Football for Breakfast
Harry Davies's dad sang him "You'll Never Walk Alone" as a lullaby. Every single night. Instead of anything else. Harry is 21. He found his dad's Istanbul 2005 tracksuit top in a wardrobe one day and quietly claimed it. He wasn't even there in 2005 - he was one year old. But he wears it now to every big game, including the 4-3 win over Spurs when Jota scored the 96th minute winner. In episode ten of Football for Breakfast, Jim Johnson sits down with the youngest guest the show has had so far to talk about inheriting football, inheriting music and what it means to be young and obsessed with both in a city that's given the world The Beatles, Gerry and the Pacemakers and a song that started as a chart hit before kick off and somehow became Anfield's emotional centre of gravity. They talk about Bath City, the grassroots club Harry adopted at university, and going to see the Oasis reunion twice this summer - shaking with excitement for a band he was only four or five when they first split. The conversation turns properly interesting in the second half. Is youth culture over? Can social media ever again produce the kind of unifying cultural moment that gave the world Britpop, Merseybeat or punk? Harry says he has to believe it can. He's an optimist. He thinks somewhere out there is the next Liam Gallagher, even if nobody's found them yet. Jim closes on him: proof that the next generation of football fans feel it just as deeply. The game is in safe hands. Football for Breakfast is presented by OSS Security. Cafes. Clubs. Communities. Culture.
10 afleveringen
Reacties
0Wees de eerste die een reactie plaatst
Meld je nu aan en word lid van de Football for Breakfast community!