
Overview
Writer Colin Shindler returns to Manchester to revisit his childhood and tell his own intensely personal, boys own story of a paradoxical year, 1957, the one in which prime minister Harold Macmillan declared that 'most of our people have never had it so good'. In the company of leading historians, he takes a snapshot of 1957 to explore what it was really like to live in Never Had It So Good Britain and to find out whether Macmillan was right.
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7 - 1The Edwardian Larder April 18, 2007
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7 - 2How To Be a Good Prime Minister September 22, 2007
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7 - 3Gagging For It: TV's Hunger for Radio Comedy October 01, 2007
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7 - 4Whatever Happened to Radio 2? October 05, 2007
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7 - 5Emmylou Harris's Ten Commandments of Country October 12, 2007
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7 - 6Emmylou Harris at the BBC October 12, 2007
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7 - 7Archaeology - Digging the Past October 21, 2007
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7 - 8Sir Mortimer Wheeler - A Life in Ruins October 21, 2007
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7 - 9Watching the Russians November 21, 2007
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7 - 10Never Had It So Good? December 10, 2007
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7 - 11A Game of Two Eras: 1957 v 2007 December 13, 2007
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7 - 12Stuffed: The Great British Christmas Dinner December 23, 2007
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7 - 13The Rise and Fall of the Ad Man March 09, 2008