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Rear-View Mirror

As Darren examines social class, he begins to wonder if we can ever overthrow the legacy it continues to exert over our lives today.

In this episode, Darren examines his own social mobility. Can he ever fully transition from his working-class past to the middle-class present he currently enjoys? Why should it matter where he is from? And why does his past continue to impact his present?

Using an experiment conceived by Yale University in America, Darren tests the theory that you can recognise a person’s social class by just seven words, visits the further education college he once attended to give a masterclass, and returns to ‘his’ stately home, Lauriston Castle in Edinburgh, to compare his two worlds.

Keen to experience what life might be like in the past, Darren tries his hand at being a butler with a man who has served everyone from royalty and politicians, to opera singers and Russian oligarchs.

Later, while toasting marshmallows over a campfire, he meets a young traveller in a Bedford van far older than she is to discuss two burning questions: what is freedom, and can social class ever be completely ignored?

Up in Elgin, Darren meets two pigeon-fanciers who show him how pigeons can become a way of life and unwittingly unlock a magic key in Darren’s mind. Coming full circle, Darren returns home to see his dad to try and find out if his rear-view mirror can ever be ignored.

2 months left to watch

58 minutes

Credits

Role Contributor
Presenter Darren McGarvey
Executive Producer Harry Bell
Producer Emma Fentiman

Broadcasts