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Ramruma
05 Jun 24 05:25
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Date Joined: 11 Dec 02
| Topic/replies: 17,910 | Blogger: Ramruma's blog
7 minutes from a 1968 BBC Man Alive documentary that opens with placing a bet at the races. A young, middle class couple is living beyond their means.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=58g_vJLBmxU

You'd imagine having two good incomes, no children and a flat in an enviable part of London would make for a financially comfortable lifestyle.

Not for this young couple. They juggle money between their five bank accounts, spend half a week's pay at the races and write letters to millionaires picked out of Who's Who, asking for a loan of £500. Welcome to the extraordinary world of people living beyond their means.

Clip taken from Man Alive: Beyond Their Means, originally broadcast on BBC Two, Tuesday 4 June, 1968.
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Report Ramruma June 5, 2024 5:29 AM BST
The opening scene is the only racing content. The rest is an interview with these entitled, misguided fools on their "good incomes" of £20 a week each. He is a teacher, which gives a baseline for comparison with today.
Report sparrow June 5, 2024 9:08 AM BST
Earning far more than I did in 1968 London.
Report ged June 5, 2024 10:23 AM BST
Is it Epsom?
Report ged June 5, 2024 10:27 AM BST
Perhaps shot the week before at Sir Ivor's Derby meeting.
Report ged June 5, 2024 3:12 PM BST
The race he's having his pound on is the Rosebery Memorial (2 and a quarter miles, some of which would have wound between markers in the interior of the course), on the Tuesday, the day before Sir Ivor's Derby. It was won by Great Pleasure. You can see 'Great' and 'Gaudy' (for Gaudy Commodore) and the beginning of 'Jacthelot' on the bookie's board. But the race shown is a different one (usual story with films - bits and pieces from different things mashed together to look like one continuous whole) - I think it might be the last race on the same card, a 12-runner 3yo maiden decided by a neck, with the winner ridden by Sandy Barclay. Mrs D Robinson had a newcomer (100/6) unplaced in it, and that looks like the Robinson colours (with noseband) near the back of the field.
Report sludge June 5, 2024 3:21 PM BST
Quite a good watch . I wonder 50 odd years later......how did they get on , or in fact are they still alive ? The woman was quite tasty , and ofcourse had that quite attractive 60s vibe going on .
Report Ramruma June 5, 2024 3:24 PM BST
It looks like Epsom. What we need is someone with a 1968 formbook who can work out what the commentator or the young lad say. It sounded like Pandora's Bay but I'd not swear to it.
Report Ramruma June 5, 2024 3:26 PM BST
Written before but posted after ged supplied details.
Report ged June 5, 2024 4:53 PM BST
The winner of the maiden was Law Officer. I think the boy is probably shouting something else - he probably couldn't tell what won from his position, or even what was in contention. Law Officer was 'brown', and the winner on the rail looks just about dark enough to be classified so, imo. The only issue I have is that there could be more than 12 runners in the film, but it's hard to say. Few races at the meeting had double figure fields (apart from the Derby and Oaks, and it's neither of them), and all the other double figure field races at the meeting were won by 2 lengths or more, and the one in the film wasn't.

It was certainly a day of incidents on the track. In the long distance race (the Rosebery Memorial), 4 of the 10 horses came down on the infield (which probably helped to get the configuratiuon, and distance, banned). The winner, Great Pleasure, had run in the previous year's Derby, where he had held up the start having been reluctant to go in the stalls (the first year they were used for the race). He continued to show a dislike of the stalls, but it didn't matter this day, as they weren't used for this unusual race.

In the previous race on the card, (in which Crooner beat Right Tack), Geoff Lewis hit the deck when the saddle slipped on 1/3 fav War Lass. (only 5 runners). This was a 5f race for 2yos, another thing you don't see at Epsom any more. Geoff Lewis won the 2000 Guineas on Right Tack the following year.

The film appears to show another horse without a rider.
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