03/03/2014 Inside Out East Midlands


03/03/2014

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Transcript


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Hello from the Peak District known for its beauty peace and

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tranquillity... Until now. ENGINE NOISES.

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But should cars and trail bikes even be allowed on tracks like these? It

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makes it impossible to use and enjoy places walkers and riders have done

:00:27.:00:32.

the generations. Why shouldn't we be allowed to drive on this?

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Football hooliganism ` will it ever it beaten? In the 70s it seemed it

:00:37.:00:46.

was a bit more knock`about. But by the 1980s it was getting nasty.

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And making money from the musical greats: The copycats cashing in.

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For centuries people have had rights of way on tracks like this back in

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the days when the only means of transport was a packhorse. But

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nowadays recreational 4x4s are using them and a battle has begun between

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villagers and off`roaders. Derbyshire's first permanent vehicle

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ban is now taking effect and Stuart Woodman's been meeting both sides in

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a countryside clash. Rural Derbyshire, the sound of the

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skylark and a babbling brook. But there is another noise echoing

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around these parts of the peak. The sound of engines. Trail bikes and

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4x4s crisscrossing the countryside. And many hikers, horse riders and

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locals living nearby aren't happy. It's all boiling down to this. Can

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ancient rural routes first used by a horse and cart take the wear, tear

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and noise created by modern recreational vehicles? Many say they

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can't. It is on these so`called green lanes battle grounds have been

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drawn and the war of words is heating up. I'm meeting Patricia

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Stubbs who until recently says she rode her horse on lanes near her

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home. She now claims it's too dangerous and she's begun a battle

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with the bikers. Why do you feel so passionately? The countryside is

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precious, especially so in a national park. And as an individual

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who ride and walks, it makes it impossible to enjoy places walkers

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and riders have gone for generations. Half of the places I

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ride, I cannot go because the surface is like this and the danger

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of an accident caused by trail bikes coming too fast around blind bends,

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is too risky. It's said The Peak District National Park has around

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300 green lanes and their use by off`roaders and trail riders has

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proved pretty controversial like here on The Long Causeway near

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Hathersage. What do you want done, Patricia? We think the only answer

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is changing the law. We think it is inappropriate to have modern motor

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vehicles using these valuable unsurfaced highways all over the

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country. Patricia wanted to show me another green lane known locally as

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Brushfield near Monsel Well over 2000 people wanted their

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say during the public consultation. I arranged to meet the man who

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played a role in the decision. It seemed this argument rages on and

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neither side will move an inch. It is the right place for us because we

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need to take balanced views. Is displacement going to be a problem?

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It will have that effect to a certain extent. It is something we

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recognise. We cannot let that be a reason for not addressing the

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sensitive routes in the park. It has been a battle. If you think of the

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amenities of people coming here, how many people are not coming here,

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like horse riders or some of the Ramblers 0

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like horse riders or some of the Ramblers because 0

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like horse riders or some of the Ramblers because they expect to meet

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vehicles that frightened horses? We have to fight the battle. Besides

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The Roych and Chapel Gate there's over 30 green lanes where

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intervention or management is now deemed necessary. On top of that 36

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there are other lanes who have not reached the list and are in a worse

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state. It is all over the countryside, not just national

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parks. Vehicle users vow to fight on and they're determined to defend

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their rights of way. The point of the national parks is access for

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all. And for one particular group to be discriminated against in this

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way, seems completely unfair. It seems this clash in the countryside

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and the battle over Derbyshire's Green Lanes is far from over.

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Last season arrests for violent disorder in football more than

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doubled but many of the problems happened miles from any stadiums.

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Four Nottingham Forest fans have recently been jailed for their part

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in a fight with rival fans from Doncaster and the two sides hadn't

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even been playing each other! Tom Brown has been investigating the

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link between violence and football, will it ever be broken?

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Come on you Reds! Years ago we used to be herded

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around like cattle. It was like a war. It was awful. I got hit with a

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scaffolding pole across my nose and it wrote my nose. I have fond

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memories of Oxford United. Back in the 70s and 80s, violent scenes

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plagued English football. The game is attracting younger and more

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passionate fans, but all too often, that passion became hooliganism. The

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symbolic struggle was no longer enough for some young men. They

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wanted to be part of the event. Football was the conduit where

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meatheads from this town would go and fight meatheads from the next

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town. Everyone knew where everyone was going to be under 70s it seemed

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like it was a bit more knock`about, but by the 80s it was getting nasty.

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If you were a young man who fancied yourself as a local fighter and had

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a reputation in the local town, the place you had to test it and display

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it was football matches. This probably would have been the

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sparring area will stop I believe. You would have had your North stand

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over there. As a young Leicester City fan, this man saw football at

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its worst. Alcohol was always the fuel. Passion as well. Loads of

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things that you could connect into why we go and do what we do. It is

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what we enjoy doing, and you get into the odd scrap, but it is over

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ten years `` ten minutes later. Going back into the 80s when I

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started policing you would have hundreds of people prepared to get

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involved in disorder and fighting. It was on a different scale and it

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was unemployed `` unpleasant environment. Since then the police

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and clubs have worked together to bring these fans under control.

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Terraces have been replaced with seats and stadiums are lined with

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CCTV cameras. There are more than 60 at Leicester, and on match day you

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are always being watched. Obviously Leicester, but those who don't

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follow football, Leicester are top at the moment by quite some

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distance. In Nottingham, a briefing allows the police to share

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intelligence on where there could be trouble. Often it is nowhere near

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the stadium. At an average game, policing is not just around the City

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Ground, it is going into the transport hubs, the stations,

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railway stations and obviously the pubs all the round the grounds. Away

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fans who come to Nottingham are taken to one, designated pub,

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so`called fan liaison officers chat to them and they are told to talk to

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the fans about their club's recent form. It is a far cry from the

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violent clashes between police and supporters when fans had to be

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penned into the terraces to keep them off the pitch. They 0

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penned into the terraces to keep them off the pitch. They wedged

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everyone in and it was a crush. I remember being up against a pregnant

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woman who was up against a fence. People started panicking and the

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crush died off and everybody had a laugh. Years later, when

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Hillsborough happens, you realised, that could have been worse. The site

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is, there are Liverpool supporters standing on the terraces. It was the

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1989 disaster but changed police attack ticks the good. Police are

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showing a bit more respect now, showing a bit more risk on civility

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towards different fans as an away supporter. Going to an away match

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was no longer a terrible trial as it had deemed the people in the 70s and

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80s. Policing foot all is about safety and control, anticipating

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trouble and banning anyone who causes it. It is about targeting the

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hard core, the minority of people who want to organise disorder.

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People should be allowed to go to the ground with their family and

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enjoy 0 the ground with their family and

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enjoy the 0 the ground with their family and

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enjoy the game, 0 the ground with their family and

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enjoy the game, it is a family atmosphere in most grounds now. For

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many, those tax ex of work. Lads like myself don't want to get

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banned, so we avoid the hotspots and keep rugby areas where 0

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banned, so we avoid the hotspots and keep rugby areas where you will

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witness get involved these things. But are 0 0

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witness get involved these things. But are football hooligans under

:16:58.:17:00.

control, or are they harder to find? Arrest for violent disorder or

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rising and the problems aren't always at the big clubs. It 0

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rising and the problems aren't always at the big clubs. It is not

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the Premier League. It's not even in the foot ball league. In Nuneaton,

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the town that last season saw the sixth highest number of football

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related arrests in the country. They are not football supporters, they

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just go for the trouble. It is a small minority and the majority are

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not fans anyway. All 87 arrests came on the same day, on a Saturday

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afternoon last March. There was a brawl at this town centre pub, 1.5

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miles away from the ground, 15 fans were jailed. On a big match day, the

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police need to be ready to deal with any trouble. In their control room,

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it is like a military operation. Cabbie 0

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it is like a military operation. Cabbie picked up 0 0

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it is like a military operation. Cabbie picked up any racist

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chanting? Calamity in the Nottingham Forest defence. He slotted it into

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an empty net. Very 0 Forest defence. He slotted it into

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an empty net. Very drunk 0 Forest defence. He slotted it into

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an empty net. Very drunk and he has been sick all over the floor. Let's

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get the medics there. We have one person it for having drugs. This has

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gone as well as we could have hoped. There is the full`time 0

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gone as well as we could have hoped. There is the full`time whistle. A

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trouble`free night for the police, the majority of games and these days

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are, but although the fans say they feel safer, many believe the

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atmosphere isn't as good. Before, when we used to stand, the

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atmosphere was better. In the end where the support was, you don't get

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that now. Hooligans also brought excitement to the stadium. They

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brought an event for people to watch. They brought an intense

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loyalty. A lot of that has gone and people are saying, it doesn't seem

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like became `` same game any more. It is like a theatre, playing to an

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audience now. The calls to let fans stand again at getting louder. Will

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that lead to a better atmosphere or a return to foot all's darkest days?

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With individual rails around small groups of fans, I don't see why

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there shouldn't be a trial that could be a success. I don't want to

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see 0 could be a success. I don't want to

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see a return to the large terraces. It is more family orientated now and

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anything that create a better atmosphere, should be implemented. A

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lot of people want standing to return. I do. I am a lot older now

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and I like sitting down for a lot of things, but I would stand up the

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football. Finally tonight we pay tribute? To

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tribute bands! With hundreds of Abba acts, dozens of Robbie Williams

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performers strutting their stuff and scores of Lycra`clad Elvis'there are

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certainly plenty of them out there! Here in the East Midlands they've

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never had it so good or been more popular. 0 0

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never had it so good or been more popular. As 0

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never had it so good or been more popular. As Mr Entertainment, Des

:20:41.:20:42.

Coleman, has been finding out, to their fans they're better than the

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real thing. Believe it or not, tribute bands are

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some of the biggest moneymakers in the music as this. They are the

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copycats back up the cream. The tribute band business is huge at the

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moment, and it is getting bigger. We are in a state now where we have

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tribute bands playing arenas, the sort of arenas that the original

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bands, like Abba in the 70s were playing. This band from Nottingham,

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playing Queen of the last few years has been a prosperous reality. This

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man might only have a passing resemblance to Freddie Mercury, and

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this man is hardly a double for Brian May, but when the lights go

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up. MUSIC: "Radio Ga`Ga".

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Queen. These lads call themselves Mercury

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and for them it is about paying tribute.

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Sadly, we were robbed of Freddie. So obviously, to recreate this music

:22:29.:22:36.

and the sound, take a smaller version of what the audiences used

:22:37.:22:41.

to do at their concerts, the hands clapping and singing back, can go

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on. Tribute bands are big business. Some

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are in over half ?1 million a year. It is so big, they have got their

:22:55.:23:04.

own festival here in Leicestershire. Glastonbudget. This three`day event

:23:05.:23:13.

in Loughborough attracts up to 12,000 people and has been running

:23:14.:23:20.

for nine years. Forget Robbie Williams at network, this crowd

:23:21.:23:26.

would rather see Mike Andrew and his band at Glastonbudget.

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MUSIC: "Let Me Entertain you". Robbie Williams.

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I get paid to doing what I enjoy doing. Look at the venue. This is as

:23:43.:23:48.

close to getting famous as it will get.

:23:49.:23:56.

I hear Robbie Williams is a bit of a fan? Yes, he said I don't know where

:23:57.:24:05.

he starts and I end! Glastonbudget or Glastonbury? Glastonbudget every

:24:06.:24:14.

time. I have seen the real thing, seen Madonna at Wembley. Terrible!

:24:15.:24:22.

It is feasible, 0 seen Madonna at Wembley. Terrible!

:24:23.:24:23.

It is feasible, technically be better. But it is not like seeing

:24:24.:24:31.

the real thing. Musical plagiarism? Exactly, copying what somebody else

:24:32.:24:38.

has created will stop to paraphrase a music writer, who described

:24:39.:24:42.

tribute vans as the cockroaches of the entertainment industry. It is

:24:43.:24:48.

quite extreme, but I think he had a point. Very harsh, but you cannot

:24:49.:24:53.

accuse tribute bands of being anything but creative when it comes

:24:54.:25:00.

to naming their bands. Here at Glastonbudget we have the Antarctic

:25:01.:25:04.

monkeys, the fillers, but the ones touring at the moment, after Kylie

:25:05.:25:23.

unlikely, Eric Crapton, and Musty Springfield. But I am wondering if

:25:24.:25:29.

these guys who are 0 Springfield. But I am wondering if

:25:30.:25:31.

these guys who are like Ian Drury and now, failed me Egyptians? I see

:25:32.:25:38.

what you getting at, but not at all. `` failed musicians. When I was

:25:39.:25:45.

growing up, you had to be doing your own thing which is quite right. The

:25:46.:25:49.

craft of songwriting and learning how to be Albert, that is quite

:25:50.:25:55.

important. But nowadays, it is brilliant because tribute is

:25:56.:26:02.

accepted. Of course, it is money that is

:26:03.:26:10.

driving this tribute train. And this man who is Elton John going on at

:26:11.:26:18.

Lichfield, will sell tickets. It has replaced a lot of theatre in

:26:19.:26:21.

Lichfield where you would have had variety artists. It 0

:26:22.:26:22.

Lichfield where you would have had variety artists. It has finished.

:26:23.:26:28.

Tribute bands are responsible for a lot of turnover. Financially it is a

:26:29.:26:36.

huge moneymaker? It is a multi`million pound industry.

:26:37.:26:41.

Tonight that multi`million pound industry is hosting the very first

:26:42.:26:44.

tribute and awards. They are all here, Dusty, James Brown, Adele,

:26:45.:26:51.

Meatloaf and Abba. They have beaten off tough confit `` tough

:26:52.:26:58.

competition, there is a lot of Ernie and Frida's out there. Back at

:26:59.:27:03.

Glastonbudget, I discovered just how much these stars inhabit the skin of

:27:04.:27:11.

their idols. One minute I am talking to Paul Higginson, then he becomes,

:27:12.:27:15.

guess who? Liam Gallagher of course.

:27:16.:27:24.

I watch what he does on the videos and get the moves and everything he

:27:25.:27:29.

does. 0 0 and get the moves and everything he

:27:30.:27:35.

does. Show us how he walks. First, your shoulders have to be back,

:27:36.:27:39.

chest out. Funds in your back pockets. As you are walking, your

:27:40.:27:52.

arms swing out. It is imitation, but it is good

:27:53.:27:55.

imitation. There is a difference between 0 0

:27:56.:27:56.

imitation. There is a difference between what 0 0

:27:57.:27:56.

imitation. There is a difference between what we do or somebody in a

:27:57.:28:01.

local pub on a Friday night. Ultimately, if the tribute band

:28:02.:28:06.

carry on growing, the music industry will collapse in on itself.

:28:07.:28:10.

Everybody will be copying what has gone on before. He may have a

:28:11.:28:20.

points, but how else will I share the stage with the likes of Elton

:28:21.:28:25.

John, Freddie Mercury, David early, Dusty Springfield and Adele. Except,

:28:26.:28:34.

in my dreams. That is it for this series of Inside

:28:35.:28:39.

Out. We will be back in the autumn. But from the team, thanks for

:28:40.:28:40.

watching. Good buy. `` good bye. Hello. The 92nd update. The Oscar

:28:41.:29:15.

Pistorius trial has begun in South Africa. He pleaded not guilty to

:29:16.:29:21.

murdering his girlfriend at his home last year. A neighbour said she had

:29:22.:29:27.

terrible screams on the night. Russia sends more soldiers into

:29:28.:29:31.

Ukraine and will stay there until the crisis comes down. A corporal

:29:32.:29:37.

killed herself and her Wiltshire barracks, today a coroner said

:29:38.:29:45.

bullying and an alleged rape were two factors. A good night for the

:29:46.:29:52.

bit at the Oscars, Gravity won an

:29:53.:29:53.

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