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Scarred For Life podcast co-host Stephen Brotherstone on British TV: ‘The 70s and 80s were like a lawless Wild West’

A queue of British entertainment figures line up to reveal their greatest fears from popular culture in a bygone analogue age

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Scarred For Life podcast co-host Stephen Brotherstone on British TV: ‘The 70s and 80s were like a lawless Wild West’

The first Scarred For Life book appeared in 2017, a bumper compendium of 1970s pop culture’s darker side which tapped into an era when kids’ TV seemed steeped in folk horror and dystopian sci-fi, and public information films gave you nightmares. A second volume did something similar for the 1980s. A new Scarred For Life podcast takes this further, with the book’s creators Stephen Brotherstone and Dave Lawrence joined by presenter Andy Bush as they ask suitably culty guests to confess three things from their childhood that genuinely terrified them.

Stephen Brotherstone

Scarred For Life has always been a conversation,’ says Lawrence. ‘The original idea for the books came from conversations that Ste and I had over many years; the conversation continued in the live show Q&As with audiences, and it just seems a natural progression to take that conversation forwards in a podcast.’ Now a dozen episodes in, Scarred For Life has featured the likes of Jamie Anderson (son of Supermarionation legend Gerry Anderson), Muriel Gray, Matthew Holness (aka Garth Marenghi) and Reece Shearsmith laying bare their fears. Listeners can also learn the origin of the phrase ‘shite hawk’, and discover what Taggart star Mark McManus was referring to when he once spoke of the only star of a TV show brought on set in a sack.

‘One thing that plays into memories of the period is that we all watched the same three, later four, TV channels,’ Lawrence points out. ‘That meant that next day in the playground, you could talk about what you’d seen the night before and guarantee that lots of your friends had seen the same. Programmes were much discussed and mythologised, and false memories heightened the horrors.’

Dave Lawrence

The Scarred For Life era was nevertheless a very different time. ‘Pop culture in general wasn’t necessarily scarier in the Scarred For Life era, but it was definitely a lot more shocking,’ adds Brotherstone. ‘Kids’ dramas could often pass for post-watershed shows, with violence, blood and mild swearing. Children’s comics were insanely violent. The 70s and 80s were like a lawless Wild West, while the 90s is when the Sheriff arrives and everything calms down; one of the many reasons why we’ll never do a 90s book.’ Given the ongoing real-life dystopia we’re currently in the thick of, what 2023 nightmares might a future equivalent of Scarred For Life reference? For Lawrence, that’s an easy one: ‘the news’.

New Scarred For Life episodes are posted every Tuesday.  

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