Paranormal. Trish, Pete, Karen, Kelsey and Tony investigate St George's Vaults Cheltenham
A night vigil at Cheltenham's St.George's Vaults. On the lookout for anything paranormal. Landlord Del Barnes.
Statue of the first ever England manager, Sir Walter Winterbottom, unveiled at St. George's Park
Sir Trever Brooking, Roy Hodgson, Jimmy Armfield and Graham Taylor and more pay homage to England's first ever manager, Sir Walter Winterbottom, at the unveiling of a bust at St. George's Park.
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Prestbury Park - all in the bush
all in the bush
RACING ROUNDABOUT
In spite of the bad weather, the traditional race meeting at Epsom was one place where there was plenty of action. Winner of the Ranmore Selling Handicap Stakes for 3-year olds was Benign, with Silver Star second. ® At Hayling Island, the sun was just warm enough for a dip. But the kids had a wonderful time! ® Now, White City and the exciting Great Britain versus United States match. In the men's 100 yards, all eyes were on Bob Hayes from America, who just managed to beat Ron Jones. The 4 x 110 yards relay was a British win, thanks to the Jones Boys Ron, David and Berwyn and Peter Radford. Britain's Dorothy Hyman won the women's 100 in 10.7. That great American athlete John Pennel jumped a new world record height of 16ft 10¼ inches in the pole vault. Coming home first in the 3 mile event - Bruce Tulloh. ® At Bayonne, France, no records but plenty of bones were broken at the annual Cow Baiting Festival. In all, 3 people were carried off to hospital, but a good many more ended up on top of the horns! But everybody had a wonderful time, nevertheless. Except those few!
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Jockey Cam: Luke Harvey's Leger Legends ride
Get the sights and sounds of a race under Rules on horseback...
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2019 - BHP Insurance Irish Champion Hurdle (Grade 1) - Racing TV
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inside TW #132
UEFA A Licence Coach, Tim Wareing, shares with you his exciting new youth development project in Northern Ireland. Tim, who is a published author whose books have sold in over 30 different countries, believes it is time that youth football evolves in Northern Ireland. Tim's new project is looking at changing the dated, unsuccessful models that haven't evolved in a generation.
Tim will share everything from his first session to direct interviews from him, his team, parents & players along with footage from training & games. This is a program that takes you from the first training session right through the season...join the journey #insideTW
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SPLIT SECOND - NEWSREEL THEATRE FEATURE - SOUND
Earl HOwe speaking. Schneider Trophy plane flying for Britain at 400 mph. CU Flt Lt Stainforth. Italian pilot entering plane and take off from water and breaking the record with 425 mph over Lake Garda. Pilot seen after the flight. Long distance champion runner breaking record at Stamford Bridge .... Pitman? Old man with the longest moustache. Coronation of Ras Tafari in Abyssinia, Duke of Gloucester is present. Captain Hope lands at Croydon with the film. Al Capone and gangsters leave hotel. Graf Zeppelin in air - over arctic etc. George Eyston breaks baby car record after having fire proof suit tested. Plane flies upside down. Italian flies for 2 hours 16 mins like this ... breaks record. Biggest open air physical display at Stuttgart. Stanley Baldwin, Lloyd George and Ramsey MacDonald together on platform. Million volt spark from mighty atom story. Amy Johnson donning flying gear. CU Jim Mollison.... their first flight over Atlantic since marriag. Seafarer t o and in air. Gar Wood breaks record on water with 125 mph. CU Gar Wood. GLider land son Dover coast after crossing the channel for the first time. Mass weddings in the USA. Shots of the Cheltenham Flyer on her record run. Aerial shots on the run, under bridges through country. CU Professor Piccard ... night shots of balloon going up. Shots of Sydney Bridge. Outboard motor boat record. Small girl of four plays piano. R A F round the world record. Flyers return. Man living in coffin... coffin opened. Motor boat in harbour after having broken the Dover - Calaise record - speedboat past camera and in harbour. Dance marathon in the US - couples leaning on each other half asleep. Fire reaging in Coney Island - Pleasure Beach. 1932 Boat Race - Cambridge break the record. Very Fat girl ballet dancing. Malcolm Campbell breaks record at Daytona - car along the beach. Campbell seated in car. Willy Post lands in New York after record flight. Cu Wily Post speaking. Shots of Hyperion breaking the Derby record.
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The Beatles - February 5th, 1963 (Gaumont Cinema, Doncaster, UK)
The Beatles' tour with Helen Shapiro had begun on 2 February 1963, but the group gave two standalone performances at the Cavern Club between that date and 5 February, when the tour resumed at Doncaster's Gaumont Cinema.
The Beatles stayed at the Regent Hotel, close to the venue. The owner's 15-year-old son was excited to learn that the group were there.
I already had tickets for the show but when mum said The Beatles were staying here I was very excited about it. After a few minutes I went upstairs. The TV lounge was up there and The Beatles were inside strumming their guitars. I didn't go in – that was not done, you didn't disturb guests. But I went near the glass doors and heard them. I've often wondered if they were working on one of their early hits that day.
I immediately called in to cancel my paper round the next morning so I could join my brother Dave in taking their tea up to their two twin rooms in the morning. Unfortunately, when we took the tea up they were all asleep. We went off to school, which was also very close by, but we both returned home fairly soon after, feeling unwell. It was probably the excitement and knowing The Beatles were probably still in the hotel. Anyway, when we got back there were The Beatles – all four of them in the restaurant finishing off their breakfast. They signed Parlophone promotion cards for us – and for some of the waitresses and kitchen staff.
They had all signed the hotel register. There was space for a name, date and nationality. George wrote George Harrison, British, February 5, 1963. But Ringo got the year wrong. He put Ringo Starr, British, February 5 1962. The others also put the wrong year. John Lennon signed his name but under nationality wrote 'white man' and Paul put 'green man'. Both followed Ringo in putting 1962. The funny thing was the next six people also put 1962 until one of them realised it was wrong and corrected it to 1963.
I remember later saying to my dad and mum, who jointly owned the hotel, that we needed to put the beds up for sale. Everything to do with The Beatles was wanted – sheets they'd slept in, etc. 'Don't be so bloody stupid,' my dad said. The register they signed is in a bank vault now, but we have copies displayed.
Mick Longworth
Beatlemania!, Martin Creasy
Taking photographs at the concerts was Charlie Worsdale, working for the Foto News agency. He was accompanied by Carol Roope, who was interviewing the performers for the agency.
[In the dressing room] they were playing Ray Charles records on a portable player, and tracks by people like Chuck Berry and Bo Diddley. I was particularly chuffed they were listening to Ray Charles because I was quite a fan. I remember them joking among themselves about how audiences were reacting to them. They were poking fun at an audience which was now largely screaming girls who practically drowned out their music.
I took my pictures from the wings while they were playing, but you couldn't hear much. What was obvious was the excitement they were creating in the audience – it was obvious that they were going to be big. The much was largely drowned out, though.
Charlie Worsdale
Beatlemania!, Martin Creasy
The Art Deco venue opened in September 1934, with 2,020 seats and a stage 67 feet wide. A number of other musical acts performed at the cinema, including Buddy Holly and The Rolling Stones. The Beatles performed at the Gaumont on two other occasions, 22 March and 10 December 1963.
The building was modernized in 1964, and in 1987 became the Odeon, but was demolished in November 2009.
Noise Agents - Indestructible (Official Music Video)
Edited by Joe Banyard
Call 07817781310
Middlesbrough v Halifax Town 1989-90 LC 2R 1L
There's a guy in the place, got a bitter sweet face...yep, that's right dear viewer The Boro are up against Halifax Town at Ayresome Park in the 2nd Round 1st Leg of the 89-90 Litterbugs Cup. Easy 4-0 win for the home team to make the 2nd leg at The Shay pretty much a formality.
Just time to say a big HELLO to Adam Weishaupt whose very first match this was and who loved sitting on that barrier in The Holgate so much that he bought a season ticket the next day. Good on yer Adam.
Young Mick: From Dunstall to Dubai
From a rating of 54 to 111 relive the great story of George Margarson's progressive handicapper, Young Mick.
I don't know how that unfolded! Ryan Moore wins Dash | Channel 4 Racing
Ryan Moore somehow guides Duke Of Firenze to an incredible victory in the Epsom Dash, the fastest five furlongs in British Racing.
Join the award-winning Channel 4 Racing team for the best racing action from around the country.
Sports broadcasting contracts in the United Kingdom
This article refers to sports broadcasting contracts in the United Kingdom. For a list of sports broadcasting rights in other countries, see List of sports television broadcast contracts.
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James Lenox Dutton Version Part I
James Lenox Naper Dutton held the Sherborne / Dutton estates from 1743-1776.
'Beer, burger and bands bar' set to open in Nailsworth
'Beer, burger and bands bar' set to open in Nailsworth
'Beer, burger and bands bar' set to open in Nailsworth
Caroline Saturley from the Vault in Nailsworth will be teaming up with Stroud Brewery, owner Greg Pilley shown here 'BEER, burger and bands' will soon be coming to a venue in Nailsworth thanks to a special new collaboration. Popular bar The Vault is collaborating with Stroud Brewery to offer customers the full range of Stroud made ales and lagers as well as a new burger menu and a packed programme of live music. Nailsworth's George Street venue has undergone a refurbishment and the all new team ...
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Bristol De Mai Future Champions Finale Juvenile Hurdle (Grade 1) 2014
Bristol De Mai landed the Coral.co.uk Future Champions Finale Juvenile Hurdle (Grade 1) at Chepstow on his British debut.
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1998 AIG Europe Champion Hurdle
Date: Sunday 25th January 1998 |
Course: Leopardstown |
Distance: 2m |
Going: Soft |
Winning Time: 4m 09.80s
Winner: Istabraq |
Runners: 7
Sam Burton Soccer Highlights '14-'15
U16 Goalkeeper Highlights
Rolling Stones - Gather Moss (British Pathé News 1964) (Hi Quality)
Happy Birthday to The Rolling Stones, on the fiftieth anniversary of their first gig!
Archive footage of the Rolling Stones in 1964 hitchhiking before performing at the ABC Cinema in Hull. We also see them in their dressing room tuning up and flirting with female reporters at a press conference -- before competing with thousands of screaming fans to be heard in the actual concert.
Fifty years ago today, July 12 1962, a nervous band called the Rollin' Stones played their first gig -- to a bemused crowd of jazz fans. In the summer of 1962, the management of the Academy cinema on Oxford Street in London thought it wise to warn patrons that the film they were about to see, the big-screen adaptation of John Wyndham's novel about killer plants, The Day of the Triffids, contained graphic horror and might prove disturbing to those of a nervous disposition. Today, Wyndham's mutant shrubs look blandly innocuous. But on the night of Thursday 12 July, in a basement club called the Marquee, just a few feet below the cinema where the Triffids was screening, something much more unsettling was about to get under way.
A sober-suited crowd of about 80 men and 30 women were on hand to witness the Rolling Stones' first gig. There was a taste among both sexes for shapeless, utility-style clothes, stout shoes and goofy square glasses. (It's remarkable how many young men seemed to resemble Buddy Holly.) Based on the number of goatees in the photographs, many were also diehard jazz fans; those who were there report that the audience took some time to warm up to the Stones' 50-minute blast of American rhythm and blues.
The band were officially billed as Mick Jagger and the Rollin' Stones, although the lead vocalist was by no means their most compelling personality. Jagger, his Dartford Grammar schoolfriend Keith Richards, and the self-styled Cheltenham Shagger Brian Jones (who had recently come up with the group's name) were the front line. Jagger, who was still a student at the London School of Economics, wore a striped sweater and corduroys; Richards a funereally dark suit; while Jones pogoed up and down, leering at the women. Behind them was the already comically deadpan rhythm section, which for now comprised Richards's art-school friend Dick Taylor on bass and the future Kinks drummer Mick Avory, who sat in for the night. Jagger and Richards were 18 and living at home; Jones was 20; Ian Stewart, a 23-year-old shipping clerk, stood off to the side, eating a pork pie with one hand and playing piano in a loping, barrel-house style with the other.
In the Britain of 1962, young people were already creating a certain amount of consternation. Perhaps inspired by Hank Marvin and the Shadows, and their string of five UK hits that year, things were looking up for the electric guitar; in suburban Ripley, Surrey, a teenager named Eric Clapton took possession of his first Kay Red Devil that summer. The Beatles signed for George Martin and the Parlophone label, but were yet to release their first single. A revolt against the accepted cultural order was at least tentatively under way. The autumn of 1962 saw the release of Lawrence of Arabia, Dr No and Mutiny on the Bounty; in November, Anthony Burgess published A Clockwork Orange, priced 16 shillings (80p). The 1961 Census listed 2,471 licensed places of entertainment in London alone; an estimated 300 of these catered in one way or another to young groups such as the Stones, inspired by the urban R&B tradition of Muddy Waters and Chuck Berry.
The Stones split the 30-guinea performance fee six ways, which somehow meant that Jones got £6 and 10 shillings, everyone else got a fiver. No one there would have guessed that the band was 21st century bound, least of all the band members themselves. By Christmas of that year, Taylor and Avory had both left the fold, to be replaced by Bill Wyman and Charlie Watts respectively. In April 1963, a young hustler named Andrew Loog Oldham took over the Stones' management, Stewart was unceremoniously sacked, and Decca put out the band's first single -- a cover of Chuck Berry's Come On, which sold 250,000 copies. The rest -- well, the rest you know.