low finance but I still believe in God.
@Clara46630
@Clara46630 6 күн бұрын
What a testimony!!! 🙏🙏🙏I'm genuinely curious to know how you earn that much monthly
@KyleighBouchard
@KyleighBouchard 6 күн бұрын
I work at a restaurant here in Houston Texas. Things have been really difficult as I'm a single mom and trying my best to pay bills and take care of my daughters.
@JamieRussell-cq6zi
@JamieRussell-cq6zi 6 күн бұрын
I started pretty low though, $2000 thereabouts. The returns came massive. Joey is in school doing well, telling me of new friends he's meeting in school. Ava Brenda Harry you're a miracle
@AudIversen
@AudIversen 6 күн бұрын
Can I also do it??? My life is facing lots of challenges lately
@JoshRobins
@JoshRobins 5 ай бұрын
I'm a musician and I like to go for a busk round different towns up and down the country on the run up to Christmas. This year, same as the past two years, I have got the best response and the most money in Grimsby. It is the only town I stay in for two days. The people here are incredibly friendly, they've got time to listen to music. Even the gangs of young lads with their faces covered up give me positive vibes and friendly nods, telling me to keep it up. The people here are generous, with their time and their money. I spend all day chatting to strangers, and while I'm playing they often bring me coffees and pastries from Greggs. And shop workers/owners only ever come out to say they've enjoyed listening to me, never to complain, which is unheard of when you're busking. I'm well aware that this town is suffering serious neglect and poverty, but it's worth saying that the people here are in it together, and there for each other, and you can see that.
@charlesnewton3878
@charlesnewton3878 5 ай бұрын
I HAVE LIVED IN GRIMSBY ALL MY LIFE 74 YRS. IT IS SO SAD TO SEE THE TOWN LIKE THIS, NOT JUST THE FISHING ,THE FACTORYS GONE TOO.
@magirusdeutzjupiter2234
@magirusdeutzjupiter2234 2 ай бұрын
Now the GRIM in Grimsby is real.
@user-qy9rt9cy2b
@user-qy9rt9cy2b 2 ай бұрын
It’s time the government looked after our own people and stopped giveing our hard earned cash away too other countries and buying weapons for Ukraine . Start at home get our people off the streets
@CheGuvera-ip8dc
@CheGuvera-ip8dc 2 ай бұрын
Now it’s just rimsby 🍩 proper shite hole
@JohnDoe-ti8uj
@JohnDoe-ti8uj Ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@CheGuvera-ip8dc
@CheGuvera-ip8dc Ай бұрын
Should call it rimbsy now
@Mr.SLovesTheSacredHeartofJesus
@Mr.SLovesTheSacredHeartofJesus 8 ай бұрын
I am an American. This video popped up into my feed. Even i've of heard of Grimsby. It's been the butt of jokes for years i think. We have the same situation here too. Many towns and cities where former manufacturing and steel works have closed up and left. Leaving devastation behind. My heart goes to these poor souls. Maybe the town could somehow capitalize the fact it's near the sea. A port for incoming ships etc. Anyway, another great video. And all the best to our UK cousins from the USA.
@angelagardner5230
@angelagardner5230 8 ай бұрын
you too
@lizmacleod8903
@lizmacleod8903 8 ай бұрын
Greetings to our American cousins across the pond 😊
@lizmacleod8903
@lizmacleod8903 8 ай бұрын
Incase people have a short memory, during the Thatcher era, Labour shop stewards in the industries induced strikes again and again until it became rediculous. British steel industries lost contracts amongs many other industries. The factories shut down and the contracts went to the far East. I get fed up hearing from people expecting the publice to work their buts off paying tax, nothing is free . Any politician that promises higher benefits and free this and that aims at borrowing more money. The only saviour is investment in infrastructure and industry to generate work . I know it's terrible to be relying on handouts but we need to promote work .
@cultfiction3865
@cultfiction3865 8 ай бұрын
@@lizmacleod8903Arthur Scargill was a hero
@petesmitt
@petesmitt 8 ай бұрын
Sacha Baron Cohen made and starred as Nobby in a movie called Grimsby, which was screened worldwide; Nobby became an alcoholic football hooligan who started a life with his girlfriend Dawn and their 11 children in Grimsby.. says it all about how Grimsby is seen and represented.
@AnonAnonAnon
@AnonAnonAnon 7 ай бұрын
35 years ago I was based miles up the road from Grimsby in the Army. One weekend a few of us travelled down for a weekend on the p iss. What a fantastic weekend we had! Great pubs, chippy, friendly locals and lovely weather. To see it turn into this is heart breaking. Another forgotten town.
@lovesrc4296
@lovesrc4296 7 ай бұрын
Thing is, if these people do so much as start protesting in the right places trained people from the forces will just do as they're told and push them along or else. If anything is going to change it must start with a revolt from the people protecting the thieves that call themselves elites and rulers. The people holding the weapons are the only ones between the public and the elites. Consider that.
@oz5791
@oz5791 7 ай бұрын
Kirton ?, went on p iss at Grimsby and Cleethorpes, both good nights.
@realbigtrouble
@realbigtrouble 7 ай бұрын
I remember my mother taking me to the fish markets as a very young boy in the early 80's - a decade later as young teenage lads my mates and I would slip out early hours down the docks on our mountain bikes. We would evade security to go harass the prostitutes waiting for the fishermen to come back. There was a pub there that didn't open until midnight that served the fishermen coming home.
@Dietchipsthefiddler
@Dietchipsthefiddler 7 ай бұрын
Concrete!
@partyguinness
@partyguinness 7 ай бұрын
Cool story bro…from 35 years ago….fucking hell.
@stevennorth383
@stevennorth383 5 ай бұрын
Im a taxi driver in Newcastle upon Tyne. Last week i took an immigrant down to east marsh paid for by the government £273 fare i couldn't believe it. House waiting for him guess he thinks the long hard trip from Egypt was well worth it. I was shocked at the place but saying that parts of the North East have huge problems too. Probably find these problems all over the UK. Can't see any of the current politicians getting to grips with it soon.
@user-zw5hs4pl9n
@user-zw5hs4pl9n 18 минут бұрын
Disgusting mate and are own are on the streets what a joke
@jenjenbeingbored
@jenjenbeingbored 7 ай бұрын
I'm Grimsby born and raised. Worked my arse off and followed my dream to live in Los Angeles and every time someone American asks about my hometown they really can't believe it's as bad as I tell them it is. Everyone thinks England is this classic elegant country with gorgeous landscapes and architecture, when the reality is so far from that and so many people are in the same position as the people in this video. Really insightful video, makes me feel a weird sense of nostalgia for GY, but also reminds me why I left.
@-_YouMayFind_-
@-_YouMayFind_- 7 ай бұрын
I mean these streets excist in the USA too haha. Even more homelessness on the streets with drug use. I think the UK is very similar to the USA in many ways.
@Nils.Minimalist
@Nils.Minimalist 6 ай бұрын
And now please talk about Skid Row, L.A. 🙄
@loadapish
@loadapish 4 ай бұрын
​@@-_YouMayFind_-we r 20 years behind america. I believe we will have huge homeless camps like they do. I believe 50% of the population will be working homeless (slaves) in about 70 years
@jonesjermaine4387
@jonesjermaine4387 4 ай бұрын
Ask the real question why haven't the British discovered dental Hygiene yet?
@kevingray5646
@kevingray5646 4 ай бұрын
The English vote Tory and wonder why they are poor, uneducated, unhealthy and left behind……a failed state ran by a privileged wealthy elite.
@BlackPanthaa
@BlackPanthaa 7 ай бұрын
Grew up there, a big issue is mentality too. So many are convinced it's a nice place to live, they don't go out and explore the rest of the county even. It's really sad and one of the worst places to be born into, even just mindset alone
@liverpoololdschool
@liverpoololdschool 7 ай бұрын
But you just mentioned virtually every town and city, locals are like that everywhere.
@BlackPanthaa
@BlackPanthaa 7 ай бұрын
@@liverpoololdschool definitely not, there's only a few places I've known that have this. Especially when do deprived
@liverpoololdschool
@liverpoololdschool 7 ай бұрын
@@BlackPanthaa lad everywhere is like that, people are the same they stay in the same place they're whole lives that's the vast majority of people.
@zopposimone9223
@zopposimone9223 7 ай бұрын
thats so interting, I would never have guessed that you once were a citizen there. Love your videos btw you made me love the crew 2 when I was younger
@radec1744
@radec1744 7 ай бұрын
lmao didnt expect to see you here
@hauntological
@hauntological 7 ай бұрын
Heartbreaking. We were a poor family when I was a child and the highlight of our year (if we could afford it) was going on holiday for a weekend to Cleethorpes (in the mid 1970s). We loved the place. It was like heaven on earth to us. To see how Grimsby and Cleethorpes has suffered since then and the way it is in 2023 is so, so sad.
@pigknickers2975
@pigknickers2975 5 ай бұрын
We used to go to Mablethorpe, same story. Revisited a few years ago, it was sad.
@user-ig3em2df2g
@user-ig3em2df2g 4 ай бұрын
Close borders for Hindu and Indian people Save British nation
@hauntological
@hauntological 4 ай бұрын
@@user-ig3em2df2g WTF has that got to do with anything?
@RaferJeffersonIII
@RaferJeffersonIII 4 ай бұрын
Was that a lie?
@hauntological
@hauntological 4 ай бұрын
@@RaferJeffersonIII What?
@IKP1000
@IKP1000 6 ай бұрын
Thank you. You just gave me an education I didn't know I needed. It's shocking how this is invisible in the mainstream media.
@The-Dream2ker
@The-Dream2ker Ай бұрын
I live in Grimsby and know quite a few of the people you've interviewed, they're all great people and it just shows you can't judge someone by their situation
@kidbexl8663
@kidbexl8663 7 ай бұрын
Honestly so glad Grimsby is getting this sort of spotlight, the rest of the UK needs to see this raw and unfiltered. There is potential for it but it needs work but there are definitely people trying to make it happen.
@cgavin1
@cgavin1 7 ай бұрын
I have been following the other fella wandering turnip is it? Its been very depressing. A solid chunk of middle and northern England look like Grimsby these days with no end in sight. The death of the high street and the ensuing collapse in regional authority budgets, already cut by central government, is fast creating a "rust belt" nation.
@XXPIXX1980XX
@XXPIXX1980XX 7 ай бұрын
No offense but if things are that bad move away, why stay?
@ufokuk77
@ufokuk77 7 ай бұрын
not as easy as that you need money to move and if you aint got it well ya kinda stuck and our gov dont do shit where they should but they help all those coming in from elsewhere@@XXPIXX1980XX
@Tomos_J-J
@Tomos_J-J 7 ай бұрын
If everyone had that mindset Britain would've lost the war once the first air raid started. It is endemic.@@XXPIXX1980XX
@treeaboo
@treeaboo 7 ай бұрын
@@XXPIXX1980XX It costs money to move, money that they don't have.
@TravellingTorunn
@TravellingTorunn 8 ай бұрын
This is quite painful to watch. Something has gone horribly wrong 😢
@WotsisFace
@WotsisFace 8 ай бұрын
Or horribly right… which would be much worse…
@svenandersen1459
@svenandersen1459 8 ай бұрын
yes yes yes@@WotsisFace
@tracysmith245
@tracysmith245 8 ай бұрын
@@WotsisFace same in Stoke why has it gone so awful has to be by design Stoke had top pubs clubs shops loved going town nothing there I could not get a job in the 90s was a lot better them days than it is now need a phone digital id to get universal credit does not matter if you are a normal person my daughter had top grades gone to university now no one gave her a job for a year what the hell is going on i ended up doing care work i hate every minute of it but i know where things are going. poor kids if they make cash no more how are starving homeless going to live they will starve to death not right for what a new currency stoke made pottery mining towns back in the day my granddad went down the mines nan textile mills
@peacocklava
@peacocklava 8 ай бұрын
Really hard-hitting video Wendall. Very sad.
@G4RY1159
@G4RY1159 7 ай бұрын
The biggest crime in these places is lack of investment, they weren't perfect in the past but they still thrived a lot more for one simple reason ............Employment!
@laura1998xoxo
@laura1998xoxo 6 ай бұрын
Grimsby definitely isnt the nicest place to live, but these are only the worst parts of it. I've lived here for the last 16 years. I also lived in Leeds for 4 years. There are some much rougher areas in Leeds, such as Harehills! People seem to think that cities are much better and safer, but personally I believe that this perception comes from the fact that the rough areas in cities are further away from the tourist or rich parts. I feel much safer walking through the marsh than harehills for sure! I also find living in Grimsby much more peaceful and homely than cities, if you keep to yourself or manage to get into a decent area its good. And the 'rough' areas are full of extremely friendly people too, I've always felt safe and welcome. Yes Grimsby isn't ideal but its my home and I love it❤
@willriley6964
@willriley6964 7 ай бұрын
Excellent documentary, sadly this is going to become more and more commonplace in Britain in the coming years.
@WendallExplores
@WendallExplores 7 ай бұрын
Accurate prediction
@laurajoyjester8424
@laurajoyjester8424 5 ай бұрын
And the US
@MrSloika
@MrSloika 4 ай бұрын
How is that possible? Wasn't Brexit suppose to fix all of this?
@TroyTempest777
@TroyTempest777 4 ай бұрын
​@@MrSloika Because Brexit only benefitted the Tory elite,not the rest of us.
@chrism8234
@chrism8234 4 ай бұрын
As am American I'm not making light of this documentary. It's extremely sad but the difference between there and here is this guy can walk down the street without being offered drugs or robbed and maybe killed. It still doesn't look as bad as where I live honestly. The entire western world in in decline though sadly
@miranda_imp
@miranda_imp 7 ай бұрын
I’m Lincolnshire born and bred and remember Grimsby back in the fishing days, the docks were bustling and I would occasionally call into the docks to buy fish only just landed. Such a sad demise and the forgotten people of Grimsby deserve better than this!!!
@ijustdidahugeshit
@ijustdidahugeshit 7 ай бұрын
I am a qualified lesbian too
@GentlemanGaming1122
@GentlemanGaming1122 7 ай бұрын
​@@ijustdidahugeshitWho asked you?
@DaveMalin-cz5xe
@DaveMalin-cz5xe 7 ай бұрын
great@@ijustdidahugeshit
@TheMasterblaster32
@TheMasterblaster32 7 ай бұрын
​@@ijustdidahugeshitI'm a qualified carpet muncher.
@angelagardner5230
@angelagardner5230 8 ай бұрын
As a elderly, im so sorry to see this. I found it hard in the seventies here in Brum. Today im glad im older but feel sorry for the youngsters today. My grandkids etc .
@noelfleming3567
@noelfleming3567 8 ай бұрын
That's d biggest worry our children what's coming next drugs everywhere
@CarterKey6
@CarterKey6 8 ай бұрын
I’m in the US and have the same fears for my children. Everything is collapsing. We have homeless everywhere even small towns but we house illegal immigrants for free.
@angelagardner5230
@angelagardner5230 8 ай бұрын
same over there carter. Imagine how we feel here too . Our small island@@CarterKey6
@tordoff80
@tordoff80 7 ай бұрын
i think same for my kids i was born in the 80s and ive seen this country go to sh??
@DR-fn1if
@DR-fn1if 7 ай бұрын
@@noelfleming3567Chinese fentanyl
@vanessahenderson1850
@vanessahenderson1850 6 ай бұрын
Grimsby is my hometown where I was born and raised. I can honestly say, that the social deprivation is paramount. The Authorities have been talking for decades that they are working on encouraging investment to the area. Locals are yet to see anything happen. Addiction, Homelessness and Unemployment levels are exceptionably high. I left school in the 80's and I can honestly say, that nothing much has changed since then. The only positive thing that I can actually say about the place, is that in the 80's, 90's and up until around 2008, the shopping mall used to be really good. Now, it's not worth even going into the mall because there's barely anything in there. Victoria Street, Freeman Street and the Riverhead areas are an absolute eyesore. It's so sad to see such decline. I often speak to the homeless guy who you filmed sat outside Mcdonalds in the Town Centre. Sometimes he's with another guy and they're always really polite. We've chatted about how dire the system is and the fact that, you're on your own due to lack of support. There's places set up that are supposed to offer support and advice for the homeless and for those that are suffering with addiction. After listening to what people have told me, all these so called services do is offer lip service nothing more. Basically, things have become so Corporate within that field. As many of us know, there's a lot of money being made off the back of the Unemployed, Addiction and the Homeless.
@jc238
@jc238 4 ай бұрын
Didn't we have a lovely time the day we went to Grimsby 🎶🎶
@realbigtrouble
@realbigtrouble 7 ай бұрын
I grew up in Grimsby between 77 & 93 - it was a rough town then but this video legit made me cry to see the level of decline in Grimsby. My heart goes out to all those seemingly abandoned by our government. Mariners for life!!
@oldishandwoke-ish1181
@oldishandwoke-ish1181 7 ай бұрын
Not seemingly. Just abandoned.
@craigduncan8833
@craigduncan8833 7 ай бұрын
Perhaps the people of grimsby shuyldn't have voted for a Tory MP.
@realbigtrouble
@realbigtrouble 7 ай бұрын
@@craigduncan8833 Grimsby was a Labour stronghold when it was killed - Tony Crosland was MP in 1976 when the fishing war with Iceland was acceded and Austin Mitchall after that. No, it was 30+ years of Labour that screwed Grimsby NOT Lia Nici in 2019. You got a Conservative MP after getting intergenerationally screwed by Labour. I knew Austin Mitchell personally through my step-father who was a local councillor in Grimsby '88-'93, he's a good man, he vehemently opposed his own party policies over the fishing wars. You clearly are an uneducated ideologue with no real understanding of what has happened there or the policies that killed the town.
@steellio5526
@steellio5526 7 ай бұрын
​@realbigtrouble Trouble is they were really voting for the party, not the man.
@realbigtrouble
@realbigtrouble 7 ай бұрын
@@steellio5526 and it was Labour Party policies that killed Grimsby, along with trying to be part of the European club under Tony Blair
@Sam_ware
@Sam_ware 6 ай бұрын
Great vid, I don't normally comment on things but had something I wanted to share. My nan was from Grimsby and lived there until about 5 years ago, I loved visiting when I was a kid. 5 years ago was when her dementia started to set in so we moved her closer to the rest of the family in the West Midlands. We lost my grandad in 2008, so she'd been living alone for about 10 years. In the months leading up to us moving her out of Grimsby, it was becoming clear that something was wrong. She told me she'd gone shopping and forgotten her purse (some kind folks then paid for her shopping for her) and on another occasion she'd tried to go to the shop in the middle of the night I believe, and fortunately a nice man found her and drove her home. It was scary at the time knowing she was far away from us while also being so vulnerable, but I'll never forget the kindness of those strangers who looked out for her back then. It's really sad to see what the town and potentially those people are going through now.
@jonnyevans6589
@jonnyevans6589 4 ай бұрын
My mum was born in Grimsby in 1939. She met My Farther here in the 50's. They both used to tell me fantastic heart warming stories about the towns wealth and community. They would leave their doors unlocked in the evening, fisher men would give the children sweets and there was never a shortage of work. I moved away in my teens but have now live where I was brought up, bought a house and one day hope to bring up some children here. What made Grimsby great was the fishing industry but now its greatness lye's in its people.
@sloppysausage1662
@sloppysausage1662 7 ай бұрын
I was born in Grimsby and spent the first 18 years of my life there. I returned after 15 years away and was heartbroken to see how the town centre looked so abandoned.
@DarkLordofTheSith69
@DarkLordofTheSith69 7 ай бұрын
Me too I left in 2006 I still go back to visit family but its destroyed and I won't be moving back
@sloppysausage1662
@sloppysausage1662 7 ай бұрын
@DarkLordofTheSith69 yup, I left in 1998 and before I revisited I told my wife about the shopping centre Freshney Place and the bustling market area next door where you could buy nearly anything and how its all so good. Got there, and the town centre looks abandoned , Freshney Place is just a shadow of its former self, and the market was just deserted , hardly any stalls . I was just struck dumb. I admit I was a teenager when I left, and probably nostalgia hyped up my memories a bit . But shit me
@anna-qg1mc
@anna-qg1mc 7 ай бұрын
I’ve also lived here for 18 years (I’m going to university next year) and it’s so sad. Most of my life growing up was occupied by being eager to get out of this town for good because it’s just so miserable.
@sloppysausage1662
@sloppysausage1662 7 ай бұрын
@anna-qg1mc that's sad to hear. What family I have left in Grimsby all kept telling me its a crime-ridden crap hole now ( they live behind Freeman Street ), I thought they were exaggerating until I visited them. I remember the air BnB we stayed in had bolted the welcome mat to the path, and the wheelie bins were chained to the wall. My wife was shocked when we saw a drug deal going on outside the little corner shop we went to.
@jasontrue8056
@jasontrue8056 7 ай бұрын
@@sloppysausage1662 That is due to the changing nature of society. Town centres don't offer value for money compared to online business as shops need to absorb more fixed overheads like lighting, staffing etc. Once the big name shops start to go it's a domino effect as more and more pound shops move in. When you can purchase globally cheaper than locally guess what happens in all walks of life? Other ways society has changed is due to town centre banks being replaced with ATMs and mobile banking/chip and pin, post offices closing, community centres closing, youth centres closing, recreational fields disappearing or not being maintained, youngsters and old people not being catered for in any way
@ianthomas739
@ianthomas739 7 ай бұрын
I started my working career in Grimsby in the early 70's in a bakery ( Massey's ) in the middle of town. I used to walk around the docks to see the trawlers coming and going. All the major fish processing factories were there and the place was heaving. To see this wonderfully empathetic video is so sad and a disgrace to those in power that have allowed this to happen. Respect to all the good people of Grimsby and I hope things improve for all of you
@The-Great-Brindian
@The-Great-Brindian 7 ай бұрын
Ian, can you make your point please I'm curious as to what it is you want the masses to understand. I get what you just typed but I want to learn something from the comment you made otherwise I'd consider the comment having been a complete wastage of my time and energy. I went out of my way to read your comment, the least you could do is perhaps shed some light into what is 'troubling' you my son.
@bunchofgrapesorafig
@bunchofgrapesorafig 7 ай бұрын
​@@The-Great-Brindianbot bot
@The-Great-Brindian
@The-Great-Brindian 7 ай бұрын
@@bunchofgrapesorafig Thanks, I appreciate that.
@stephenallison1522
@stephenallison1522 7 ай бұрын
It's the industries own fault for over-fishing -- simple as that. If you remove any species from their natural environment before the age of sexual maturity, how can they possibly breed and multiply? It's got fuck all to do with politics or fishing rites, it's GREED! Grown men here feeling sorry for themselves saying they have to rob and go to prison, what a load of shite!
@Goodmentalhealth.
@Goodmentalhealth. 7 ай бұрын
.
@fuksushi3766
@fuksushi3766 5 ай бұрын
Your commitment is awesome I watched most of your output It's really good, keep going this is pure valid documentary. Much love
@NuRetroReactions
@NuRetroReactions 2 ай бұрын
I grew up in Grimsby. I left 10 years ago. The town is in a absolute state. Its sad. My family and friends are all there. Grinding to survive.
@Ms.Norths.Musings
@Ms.Norths.Musings 8 ай бұрын
I think the government should refurb those boarded up shops and turn them into homes for the homeless. Infact, they should demand it.
@lewit1391
@lewit1391 8 ай бұрын
ok then give money for refurb-do you think gov has money-? no gov doesn't have-if no one works all on benefits dont pay tax there is no money for ''refurb''
@griswald7156
@griswald7156 8 ай бұрын
@@lewit1391 well a lot of that money was spent on HS2 North ..so that was a few billion thrown away..and they need 6million a day to service the boat migrants bill.
@jeannemillsom9300
@jeannemillsom9300 8 ай бұрын
@@griswald7156 8 million now , an absolute scandal.
@GG-qo4qo
@GG-qo4qo 8 ай бұрын
The government are happily funding hotels to become migrant hostels, if they had any appetite to help the homeless they would have included them in this scheme.
@gingerali
@gingerali 8 ай бұрын
The Government has plenty money for the freeloaders that come by the boatloads soon the boarded up shops will be replaced by another culture who will demand building of mosques and prayer centres
@MbisonBalrog
@MbisonBalrog 8 ай бұрын
This is so strange. Britain is heavily populated and dense. One would think ever piece of real estate be extremely valuable.
@alexmac337
@alexmac337 8 ай бұрын
It is extremely valuable....for growing weed.
@eddieharris6004
@eddieharris6004 8 ай бұрын
Not if there has been no real investment to replace the collapsed fishing industry....still waiting for "levelling up" to take off....Boris?
@jimjoelliejack
@jimjoelliejack 8 ай бұрын
@@eddieharris6004Just a heads up buddy, BJoe has been gone for a while now, it’s an Asian gentleman called Rashid Sunuk according to the leader of the western world. I grew up in a shit hole called Woodend in Coventry, it was fecking dire.
@sunnyjim1355
@sunnyjim1355 8 ай бұрын
@@eddieharris6004 Yet another who's still living in a passed paradigm and doen't grasp the reality of the current paradigm we live in... 🤦‍♂
@sunnyjim1355
@sunnyjim1355 8 ай бұрын
@@qumbe 🤣 Tell me, by which 'democratic' process did Sunak become PM? I'll tell you - NONE! Wake up.
@katyajovich2308
@katyajovich2308 3 ай бұрын
Thankyou for doing this in a respectful humanising way
@hashpling
@hashpling 16 күн бұрын
Anyone who was a kid in the 90s will remember Fantasy World, which was a children's party venue situated above the arcade of the same name right next to the train station. It was a time when soft play ruled over screens, and the excitement was palpable for weeks if you knew you had been invited to a party there, or indeed if it was your own one coming up. From the moment you raced up the carpeted stairs to the reception to greet your guests, to the first dive in the ballpool, it was a time of pure childhood innocence.
@skfalpink123
@skfalpink123 8 ай бұрын
Back in the 1960s, fishing was the FIFTH largest industry in Britain. Some 10,000 vessels being serviced by over a million people - and that's before we even start looking at fish processing, sale and distribution! And the political classes of this country gave up all of those fishing waters without even consulting with those who would be ruined by their decision
@Leberteich
@Leberteich 7 ай бұрын
I believe that technology has a lot to do with the loss of jobs in fishing, just like in farming. There are giant trawlers now run by a handful of sailors taking as many fish as a hundred vessels used to. Not saying we made all the right political decisions w.r.t. fishing, but there is so much (or little) that politics can do when faced with satellite- guide megatrawlers. The failure of politics is in (not) transforming Grimsby's economic model.
@fenlander7114
@fenlander7114 7 ай бұрын
@@Leberteichjust cos it can be done doesn’t mean it must be so, political will is quite capable of limiting the tech you describe. This is a long running problem of natural resource over extraction,dating back to the likes of the Hudson Steam Trawler co of a century ago - plenty of profits for the bosses and now look.
@adammoss5284
@adammoss5284 7 ай бұрын
Them factory ships hoovering it all up aren’t even ours. It’s been going on for way way too long. No wonder the place is suffering. I have a few relations still there and over the last 40 odd years it’s been heartbreak to see how things have slowly deteriorated on each visit. Last time I was on freemo they were going to shut the market and more than half the old shops were shut. It’s very sad. My father was born on Orwell Street in the 20’s and his brothers and sisters went through the depression years but as bad as that was it’s nothing like as tough as it looks there now. Good people too. Breaks your heart..
@guzzergusher
@guzzergusher 2 ай бұрын
he booted my dog in the balls when i was in the chippy 🐕🦶🏿 not a bad lad tho
@glennfolau6959
@glennfolau6959 7 ай бұрын
I'm from New Zealand, and many of us have heard of Grimsby Town football club, but not many of us are aware of Grimsby's past as a thriving fishing town, with a thriving port. It's the same in our part of the world, where once agricultural and manufacturing towns have had paper mills, timber mills close, possibly because of high manufacturing costs and competing with cheaper operating costs elsewhere. It is a real shame when towns, which relied upon a certain industry, go into decline.
@rjdavey68
@rjdavey68 7 ай бұрын
It wasn't just thriving, at one time it was the single biggest fishing port in the world
@DR-fn1if
@DR-fn1if 7 ай бұрын
Jacinda and Luxon will make NZ same
@glennfolau6959
@glennfolau6959 7 ай бұрын
@@DR-fn1if who knows, it's global, it's happening in parts of Australia, the US.
@user-yh8we8gn4f
@user-yh8we8gn4f 7 ай бұрын
You mean rugby??? Chur bro, I'm a queenslander living in UK, 17 years of it😢
@user-yh8we8gn4f
@user-yh8we8gn4f 7 ай бұрын
Lower hut?
@GlitchZitch
@GlitchZitch 16 күн бұрын
i've grown up around grimsby and cleethorpes. it's a pretty small, close-knit community, everyone's just trying their best to get by and survive. it's a real shame, i wish i got to see it's hayday and i can only hope things improve
@user-xt8km1dh4q
@user-xt8km1dh4q 6 ай бұрын
Really important work you're doing by documenting parts of the Country that many are unaware of. Liked and subscribed.
@stevo728822
@stevo728822 8 ай бұрын
I was born there in the 60's but never returned. Thing is if you sail across the North Sea to Norway and Denmark, you will find similar size towns full of wealth and much better lifestyles. We suffer in this country from a political class and media that are only Londoncentric. Places like Grimsby are invisible to them. Some of it's downfall is due to a change in eating habits. When I was a lad..lol...we had kippers for breakfast, not full English. And I bet those kippers were landed in Grimsby. The Danes still catch and eat plenty of herring from the North Sea.
@paulrowe9604
@paulrowe9604 7 ай бұрын
What a load of TWADDLE !!!
@paulrowe9604
@paulrowe9604 7 ай бұрын
We had a cod war with Iceland around 1973 and fishing declined from 1975 !!! It was nothing to do with changes of taste !
@jasontrue8056
@jasontrue8056 7 ай бұрын
@@paulrowe9604 No Government invests in the north. It is only private investment and a lot of them are cowboys fleecing incompetent local authority's. Margaret thatcher shafted this country. She sold off public assets to the people who could afford to tie up savings in long term investments, sold council houses even though it was obvious a lot would end up in the hands of landlords, broke the unions during the miners strike, let the steel and car industries decline, introduced poll tax/ council tax etc. There was no investment in education, skills and training. No attempt to diversify the economy with tech or renewable energy or anything. As the person you are responding to says (he's right and you are wrong) only Southerners matter to the English Government and everything above Oxford would be better off being part of Scotland!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
@michelleparkinson1118
@michelleparkinson1118 7 ай бұрын
My father was a chief engineer on one of the trawlers. He was made redundant in 1978. We had to move abroad. Thankfully, my father's family had fishing vessels that he could then work on. It is so heartbreaking to see how this once thriving town has become now become so destitute 😢
@quokkapirquish6825
@quokkapirquish6825 7 ай бұрын
You didn't HAVE to move abroad. Could've just moved cities.
@jeph33
@jeph33 7 ай бұрын
Wot do you care? You don't live there.
@michelleparkinson1118
@michelleparkinson1118 7 ай бұрын
@quokkapirquish6825 Sure , as there were so many vacancies for seamen in this country 🙄 and I was a child, I didn't really have much of a choice!!!
@quokkapirquish6825
@quokkapirquish6825 7 ай бұрын
Its like saying 'my dad was a bus driver but we had to move abroad when everybody started getting taxis' @@michelleparkinson1118
@The-Great-Brindian
@The-Great-Brindian 7 ай бұрын
Nostalgia can indeed provide comfort, but it becomes problematic when it impedes your ability to make sensible and well-informed decisions. Moreover, shedding tears over events from as far back as 1978 is not just a sign of a broken heart; it might indicate deeper underlying issues. It's crucial to seek the expertise of a mental health professional, perhaps even a psychiatrist, to address these concerns. I say this not to patronise you, but to genuinely offer help. It's time to confront the reality of 2023 and prioritise your mental well-being.
@StewartBrand85
@StewartBrand85 7 ай бұрын
It's funny how entitled some people are - "I've burgled someone's home but I deserve to be given more for nothing than innocent people from other countries"
@SamLesGo
@SamLesGo 6 ай бұрын
You can rarely have it both ways. When it’s (poor) area people tend to be more welcoming and friendly. The more rich the less empathetic in my humble opinion.
@heidigarrison5702
@heidigarrison5702 7 ай бұрын
I am impressed how eloquent these men are, their speech is fluid...few fillers, very few ahs, ums or unnecessary words. I think they really would take a chance and make the most it....they just need the chance.
@radeakins
@radeakins 7 ай бұрын
Born in Grimsby and still my home. Its difficult living here. It feels as if we are forgotten by government and businesses. Documentarians like yourself seems the only attention we get. We are an end of the road town, you need reason to come here, not just pass through. Job hunting is a nightmare even for people without criminal records. If you have a job, you stick to it like a limpet because there is no guarantee you'll find another in good time. I consider myself lucky that I've only been unemployed 4 days in the last 20 years but always remain fearful that my luck will finally give out at any time. I can't afford to leave Grimsby, those who can will, but I can't imagine living anywhere else. People of Grimsby and Cleethorpes have a strange comradery which is difficult to put into words. I wouldn't change it. The future looks bleak but we still carry each other and take it on the chin. I know many people in this town and many know me and everyone will tell you the same thing. There is a tribal essence here and all are welcome. You also got the name wrong: Its GREAT Grimsby.
@daddybones45
@daddybones45 7 ай бұрын
Grimbarians have the driest humour and the tightest bullshit filter. UTFM!
@heathstjohn6775
@heathstjohn6775 7 ай бұрын
Wonderful to read that. But I feel I must add: for whom do the people there vote ? It couldn't be CON/Lab/Lib, could it ? Think of all the magnitude of political corruption, and that ! only what's been discovered, and, last night, in Tamworth and Bedford: what was their great idea there, to reinvigorate the land ?: CON/Lab !! And the 65% who didn't attend the polls?: that's just another even more cowardly way to be complicit; just tacit consent. Their hands have the keys to their handcuffs given to them, given to them !, in the polling booths; they pick up those little pencils, and, instead of picking the lock by choosing another name, they tighten the barrel the more.
@neilfoster814
@neilfoster814 7 ай бұрын
I agree, folks from there are salt of the earth. Used to knock about with a few ex trawler men, hard working lads, even dated a couple of lasses from Gy/Clee, top lasses who were demons in bed!
@daztee8322
@daztee8322 7 ай бұрын
It's a shit hole bore off
@jasontrue8056
@jasontrue8056 7 ай бұрын
It's not difficult living in Grimsby. It all depends on the mindset. If you had good parents who worked at least most of their life and they are decent role models with values (the bedrock of society) then you should know right from wrong, go to school and do reasonably well if not better. From there you can move out of town to pursue specific job/ education because there will be the element of nepotism where you favour your own family/friends if in the position to employ otherwise there is strong competition due to females working more in the last 40 years unless you are prepared to work in shops and factories and educate/train yourself. If you manage to get a decent job the cost of living is below average. It's different if you grew up with bad parents/in bad areas or in care or witnessed/suffered abuse/ neglect, poverty, crime, unemployment, prostitution etc then you have something of an excuse for how you turn out but a lot of people expect better jobs than they have despite no evidence to suggest you deserve better than what you're in as it was the result of choices you made up to that point in life unless you are learning disabled, have mental health or physical health issues
@JordiPZ
@JordiPZ 7 ай бұрын
One million views! Well done mate. Been following since the start
@garyhesketh8164
@garyhesketh8164 6 ай бұрын
Very interesting, well put together. Well done. Also sad. Levelling up, down south.
@paulshaw3882
@paulshaw3882 8 ай бұрын
My parents and most of my family were born in Grimsby, I was born there too and never, has Grimsby been in "this" state. Even during WWII there was hope but not now. I can't help but feel that this is intentional .
@BrickTop-oi7hx
@BrickTop-oi7hx 8 ай бұрын
It’s deffo intentional! A class war! Tory scum
@bertibear1300
@bertibear1300 8 ай бұрын
Of course it’s intentional
@peacocklava
@peacocklava 8 ай бұрын
To what end?
@kevinpye3140
@kevinpye3140 7 ай бұрын
​@@peacocklavaour end
@englishvolunteerforce5862
@englishvolunteerforce5862 7 ай бұрын
​@@peacocklava To end European civilisation!
@FielDofroses-bv1jx
@FielDofroses-bv1jx 7 ай бұрын
At 13:09, what Anthony says makes you appreciate having a roof over your head, wash area. He has a smile on his face and a calm demeanor, I find his words about " I feel normal,"when describing what he deems attributes to that as very very touching. It's every day essentials for most of us that we don't even think about.
@PeterSellers-yw9us
@PeterSellers-yw9us 7 ай бұрын
I know that Anthony he is from Armthorpe he is a good lad his brother died years ago of drug over dose
@clooxies2952
@clooxies2952 7 ай бұрын
I walk past him quite a lot😊
@jamesh8648
@jamesh8648 7 ай бұрын
@@PeterSellers-yw9us I met him, really nice lad.
@artconsciousness
@artconsciousness 7 ай бұрын
In 1998 I had an awakening and saw the grim future the UK was heading towards. The awakening was that the UK was on the verge of embracing capitalism as the new religion. The seeds of this awakening began in 1987 when I watched the movie "Wall St" with my brother. In that movie the main character "Gordon Gekko" gives a speech about greed being "good." After the movie I said to my brother; "That speech chilled me to the bone and I have a strong feeling that it may well be taken up as a new form of belief system." My brother laughed and mocked me saying that I had a tendency to: "think too much." As the years went by I began to notice signs that I was right. One day I phoned my bank and they asked; "What is your account number?" Instead of; what is your name? - So now I am a number and not a person. The privatised railway companies started using inferior materials to save money which lead to crashes. The same happened in the aeroplane industry. Why, to try to increase profits. And so I started going around my local town holding a poster that read "Don't put profit over people"" - I also wrote letters to the newspaper and the Govt telling of my fear for the future if we copy America down the "profit" is God path. For 5 years I did everything I could t wake people up to the future the UK was heading towards but all that happened was that I was laughed at and ridiculed. I was ridiculed so much that it lead to the end of my marriage. Finally in 2003, the local 200 year old church was demolished to make way for an Sainsbury's supermarket. When that happened I saw that as a sign that the masses had consciously and subconsciously abandoned belief in a higher power and embraced capitalism as the new ideology to live by. When money is religion and profit is God the first thing that happens is that people become an object that can be bought, sold or thrown away. You become a number in a system. You are either an asset or a liability to that system. Therefore the rich are assets and the poor, the sick, the elderly, the criminals and the handicapped are liabilities - a burden on the system. Money does not have a soul, it does not have a heart. It is ruthless and it does not care if you live or die. In such a system honour, morals and integrity doe not exist. All that matter is that you make a profit no matter the cost, no matter who gets hurt or who dies. And yet this was the system the masses chose. In 2004, after 6 years of trying, I gave up my mission to awaken people and decided to emigrate to the one country I felt treated its citizens as people with souls rather than soulless objects. Before I left I wrote one last letter to my local newspaper and they published it: "I believe the UK is heading for a cold and brutal future in which there will come a two-tier society. The rich and the poor. At the moment the churches are being torn down and banks and supermarkets are being built in their place. The people of the uK have abandoned Christianity and embraced capitalism. That was their free will choice. But I predict a day will come when the people of the UK will wonder where christian values have gone" In the last few years I have had many of my old friends in the UK write to me, phone me, many are those who laughed and ridiculed me, telling me that my prediction is coming true. It does not please me to see towns turning into places only fit for ghosts. It does not please me to see that my prediction was right. But that is what happens when you tell the horse where the water is but the horse chooses to head in the direction of the desert instead. The consequence of that decision is that the horse will die of thirst.
@davidworley8637
@davidworley8637 5 ай бұрын
Lived in Grimsby until 1992, loved the place I used to sing in a folk club there on a paddle steamer. Puzzles me that the people who have got no money always appear to have money for tattoos, ear rings etc. I used to go onto the docks and into the pubs and occasionally treat people with no money to a pint and listen to their stories of better times. Some of them were out of work trawlermen - they use to be at sea for all the month apart from a couple of days and their wives looked after the kids. I used to sit in and listen to what they had to say. When the Fishing Industry in Great Grimsby died the Trawler owners got a lot of compensation money, but the Fishermen who were considered casual workers got no redundancy pay. I have been to Jaywick in Essex as well it is poorer than Grimsby. Hopefully the North Sea Oil Boom will bring back the money to the Northeast and Humber.
@bgregg55
@bgregg55 6 ай бұрын
This is a difficult & painful watch but I thank you for making it.
@fiddlestickzmuzik
@fiddlestickzmuzik 7 ай бұрын
Be nice if people could move into those buildings and fix them up so people don't have to live on the streets. I'm originally from England, live in Australia now and it makes me feel so gifted to have a job and somewhere to live. Never take what you have for granted ever.
@walter3433
@walter3433 5 ай бұрын
pom pom pom
@mamandalatruck1
@mamandalatruck1 7 ай бұрын
I worked Grimsby recently. Yes it is desperately poor and has massive social issues. But! Having worked for 28 years as a Midwife I can honestly say they have the most outstanding world class Maternity unit and services they have. Amazing. No where else like it in the world.
@user-lm9fe4uw3s
@user-lm9fe4uw3s 5 ай бұрын
C'mon Love . World class
@costeris35
@costeris35 4 ай бұрын
Based on your worldwide experience? 😂
@Kam-King213
@Kam-King213 4 ай бұрын
Is anyone even having babies over there
@SeasonalParadise
@SeasonalParadise 4 ай бұрын
I was born in Grimsby in 71, spent the 70s in Cleethorpes going to Thrunscoe School, and then moved to Grimsby going to Macaulay and Whitgift. My granddad was a docker. I really enjoyed it. Overall, it was a good place to grow up. You're right, the people were friendly. I'm glad to see you discovered they still are. Grimsby has a great leisure center, nice places to walk, some great cycling in the Wolds, and some good pubs. Funny to see the pier change into a massive fish and chippy. I remember it for being a nightclub. My friends and I used to stay out until one or 2 AM at the pier and then I have chips across the road. It's a shame to see all the shops boarded up, but online shopping has killed most local shops. They really should just get converted to residential.
@langwang9130
@langwang9130 6 ай бұрын
this town is just the definition of depression. Even the sky is a dull, gray nothingness!
@malcolmmitchell6529
@malcolmmitchell6529 Ай бұрын
In 78 it was a vibrant town, thank you tories
@charisaxiopoulos9725
@charisaxiopoulos9725 Ай бұрын
And the sea is grey
@bigmac2722
@bigmac2722 7 ай бұрын
I feel incredibly sad for all the people featured in this video. Particularly the first two guys. They were both incredibly articulate but have obviously not been given the same opportunities as some of the rest of us in the UK. Something has gone desperately wrong and the government should be ashamed.
@annedoyle222
@annedoyle222 7 ай бұрын
The government wants it like this,it’s all part of the globalists agenda the disgusting energy of greed generates nothing but suffering and misery on the poorest most vulnerable members of society,it makes my blood boil especially since it’s only going to get worse,meanwhile the rich get richer
@CW-Design
@CW-Design 7 ай бұрын
I think some of their life choices have played a big impact too.
@Chalize
@Chalize 6 ай бұрын
@@CW-Design For sure. You can tell they're on the street for a reason.
@tihannabear
@tihannabear 6 ай бұрын
If you've spent a heavy amount of time around addicts, you can also see through some of what they say. They may say they want to change but without access to proper ABILITY to change, their hands are tied and stuck in a cycle of drug abuse.
@ozzylad2497
@ozzylad2497 6 ай бұрын
Really?? Yes, we all have different opportunities in life, but if you don't take those opportunities, you may never get anywhere in life and end up like some in this video. just like the bloke at 4.50 with the dodgy tatts on his face, nothing says more than "I don't want a job" than face tatts! ... poor life choice ...
@kirishima638
@kirishima638 7 ай бұрын
Really good of you to actually speak to the locals and the homeless. They’re not all druggies and criminals
@michaelb2388
@michaelb2388 7 ай бұрын
No just half of them
@johnfowler7266
@johnfowler7266 7 ай бұрын
Why is it good of him? He is capitalizing on a bad situation and making videos!!! More than half are drug users!! In fact I would say 99% and the 1% that don’t are fucking lying!!!!! Or alcoholics!!!!!
@theelitest5795
@theelitest5795 7 ай бұрын
Can’t watch things like this because it’s not a true reflection of the area. Filmed the wrong places completely. There’s more to the areas than the substance users who make themselves homeless. There’s waaaaaay nicer areas than the town centre of Grimsby. Actually go out there and do a proper video on the area.
@ian_y
@ian_y 7 ай бұрын
@@theelitest5795 just by looking on google maps it can be seen there are plenty of nicer areas, including shopping areas. There will always be homeless people as not everyone can fit into society. As you say, using substances heavily is not compatible with a normal existence.
@fredericktarr8266
@fredericktarr8266 7 ай бұрын
And more than 50% of blacks, but the anti-White government makes sure to put them in council housing first@@michaelb2388
@watsoft70
@watsoft70 5 ай бұрын
You just made Look North with this video. There were people trying to defend the place and what little is left of the fishing industry, but you nailed it! Grimsby is a forgotten dump and Cleethorpes is only marginally better. It's sad, but the same in many costal areas that relied heavily on fishing and/or tourism. 😢
@jamesmcdougall6338
@jamesmcdougall6338 5 ай бұрын
Yeap great video my friend. Very sad to see these places go to decline. But yet all the rest are in hotels. Bloody shocking.
@AusAnon91
@AusAnon91 7 ай бұрын
Your storytelling and articulation is incredible. Thoroughly enjoyed the whole thing and it's a shame to see. There's so much that could be done with those boarded up businesses/homes, im sure redeveloping one of those rows into government housing would do so much not only for the hopes of people but also the "image" of the town, which is what the people paying will more than likely only care for. With love and kindness from Australia, thankyou. Subbed
@thesingingmolecatcher5461
@thesingingmolecatcher5461 6 ай бұрын
For what it’s worth .. I worked with a load of guys from Grimsby and they’ve gotta be the best bunch of lads I’ve ever met , but niceness doesn’t keep the wolves from the door . This is happening across Britain, the world is changing , you either move with the times or get left behind 😢
@robertmortensen
@robertmortensen 6 ай бұрын
Sorry mate but I beg to differ. It depends on your Governments response to investment requests. We had the same problem up here as in Grimsby but the Government changed the tune. Frederikshavn (my hometown) in the north is today home to a booming industry for scrapping and refurbishment of oil platforms and tankers. If you want funding for your new project you have to play by our rules - period!
@BaronEvola123
@BaronEvola123 6 ай бұрын
Not easy to do if you can't afford to move. If you're taking care of an elderly parent, or two, small kids, for instance, unless you have big money, you can't just get up and go.
@alexandrarusu6230
@alexandrarusu6230 5 ай бұрын
I'm Romanian and i live in Grimsby town and I really like it, the people are ok and they will help you if you need anything ❤to everyone
@DjNikGnashers
@DjNikGnashers 8 ай бұрын
This is a great video, thank you for putting the spotlight on this forgotten town. The Nunsthorpe and Grange estates have always been a bit run down, but the whole of Grimsby is now in a shocking state.
@DTAGAFFA
@DTAGAFFA 7 ай бұрын
the people from the nunsthorpe and grange that was causing issues before have gotten older and had kids and moved into east marsh now :)
@magirusdeutzjupiter2234
@magirusdeutzjupiter2234 2 ай бұрын
This place is EFFING ROUGH. Late at night kids about 7 yr old were using drug syringes to play darts on some ones house front door at 11pm 😁😁😁 thats ROUGH!!😜🤥🥶.....😁😁
@cjherbert
@cjherbert 8 ай бұрын
I feel for them. I grew up in Lincolnshire and this seems a world apart from the pleasant, rural backwater I remember. The political problem with Grimsby and investment is that it's not on the way to or from anywhere, with the demise of fishing and the docks there is, in the view of the government, almost no reason for a town of that size in that location to exist. It's in managed decline. There are glimmers of hope: up-to-date food processing has always been a local employer, and, with a boost, it could become a hub for green energy and offshore wind farms with apprenticeships and good quality jobs. Again, I wish everyone well.
@kjp1232
@kjp1232 8 ай бұрын
Yet they spend 8 million a day puttin Albanian single men with no passport in 4 star hotels
@tonemc6047
@tonemc6047 8 ай бұрын
@@kjp1232It’s the Kalergi plan.
@dessmith7658
@dessmith7658 8 ай бұрын
It's grim up north
@andyt8216
@andyt8216 8 ай бұрын
@@kjp1232No, the Albanians are sent back. Unfortunately it’s the misogynist, Islamist, Middle Eastern and Afghan ones who we let stay and God knows to what end.
@tradeladder146
@tradeladder146 8 ай бұрын
Grimsby is Tory, Go figure. 🤷‍♂
@theabandonedhunter3604
@theabandonedhunter3604 2 ай бұрын
I nearly went to Cleethorpes on New Year’s Day when we played Grimsby this season ⚽️Unfortunately I had to get into work quickly the next day but I wanted to do the Match and get some overnight accommodation as Grimsby has been a town that has always made be curious. Top video mate …. Smithy
@WendallExplores
@WendallExplores 2 ай бұрын
Lovely people, worth a visit, regardless of the decline
@angusmackay6196
@angusmackay6196 5 ай бұрын
I used to work on a Grimsby fishing vessel in 1991 -92 , I cannot believe the state of the place nowadays , it’s unbelievably sad , an absolute state . It was quite busy back in the early 90s now it’s completely dead
@M15Guys
@M15Guys 8 ай бұрын
Sanctioned "Cos I missed an appointment '" .... all the time in the World and he missed an appointment with the organisation that is his source of income ? I am 63 and still walk 8 miles to work and back daily .... What is wrong with these people ??? "
@rustydumper
@rustydumper 5 күн бұрын
Lazy, no ambition and the rest of us are paying for it. I was homeless and I worked nights picking and packing in a chilled warehouse, no excuses.
@Daedricbob
@Daedricbob 7 ай бұрын
I grew up in one of the surrounding villages in the 80s. We used to enjoy Mum & Dad taking us to Grimsby for the shops - I remember there was an amazing toy shop on Freeman Street that was heaven as a kid! It's so sad to see the state it's now in
@scottyw0tty420
@scottyw0tty420 7 ай бұрын
lol i remember that toy shop, it was on the corner, opposite kent street at the dock end of freeman street, or freemo as we call it.... im sure it had 2 floors too
@simonlewis5166
@simonlewis5166 7 ай бұрын
Ramsdens
@scottyw0tty420
@scottyw0tty420 7 ай бұрын
​@@simonlewis5166 ramsdens was decent, but the shop on freeman street was also good... used to enjoy the video game area in ramsdens.... was on the right as you got to the top of the stairs.
@alexhaddock4554
@alexhaddock4554 7 ай бұрын
@@scottyw0tty420Used to go to Ramsden’s as a kid with my Grandma, was magical to me in those days.
@user-tm6hg9xu2v
@user-tm6hg9xu2v 6 ай бұрын
This is essentially like Gary Indiana in the us, you go down the street and you see 8/10 places shut down and anything thing still open has guards in place for crimes, poverty is worldwide and there’s levels to it but what remains the same is it sucks for everyone and even middle class you pay for all the bills and things which I’m grateful for but you’re left with nothing to save for the future. I pray one day we’ll all be able to live a “normal” life without the struggle of dying without a meal or without a home at least.
@Gaiathechi
@Gaiathechi 7 ай бұрын
I lived there for a few years. It's an incredible place, i recall feeling very down after a while living there - i saw people have seizures from drugs on my breaks, saw petty crime regularly, couldn't afford to even give the numerous homeless any change so used to often carry a few pre-rolled cigs to give them instead, helped basically mediate a homeless couples' domestic argument in order to prevent nearby lads intervening and giving the guy a beating to leave her alone... so much more, i could write a book about it. Yet nothing bad ever happened to me... sure, foxes occasionally made me jump walking home late at night from work, but never people. Honestly, i could write a whole book about my short time there... There was always an urgency to escape while there in that bleak enviornment yet all 8 have looking back are fond memories of the people. They had a lot of pride in their dying town, an unusual yet strong concept of community. Lots of people without much at all, yet always willing to help each other.
@moretimeneeded56
@moretimeneeded56 8 ай бұрын
Britain is not a rich country. It is a poor country with some rich people. Without London, the UK would be poorer than Mississippi, the poorest American state.
@museonfilm8919
@museonfilm8919 8 ай бұрын
That makes sense, yes - just one square mile in London where all the serious financing is going on. Outside of that everything is just shit, and falling apart.
@cultfiction3865
@cultfiction3865 8 ай бұрын
I’d agree with that too. Politicians tell us it’s a rich country when it’s a poor country with some rich people in it such as them. I’m from the mining heartlands of Yorkshire and there’s no shortage of poor bleak hovels considering MPs are telling us we are rich
@Gary-vx7gp
@Gary-vx7gp 8 ай бұрын
Shocking really.
@pabo-qv3nx
@pabo-qv3nx 7 ай бұрын
​@@cultfiction3865 Maybe rich but not through resources but through squeezing the public(taxes on everything) but definitely the money is SQUANDER left right and centre by the CORRUPT PLOT TICIANS .
@dean-gm1lg
@dean-gm1lg 7 ай бұрын
The south as always been given priority over the north ,Grimsby could still be thriving if we caught and procesed our own fish again
@sneakykebab
@sneakykebab 6 ай бұрын
Great coverage. This really puts the grim in grimsby. Sad thing is these are ordinary decent people that are just shat on & forgotten about by the government. Industry, economy & wealth should be spread equally, but unfortunately the rich are gettIng richer while the poor get poorer. Im not from the UK but i hope the situation in places like Grimsby improves.
@blasterrax5621
@blasterrax5621 4 ай бұрын
what an amazing video! thank you
@PietiaKedzierski
@PietiaKedzierski 7 ай бұрын
I have been living in the nearby town of Cleethorpes for the last 10 years. Despite the poverty, it is a friendly town and the people are generally good. However, the main problem lies with the parasitic council and lack of sensible investments to rebuild the place. Grimsby & Cleethorpes has the potential to become a better place to live, but the current economic situation doesn't help.
@Grimberian72
@Grimberian72 7 ай бұрын
as a grimberian myself! i do agree with you regarding the local council making stupid investment choices at the expense of the locals.
@70sChild-bv7ox
@70sChild-bv7ox 7 ай бұрын
I lived down Tunnard Street just 2 minutes from where you interviewed the postal lady. We moved away in 1986 and I can assure you, that is when the decline began. This is why my parents decided to move away. It really does upset me when I see the desolation. The vast majority of my childhood memories are from Tunnard Street and I still have many friends who grew up on the East Marsh. We all say exactly the same thing and it’s sad.
@jasontrue8056
@jasontrue8056 7 ай бұрын
Yeas the East Marsh, Port areas and most of West Marsh are the worst areas. Not too bad like you say in the 80s but even then areas near ports and shops and factories like cleethorpes road, freeman street, oxford street etc were always on the verge of dodgy, they just took over from the Nunsthorpe
@ducatimann
@ducatimann 5 ай бұрын
This is how journalism was when panorama and world in action 1st started ...this is what youtube should be used for ...well done
@12345gerrard
@12345gerrard 4 ай бұрын
Universal love and helping everyone you can has never been so important
@patrickscott838
@patrickscott838 8 ай бұрын
There should be a program to get those homeless people back on the right path!
@morris8398
@morris8398 8 ай бұрын
Sorry to say .. if they are illegal immigrants the government will go out their way to a help them the government don't care about us need to stand and fight
@stevenmoore3480
@stevenmoore3480 7 ай бұрын
you can lead a horse to water...
@paulrowe9604
@paulrowe9604 7 ай бұрын
There should be a program to re vitalise Grimsby to help the decent people who are not druggies or boozers or lazy ! In other words the great majority of grimbarians !
@richardstott6023
@richardstott6023 7 ай бұрын
Be nice if we had the 36 billion the government wasted on Track and Trace covid phone app....
@ElsieJoy39
@ElsieJoy39 7 ай бұрын
They don't want to be "on the right path"...there are plenty of opportunities for them to do so
@thursday1679
@thursday1679 7 ай бұрын
Not from Grimsby but it is reminiscent ( on a much smaller scale) of Detroit , where basically everything revolved around one industry and once that went into decline , everything else did as well ...very sad to see and I genuinely hope things get better for the people who live in Grimsby.
@Koutsimouka
@Koutsimouka 5 ай бұрын
What was Detroits one industry? Curious
@finalbanese9359
@finalbanese9359 5 ай бұрын
@@Koutsimoukathe car industry, I’m the 60s it was known as ‘motor town’, and was where the very first ford production line was
@L1623VP
@L1623VP 3 ай бұрын
Yes, I was thinking the same thing but only of Cleveland, Ohio, Youngstown, Ohio, and Buffalo, New York when the steel industry left. Those cities never rebounded.
@tihannabear
@tihannabear 6 ай бұрын
Blaming one industry as a whole can't be denied. Newfoundland - in Canada, had a Cod Moratorium in 1992 and life hasn't been the same on the island. Islanders try, many head west or to Ontario to work from afar but, the decline in fishery is huge to many regions.
@philk2149
@philk2149 4 ай бұрын
Felt really sorry for these guys they seem look good people and want to do the right thing just haven't been given any opportunity to do so... I wish you guys all the best don't lose hope
@nicolebyron5484
@nicolebyron5484 7 ай бұрын
After watching your program and having grown up in North East Lincs, I checked out charities in that area that help homeless people and have just sent a fairly large donation from my CAF charity account to Harbour Place. I was shocked at how much Grimsby has gone downhill. So sad. This Gov doesn't give a dam about anywhere north of London and anyone except their greedy selves. Got to go, blood boiling now!
@apocalypse_____
@apocalypse_____ 7 ай бұрын
UK sucks 😞
@vanessahenderson1850
@vanessahenderson1850 6 ай бұрын
Harbour Place has been taken over. The council now have their fingers in the pie and things are far from being good. People aren't getting the help/support that they are led to believe. All that's happening is lip service nothing more which is why I refuse to donate to this place. Instead, I go around the area and I hand out food and money. That way, I know that the less fortunate are getting a bit of help and that the monies isn't going into some brown envelope within the corporate system.
@Kcd265
@Kcd265 6 ай бұрын
It’s been happening. This is just the tip of the iceberg believe me. God bless
@genaromicol7347
@genaromicol7347 5 ай бұрын
why?@@apocalypse_____
@genaromicol7347
@genaromicol7347 5 ай бұрын
great. fuck britain
@bonecruncher2641
@bonecruncher2641 7 ай бұрын
I live in Grimsby and the main problem we have is a uncaring,corrupt council.
@YaNansCrustyToe
@YaNansCrustyToe 7 ай бұрын
The councils n government don’t care about anyone
@TriviaChallenge
@TriviaChallenge 7 ай бұрын
Tories by any chance?
@extraneus1630
@extraneus1630 7 ай бұрын
@@TriviaChallenge you realise Labour will piss away our money too, they are all sick and evil the lot of them
@VictoriaSharpeMusic24
@VictoriaSharpeMusic24 7 ай бұрын
I'm 14 (15 in dec) and yes, Grimsby is appalling right now, even for schools and rent.
@williamcaldwell-smith3865
@williamcaldwell-smith3865 7 ай бұрын
The council's have been taken over by criminal cabal all over the UK
@annedoyle222
@annedoyle222 7 ай бұрын
This is heartbreaking,sadly we live in terrible times where money and greed generate terrible misery and suffering,what makes me angry is doesn’t need to be like this
@shaunstevenson8078
@shaunstevenson8078 3 ай бұрын
Interesting video 👌
@grahamjarvis2009
@grahamjarvis2009 7 ай бұрын
I am from Grimsby, Lived here all My life, The Online shopping world has killed the high street. We are at the end of the train line, end of the motorway, we are not connected with big cities. The guys you interviewed if given a job today wouldn’t turn in tomorrow, it’s the mindset. He missed his appointment and lost out of £200, you are homeless, surely getting £200 and turning up for your appointment is an absolute priority. I work, I’m not rich, I provide for my family, but you have to want to work, drag your self out of bed and want to contribute to society. There was no mention of the wind sector Grimsby which is a major part of the docks now, a growth sector of the town, fish work will dry up eventually and Grimsby will take another knock in the unskilled labor sector. The fishing has long gone, a handful of crabbing boats going out that’s about it. The fishing industry in the Uk is worth 1/10th of the Uk gaming industry. It’s gone and it won’t be coming back. Grimsby is home for me, I’m a townie and the city life isn’t for me, it has its problems like anywhere, the internet has killed shopping and the high street again the high street will be in a state of decline each year. Drugs drag areas down, Policing isn’t the best, we need more police on the streets but that’s a government issue. Oh and one more thing…. Up The Mariners… Clap Clap Fish 🐟
@Spuddins54
@Spuddins54 7 ай бұрын
Being from Scunthorpe, a stone's throw away, a lot of this translates to my town too. No investment in the high street, not many job opportunities. As Grimsby has declined with the loss of the fishing industry, Scunthorpe has declined with the uncertainty over the steel industry, I can sympathise a lot.
@deadendwaterfall
@deadendwaterfall 7 ай бұрын
I'm originally from Scunthorpe and I'd feel hard crushed to find anything good to say about Scunthorpe, I wouldn't feel safe anymore in most areas of the town.
@CalRapz
@CalRapz 7 ай бұрын
Your steel industry is still going
@user-ni2vk9xl2v
@user-ni2vk9xl2v 7 ай бұрын
Scunthorpe isn’t much better 🤣
@Spuddins54
@Spuddins54 7 ай бұрын
@@CalRapz It is but it's future is uncertain, as I said.
@Spuddins54
@Spuddins54 7 ай бұрын
@@user-ni2vk9xl2v that was kind of my point.
@deejay5224
@deejay5224 6 ай бұрын
Great video. Sad to see the decline of industrial cities.
@edenhundsdoerfer7971
@edenhundsdoerfer7971 5 ай бұрын
Great video Wendall!
@Aelwyn666
@Aelwyn666 7 ай бұрын
It's very sad and eye opening to see this. I hope things change. Thank you for bringing this to our attention. Great video, mate. All the best.
@deadendwaterfall
@deadendwaterfall 7 ай бұрын
Last time I was in Grimsby, the urge to weep never felt greater, I couldn't get back to Hull quickly enough, I know Hull has poverty issues too, but Hull seems like Grimsby's richer brother. Even my dog which we got from a family in Grimsby hates the place being mentioned.
@ams1897
@ams1897 7 ай бұрын
I think that’s overplaying it a bit. The city centre has definitely had some money spent on it, but the city still has a lower life expectancy, lower wages, etc. I’ve always seen Hull, Grimsby, and Scunthorpe as the same places really, the only difference is size and quality of town centre
@ehkirkio
@ehkirkio 7 ай бұрын
Sorry but what a load of melodramatic bollocks
@jasontrue8056
@jasontrue8056 7 ай бұрын
Are you kidding me? Hull better than Grimsby? In what way? Hull is dump and ever further north!
@Kris_1708
@Kris_1708 5 ай бұрын
@@jasontrue8056Hull is not even ranked in top 40 worst places anymore …get a grip
@stevenhighams4190
@stevenhighams4190 5 ай бұрын
@@ams1897 We're not the same at all; one of us is in Yorkshire and the other two might as well be on the moon.
@slappedhappy9549
@slappedhappy9549 Ай бұрын
Really sad!😔 Listen to Morrisseys EVERYDAY IS LIKE SUNDAY! Times change! Wish it would go better for these nice seaside towns!✊🏼🍀
@forktruck71
@forktruck71 5 ай бұрын
It's such a pity to see people at the edge of poverty blaming other poor people. The rich have really worked on that mind control.
@theresam1963
@theresam1963 8 ай бұрын
Blame the government giving our fishing waters to foreigners
@BatTaz19
@BatTaz19 8 ай бұрын
Perhaps you could start by returning stolen property to "foreigners"? 😊
@martinwilde2737
@martinwilde2737 7 ай бұрын
Oh and did Ted Heath get a brown envelope for over 250k? - worth a million or two in today's money. The government should be driven into the sea.
@unionjakjakson
@unionjakjakson 7 ай бұрын
The skippers made very good money from this. De-commissioning their boats and selling their eu quotas. Did not help the people that worked for them, but it made a few very wealthy.
@DropB
@DropB 24 күн бұрын
Take a look at the map...
@marcusmotley2550
@marcusmotley2550 7 ай бұрын
My Mum grew up in Grimsby when it was at its peak ,my uncle and his brother had trawlers and the place was thriving I remember a Docks full of activity and a brilliant high street It’s CRIMINAL the neglect it has endured On the flip side after all that neglect the locals are overall great people I was a member of a boxing club in Tunnard st east marsh for 20years Never saw any trouble ,kids playing football in the street and you could park any car down there it would not be touched They are overall good people that deserve a hell of a lot better
@stephenallison1522
@stephenallison1522 7 ай бұрын
It was probably your greedy uncle and his greedy brother who took all the fish and left none in the sea.
@marcusmotley2550
@marcusmotley2550 7 ай бұрын
@@stephenallison1522f you had a brain you’d be a lot more dangerous
@Thaidave
@Thaidave 6 ай бұрын
born and bred , living in GY for 58 years and all my adult life its been a shithole glad i got out two years ago
@Robin-sc1lf
@Robin-sc1lf 5 ай бұрын
I grew up in Blackpool. All my childhood and teenage life was spent there. It was pretty rough back then in the 80s - 2000. My family were probably middle class and lived in a decent area, but I went to school with all the kids off the council estates and poor neighbourhoods, who were all my mates growing up. It was tough not to get involved with drugs and petty crime as a kid. Even me from a stable family got tied up in it so I could see how easy it was for my mates, who had nobody pointing them in the right direction. I'm the only one of my mates that got to go to University and I have a good job. Some of my friends ended up in prison, some died from drug addiction, one of my close friends was stabbed to death, a couple killed themselves. Even now that I live in Cambridge for work I still consider Blackpool home and I have only ever been back twice in 10 years. Each time I go back I see more decline. Today blackpool is at the top of the league for all the wrong reasons. 8/10 of the poorest neighbourhoods in the country are in Blackpool, it has the lowest life expectancy of the England, double the national average suiccide rate, 1 in 3 have serious mental health conditions. Through consistent lack of investment over the last two decade, Blackpool is one of the worst places to live on every measurable statistic. However, some of the warmest, most inviting people you will ever meet.
@senianns9522
@senianns9522 8 ай бұрын
If the money was so important to that guy---! How on earth does he miss an appointment!? I would be there waiting for hours ahead of the appointment!
@limitedmark
@limitedmark 8 ай бұрын
Being from north Lincolnshire I have watched most of the major towns go downhill , its a sad time.
@brycecurtis8483
@brycecurtis8483 6 ай бұрын
Grim indeed! Praying for you all.
@cello4009
@cello4009 4 ай бұрын
Shocking to see a rich country living their people like this...England it´s not just what we see on Internet/Television, like London, is much more.....Good job Wendall, the World need to see that..
@sommesoul33
@sommesoul33 7 ай бұрын
I went to Grimbsy on my own and i found it a very friendly place. Locals took me into their homes without me asking as i was alone. They done it because they genuinely wanted to help (i never asked). They were single young men too (just platonic strangers) and met one of their parents. I then got train back to Scotland. There was no snobbery from the ones who helped me.
@rtm1619
@rtm1619 7 ай бұрын
😂 unless you're brown they look at you like a terrorist
@steviejrr
@steviejrr 7 ай бұрын
One of these times they'll murder you mate, going into strangers homes?
@android584
@android584 7 ай бұрын
A young blonde woman in her own? I can see why people were so friendly.
@sommesoul33
@sommesoul33 7 ай бұрын
@@android584 they were just genuinely nice men to me. They didn’t try anything or say anything that was creepy.
@clooxies2952
@clooxies2952 7 ай бұрын
@@sommesoul33They were tryna hit mate im not sure theyd do the same for a young brown man
@neilfoster814
@neilfoster814 8 ай бұрын
Having spent a LOT of time in Grimsby and Cleethorpes (including the docks) I can say that the vast majority of the people are lovely, but yes, the decline is sad to see.
@jimbo43ohara51
@jimbo43ohara51 7 ай бұрын
These characters telling the tale could do with a bit of a clean up as well. Not sure if this is the average Joe Blow in Britain but heaven help us.
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