The Death of Britain's Most FEARED Subculture..

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Published 2024-02-29

All Comments (21)
  • @ihebbendebba2978
    As a non-british (normal) person, I appreciate Britain's ability to create endless subcultures every couple of years.
  • @richardIII3
    back in the 90s I went to see a Two-tone band called Bad Manners. I was a preteen when Bad Manners were popular so I didn't realise that Bad Manners was a skinhead band. There I was, one black man surrounded by 500 skins. They were fine. No one threatened me with a stanley knife so that was a result.
  • @EDWARDKILE
    I was Skinhead growing up in London and I’m still Skinhead at heart today. Long live the spirit of 69. I’m half Scottish and half Jamaican and raised in London.
  • @mattwales2734
    I'm an old man in New Mexico. Thank you for telling me what half the songs on my Specials and Madness albums were about.
  • @WillieTonka
    I remember in the early 80's hearing about skinheads and they would hang out at the video arcade in my city that had the best variety of games but I was too intimidated to go in because of what I heard about skinheads. Eventually, one of my non-skinhead friends decided to "take one for the team" and go down to the arcade and face them but to his surprise, they just looked him up and down and then went back to their business. Eventually we all went down to the arcade and the same thing happened. They just looked at us and went about their business. Eventually, after 2 months of going down there they became friendly with us & we ended up sharing the same taste in music (some of it being dub reggae & they introduced us to the Clash) so the media hype surrounding skinheads was just a hoax.
  • @FatNorthernBigot
    Now I'm 54 and balding, I have to embrace the skinhead haircut I hated as a child. 😂
  • @skankingrudeboy
    I have a shaved head, Dr Martin boots, a Harrington jacket, and a love of 60s Jamaican music. This video is mostly right, but the non-racist Skinhead movement was and still is a bigger deal than portrayed here.
  • @BK-pd1sq
    I grew up in 90s Bulgaria and I think that's when the skinhead culture was at its strongest here. They were full blown neo-nazis, and their favourite passtime was beating up gypsies, metalheads, hippies, and LGBTQ people, and adorning the cities with nazi swasticas and white power bs. I don't think music was ever as important to them as the their nazi nonsence, even though there were a few local ska-punk bands that were popular with them. A lot of this culture morphed into the football hooligans culture of today, but a lot of the more promintent skinhead neonazis grew up and started working in politics. So when I think of a skinhead, I always think of the violence and racism that surrounded them. Funnily, I've lived in the UK for some time and when I think about a British skinhead, I'm actually thinking about the skinhead part of the British LGBTQ culture. Dudes in Doc Martens, suspenders and shaved heads that you expect to be into some sort of kink but are generally super sweet and nice, and the complete oposite of the skinheads from back home.
  • @gauloise6442
    There's a lot of nuance missing in this analysis. I feel the entire skinhead era would make for a fascinating historical explanation, but no one wants to go beyond the sanitized story that has been repeated a million times before.
  • @gaillaffer7579
    As a skinhead from 79 to 84 ,it was a turbulent time. Im definitely not racist but loved “uniform” and the energy of Oi music and still do. My exceptionally shiny boots and cropped hair actually got me my first job and career. Though I can’t remember his name now, the area manager of Windshields Ltd , (now Autoglass) was in the shop when I turned up for a YOP placement,a work experience program. He told the manager to take me on as my appearance was immaculate. This was 1982 high unemployment, recession etc. I ended up staying for 11 years before moving to America and Safelite an international part of Autoglass. I guess what I’m saying is never judge a book by its cover.(you’re not). Great video. Thank you.
  • @Behemot_
    I'm from Spain, here the peak was late 80's early 90's, I was a SHARP at this time.
  • The idea that England must choke on multiculturalism is rich in this video whose host is conspicuously non-White.
  • @leewightman8619
    People always think of skin heads be racists but not all skin head gangs are neo Nazis
  • @sadmermaid
    Youve gone from little parkour videos to these in depth, long videos. They're great, amazing work mate
  • @DVDFRMN
    i was a Goth/Hippy in late 80s, walking with another Goth/Hippy dude we see 4 or 5 skinheads coming down the street, about 9pm, the smallest skinhead says to the leader "what about them?" hoping to get his violence fix for the evening.... the leader said "No, leave them, they look mellow"đŸ€Łi guess they wanted a fight that lasted longer than 20 seconds...
  • @LoFiMan1981
    " England looked like the back oif a co-op after ww2" .. mate it still does
  • @user-iw7gb6hx2j
    Got the post war immigration completely wrong. The Citizenship act that allowed commonwealth immigration happened in 1948, when the worst of the war damage was already sorted and the rest well underway. But the government never invited people to come from the commonwealth to rebuild. This is total nonsense, never happened. Even the Empire Windrush ship carrying those first Caribbean immigrants, that happened because the ship owner wanted to make more money on his return voyage from taking cargo to the caribbean. When it arrived the government and local government scrambled trying to calm people down and work out what to do with the people who had arrived. They actually paid for a bunch of them to go straight back! As I said they weren't invited to rebuild, this is nonsense.
  • @CJD666
    I was a skinhead at school in 1966 at 14 years old we were a crossover from the Mods who did wear parkas when riding their scooters. We lasted about 8-10 years and wore made to measure tonic suits to go out to clubs at night ( I left school at 15 and got an apprenticeship) and wore jeans and Dr, martens to football. We all sort of grew out of it as we grew older, it was a teenage and early 20's thing for us. we lived just outside South West London my mum and dad were South Londoners like a lot of my mates parents. Happy days going to Football on a saturday and Petticoat Lane and Brick Lane on a Sunday (my dad and his mate had a stall occasionally in Petticoat Lane when I was a kid) we and the Girls of the day were very smart and like the mods did dress up to go out we shared a love of reggae, Ska, bluebeat etc.and soul music with the West Indian boys there were skirmishes but not really to much about the racial aspects just different areas and young blokes getting into fights.
  • My uncle was an OG skin in the late 60’s, so you can imagine his horror when my cousin became the wrong type of skin in the 80’s