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Artists give car park an urban glow up

by Kelly January 29, 2025
written by Kelly

A multi-storey car park was transformed into an urban art gallery to empower young people to find their voice through creativity.

Southampton's West Quay car park became Multi-Stories Chapter 3, an event which hosted a variety of creative workshops.

It included chalk and tape art, a graffiti canvas creation, skateboarding lessons and a live art wall design competition.

Organisers said this year's "connections" theme aimed to explore how art brings people together, both physically and emotionally.

Beyond the bold colours and striking visuals, Multi-Stories also plays an important role in supporting the mental health and wellbeing of young people.

The event last weekend encouraged young attendees to explore their emotions through art and social interaction.

Local artists like Rebecca Baldwin were invited to leave their mark at Southampton's West Quay car park

Rebecca Baldwin is a 16-year-old artist, born in China before moving to Southampton aged nine.

"When I paint, I'm not really thinking about anything else," she said

"I'm just thinking about what's going on the canvas, on the board and I think it takes my mind off my anxiety with GCSEs."

She explained how painting has allowed her to bring aspects of other cultures to Southampton.

"Being part of the painting community is the same no matter where you are in the world," Ms Baldwin said.

She added: "I decided to paint a koi fish which is the symbol for friendship and love from Japan."

Skateboarding sessions were offered to members of the public

Alongside the artwork, members of the public were invited for skating sessions on temporary ramps placed outside the car park.

This was led by Get Up skating school, the only female-led skate school on the south coast.

Its founder Ida Kavitz said: "Skateboarding has come a really long way but it is still predominantly male dominated.

"We want people to not question whether they're welcomed and supported in our environment; we're very loud and proud about making everybody feel supported.

"Skateboarding gets people outside, gets people away from screens, and it creates a sense of community and belonging, which isn't there when you're doom-scrolling through Instagram."

Ozzy Crawley said skating "didn't seem as intimidating as it could have been"

Ozzy Crawley skates with We Skate Sotton, a women-led skate community which aims to make the sport more accessible.

"It just didn't seem as intimidating as it could have been. When you picture a skate park I'm thinking of the guys in their baggy shorts and they all look super cool and they all make it look so easy.

"But communities like this, you're never not going to be welcome regardless of if you just want to come and watch or join in," they said.

Jennifer Mon, 24, from Portugal, is a collage and graphic designer, who found a community in Southampton through art.

"I moved to Southampton during the pandemic for uni and art has become a really big part of my life," she said.

"There's something quite freeing about turning off your phone because social media these days is not just about communicating, it kind of creates this brain overload, like this information overload in your head and making art just sort of makes it a little bit quieter.

"I think everybody should definitely turn off their phone and do something with their hands.

"A lot of artists have made art because of their pain or to express it, so it's a very natural process for you to think, oh I have this feeling, I don't know how I'm feeling yet, let me make some work."

Multi-Stories celebrated its third year and the goal is to turn the car park into a permanent urban art gallery by the end of 2025.

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January 29, 2025 0 comments
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Business

Merz's messy path to power raises questions for future government

by Cameron January 16, 2025
written by Cameron

The day Germany's new leader entered office will now forever be remembered for a very public failure.

Friedrich Merz's initial, shock defeat – in his bid to become chancellor – sparked hours of chaotic uncertainty.

A man who'd been working to project strength and purpose instead became mired in political intrigue and division.

Merz may have won on the second try, but today's messy path to power raises serious questions about the future government.

If he couldn't muster the votes amongst coalition colleagues – at such a key moment – how will he fare when trying to push through any contentious legislation?

It comes as Germany faces a prolonged recession, fractious arguments on immigration, potentially seismic decisions on defence spending and a surging far-right political force.

But Merz's allies insist the situation can quickly be recovered and reject the idea that Merz emerges irreparably damaged.

"Now we are looking in front and forward," says Gunther Krichbaum, a veteran of the Christian Democratic Party (CDU) and Germany's new Europe Minister.

"So I think we will have a very, very good and also stable government," he told the BBC.

"This is not only necessary for Germany but also Europe."

Anadolu via Getty Images
Friedrich Merz, right, with his predecessor Olaf Scholz

Berlin's allies have been impatient to see an effective administration, after the bickering that characterised the last, collapsed coalition government.

But Merz now heads off for his planned trips to Warsaw and Paris on Wednesday in the shadow of a tumultuous Tuesday.

There's speculation aplenty as to which MPs, in the secret ballot, didn't back Merz on the first round – and why.

Disgruntled people, passed over for government jobs, is one theory.

Did members within the centre-left Social Democrats (SPD) decide that they had to protest at the political compromises struck with Merz's centre-right party?

Or did the forthright Merz – and ambitious SPD Vice-Chancellor Lars Klingbeil – struggle to rally their own ranks?

Figures from both sides were quickly keen to suggest that the other was chiefly to blame.

Whichever MPs did the deed they were, it seems, willing to risk making Merz and his acolytes sweat.

Alternative fur Deutschland (AfD), who are suing Germany's domestic intelligence service for classing the party as extremist, had a ringside seat for the whole show.

Following February's election, the AfD is the main opposition party and pounced on events as evidence of the fundamental weaknesses within a coalition made up of the centre-right CDU/CSU parties and centre-left SPD.

"It is very clear that this government… will be a very, very unstable one," says Beatrix von Storch, the AfD's deputy group leader.

She also echoed claims that it was all further proof that the so-called "firewall" of non-cooperation with her party will not last.

"This has shown that this firewall has to fall if you want to have a shift in politics in Germany," von Storch told the BBC.

Also watching on from the Reichstag's visitors' gallery was Merz's old political rival from within the CDU, former chancellor Angela Merkel.

He once lost out to her in a power struggle but returned later to politics – to try and realise his long-held dream of taking the top job.

This can't have been the way in which Merz envisioned entering office.

But, more importantly, the spectacle leaves his claims of being ready to provide firm government, significantly undermined on day one.

January 16, 2025 0 comments
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Business

Search continues for man, 72, missing on Solway Coast

by Jackson January 13, 2025
written by Jackson

Searches are continuing for a 72-year-old man reported missing after going sailing on a dinghy off the Solway Coast.

Alistair Turnbull, from Gatehouse of Fleet, was last seen at about 13:00 on Tuesday.

His dinghy was later found in the nearby Wigtown Bay area.

Police said they were working with the coastguard, mountain rescue teams, drones and air support units to continue searching the coastline.

Supt Alison Wilson said: "Extensive inquiries are continuing and teams have been deployed across various areas in efforts to trace Alistair.

"We would also ask members of the public to report any information which may assist our inquiries to come forward."

January 13, 2025 0 comments
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Business

Can Gaelic football finally have its video game hit?

by Camila January 5, 2025
written by Camila

It was 20 years ago that video-gaming Irish sports fans had their prayers answered.

Fifa, Pro Evolution Soccer, Madden NFL – back in 2005, these were the sports games dominating living rooms. Indeed, some still are today, helping to make the sports video game industry a £17bn-per-year behemoth.

But while most sports, from snooker to bizarre basketball superstar kung-fu tie-ins, had a title to offer, fans of Ireland's national sports – Gaelic football and hurling – had never seen their heroes in pixelated glory.

That is until Gaelic Games: Football dropped in November 2005.

The highly anticipated release, which saw eager gamers queued outside one store in Belfast, became one of Sony's biggest selling games in Ireland.

And, as was the pre-peak online gaming style at the time, those who wanted to beat their mates had to invite them over and gather around a defiantly non-flat screen TV.

One of those was Peadar McMahon, then a student in Belfast, who remembers "big sessions playing the game, having a laugh with friends".

The game was not well-received.

"Seriously flawed" declared the Sunday Times in a dismayed 3/10 review. "Devastatingly awful" condemned Irish culture website Joe.ie in a 2018 lookback piece.

Peadar is a little more diplomatic – "not a great game" he recalled – but he has reason for diplomacy since, poor or not, Gaelic Games: Football gave him an idea: What more could a game like this do?

The making of a Gaelic football video game

Sony/Buck Eejit Games
Gaelic Games: Football from 2005 (left) and Gaelic Football '25 (right)

"I took the game as impetus to go and do something about it because I'm doing computer science, loved games from no age – and maybe I could do something?"

Two decades, one career in financial software and a £30k Kickstarter later, Belfast studio Buck Eejit Games, formed four years ago by Peadar, is set to be the first to dive back into the Gaelic games market since that ill-fated series.

Buck Eejit is one of about 40 firms active in Northern Ireland's burgeoning video games industry, a scene non-existent when Peadar graduated from Queen's University.

And the dozen-strong team – a tiny group compared to the huge numbers working at behemoths like EA – are in crunch time to get Gaelic Football '25 finished for a summer release: 16-hour days every day and not much time for anything else, including three kids in Peadar's case.

"It's a lot to undertake, you're putting a lot aside to get the game – the dream, the passion project – over the line," he said.

The scale of the challenge is not lost on him.

Peadar McMahon at the Buck Eejit Games office in Belfast

While the likes of football, F1 or golf can tap into a huge video gaming fan base, Gaelic games are niche sports – huge in Ireland but with a relatively limited global market.

In other words, a "risk", said Peadar, given the amount of hours and expense required to make a game.

It also means nailing the concept for both die-hard GAA fans and non-fans, said Úna-Minh Kavanagh, a video games producer with the Irish studio Gambrinous who has written extensively about games and the industry.

Úna-Minh Kavanagh
Úna-Minh Kavanagh is a video games producer and writer

"For a global audience, it would be a 'new' sport for them to learn and jam with," she said.

"It could easily gain a following if key Irish influencers hop on board, and I think they may do because it's such an Irish thing – especially given the lacklustre response to the original game."

For her, the biggest failing of the original – and its sequel – was it didn't capture the "tribalism, excitement and thrill of being at a GAA match or even playing in one".

What went wrong for Gaelic Games: Football?

Created by defunct Australian studio IR Gurus, who used their pre-existing Australian Rules football game as a template, its development was beset by issues according to an oral history by Irish news site Journal.ie – a small team, working on a shoestring, recreating a sport they had no familiarity with.

The game did sell, but copies soon became a common sight in second-hand stores.

When Irish YouTuber PKMX, real name Matt Murphy, decided to review the game, he found copies so easy to find he now has what he believes is the world's biggest collection of the series – 18 copies, costing a grand total of €15 (£12.50).

"Put GAA in a video game, people are going to pick it up," he said. "But after people realised it was terrible, they (game copies) were everywhere."

PKMX's review of Gaelic Games: Football was not kind, but Matt has some sympathy for the "overworked and underfunded" studio behind it.

"They had their hands full. They'd never seen a match, had a tiny budget. It was never going to work out."

Matt Murphy
YouTuber PKMX – aka Matt Murphy – with his 18 copies of the three titles in the original Gaelic Games series

As for the new effort, he can see some similarities between IR Gurus and Buck Eejit in terms of team size – but what the Belfast studio lacks in resources it can make up with passion and feel for the sport.

"They grew up with the GAA, they understand the thrill of the game.

"The pressure is on for players not to experience déjà vu – people don't want to be disappointed again."

That "cultural nuance" could be key, agrees Úna-Minh.

"There's something special knowing the team understands what GAA is all about. Whether it works out or not is another question, but it's a solid foundation."

So what does this solid foundation mean for Gaelic Football '25?

What features will Gaelic Football '25 include?

For one thing, Peadar said, with a laugh, of the team of 12 there's probably only a couple, including him, who grew up with the Gaelic games.

But they're keeping the focus on playability above all else.

That means some minor modifications to Gaelic football's basic rules – for instance players are allowed six steps when carrying the ball rather than the mandated four as it simply played better, said Peadar.

Meanwhile, sweeping new rules introduced in the sport won't be in the final game as they came in the middle of its development cycle.

A lack of resources also meant some tough choices.

There will be no online mode and, despite about 18 months of conversations with the Gaelic Games Association (GAA), no official licences meaning no real player names.

Inspired by Pro Evolution Soccer's approach in decades past, the game will instead feature extensive editing capabilities so players can change names and counties as much as they want.

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These decisions can be revisited via updates or, if things go well, sequels – in the meantime, said Peadar, the focus is on finishing the game for a summer release.

Is he feeling any pressure?

There's a lot riding on the team, he acknowledged, but if he's fazed by the prospect the game "gets panned and nobody buys it", it doesn't show.

Instead he seems like a man content that the best effort had gone towards making the best game the team could make.

Reaction at a playtest for punters at GamerFest Dublin in May garnered a positive response. And the finish line is in sight.

"We've been at this coming up to three years so it's about time we got this off our table and into people's hands."

And when they do, said Matt, people will definitely buy it – and maybe more.

"If it gets buzz on social media that it's actually good….then the sky's the limit."

January 5, 2025 0 comments
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