This document discusses the representation of the working class in British popular film and television from the 1960s onward. It notes that working class culture and lives were typically portrayed through certain established tropes and stereotypes involving northern English settings, industrial imagery, and accents. Several key films from the 1950s/60s like Room at the Top, Saturday Night and Sunday Morning helped bring working class stories and voices to the screen. Television shows like Coronation Street and The Likely Lads also drew upon these filmic tropes to depict working class life. Representation is shaped by earlier cultural works, and tropes become ingrained over time.