Foul-Mouthed Aristocrats Restore A Tudor Manor | Country House Rescue: Great Fulford | Real Royalty

486,255
0
Publicado 2022-10-14
Great Fulford is a Grade I listed manor house near Exeter in Devon. Set in 3000 acres, Great Fulford is home to Francis and Kishanda Fulford, previously seen on Channel 4 in The F***ing Fulfords in 2004. The future of Great Fulford is hanging in the balance. Parts of the house haven't been touched for decades and other parts are starting to crumble.

With the income from the estate and tenanted farms going towards paying off borrowings, the house must start to pay its own way. Simon believes that the huge formal rooms and recently renovated bedrooms mean that the couple are sitting on a goldmine. But will they listen to Simon's advice, or will the couple's forceful personalities leave them at loggerheads?

From Elizabeth II to Cleopatra, Real Royalty peels back the curtain to give a glimpse into the lives of some of the most influential families in the world, with new full length documentaries posted every week covering the monarchies of today and all throughout history.

📺 It's like Netflix for history... Sign up to History Hit, the world's best history documentary service and get 50% off using the code 'RealRoyalty' bit.ly/3vp92uu

Subscribe to Real Royalty: bit.ly/3tofGQL
Facebook: www.facebook.com/RealRoyaltyDocs
Instagram: www.instagram.com/realroyaltydocs/

Any queries, please contact us at: [email protected]

Todos los comentarios (21)
  • @Jersey1971
    You can hear the House scream to Simon "Please don't leave me with these people!"
  • @obliobeni
    If there ever were a demonstration of why the commoners wanted to behead their aristocracy, this is it.
  • @ThisGuy76
    "Well, I'VE seen round my house, so I don't need to look around again"... what a charming & gracious hostess!
  • @bwoneymaddic446
    What you don't see are the ten tenant farmers who rise early and work hard everyday to keep these rich folks afloat. The rich folks, of course, have no gratitude for those who actually work.
  • The house deserves people who love it enough to take responsibility for it.
  • @lloyannehurd
    When I was visiting relatives in England, we visited a large manor house. The family that owned it had one wing that they lived in privately and another wing that was furnished for visitors and it reflected how the people of the 1600’s lived. There was a tea house to go with it. It was really worth the money to visit it.
  • @ianmattl
    I love the dad. He’s pompous yet humble, formal yet casual. And 100% on the autistic spectrum.
  • @gee3883
    If he stopped pouring whiskeys the size of pints he could afford to restore the entire house in a week.
  • @swwly
    These people are their own worst enemies. They refuse to change in any way, and expect to be able to charge exorbitant amounts for the little effort they put in. This is entitlement at its best. So sad to see a beautiful historic building have to fail because of people like this.
  • @katielemos8590
    These people want someone to walk in, give them millions of pounds, fix their life, and hand the house back to them as a private home. They don’t want to work for anything. They are the most entitled people I have ever seen.
  • @vivlocke2694
    Something tells me that Kishanda is deliberately overpricing her rooms to avoid having strangers in her home. It probably doesn’t matter if the place is starting to fall apart at her hands and her husband's as the process will be complete at the hands of her offspring. You simply can't make enough money to maintain a property of that size sitting around drinking, eating and partying, which is about all the husband is capable of or prepared to do. The only thing that will save this house is a plan and a work ethic.
  • @scottlund4562
    I have heard of a "Posh" accent, but "Sloshed" is new to me. 😅😂
  • These people are unbelievable. So entitled and unrealistic. That house looks pathetic. Mold on the outside and very shabby inside. Simon is very patient with them.
  • @cocoaddams4502
    Francis to his friend: "Would you like to come to our house for dinner?" Friend: "That would be great." Francis: "Okay. 60 quid."
  • @giiiddyup
    Frances keeps referring to himself as the laid back one... he's not laid back, he's dismissive and negligent. There's a huge difference.
  • @drsuperhero
    Wow, they made it 27 generation as without having to really work. Amazing.
  • @BillyAlabama
    Could they be nastier? Put them in a trailer and call it a day. Nothing redeemable about this family.
  • @SM-ke6jq
    Simon described Kishanda as a "petulant child." I'd say that was the understatement of the year. These people deserve everything that comes to them.
  • @vindersingh25
    My brother in law told me that people that inherit good amount of money don't compromise with their comfort and lifestyle. I can see it here in that couple.
  • @jayplays1434
    Aristocratic 800-year familial history and both of them as common as muck. It will make a splendid hotel if there's anything left to refurbish when they lose it.