The Queen tends to her paperwork in the BBC s Royal Family documentary
Credit: BBC/Crown
A 1969 documentary about the Royal Family which hasn’t been seen since the Seventies – because it was deemed too intrusive – has finally emerged on YouTube, offering a view of Elizabeth II and her family unlike any that we’re used to seeing.
The film, which has been hurriedly removed, includes footage of the Queen worrying about four-year-old Prince Edward making a mess with his ice lolly in her car, the teenage Princess Anne moaning at a family barbecue at Balmoral, the Duke of Edinburgh joking about his father-in-law, King George VI’s “very strange habits”, and, in one scene, the Queen indiscreetly describing an official visitor as “a gorilla” and trying not to laugh.
The Royal Family documentary: what it tells us about the Winsdors
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no young lergets, you need to know the process. if it is a state that does not do that, the legal defense fund and various groups that will help you. you got to get on the computer and figure out how to draw a district. it is rather self-serving the most important issue for every legislator here is the budget. who gets cut, who does not get cut? you appear to spend your time figuring out how to draw your district, you may draw a wonderful district, which you will probably get retired if they know that what you done. you see texas and three are seats. picked up a seat out of new york. right now 32 members of congress, probably have 35 members of congress, we ll still have 31 members of the state senate. i don t want my lines drawn where i m just talking to myself. i want some people that will agree with me to influence. you got to take the element of self out. i been here 20 years, i have served longer than i m going to serve. i mean, i don t man from the for them to roll
thank you. thjetle of my paper i,s, e keynesian state. this will be in relation to the economy. this paper had its relations this summer when i heard that glenn beck had [unintelligible] and saw it was a kind of response. it was not an economic response, it was a political response and the thought that runs through is this will never work politically, leaving the economic theory aside which he also criticized. the general theme of my paper here is the estate that comes into being as a consequence of trying to implement keynesian policy kind of defeats in the hands. a big government of the kind that has evolved will implement the kind of a surgical keynesian policy, a more limited government would do it a lot better. in a certain sense, the big government that comes into being theoryonsequence of his thei makes it more difficult to implement keynesian policy. in response to some of the things that have been said, i do think that the growing size of the government is compro
reading in the u.s. found it talked a lot about u.k. issues, but also the position in the global economy and a lot about the global economy. they spend a lot of time thinking about international economic issues and i try and explain those, especially now. there is a teaching function and also reporting function. what did you learn when you were larry summers aide back in 1997? well, a couple of things. i certainly learned that he s a very smart guy. i learned that it s interesting to have a serious sort of academic economist at the heart of things at a time when international issues were pretty important. now they look like pretty small change. but when i got there, it was july, 1997. that was just the beginning of the asian financial crisis which began with this devaluation by the thy government but rolled into all000 these thigh government but rolled into these other, larry summers, bob rueben and alan greenspan as the committee to save the world. and it did feel lik
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