Looks good and I love Eric but surely us long time fans, over 50 years in my case, won't see anything new here.
I'm more interested in seeing the success story continue than looking back.
May be we won't see anything new here but maybe, just maybe, this documentary offers a fresh perspective to each and every one of us and allows us to redefine what it means to be a United fan.
I am a sucker for history in general, and I've got all day to listen to football history. I am not from Manchester, hell, I am not even from Europe but I have been fortunate enough to visit Old Trafford (and Stamford Bridge, for that matter) and you can just imagine what a football club means to the locals - people with houses that are a stone's throw away from the stadium walls. You can imagine when there wasn't even a stadium but maybe just a patch of grass tended to and made match-ready by the people living around.
Totally understand football is not just what it once was - it has become a global sport with billions of dollars and greedy owners - but somewhere in there, a part of what football once was still exists.
The fact that some sections of the global United fanbase were pretty upset when United refused to pay through the nose for Sancho feels ridiculous when you see how United did NOT furlough the staff (~900) and kept them on full pay during COVID-19 (thankfully, the Glazers showed that much decency).