Available on
BBC» iPlayer until 10pm, 19th Jan 2011:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b00xf6xk/Time_Shift_Series_10_The_Modern_Age_of_Coach_Travel/Documentary which brings the story of the coach up to date, as it explores the most recent phase of Britain's love affair with group travel on four wheels - from school trips and football awaydays to touring with bands and 'magic bus' overland treks to India.
The establishment of the National Coach Company may have standardised the livery and the experience of mainstream coach travel in the 1970s, but a multitude of alternative offerings meant the coach retained its hold on the public imagination, with even striking miners and New Age travellers getting in on a very British act.
A fascinating documentary on the genesis of scheduled long distance coach travel in the
UK▸ . The documentary also covers the deregulation of scheduled coach services under the 80's Tory government, and National Express's rise to dominance in the marketplace. With comparisons to the rail alternative and interesting asides to the current state of affairs with Stagecoach's Megabus and First Group's Greyhound products.
Well worth a watch..... reluctant to admit it, but a train isn't always the only option.
And for the best song ever written about coach travel:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H3NVPOedkEkIgnore the rather arty video and instead listen to the lyrics:
On the National Express, there's a jolly hostess selling crisps and tea.
She'll provide you with drinks, and theatrical links for a sky high fee.
Mini-skirts were in style when she danced down the aisle back in '63.
But it's hard to get by when her arse is the size of a small country.
^Music and lyrics, Neil Hannon.