Friday, September 17, 2010

London Rebranded


Fancy catching a black cab from Cityside to Noho via Midtown? Me neither. Here's my BBC News feature.

Carnival fever


When a feather-clad cast of several hundred danced to calypso beats through west London's streets for the first Notting Hill Carnival in 1964, few would have thought the event would develop into the vast and vivid expression of multiculturalism it is today.

I was lucky enough to be BBC News' online reporter for 2010's carnival.

Here is the trilogy of features I wrote.

As a gargantuan glistening golden dragon, strapped onto 16-year-old Vernon Francis' back, turns onto Ladbroke Grove, Notting Hill Carnival's carnal throng can be seen far into the distance.

The carnival has grown from an essentially Trinidadian template of mobile steel bands, into Europe's largest street party, with performers embracing cultures from the Caribbean and beyond.

As the sequins shimmer, feathers flutter and steel drums rumble at this weekend's Notting Hill Carnival, organisers will be thinking "you ain't seen nothing yet" as they look forward to 2012.

Banksy gallery eviction


Pete Doherty read poetry there, Kate Nash performed there and in the basement stood a six-metre high Banksy mural.

But now developers plan to replace the iconic Foundry pub with an 18-room art-themed hotel. I interviewed the squatters the day before they were evicted.

Tube strike chaos


Commuters marched out of central London's Kings Cross station, armed with their most comfortable walking shoes, A-to-Zs and stiff upper lips. Here’s my BBC News report.